Capitol Talk: Antifa; ‘Religious Freedom’, And Limits On Local Control – MTPR

Capitol Talk: Antifa; 'Religious Freedom' And Limits On Local Control

Bills heard this week at the Capitol seek to: limit the ability of local governments and health departments to require restrictions during a public health emergency; limit services to LGBTQ people in the name of religious freedom; make Montana a right-to-work state; declare antifa a domestic terrorist organization even though there isn't such an organization.

And after years of criticizing dark money groups, former Gov. Steve Bullock raises eyebrows by taking a position with a PAC tied to dark money.

Listen now onCapitol Talkwith Sally Mauk, Holly Michels and Rob Saldin.

Sally Mauk Holly, the House on a mostly-party-line vote has passed a bill that would prohibit local government and health officials from forcing local businesses to take health precautions, like wearing masks that are designed to prevent the spread of disease.

And Republican supporters say this is a way to protect those businesses from being hurt economically. But Democratic opponents and others say it will hinder efforts to control things like the COVID pandemic that we're all experiencing right now.

Holly Michels This bill is actually one of quite a few that are moving through. I think at one point there was more than two dozen I counted that aim to do things like limit local health authority in a pandemic and also there's some that would try to limit the governor's power.

But this one would really remove any power from local governments to make businesses follow public health orders like closures, limits on hours, capacity, masks and it would also stop governments from issuing fines for businesses that don't comply with those orders.

Rep. Jedediah Hinkle from Belgrade is carrying this, and he's arguing that businesses have suffered because of these mandates.

In debate before the full House, Hinkle and other Republicans who spoke in support of the bill really didn't talk about public health very much, just about the economic fallout from the virus. Hinkle talked about businesses that have closed in his community, ones that are teetering on the edge, but we did hear Democrats who oppose the bill talked a lot about public health.

Rep. Tom France of Missoula said that there's the very real possibility of another virus, something worse than COVID, and if this bill passes, it would put communities in a real bind in the future. We also heard from Democrats there's heightened concern because last week Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte lifted the statewide mask mandate.

And what Gianforte said is he thinks local governments and businesses are best equipped to make decisions for their own communities and right now, they have that ability to put in more restrictive mandates. But this bill, if it were to pass and Gianforte were to sign, it would take that away.

Mauk And of course, we don't at this point know if the governor would sign it or not. He hasn't really indicated that.

Michels No. We asked this week specifically on this bill, and like a lot of other bills, Gianforte said that he wouldn't speak about his actions until the bill reaches his desk. But Gianforte, again, has said that local businesses, local government should be the ones making these decisions. And, of course, local businesses do have control over what happens on their property.

Mauk Rob, former Gov. Steve Bullock has a new job co-chairing a super PAC called American Bridge 21st Century, and this PAC has strong ties to a dark-money group called American Bridge.

This wouldn't necessarily be newsworthy, except Bullock has been a longtime critic of dark money groups. And to say this new job reeks of hypocrisy I think would be an understatement, Rob.

Rob SaldinYeah, well, Sally, I mean, you're right. Bullock's most prominent issue, arguably dating back to his days as attorney general, has been dark money and trying to reduce the influence of money in politics. And now here he is signing on to co-chair the super PAC that has a dark-money affiliate.

Now, the hypocrisy charge is certainly not new on this front: Bullock and Tester too, who's also very much associated with campaign finance reform have both been hit with the hypocrite charge in the past. The allegation is basically that these guys are out there running around piously condemning the supposed evils of money in politics and then they go off and engage in the very activities that they denounce.

Well, in the past, that's never struck me as a particularly compelling charge, because it's entirely reasonable in my mind to say, one, that the rules of the game ought to be changed. But two, until they are changed, it's unreasonable that I should unilaterally disarm and put myself at a huge disadvantage in the election.

And so the real key distinction in my mind has always been between those who think that money, and particularly dark money, have too big of a role in our politics and those who don't think that that's a problem. And it's always been clear where Bullock stands on that.

But Sally, I think you're right, this case is different. Bullock is now a private citizen. He certainly didn't have to sign up to co-chair this super PAC with the dark-money wing. So the hypocrisy charge seems to me to have more merit in this instance.

Mauk Holly, Kila Rep. Carl Glimm is sponsoring a bill called the Montana Religious Freedom Restoration Act, and this act would basically allow someone to use their religion as a reason not to provide service to an LGBT person.

Missoula Democrat Bryce Bennett, who's gay, gave emotional testimony against the bill. Here's what he said:

"This bill is very personal to me, and the testimony that we heard today was personal to me as well because I have lived those experiences. This bill would allow people like me to be denied housing, to be kicked out of restaurants, to be denied health care, to be fired from my job, not because of something that I did but simply because of who I am."

Mauk And the bill's sponsor, Holly, denies that that would be the bill's effect, but it's hard to argue otherwise, I think.

Michels Yeah, what this bill says is people don't have to do things that burden their religious expression, and it would also allow people to make arguments in court based on claims their ability to exercise religious beliefs had been limited.

Supporters have argued that it would safeguard religious freedoms against government interests, but we heard a lot of opponents to the bill give testimony, like Bennett's, that was pretty impactful, talking about concerns that this would just really affect their ability to get jobs, rent, apartments, you know, have plumbers come over to work on their house.

We had just four supporters of the bill, they were saying it would do things like stop florists from having to provide services for a same-sex wedding. But opponent after opponent ... you know, there's one who talked about he was worried the doctors would not provide him with necessary medical care.

Sen. Glimm, he countered, from what we heard from Sen. Bennett there, Glimm saying that he doesn't believe that would be the outcome of the bill. But we do know there's a similar federal law this is modeled off of that's gone through court several times.

One ruling in 2008 said it couldn't be used to justify discrimination against employees, but in 2019, a judge said that this federal law, again, could allow providers or insurers to deny health care treatment or coverage.

And this is sort of a theme in recent days at the Capitol. We've seen tensions collide between a lot of these so-called religious freedom bills and then LGBTQ rights. There's this hearing, there's another one on campus free speech laws and we've heard from people advocating for rights of LGBTQ people that this is just something that's been a lot more pressured this session.

We're looking at the first Republican governor in 16 years, and a lot of legislation like this has been vetoed before by Democratic governors, so there might be different outcomes and it's definitely something that's been a central theme of this last week up at the Capitol.

Mauk Rob, similar bills have passed in other states and that has prompted boycotts in some instances that have hurt those states' economic bottom lines.

SaldinSure, Sally, and there's actually some longer history to that sort of pressure.

You know, this was a thing back in the day when the Martin Luther King holiday was being debated. Arizona's resistance to that led the NFL to yank the Super Bowl out of Pheonix one year. South Carolina faced a similar boycott from the NCAA back when the Confederate flag was flying over the state capitol.

And then, as you suggest Sally, right, more recently, you've got these LGBT issues that have led to boycotts of various sorts.

Probably most notable was North Carolina. North Carolina faced a backlash over the so-called "bathroom bill," including, once again, the NCAA. And you had Bruce Springsteen and Pearl Jam, among others, canceling concerts, this sort of thing. Idaho is another place where this has been an issue.

Idaho is apparently currently under scrutiny by the NCAA, and might have Boise as a host site for the NCAA tournament moved elsewhere. So yes, there are some potential economic costs to this kind of legislation for sure.

Mauk Holly, another bill sponsored by Republican Caleb Hinkle would make Montana the 28th so-called "right to work" state. And this bill drew a lot of opposition, not just from union workers, as one would expect, but also from some prominent employers.

Michels Yeah, there were a lot of people opposed to this bill. What it would do is prohibit the requirement of belonging to a union as a condition of employment, and it would also bar private-sector unions from requiring non-members covered by bargaining agreements to pay union dues.

On the public union side, there's already been significant changes after a U.S. Supreme Court decision in 2018 that said public sector unions can't collect fees for bargaining on behalf of non-members. But that's not something that applies to private sector unions.

We heard, you know, from who you'd expect: AFL-CIO, other big unions that this bill would hurt their ability to negotiate fair wages and good benefits. They also said that many of them already bargain on behalf of workers even if they don't pay dues.

One opponent was a steel worker who works at the Stillwater Mine, and he was saying that a lot of employees and union members are saying these union jobs are their ticket to the middle class. This worker also made a pretty interesting point that, he was saying himself and a lot of union members are politically conservative which felt like he was trying to say to the committee, "You know, this isn't just liberals or Democrats that are opposing the bill, but it's politically-conservative folks, too."

But like you said, two of the state's larger employers, the company that operates the Stillwater Mine and other operations and NorthWestern Energy, also spoke in opposition to the bill. They argued it would create division between the work force and harm productive relationships that they say exist between the union and employers.

There were individuals who backed the bill, but most of the support we heard came from groups like the national right to work organization, Montana Right to Work and Americans for Prosperity. These groups argue that what they called "forced unionism" doesn't really make sense, and that if a union was doing a good job advocating for people, it wouldn't need to require dues.

But there was, like you said, a lot more opposition. There were so many people opposed that we hit a point in the hearing where people were just limited to giving their name and their employer any affiliation they had just because they ran out of time for opponents.

I think it's interesting, too: one layer to this is during the election, now Lt. Gov. Kristen Juras told people at a campaign stop in Sydney that Gov. Greg Gianforte, if he were to become governor, wouldn't veto a right-to-work bill.

The campaign later had Juras clarify that she says she hadn't spoken to Gianforte when she made that statement, and it wouldn't be a priority for them. The campaign also tried to say audio that came from this event was edited.

But even though it's not a priority for Gianforte, it is for at least some Republican legislators, so it'll be something he'll have to weigh in on if it reaches his desk.

Mauk Rob, another Republican-sponsored bill would designate antifa as a domestic terrorism group, even though there is no antifa organization, per say.

SaldinRight. Antifa obviously stands for antifascist. It's this kind of very loose, amorphous network of hard-left activists and they absolutely have been involved in violence in parts of the country, which is appalling but they've also, I think, arguably been blown up into something a little bigger than they actually are.

Notably, former President Trump talked about antifa a great deal, falsely claiming, for instance, that it was antifa, not his own supporters, who were behind the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6. But, you know, Sally, you noted that critics of the bill point out that here in Montana, we haven't actually had any antifa activity.

Now, supporters of the measure say they want to send a message that antifa isn't welcome in Montana, but that doesn't pass muster with opponents, who say this is a silly distraction, especially when we have much more serious threats from far-right-wing extremists.

But you know Sally, the thing that stood out to me this week as being most notable is that at the beginning of the week, this bill had over 50 co-sponsors. But after a hearing, over half of those co-sponsors withdrew their support, which is extremely unusual.

And it seems that the primary reason for those members doing that is that the bill's sponsor, Braxton Mitchell of Columbia Falls, wasn't willing to add other extremist groups to his list of domestic terror organizations. So, you know, bottom line, losing over half of your co-sponsors certainly doesn't bode well for the future of this bill.

Mauk Holly and Rob, thank you. Talk to you again next week.

SaldinThanks Sally.

Capitol Talk is MTPR's weekly legislative news and analysis program. MTPR's Sally Mauk is joined by Lee Newspapers State Bureau Chief Holly Michels and UM Political Science Professor and Mansfield Center Fellow Rob Saldin. Tuneduring the legislative sessionFridays at 6:44 p.m.,via podcastorlisten online.

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Capitol Talk: Antifa; 'Religious Freedom', And Limits On Local Control - MTPR

John Mayall: The blues have given me musical freedom – Olean Times Herald

John Mayall doesn't compare his success to that of his former Bluesbreakers bandmate Eric Clapton

The 87-year-old blues legend recruited the 75-year-old guitar hero to join his influential group John Mayall & the Bluesbreakers in 1965.

Over the years, the band featured the likes of the late Peter Green, Mick Fleetwood and John McVie of Fleetwood Mac and former Rolling Stones strummer Mick Taylor and inspired a whole generation of blues and rock legends.

Mayall, dubbed The Godfather of British Blues, insists the most important thing to him is being an authentic artist rather than chasing fame and he has always been happy for Clapton regarding his many achievements in the music business.

When asked if he had ever envied Clapton, Mayall said: I dont think it really works that way. You do whats natural to you and see if it works for the public in the same way it does for you."

Speaking exclusively to BANG Showbiz, he continued: My philosophy has always been to work as honestly as I can with the kind of music that was natural to me, to put those songs into words, its a great feeling to have had that freedom.

Clapton quit the Bluesbreakers in July 1966 and was replaced by Green. He was then invited by late drummer Ginger Baker to play in his new group Cream, the now-iconic band which also featured former Bluesbreakers member Jack Bruce.

Before Cream, Clapton was not well known in America, and had left his other group, The Yardbirds, before their track 'For Your Love' hit the US top 10.

Mayall also insisted he would never work with just any musician and is very selective when it comes to his collaborators.

The Bare Wires rocker said: You know you do something which is natural to you and natural to the musicians you are working with. I dont think theres been any point in my career where Ive ended up sticking with someone I wasnt really fully into ... Ive had total freedom really; I think one of the good things about being a bandleader is you get to choose who you want to work with.

Mayall - who was awarded an OBE in 2005 for being a pioneer of blues music also admitted music has always been a source of "improvisation and exploration" for him since he was a child.

He said: I dont think anybody really knows what draws them into any kind of music. I think it was a good thing for me to find something I was attracted to. Its not just blues. It's jazz. Its the whole thing. Its the improvisation and its the exploration through music and the feelings.

John Mayall: The First Generation' a 35 CD limited edition box set - is out now via Madfish Records through Snapper Music.

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John Mayall: The blues have given me musical freedom - Olean Times Herald

Greta comes out in support of Disha, says freedom of speech and right to peaceful protest non-negotiable – The Tribune India

Tribune Web Desk

Chandigarh, February 19

Lending support to the call for setting free Disha Ravi, who was arrested by Delhi Police for allegedly editing the controversial farmer protest toolkit, climate activist Greta Thunberg on Friday said that freedom of speech and right to peaceful protest were non-negotiable human rights and these must be a fundamental part of any democracy.

The tweet comes six days after Disha was arrested by a Cyber Cell team of the Delhi Police from Bengaluru and over two weeks after Greta was booked on charges of criminal conspiracy and promoting enmity.

Greta in her tweet said: Freedom of speech and the right to peaceful protest and assembly are non-negotiable human rights. These must be a fundamental part of any democracy.

Disha, a 21-year-old climate activist, has been accused of editing the controversial farmer protest toolkit posted on Twitter by climate campaigner Greta and was sent to five days police custody by a Delhi court on Sunday.

Greta had shared the toolkit to lend her support to the farmers agitation against the three farm laws, but later deleted it.

In the document, various urgent actions, including creating a Twitter storm and protesting outside Indian embassies, were listed which were needed to be taken to support the farmers protest.

Greta had taken to the microblogging site to express her concerns over farmers agitation and shared a post stating solidarity with the farmers.

I still #StandWithFarmers and support their peaceful protest. No amount of hate, threats or violations of human rights will ever change that. #FarmersProtest, she had tweeted.

Taking cognisance of her tweets in support of farmers agitation, Delhi Police had registered a case against the Swedish teen climate campaigner under Sections 120B and 153-A of the Indian Penal Code (OPC) on charges of criminal conspiracy and promoting enmity on February 4.

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Greta comes out in support of Disha, says freedom of speech and right to peaceful protest non-negotiable - The Tribune India

Mosaic Announces Long-Term Partnership with Freedom Forever – PRNewswire

OAKLAND, Calif., Feb. 18, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --Mosaic, the leading financing platform for U.S. residential solar and energy-efficient home improvement projects, today announced a unique, multiple-year partnership with one of the fastest-growing residential solar power providers in the country,Freedom Forever.

This partnership marries Mosaic's credit expertise and innovative technology with the most efficient solar sales and installation organization nationwide.As a result, Freedom Forever can now offer its customers the most attractive solar financing rates and boost the adoption of residential solar power.

"Lowering the cost of solar enables dealers to help more families make the switch to clean energy," said Billy Parish, founder, and CEO of Mosaic. "This partnership will accelerate Freedom Forever's already impressive growth by powering their robust sales organization with Mosaic's industry-leading financing platform. As we align and enhance our companies' technologies and operations, it will be faster and easier to offer more financing options to more people. It's a win-win."

Mosaic's financing solutions make it possible for homeowners to invest in sustainable energy home improvement projects, such as generating and storing solar energy. Empowering providers such as Freedom Forever to offer the best financing broadens the residential reach of clean energy.

"We have become one of the fastest-growing residential solar providers because we are always looking for new ways to say 'yes' to solve climate change," said Brett Bouchy, CEO of Freedom Forever. "What makes me so excited about this partnership with Mosaic is their innovative technology, years of proven financial performance, and high approval rates. The end result is a better sales process and industry-leading conversion rates for our authorized dealers. Mosaic, like Freedom Forever, is agile and responsive to the needs of their customers. Together, we will be able to offer solar to more people, in more states, beginning right now."

About Mosaic

Mosaic makes financing solar, solar-plus energy storage systems, and other home improvements accessible and affordable for homeowners by providing the simplest borrower experience in the industry. Customers are referred by approved solar installers and home improvement contractors and can qualify instantly for no money down loans with fixed interest rates and multiple term options. For our network of hundreds of solar installers and home improvement contractors, Mosaic provides a streamlined financing platform to drive sales growth. Since 2012, Mosaic has helped more than 125,000 households go solar with its financing products. For more information, visitwww.joinmosaic.com.

Financing applied for and processed through the Mosaic platform is originated by Solar Mosaic, Inc. or one of its lending/financing partners. All PowerSwitch ZERO and other Home Improvement Loans through the Mosaic platform are made by WebBank, Member FDIC, Equal Housing Lender.

About Freedom Forever:

Freedom Foreverand its family of companies focuses on residential solar installations that deliver best-in-class Engineering, Procurement, and Construction for its dealer network. Since 2011, Freedom Forever has enabled its dealer network to succeed with a premium offering and aggressive pricing flexibility. Freedom Forever's 25-year production guarantee provides the ultimate peace-of-mind for homeowners reluctant to make a big investment when purchasing their solar systems. With Freedom Forever, homeowners know what they're getting every time. For more information, please visithttps://freedomforever.com.

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Mosaic Announces Long-Term Partnership with Freedom Forever - PRNewswire

Creative freedom restricted by cloaking it in religion – The Hindu

Haasyam, Jayarajs penultimate work in the Navarasa series, part of IFFKs International Competition section

Award-winning filmmaker Jayaraj has been a genre hopper of sorts. From outright crowd-pleasers like Johnnie Walker and Thilakkam to the ambitious Navarasa series, the filmmaker has swung between extremes while being pilloried for his alleged affinity towards right wing politics. Attending the Kochi leg of the International Film Festival of Kerala (IFFK) where Haasyam, his penultimate work in the Navarasa series, was screened in the International Competition section, Jayaraj talks about his works and the present climate of fear hampering creative freedom.

Do you think filmmaking is being straitjacketed by the prevailing political climate?

There is a sense of fear that wasnt there in the past. One has to think before doing anything. The creative freedom is being restricted by cloaking it in religion, which is the biggest tragedy of the supposedly progressive times. I try to steer away from potentially controversial things, which in itself is a lack of creative freedom.

With the ambitious Navarasa series nearing completion with only one more film left to be made, is there a sense of emptiness? Which was the most challenging work?

That is something I ask myself. It is the same feeling as a sprinter who has breached the record and is left with nothing more to achieve. I will be content if I am able to finish that series. It has to be Karunam as it featured an aged couple in a restricted space. Apart from Karunam in the Navarasa series, Deshadanam was my other major experiment and and both were well received and successful financially as well.

I have been accused of different things at different times. I could be called the most rebellious Leftist for making a film like 4 the People while I am stamped a right winger to this day for making Paithrukam.

What are your plans for the next movie, Sringara, the last one in the Navarasa series?

I am still undecided as it has many shades. I even spoke with MT sir [M.T. Vasudevan Nair] on what constitutes the right interpretation of Sringara. I had a somewhat similar dilemma in the making of Haasyam (humour), which also has many shades before I decided on black humour.

I have just completed shooting the movie Niraye Thathakalulla Maram, which is an independent movie, and the edit is under way.

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Creative freedom restricted by cloaking it in religion - The Hindu

Statutes of Liberty: Freedom of Information Act Requests are Free for Immigrants and U.S. Citizens – ARLnow

This sponsored column is by James Montana, Esq. and Doran Shemin, Esq., practicing attorneys atSteelyard LLC, an immigration-focused law firm located in Arlington, Virginia. The legal information given here is general in nature. If you want legal advice,contact Jamesfor an appointment.

The best things in life are free. The best things in law are expensive, with one exception: Freedom of Information Act requests, which are free, free, free.

The Freedom of Information Act is, as readers surely know, a useful tool for journalists and ordinary citizens to obtain information about what our government does. But it is extremely useful and vastly underused in the immigration context. Submitting FOIA requests for immigration records is a simple process that helps immigrants and practitioners alike by giving us a look at someones entire immigration history.

FOIA requests are filed with USCISs National Records Center online or by mail on a simple form called the G-639. The form can be used to request specific documents, such as an old application or certificate of naturalization, or an individuals entire immigration file. There is no charge unless the government sends a bill; in our experience, the government never, ever does.

The results of FOIA requests have given us some of our most exciting cases. Weve found:

Any time you have questions about what happened in an immigration case or if youve lost your documents, file an FOIA!

FOIAs are also helpful for American citizens researching family history. You can submit a G-639 seeking the records of a deceased family member using an obituary or death certificate. For example, Doran wanted to learn more about her grandmother Lillians immigration history and submitted an FOIA request to USCIS with a copy of her grandmothers obituary.

In the FOIA results, Doran received a copy of Lillians Argentine birth certificate, a copy of Lillians visa application and Lillians application for U.S. citizenship. Doran also learned that her grandmother did not legally change her name from Luisa to Lillian until Lillian became a U.S. citizen in 1956. All of this information was sitting in a government office waiting to be discovered and would have otherwise been unknown.

Analyzing FOIA results are some of our favorite things to do at our office. Were happy to help our clients request their file and make recommendations about how to move their cases forward. We do an FOIA request at no extra charge whenever we think it is necessary as part of a consultation information wants to be free, and we want to help you liberate it.

Weve participated in the immigration FOIA review process at an even nerdier level helping sue USCIS to try to compel the production of allegedly exempt material but thats a story for another day. For now, our message is: File an FOIA request! Youll learn a lot, and your future lawyer will be deeply grateful.

As always, we welcome any thoughts or comments and will do our best to respond.

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Statutes of Liberty: Freedom of Information Act Requests are Free for Immigrants and U.S. Citizens - ARLnow

Woman who fought for racial equity as a Freedom Rider reflects on the past, gives outlook on the future – WLWT Cincinnati

REMEMBERS THE HORRORS OF THE RACIAL STRIFE AND VIOLENCE IN THE DEEP SOUTH >> WE KNEW THAT EVERY TIME THAT WE TOOK A RIDE, THAT IF W DIED, WE DIED. ASHLEY WAS THERE A FEAR THAT YOU ARE NOT DOING THE RIGHT THINGS OR GOING TO THE RIGHT PLACES? THAT YOU WOULD BE STOPPED BY POLICE OR HARASSE >> IF THEY TELL YOU MOVE -- IF YOU GOT ON A METRO BUS AND A WHITE PERSON WANTED YOUR SEAT, THEY COULD INSIST THAT YOU MOVE AND GO TO THE BACK OF THE BUS. IF YOU DID NOT DO WHAT THEY SAID , HE WOULD BE ARRESTED, SO YOU ALWAYS HAD TO DO IT, OR YOU PAID THE CONSEQUENCES. ASHLEY AT 21 BETTY DANIELS ROSEMOND THEN BETTY DANIELS DECIDED TO LEAVE SCHOOL AT LSU TO JOIN THE FREEDOM RIDERS. >> I WENT THROUGH SOME OF THE TRAINING. ONE OF THE GIRLS SLAPPED ME AND ALMOST KNOCKED ME DOWN, BUT THAT WAS PART OF YOUR TRAINING, TO SEE IF YOU COULD -- IF YOU WOULD RETALIATE. YOU COUL NOT RETALIATE. ASHLEY BETTY AND 4 OTHERS WENT ON A FREEDOM RIDE FROM NEW ORLEANS TO MOBILE, ALABAMA JUST DAYS AFTER ANOTHER GROUPS BUS WAS BOMBED. ON THE WAY BACK, WHEN WE GOT TO A LITTLE TOWN IN MISSISSIPP NOW, FREEDOM RIDERS WERE TESTERS. THEIR JOB WAS TO TEST THE FACILITIES TO SEE IF THEY WERE FOLLOWING THE LAW. MY JOB WAS TO MAKE A PHONE CALL. WHEN I GOT TO THE PHONE BOOTH, A TRUCK OF MEN IN A PICKUP TRU WHITE MEN PULLED UP AT THE , LITTLE BUS STATION. THEY LITERALLY DRAGGED FRANK AND THRE GIRLS OUT, PUT THEM IN THE BACK OF A TRUCK AND DROVE OF NOW I KNEW IF THEY FOUND ME. IT WOULD HAVE BEEN ANOTH LYNCHING THAT NIGHT. ASHLEY: ALL OF THIS BECAUSE YOU ARE BLACK? >> OF COURSE. EVERYTHING WAS BECAUSE OF THAT. YOU JUST DID NOT STAND A CHANCE. ASHLEY: AND HERE WE SIT TODAY IN 2021, WEVE HAD OUR FIRST BLACK PRESIDENT HAVE HAD OUR FIRST FEMALE AND BLACK AND SOUTH ASIAN VICE PRESIDENT. HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT WHERE WE ARE TODAY? >> OH, I FEEL GOOD. I REALLY DO. GOOD TO KNOW THAT PEOPLE WERE STILL WILLING TO TRY TO SEE TH CHANGE WILL COME AND THERE ARE STILL PEOPLE WHO RISKED THEIR LIFE TO SEE THAT THIS HAPPEN ASHLEY DO YOU FEEL THAT WE HAVE ACHIEVED OR ARE CLOSE TO THE DREAM THAT D KING SPOKE OF? >> WE HAVE WORK TO DO. IT IS NOT OVER UNTIL GOD SAYS IT IS OVER. THE BIBLE SAYS W MUST LOVE EACH OTHER, LOVE OUR NEIGHBOR AS OURSELVES. WE ARE COMPELLED TO LOVE ONE ANOTHER. THAT IS WHAT IS MISSING IN THE WORLD TODAY. ASHLEY IT WAS MY COMPLETE HONOR TO SPEAK WITH HER. TODAY, THE 81-YEAR-OLD WHO JUST RECENTLY STOPPED WORKING LAST YEAR STILL SPEAKS TO AUDIENCES ABOUT THE WORK THEY DID AND THE HOPE OF A BETTER FUTUR SHE PLANS TO RELEASE A BOOK OF HER POETRY SOON. SHE SAYS WHAT DROVE HER THEN AND WHAT SHOULD DRIVE US ALL, IS TO BE THE CHANGE WE WANT TO SEE IN THE WORL TO SEE MORE OF OUR CONVERSATIONS IN OUR HISTORY AND HOPE SERIES GO TO THE PROJECT COMMUNITY SECTION OF WLW

Woman who fought for racial equity as a Freedom Rider reflects on the past, gives outlook on the future

Updated: 5:59 PM EST Feb 16, 2021

Betty Daniels Rosemond, 81, grew up with Jim Crow laws and segregation being the norm in New Orleans, Louisiana. She saw firsthand how racism held her family back when her mother tried to vote or buy a home and was ultimately denied.She decided she wanted to be a part of a movement that was changing the country, so she joined CORE, or the Congress of Racial Equality, to become a Freedom Rider."We knew every time we took a ride that if we died, we died," Rosemond said.Rosemond said there was a general fear growing up that she could be stopped by police or harassed at any moment for simply being out.You would be stopped, but you had to, if they tell you to move, for instance, if you got on a metro bus, and a white person wanted your seat, they could insist that you move and go to the back of the bus because that part was for Black people, she said. And if you didn't do what they said, you will be arrested. So there was always you had to do it, or you pay consequences."At 21, she decided to leave school at Louisiana State University to join the Freedom Riders."I went through some of the training and one of the girls slapped me and almost knocked me down, but that was part of your training to see if you retaliate, and you couldn't retaliate," Rosemond said.Betty and four others went on a Freedom Ride from New Orleans to Mobile, Alabama, just days after another group's bus was bombed.On the way back, when we got to a little town in Mississippi, now, Freedom Riders were testers. Their job was to test the facilities to see if they were following the law," said Rosemond.Her job was to make a phone call back to their headquarters in New Orleans."When I got to the phone booth, a truck of men in a pickup truck, white men, pulled up at the little bus station. They literally dragged Frank and three girls out, put them in the back of a truck and drove off. Now, I knew if they found me, it would have been another lynching that night," Rosemond said.We asked Rosemond how she feels now that the nation has seen its first Black president, and its first female, Black and Southeast Asian vice president. Oh, I feel good. I really do, she said. Its good to know that people were still willing to try to see that change will come and there are still people who risked their life to see that this happens."Rosemond said she believes we're close to the dream that Dr. King spoke of, but there's still work to do."You know, we have work to do it. It's not over until God says it's over. The Bible tells us this, that we must love each other, love our neighbor as ourselves, we are compelled to love one another. And that that's what's missing in the world today," Rosemond said.

Betty Daniels Rosemond, 81, grew up with Jim Crow laws and segregation being the norm in New Orleans, Louisiana.

She saw firsthand how racism held her family back when her mother tried to vote or buy a home and was ultimately denied.

She decided she wanted to be a part of a movement that was changing the country, so she joined CORE, or the Congress of Racial Equality, to become a Freedom Rider.

"We knew every time we took a ride that if we died, we died," Rosemond said.

Rosemond said there was a general fear growing up that she could be stopped by police or harassed at any moment for simply being out.

You would be stopped, but you had to, if they tell you to move, for instance, if you got on a metro bus, and a white person wanted your seat, they could insist that you move and go to the back of the bus because that part was for Black people, she said. And if you didn't do what they said, you will be arrested. So there was always you had to do it, or you pay consequences."

At 21, she decided to leave school at Louisiana State University to join the Freedom Riders.

"I went through some of the training and one of the girls slapped me and almost knocked me down, but that was part of your training to see if you retaliate, and you couldn't retaliate," Rosemond said.

Betty and four others went on a Freedom Ride from New Orleans to Mobile, Alabama, just days after another group's bus was bombed.

On the way back, when we got to a little town in Mississippi, now, Freedom Riders were testers. Their job was to test the facilities to see if they were following the law," said Rosemond.

Her job was to make a phone call back to their headquarters in New Orleans.

"When I got to the phone booth, a truck of men in a pickup truck, white men, pulled up at the little bus station. They literally dragged Frank and three girls out, put them in the back of a truck and drove off. Now, I knew if they found me, it would have been another lynching that night," Rosemond said.

We asked Rosemond how she feels now that the nation has seen its first Black president, and its first female, Black and Southeast Asian vice president.

Oh, I feel good. I really do, she said. Its good to know that people were still willing to try to see that change will come and there are still people who risked their life to see that this happens."

Rosemond said she believes we're close to the dream that Dr. King spoke of, but there's still work to do.

"You know, we have work to do it. It's not over until God says it's over. The Bible tells us this, that we must love each other, love our neighbor as ourselves, we are compelled to love one another. And that that's what's missing in the world today," Rosemond said.

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Woman who fought for racial equity as a Freedom Rider reflects on the past, gives outlook on the future - WLWT Cincinnati

Rescue horses move to Freedom to teach, provide therapy for people in need of rescue – Boothbay Register

FREEDOM On one side of a window, an elderly person with dentures looks out at the same time as a mini horse with no top teeth peers in.

Belfast nursing home residents will soon have a day when horses clip clop through the parking lot. For residents game to get a little close to brush their hands against the fur a small paddock meet-and greet circle will be set up as well. The equines love attention, love to work, and love to bond.

Grateful Pony Art and Equestrian Center has settled into the town of Freedom, expanding its existing programs and pursuing potential futures as it sows a transplanted organization into the local roots.

Four rescue horses freely roam the new Smithtown Road property. They sidle up to the doors and windows of the main house, peer through the glass, and if given the opportunity, invite themselves in. Some of them love being in front of cameras, assisting in phone conversations, and posing for portraits.

This is the reality for Danielle Roberts, who, along with her husband and son, moved her certified equine therapy program from Connecticut to rural Maine in October 2020.

The platform for Roberts therapy is arts and crafts: on the road with mini horses, on site around the barn, or online during COVID. She and her team work with all groups: children, teens, families, spectrum, special needs, addiction, disabled Veterans, and (someday) caregivers, first responders, and residential facilities. Roberts personal passion is for older folks, Veterans, and homeless women, though shes watched children grow, and celebrates all breakthrough moments with her endless passion for equine therapy, the people it serves, and the community around her.

Whats more gratifying than helping someone I dont really know? said Roberts. Its just the best feeling to make someones day with a pony, and a piece of art they can keep forever... And making sure that with our traveling therapy program we can go back to the people that we have helped, and continue to be a part of their lives.

In her sessions, the vibes are with the horses. And the horses are well aware.

When Roberts conducted her first COVID-19-safe group teleconference session (for grieving children), she had no idea how shed incorporate a live horse into the activity. Her concerns quickly faded when one horse strutted up to the video camera and posed for self portraits, standing still for 45 minutes.

Onsite, the horses might linger over the picnic tables as clients work or dont work, if they choose. Some clients help in the stables, finding their personal purpose through gratifying responsibilities. Regardless of program, any stress for the clients tends to fade away as a long snout hovers over a shoulder.

Roberts has stories of non-verbals who suddenly speak, of people whose hidden talents only surface after being around Hersey, Hiro, Kit Kat, and Snickers, each of which has a story to tell.

In their own way, they nicker, they whinny, they show you their body language, and thats what I teach, to explain to people how theyre feeling.

Roberts once described to a blind client the appearance of a horse that happened to be afraid of a slinky brought by another client as a comfort item. Roberts asked the blind woman what she thought the pony needed. When the woman said the pony needed a hug, the pony leaned down and kissed her on the neck.

Another time, a different horse refused to participate in an activity. A non-verbal client in the group started making stressed grunting noises and pointed to her own abdomen as if in pain. The staff were left with confusion, but not the horse. The horse strolled over to the woman, nestled its head above her head, and fell asleep. The woman laughed, breaking the spell of her rising anxiety attack.

Horses are smart, said Roberts. They can connect with people. And because of their own backgrounds aging, being saved from slaughter, going through surgery, mourning friends, losing their teeth from a stress-triggered jaw joint problem called cribbing the clients can relate.

People really connect on this level that is so healing for the horses as well as the human, she said. The horses get so excited when they see groups come. Like youre here for me, I get to teach you.

Roberts said she cannot pick which horse will bond with which person. The horses pick the person, and then they fight over the attention.

Along with adopting rescue horses, and providing therapy, The Grateful Pony is open to helping other organizations create their own equine therapy programs. Its also interested in partnering with local businesses for fundraising efforts when Grateful Pony obtains its 501c6 nonprofit status within the next month

Its not about the money, according to Roberts.

Its the gift of the experience, she said.

For more information:www.brightstrides.org

Reach Sarah Thompson at news@penbaypilot.com

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Rescue horses move to Freedom to teach, provide therapy for people in need of rescue - Boothbay Register

Sudan: Forces of Freedom of Change refuses army appointments as governors – Middle East Monitor

A leader in the Forces of Freedom and Change coalition, one of the components of the ruling council in Sudan, said the movement has refused to see military leaders governing states which are facing security problems.

The military component of the Sovereignty Council suggested that some states which have been classified as having "fragile" security situations, such as Kassala, the Red Sea, West Kordofan and West and Central Darfur, be governed by military leaders.

The Sudan Tribune newspaper quoted the leader of the Freedom and Change Alliance, Ahmed Hazrat, as saying: "We do not believe that a military governor can control the situation more than a civilian."

He added, "In principle, there is no acceptance. There are also no justifications for the military to assume the rule of governors."

He indicated that the governors of the states are nominated by Freedom and Change and appointed by the prime minister.

Temporary governors were appointed to the states on 22 July 2020 by the prime minister.

READ: Ethiopia would welcome Turkish mediation in border conflict with Sudan

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Sudan: Forces of Freedom of Change refuses army appointments as governors - Middle East Monitor

Freedom Foods sees another CFO depart troubled Australian dairy business – just-food.com

Freedom Foods' share remain suspended at its own request

Graham's departure marks another executive to leave the New South Wales business, which has been bogged down for almost a year investigating possible fraudulent activity in its accounts dating back to June, and more recently agreed a AUD200m (US$156.7m today) capital injection from its majority shareholder Arrovest, led by the Perich family, as part of a recapitalisation exercise.

Its share remain suspended on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) at Freedom Foods' request, and have not traded since last June. The company has repeatedly extended the suspension as it seeks to resolve the crisis at hand.

Freedom Foods producesconsumer-dairy products, dairy ingredientsand plant-based beverages. In December, the company announced the sale of its cereal and snacks division to local peerThe Arnott's Group, owned by US private-equity firm KKR, for AUD20m.

The financial saga at Freedom Foods resulted in the resignation of CEO Rory Macleod in June, the same month CFOCampbell Nicholas also quit the business, followed by vompany secretary Trevor Allen. Michael Perich is currently serving as interim chief executive.

Jose Lemoine, who stepped in as CFO when Nicholas departed, will now occupy the same executive position again with immediate effect.

"Ms. Lemoine has been working within the company's finance team since November 2020," Freedom Foods said in thefiling with the ASX. "The board of Freedom Foods Group thanks Ms. Graham for her service and commitment to the company and wishes her well in her future endeavours."

In January, Freedom Foods' chairman Perry Gunner noted in another ASX filing that the company was reviewing the potential disposal of its "Speciality Seafood" division, which would leave the business engaged in dairy and nutritionals and plant-based beverages.

Perich noted in the same document: "Wehave been reviewing every product line, every site, every sales channel and every market segment to ensure we are focused on those with the greatest potential. We are removing or repositioning products that are not delivering value and investing in the ones that are."

Those comments were issued on the back of Freedom Foods' financial results for the fiscal year to 30 June 2020, the most recent numbers. All of the company's 2019 accounts have been restated.

Revenue climbed 26% to AUD461.8m, but losses permeated the rest of the results. EBITDA was in the red to the tune of AUD96.7m, widening from the previous year's loss of AUD118.6m.

Net profit after tax was a loss of AUD174.5m, down from a corresponding loss of AUD145.8m. Net debt stood at AUD275.2m, up from AUD122m in the prior 12 months.

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Freedom Foods sees another CFO depart troubled Australian dairy business - just-food.com

Opinion | Give Fred Gray the Medal of Freedom, because no one deserves it more – alreporter.com

Last updated on February 18, 2021, at 05:49 pm

Alabama Congresswoman Terri Sewell has to be wrong. The letter she sent Wednesday to President Joe Biden asking that Tuskegee attorney Fred Gray Sr. receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom must have been sent in error.

Because surely theres no way that Fred Gray hasnt received the Medal of Freedom yet.

I know Sewell doesnt make many mistakes, but that simply cant be true. It cant be true that Gray is behind the likes of Rush Limbaugh, Devin Nunes, Jim Jordan, Richard Petty and Bear Bryant. I mean, make whatever arguments youd like for those guys, but they aint no Fred Gray.

Doubt me?

Did any of those guys manage to get Martin Luther King Jr. acquitted of tax evasion by an all-white jury in Alabama in 1960 at the height of the Civil Rights Movement?

Because Fred Gray did that.

Did any of them represent Rosa Parks after her infamous arrest on a Montgomery bus, and also help plan and orchestrate the Montgomery Bus Boycott?

Because Fred Gray did that, too.

Did any of them file and argue the lawsuit that led to the desegregation of Alabamas colleges and universities?

Because, yep, Fred Gray did that, as well.

What about did any of them represent Vivian Malone and James Hood, ensuring they could get past George Wallace as he stood in the schoolhouse door?

Yeah, he did that, too.

What about winning the first-ever voting rights case for a group of Tuskegee teachers any of them do that?

Because Gray did.

Look, I could go on and on and on like this for quite some time because very few people have changed America more than Fred Gray. You could almost pick any civil rights case from 1955 to 1975, and youd very likely find Gray as the attorney of record.

He was Kings personal attorney for years, helping him successfully navigate a never-ending maze of legal issues. He was Parkss attorney. He repd Black teachers and Black students. He defended the NAACP.

It was Gray who filed and won the lawsuit that gave marchers the right to cross the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma and march all the way to Montgomery a march that ended with the Voting Rights Act.

Heck, without Gray, there wouldnt have been a Bus Boycott. Not only did he help plan the whole thing and defend Parks, but he also defended Claudette Colvin in a prior case that led to law changes regarding racial segregation on the buses.

He successfully fought off the state of Alabama when it attempted to outright ban the NAACP from operating in the state.

And it was Gray who, in the 1970s, defended the participants of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, winning a $10 million verdict and getting a formal apology for those participants and their families from then-President Bill Clinton. (That verdict also dramatically altered the way government studies were performed and documented.)

Gray told me once during an interview that it was his goal coming out of law school to fight segregation everywhere I could.

I didnt want to just desegregate the buses in Montgomery, he said. I wanted to desegregate everything.

And, dammit, he pretty much has.

Which is why its patently absurd that Gray hasnt received every honor and medal that can be handed out for helping to make America a better, fairer country.

In her letter to Biden, Sewell says of Gray:

As a Black lawyer and as Alabamas first Black Congresswoman, I am a direct beneficiary of Grays lifelong work in the fight for justice, inclusion and equity for all. His litigation in groundbreaking cases like Browder v. Gayle can be seen as not only directly responsible for integrating institutions in Alabama, but all across America. An iconic figure and pioneer of the Civil Rights Movement, I can think of few people more deserving of the Presidential Medal of Freedom than Fred Gray.

Gray changed the world for Sewell and millions of other Black Americans, and he made America a much, much better place for all of us.

And like Sewell, I cant think of anyone more deserving of the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

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Opinion | Give Fred Gray the Medal of Freedom, because no one deserves it more - alreporter.com

The scars of solitary: Albert Woodfox on freedom after 44 years in a concrete cell – The Guardian

Every morning for almost 44 years, Albert Woodfox would awake in his 6ft by 9ft concrete cell and brace himself for the day ahead. He was Americas longest-serving solitary confinement prisoner, and each day stretched before him identical to the one before.

Did he have the strength, he would ask himself, to endure the torture of his prolonged isolation? Or might this be the day when he would finally lose his mind and, like so many others on the tier, suddenly start screaming and never stop?

On Friday, Woodfox will wake up in a much better place. He will find himself in his three-bedroom home in New Orleans, the city of his birth. There will be colourful pictures on the wall, books to read, not an inch of brutal concrete in sight. It will be soothingly quiet no cries and howls bouncing off the walls, no metal doors clanging. Once up, he can step outside and look up at the open sky, a pleasure withheld from him for almost half a century.

It will be a good day. Today he will celebrate his 74th birthday. Today he will mark the fifth anniversary of his freedom.

On 19 February 2016, on his 69th birthday, Woodfox walked free from prison after more than 43 years inside. Almost all that time he spent in solitary confinement, on a life sentence for a murder which he did not commit.

His experiences as a former Black Panther in Angola, Louisianas notorious state penitentiary and the largest maximum-security prison in the US, tested his mental fortitude to the limit and beyond. It made him dig deep into reserves of compassion and resilience he never knew he had, and forced him to learn how to live in the absence of human touch.

Five years on from his release, he might chuckle a little to himself at the irony of today. This may be his birthday and the anniversary of his freedom, but he will spend the day in physical isolation along with most Americans who, courtesy of Covid, have spent the past year getting a tiny taste of what life in solitary really means.

Who would have thought that all those years in solitary would have prepared me for living through this pandemic? Woodfox said when we meet on Zoom. People always want to know what its like. I used to tell them, Why dont you spend 24 hours in your bathroom and find out for yourself. Well, thats no longer necessary this pandemic has forced everyone to isolate and they are freaking out!

One of Woodfoxs techniques for surviving years alone in a 6ft by 9ft cell was to compose a list of what he would do were he to be set free. Most of the lists items were strikingly mundane: he would have dinner with his family, drive a car, go to the store, have a holiday, eat some good old home-cooking.

Other desires were more substantive. He would get to know his daughter Brenda, whom hed had when he was 16 but hardly knew. He would go to the grave of his mama, Ruby Edwards Mable, who died while he was behind bars. And he would visit Yosemite national park in California, which he had fallen in love with watching National Geographic on his cell TV.

Over the past five years, he has ticked every single item on his list. A day after he walked free in 2016, he went to Rubys grave and told her: Im free now. I love you. He has forged a strong bond with his daughter and her children. His brother Michael, a master chef by trade, comes regularly to his house to cook him stuffed crab, hot sausage or his favourite, smothered potatoes. Hes even adopted a stray dog he came across out by Lake Pontchartrain. He named him Hobo.

Not all of it has been easy. In the early days of his release, Woodfox had to retrain his body to do things it hadnt done for decades, like walking up and down stairs or sitting without shackles and leg irons. There have been a lot of first-time experiences that were both exciting and scary: first flight on a plane, first visit to a university to speak about solitary confinement, and the one we all share first time on Zoom.

He was anxious for quite a while about how he would fare in the outside world. He had been separated so long from his family, and he was apprehensive too about his childhood neighborhood of Trem, which as a teenager he had plagued with acts of petty crime and fighting. I went into prison as a kid and emerged almost 70, this patriarchal figure. So how do you fit in? When I left society, my daughter was a baby; now shes a grown woman with three kids and four grandkids and great-grandkids beneath. And the community. When I left Trem I was a predator on my own people. How could I make amends?

To his relief, both sides have worked out fine. He is a present and much-loved grandfather and great-grandfather, pandemic notwithstanding. Through childhood friends, he attended meetings with community groups and apologized for what he had done back in the 1960s, asking for forgiveness. They gave me a second chance, and since that time Ive been working hard to earn the trust they put in me, he said.

Some of the hardest things have been the least expected. He has felt a disturbing disconnect between the world as he knew it from his prison cell all mediated for him through TV, books and magazines that he fought hard for years to be allowed access to and the actual physical world that now accosts him in all its raw, unfiltered splendour.

He did make that longed-for trip to Yosemite, and almost wished he hadnt.

It was far rougher than I thought it would be. We went to this waterfall way up the side of the mountain. It was quite a task getting there, going up, up and up. The waterfall was so high theres a massive spray where the water hits the rocks, and as I turned into it, it was like someone had thrown a bucket of ice-cold water on me. It was a wonderful experience, in hindsight, but in the moment, I was, What the hell am I doing here? In the cell it looked so magnificent, but when I got there I realized, you know, this is real.

Numerous scientific studies have found that when human beings are cooped up in isolation, the experience can cause psychological damage that can be irreversible or even fatal. It can induce panic, depression, hallucinations, self-harming and suicide and should not extend under international rules set by the UN beyond 15 days.

Woodfox endured not 15, but 15,000 days in solitary.

He was held on the tier known as closed cell restricted, or CCR, where prisoners were locked up alone for at least 23 hours a day. He went into CCR in April 1972, aged 25, and remained in it almost without pause until his release aged 69 in 2016.

Ostensibly, the punishment was meted out to Woodfox and his fellow member of a group of solitary prisoners who became known as the Angola 3, Herman Wallace, after they were accused and convicted of murdering a prison guard, Brent Miller. A mass of documentation gathered over years by his tireless defense lawyers points to them having been framed.

There was ample forensic evidence at the scene of the murder, including a bloody fingerprint, yet none of it implicated Woodfox and Wallace. Both men, who were serving separate sentences for robbery at the time, had alibis. It emerged after the trial that the main state witness against them, a fellow prisoner, had been paid for his testimony in cigarettes and promises of a reduced sentence.

Despite all that, and many other discrepancies, all-white juries took less than an hour to convict both men in separate trials.

There is also an abundance of evidence that supports the real reason why the pair later joined by the third member of the Angola 3, Robert King were held for so long in the harshest form of captivity. Three years before they were framed for Millers death, Woodfox and Wallace set up an Angola prison branch of the Black Panther party.

They saw it as a way to fight for racial justice in an environment in which none existed. Angola was built on the site of an old cotton plantation where slaves were bred and put to work in the fields. The location was named after the African country that supplied most of the slaves.

In 1971, when Woodfox formed the Panther chapter, the prison continued to operate a system of slave labour in all but name. Black prisoners, segregated from white inmates, were sent out into the baking sun to pick cotton for two cents an hour.

When Miller was stabbed to death and culprits needed to be rounded up swiftly, the Black Panther troublemakers were a convenient target. They were thrown into solitary where they remained, year after year, decade after decade, long after the Black Panther party itself had ceased to exist. Many years into their time in CCR, the warden of Angola admitted under oath in legal depositions that they were being held in CCR because of their Pantherism.

If the Angola authorities thought that they could break Woodfox on the rack of solitary confinement, they hadnt counted on his powers of resistance. And they hadnt factored in the principles and values instilled within him by the Black Panther movement, which he says literally saved his life.

The Panthers gave me a sense of self-worth, that I did have something to offer to humanity, he said. More than anything, it made me realise that the person I had become was not determined by me, but by the institutional racism of this country. My life had been set in survival mode.

Woodfox came to believe that he could change his own destiny by simple force of willpower. Everything solitary does to you, we managed to survive it. Not just to survive, but prosper as human beings. I wasnt sure whether I would ever be physically free, but I knew that I could become mentally and emotionally free.

In his 2019 book Solitary, a finalist for the Pulitzer prize, Woodfox describes how he managed to stay sane. He immersed himself in prison library books by Frantz Fanon, Malcolm X, Marcus Garvey. He studied law for his appeals. He organised maths tests and spelling bees, played chess and checkers, shouting quiz questions and board moves through the bars of his cell to fellow solitary prisoners down the tier.

His proudest achievement was teaching another inmate to read.

Our cells were meant to be death chambers but we turned them into schools, into debate halls, Woodfox told me. We used the time to develop the tools that we needed to survive, to be part of society and humanity rather than becoming bitter and angry and consumed by a thirst for revenge.

The evident pride in his voice about how he had refused to be broken prompted me to ask a perverse question. Did he miss anything about Angola?

He replied without hesitation. Yeah. I miss the time that I had. One day it dawned on me: I just dont have the time that I used to in prison. In solitary, I had 24/7 to do what I wanted. I had structure, a program. In society there are so many more distractions, so many more demands made on you. In Angola, in the cell, I didnt have a choice.

Albert Woodfox may have survived 43 years in solitary, but it came at a price. Over the past five years, he has observed in himself the long-term damage inflicted by conditions that the UN has denounced as psychological torture.

Sometimes I wake up and Im not aware where Im at. Im confused for seconds or minutes. Im used to waking up seeing concrete and bars, not pictures on the wall, and for a moment its like, Where the hell am I?

Claustrophobia was something he wrestled with throughout his four decades in solitary. At times, he would sleep sitting up to try to fend off the sensation of the cell walls bearing down on him.

He still has claustrophobic attacks every few months or so. Once he was in the bleachers at a sports stadium watching his great-niece and nephew compete when he started having telltale signs. We were sitting there and all of a sudden I felt I was being smothered, like the atmosphere closing in, pushing down on me. I went outside and just walked and walked. That was a surprise I didnt know you could be in a stadium with a couple of thousand people and it happen to you.

His awareness of the scars he still keeps him eager to fight for change, as he has throughout the past five years. He helped found a non-profit, Louisiana Stop Solitary, to press for reform in Angola and other state prisons. Its a long struggle. Last year Louisiana banned the use of solitary confinement for pregnant women, the first reform in the states use of the practice in more than a century. But the state continues to rank No 1 in the solitary league table, with rates that are four times the national average.

Woodfox has taken his message around the globe, traveling extensively across North America and Europe with King by his side (Herman Wallace died of cancer in 2013, two days after the authorities begrudgingly let him out). Woodfox uses the power of his story to press for an end to solitary confinement, which nationally still holds 80,000 US prisoners in its brutal grip.

Last October, he became a central character in 12 Questions, the album by Fraser T Smith in which the super-producer enlists artists and activists to help him explore critical issues of our time.

Smith asked Woodfox a simple question: Whats the cost of freedom? The resulting conversation, according to Smith, was life-changing.

Smith told the Guardian he came away from the encounter with the overwhelming sense that Albert did become free in that 6ft by 9ft cell. To hear someone who has actually lived it tell you that no matter horrendous your external situation, you can be free in your mind that was mind-blowing for me.

In his book, Woodfox writes that he had the wisdom to know that bitterness and anger are destructive. I was dedicated to building things, not tearing them down.

And now that hes out, what does he make of the political turmoil engulfing the US?

Im more optimistic than Ive ever been. Im 74, so Ive seen a lot of upheaval in this country, and the Capitol insurrection was a defining moment in American society. Its made people realise that democracy is fragile, it can be destroyed, that its only as strong as those who believe in it.

When Woodfox first emerged from captivity five years ago, he was amazed by the number of Confederate flags he saw stuck on windows or on car license plates. It took him about three weeks, he said, to appreciate that the apparent improvements in Americas approach to race since he had been in prison were purely cosmetic.

I came to see that America was still a very racist country. It had become coded I guess you could say racism had put on a suit and tie. But it was still there. Donald Trump was making it safe to be a racist.

So where does all that optimism come from? It comes in part, he explained, from the Black Panthers manifesto. The party may not exist any more, but Woodfox still holds tight to its values: We want an immediate end to police brutality, We want decent housing, fit for shelter of human beings, We want education that teaches our role in present-day society.

There is an unmistakable echo with Black Lives Matter, the second source of Woodfoxs optimism. The sacrifice of so many black men and women and young kids in this country has made Black Lives Matter a rallying cry throughout the world, he said.

In the end, Woodfoxs meditations on isolation, resilience and the cost of freedom always bring him back to something more personal. Or someone: his mother Ruby. She may not have been able to read or write, but over the years he has come to know her as his true hero.

The closest he ever came to cracking in solitary, to starting to scream and never stopping, was when the Angola prison authorities refused to let him attend her funeral in 1994. As he looks back today on his five years as a free man, and the 43 years in a concrete cell that preceded them, he finds himself thinking more and more about her.

You start remembering things, things she said, how she said them. My mom was functionally illiterate, but I never saw them break her, I never saw a look of defeat in her face no matter how hard things got. I grew into my mothers wisdom. I carry it within me.

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The scars of solitary: Albert Woodfox on freedom after 44 years in a concrete cell - The Guardian

Biden Has No Time to Lose on Freedom of Navigation Operations Against China – Foreign Policy

Few foreign-policy challenges confronting the Biden administration are more daunting than China. With recent headlines drawn toward trade wars, repression in Hong Kong, COVID-19 conspiracy theories, the intimidation of Taiwan, concentration camps in Xinjiang, and the China-India border crisis, its easy to forget that the South China Sea, despite being quieter than it was in the mid-2010s, remains one of the most controversial and volatile disputes in U.S.-China relations. The two countries differences over freedom of navigation in the vital waterway constitute the only bilateral dispute that has repeatedly produced hostile or dangerous encounters between Chinese and U.S. military platforms in close proximity with escalation risks.

Over the past decade, a series of provocative Chinese claims and actions in the South China Sea have opened a gaping geopolitical fault line with the United States, including its unlawful nine-dash line claim, its occupation of the disputed Scarborough Shoal, its creation and militarization of seven artificial islands in the Spratlys, and its use of a vast maritime militia to bully and coerce its neighbors. But it is Beijings attempts to restrict freedom of navigation in the South China Sea, particularly for U.S. warships, that has generated the most concern in Washington and provoked the most robust policy response.

The U.S. Freedom of Navigation operations (FONOP) program, which sees U.S. naval vessels challenge unlawful and sweeping maritime claims that are inconsistent with customary international law, was bought from obscurity into international headlines in the mid-2010s when China began construction of its artificial islands in the South China Sea.

After a hiatus of several years, the Obama administration began conducting FONOPs near Chinese outposts in 2015. The number of annual FONOPs in the South China Sea swelled under the Trump administration, prompting mounting anger from Chinese officials who deemed U.S. operations as blatant navigation hegemony and a military provocation.

The Biden administration is expected to continue regular FONOPs in the South China Sea, but the pace of operations and the Chinese claims challenged are up for debate. As U.S. President Joe Biden deliberates his South China Sea strategy, the administration should recall and avoid some of the stumbles that characterized the Obama administrations early FONOP policies. Operations should be regular and routine, ideally at a pace of at least two per quarter, in addition to being depoliticized and not sensationalized. Finally, FONOPs cannot be viewed as a bartering tool to solicit Chinese cooperation in other areas: Freedom of navigation must remain nonnegotiable.

Since 1979, the U.S. Defense and State Departments have jointly run the FONOPs program, which challenges maritime claims the United States finds inconsistent with international law. China is far from the only country targeted by the program. In 2019, the U.S. government used FONOPs to challenge unlawful claims of 22 countries. However, since the construction of Chinas artificial islands in the mid-2010s, U.S. FONOPs in the South China Sea have attracted greater international attention and greater Chinese ire.

Based on publicly available information, the United States conducted one FONOP directed at excessive Chinese maritime claims in 2015, three in 2016, four in 2017, six in 2018, eight in 2019, and nine in 2020, although the number of actual FONOPs may be higher than those publicly reported. In 2019, U.S. FONOPs challenged a variety of unlawful Chinese claims in the East and South China Seas, including Chinas demand that foreign warships obtain prior permission from Beijing for innocent passage through Chinas territorial sea.

Chinas Ministry of Foreign Affairs claimed U.S. FONOPs have gone beyond the scope of freedom of navigation. It is a political provocation, and the purpose is to test Chinas response. U.S. freedom of navigation is actually deprivation of others freedom, according to China Military, a publication run by the Chinese military, and an excuse for its gunboats to run wild in other countrys territorial waters.

In public, Chinese officials often claim Beijing would never seek to restrict freedom of navigation in the South China Sea.

In public, Chinese officials often claim Beijing would never seek to restrict freedom of navigation in the South China Sea. When has freedom of navigation in the South China Sea ever been affected? asked Adm. Sun Jianguo at a 2016 closed forum. It has not, whether in the past or now, and in the future, there wont be a problem as long as nobody plays tricks.

However, Chinese scholars and officials, including Sun, have repeatedly revealed that when they speak of freedom of navigation, they refer only to commercial vessels, not military vessels. China doesnt believe the United States military surveillance and reconnaissance in Chinas exclusive economic zone is freedom of navigation, said an opinion reporter for China Daily. No freedom of navigation for warships and airplanes, added Chinese Ambassador to the Philippines Zhao Jianhua.

This is not merely a rhetorical dispute. Since the turn of the century, Chinese ships and aircraft have repeatedly harassed or intimidated U.S. military vessels operating lawfully in Chinas 200-nautical-mile Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) and 12-nautical-mile territorial sea. International law grants China exclusive economic rights in its EEZ but not the right to regulate most foreign military activities. And although China can demand prior authorization for foreign military operations in its 12-nautical-mile territorial sea, it must respect the right of innocent passage for foreign warships there.

Disputes over freedom of navigation are not new to U.S.-China relations. Beijing has long objected to U.S. close in surveillance activities near Chinese territory despite U.S. operations adhering to international law and the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). (China, which helped draft UNCLOS, ratified the convention in 1994. The U.S. Senate has not ratified UNCLOS, but U.S. policy recognizes and aligns with UNCLOS provisions on maritime entitlements and freedom of navigation.)This rift was exacerbated by Chinas construction of artificial islands in the South China Sea.

In late 2013, China began dredging what would eventually be thousands of acres of sand on seven disputed rocks and low-tide elevations in the Spratly Islands, transforming the features into seven large, militarized artificial islands. However, it wasnt until early 2015 that they were drawn into the international spotlight when the Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative published high resolution satellite images of the growing Chinese outposts.

National security experts quickly began calling for the Obama administration to conduct FONOPs within 12 nautical miles of the artificial islands, correctly predicting China would seek jurisdiction around the outposts inconsistent with international law, including attempting to restrict U.S. freedom of navigation.

Yet, Washington deliberated for months. In June 2015,Daniel Russel, the U.S. assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, sent a peculiar and confusing signal by saying, As important as [the] South China Sea is its not fundamentally an issue between the U.S. and China.

The long deliberation prompted an escalating game of diplomatic chicken with Beijing. China will never tolerate any military provocation or infringement on sovereignty from the United States or any other country, just as the United States refused to 53 years ago [during the Cuban Missile Crisis], according to the China Daily in 2015. This is our backyard; we can decide what vegetables or flowers we want to grow, said Senior Col. Li Jie of the Peoples Liberation Army Navys Military Academy.

In September 2015, for the first time, Chinese naval vessels entered U.S. territorial waters following a naval exercise with Russia, passing through Alaskas Aleutian Islands precisely as the state was hosting a rare visit by President Barack Obama. The following month, a senior Chinese military officialtold Newsweek,There are 209 land features still unoccupied in the South China Sea, and we could seize them all.

Eventually, the Obama administration called Chinas bluff. In late October 2015, the USS Lassen conducted a FONOP near Subi Reef, one of Chinas artificial islands in the Spratlys. However, even that delayed operation drew criticism. With several Chinese artificial islands and several forms of FONOPs to choose from, the administration opted for exercising innocent passage within 12 nautical miles of Subi Reef, the weakest type of FONOP the U.S. could have chosen, according to international law expert Julian Ku. And to make matters worse, limiting the FONOP to innocent passage could actually strengthen Chinas sketchy territorial claims in the region. Even sympathetic experts found the FONOP to be poorly managed with a lack of clarity and potentially a huge blunder.

In the years to follow, FONOPs in the South China Sea became more robust and routine, but the hesitation and seeming politicization of the first operation risked feeding the impression that freedom of navigation was negotiable. Ely Ratner, former deputy national security advisor to then-Vice President Joe Biden, has argued the United States was insufficiently resolute in its response to early Chinese provocations in the South China Sea, resulting in incremental gains for China as a result.

The Biden administration needs to avoid these early missteps and instead, conduct a rigorous and clear program. Beginning in 2021, the Biden administration should pursue a regular schedule of FONOPs in the South China Sea at least twice per quarter, the pace established in 2019 and exceeded in 2020. On Feb. 5, the USS John McCain reportedly conducted the first South China Sea FONOP of the Biden administration, accompanied by an unusually detailed readout of the operation.

Should Chinese attempts to restrict U.S. freedom of navigation escalate, the administration should be prepared to increase the tempo and consider new flavors of FONOPs. Naval War College professor James Kraska recommends bolstering FONOPs by using not just single ships and airplanes but squadrons, such as surface action groups and aircraft carrier and expeditionary strike groups.

FONOPs should continue to include military maneuvers within 12 nautical miles of low-tide elevations (LTEs) subsequently transformed into artificial islands by Chinese land reclamation. International law is clear: LTEs cannot be reclassified as natural islands entitled to a territorial sea and EEZ. Any Chinese attempts to claim an undefined military alert zone around the outposts or restrict navigation is unlawful.

FONOPs should also be depoliticized and not sensationalized. The Obama administration was criticized for seeming to delay or downgrade FONOPs to avoid offending Beijing at a time the administration was seeking Chinas cooperation on issues like climate change and North Koreas nuclear program. Beijing will undoubtedly try to tempt the Biden administration into similarly unbalanced compromises as recent, testy exchanges over climate change showed.

At the same time, FONOPs should not be high-publicity affairs. In some ways, international fanfare can undermine the intended objective. Regular, routine operations and transits of the South China Sea are arguably just as effective at signaling U.S. nonrecognition of Chinas unlawful claims. Experts Isaac Kardon and Peter Dutton believed consistent practice of free navigation, not the reactive FONOP, is the policy best suited to respond to Chinese assertiveness in the [South China Sea]. This is especially true in areas such as the Spratly Islands where China has made no actual legal claims to challenge.

Although U.S. allies have thus far shown little interest in conducting joint FONOPs in the South China Sea, Gregory Poling, a fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, argues the U.S. government should seek to persuade like-minded partners to conduct their own FONOPs independently. The vast majority of the worlds capitals find Chinas claims in the South China Sea ludicrous. It would be harder for China to sell the false narrative that the South China Sea is a bilateral dispute with the United States if other countries were more robust in their exercise of freedom of navigation in the South China Sea like Australia is.

FONOPs are no panacea for the South China Sea, but they are a uniquely effective tool for advancing the United States most vital interest there. In October 2019, Kurt Campbell, the Biden administrations new Indo-Pacific tzar, affirmed in no uncertain terms, I think the most important dimension of the South China Sea [dispute] is freedom of navigation. Defending the United States varied interests and addressing Chinas multilayered challenges in the South China Sea will require a much broader U.S. strategy. But FONOPs are a key pillar ofnot a distraction fromthat strategy.

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Biden Has No Time to Lose on Freedom of Navigation Operations Against China - Foreign Policy

Washington Spirit owners, Freddy Adu, and more: Freedom Kicks – Black And Red United

Good morning! It is another gross day down here in Richmond, and I hope that everyone stays warm, safe, and en-powered today as we march towards spring. There is a bunch of news today on a lot of weighty topics, so lets get right into it.

Washington Spirit add literally dozens of new owners

If youre reading this, there is a not insignificant chance that you too are an owner of the Washington Spirit, as they added a ton of new ones yesterday. Chelsea Clinton and Jenna Bush Hager leaked a day early, but other notable names include Tom Daschle, Dominique Dawes, Brianna Scurry, Jay Carney, and a bunch more.

As Chelsea Clinton, Jenna Bush Hager invest, meet 1st female owner of Washington Spirit

All of these new owners join Steven Baldwin and Michelle Kang, who was the teams first woman owner; her company, Cognosant, has almost 2,000 employees.

D.C. United is close to signing their other first round draft pick, which would give them some much needed help on the front line.

A new Crystal Dunn - USWNT star will not be staying silent any longer

Crystal Dunn talks to Seth Vertelney about how she is speaking out about her positional preferences with the USWNT and so much more.

This is a very big deal!

Black Chicago Fire players share their experiences with race in life and soccer.

Chicago Fire players speak out about the racist abuse that they have suffered, not only in the MLS ranks but in youth academy matches from parents. Any parent who uses a slur should be immediately banned.

Revealed: how the pay gap at US Soccer goes all the way up the ladder

US Soccer: still doing a bad job!

It would not surprise if the situation is similar in USL League One, and probably not too much different for the majority of players in USL Championship. These players are scrapping by for the love of the game, and these teams are scrapping by one small margins and small staffs. The only USL teams that I see that really break out the pocket books are the ones that are mortgaging their future in hopes that they get that jump to MLS. If they dont, the cuts come fast.

I always wish the best for Freddy Adu, but he has just been let go from a 3rd division side in Sweden. The quote is....not great.

Swansea City 1-0 Nottingham Forest: Late Connor Roberts header earns Swans dramatic Championship victory

Paul Arriola sighting!

Thats all Ive got today, whats up?

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Washington Spirit owners, Freddy Adu, and more: Freedom Kicks - Black And Red United

Readers Write: Impeachment trial, freedom of speech, the cold weather – Minneapolis Star Tribune

Well, GOP senators had two chances to get former President Donald Trump off their backs for good through impeachment, and they threw them both away. This latest act of cowardice, acquitting Trump of inciting insurrection, will come back to haunt them.

The Senate trial was not a criminal one. There will be action by the Justice Department, the FBI, the District of Columbia and the trials of those arrested for violent activities at the Capitol building on Jan. 6, among others.

Tens of thousands of moderate Republicans, sickened by what has been done in their names, have called their state parties to resign from the GOP. There is now talk of a split between those moderates and those who have been co-opted by Trump and have defended his notorious behavior for four years.

The repercussions from the insurrection are far from over.

A Trump-supporting mob shouted, "We will destroy the GOP." And when Republican senators acquitted Trump for instigating the Jan. 6 insurrection, they helped make the mob's dream come true. The GOP, the Grand Old Party, no longer espouses high-minded policies or values. Nor can it be considered "grand." The Republican senators are spineless politicians under the thumb of a ruthless tyrant and his followers. Destroy the GOP? With Trump's acquittal, the answer is yes.

Many years ago I was employed by a public affairs (i.e., lobbying) organization. My boss was an old-school Missourian with a deep understanding of politicians. He used to say, "The first rule in politics is self-preservation."

The Republican senators from red states voted for self-preservation. The senate is a political body, not a court of law. If you vote to impeach, you antagonize your constituents, who have the power to end your career at the next election and you incur the everlasting hatred of Trump. What politician needs enemies?

The red-state Republicans made a calculated decision to please many constituencies and to keep their jobs. That's how politics works.

If someone ever writes "Profiles in Cowardice" as a companion to John F. Kennedy's "Profiles in Courage," there are 43 U.S. senators who will merit a collective chapter.

It continues to amaze me that so many Republican politicians remain eager to identify with such a transparently self-serving narcissist as Trump, especially after his appalling behavior following his election loss to President Joe Biden. These lackeys apparently cling to Trump out of abject fear of offending him and his base, but that's treading a fine line. They may have gained some traction with that base by condoning Trump's hateful attacks on those they consider to be the "others," but to a narcissist everybody is an "other." No matter how vehemently they align with him, or how abjectly they kowtow to him, even Trump's most servile supporters will eventually work their way to the top of his hate list.

One perceived transgression can make him turn on someone in a flash. Just look at the attrition rate among the sycophants in his administration. For his inability to override Biden's sweeping electoral win, even former Vice President Mike Pence, Trump's longtime No. 1 groveler, suddenly went from prince to pariah.

For the GOP, lying about sexual relations with a woman other than one's wife: impeachable.

Lying about the results of a free election and inciting a seditious mob: unimpeachable.

Thus one of the numerous reasons I am no longer, in good conscience, able to vote Republican.

As expected, a majority of Senate Republicans voted Saturday to acquit Trump. The evidence that Trump incited the deadly insurgency of Jan. 6 is incontrovertible. What prompted those senators to ignore that evidence?

While some of them are perfectly comfortable as lap dogs to a caudillo Sen. Lindsey Graham comes to mind for most there are two related reasons: cynicism and cowardice.

The ratio varies with each lap dog, but for all of them, their only motivation is re-election. If they anger Trump, a child-man with skin so thin it's a wonder his insides stay there, he will attack them and do everything in his now-limited power to turn his base against them. Even worse, they will likely be primaried by someone even further to the right.

So principle, truth and their oaths of office be damned, and they let the insurgent off. If history remembers them at all, it will not be kindly.

One final note: By constantly predicting that Senate Republicans would make themselves complicit in attacking our country and its democracy, commentators implicitly granted them permission to do just that. If we had publicly expected them to consider the overwhelming evidence against Trump, maybe some of them would have.

Regarding "Must freedom of speech include the freedom to lie?" (Opinion Exchange, Feb. 16), Cass Sunstein advances the notion that our psyches are inclined to embed false information. I suppose I am an exception. I suspected his premise was false information from the get-go or, at least tenuous science at best. One doesn't need a Ph.D. in psychology to realize that making generalizations about beliefs is shaky business. The components of faith, educational level, individual gullibility (an unquantifiable behavior) and mob psychology are all ingredients in this matter. Sunstein doesn't really address this. Can he or any "expert" really demonstrate that people like me reluctant to believe everything I hear are vastly outnumbered by people who embrace lies? I doubt it.

So, while Sunstein is cautious about forwarding restrictions on dissemination of information ("No one ... should assume the role of a Ministry of Truth"), he is proposing limited censorship. I doubt the efficacy of this. Personally, I prefer to accept the risks of widespread misinformation to the risks of limited censorship. I believe that as our world becomes more complicated, with greater challenges, the dissemination of information will become increasingly essential. Yes, there will be falsehoods that require debunking. (The "stolen election" comes to mind.) But the risks of limiting vital information are greater.

Dear weathercasters,

We know that out of every 30-minute news broadcast, 42 minutes are devoted to weather. You kindly tell us that Joe's thermometer says it was -5 in his backyard in Grand Rapids, and Jane's thermometer showed -4 in Mankato. It's riveting. Riveting, I tell you.

But fer Pete's sake it's winter. In Minnesota. It's been cold for a few days. Could you stop with the gushing, breathless delivery? It's cold. We expect it to be cold. It's going to be cold again. Then it will get warmer. Maybe even cold again. It's not a surprise!

Just give me the high, the low, what to expect for wind, temperature and precipitation over the next few days. That's it. That's all I need. If I want more, I can go to your website.

If you keep gushing, it's likely to freeze that way.

We want to hear from you. Send us your thoughts here.

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Readers Write: Impeachment trial, freedom of speech, the cold weather - Minneapolis Star Tribune

What the Trump administration meant for freedom of information requests – Columbia Journalism Review

The election of Donald Trump promised an epic test for the Freedom of Information Act. On one side, the powerful, yet deeply flawed, transparency law that turned 50 years old a few months before Trumps 2016 election. On the other, a brash, dishonest, norm-flouting billionaire who had spent his adult life working in a privately-owned business. What would happen when Trump, the reality-star-turned-demagogue, became subject to the presidencys transparency laws?

Alas, the FOIA world is notoriously slow-moving; historian and journalist Jon Wieners battle for John Lennons FBI file began with a request in 1981 and didnt fully end until late 2006, when the bureau handed over the last 10 pages. And one of the biggest FOIA-driven stories of the Trump years, the Washington Posts Afghanistan Papers, was a reminder that the law often works better as a window into the past than a mirror of the present.

But we can begin to glean at least the outlines of what happened when Donald Trump met the law that the late New York Times columnist William Safire said has done more to inhibit the abuse of Government power than any legislation in our lifetime. The results of that clash are as revealing about the 45th president as they are about FOIA.

Trump came into office with the FOIA bar already low. The Obama administration, despite lofty campaign rhetoric about transparency and a first-day-in-office memo urging agencies to adopt a presumption in favor of disclosure, set records for FOIA non-compliance and was caught at one pointby a FOIA lawsuit, naturallycontradicting its public posture by lobbying against FOIA reform behind closed doors. Thus, as MuckRock co-founder Michael Morisy put it, comparing Obama and Trumps transparency records is a case study in setting high expectations and then failing to meet them in some really critical ways versus setting some really low expectations and delivering what folks expected.

Trump as president lied prodigiously, withheld White House visitor logs, went months between formal press briefings, made employees sign non-disclosure agreements, attempted to stop the publication of books about his administration, and committed a long list of other offenses against openness.

And when it comes to FOIA, its hard to find any statistical category where the Trump administration cleared even the low bar set by Obama. FOIA rejections and redactions increased under Trump, while delays grew at most federal agencies and the number of FOIA lawsuits skyrocketed. Just about by any measure, things have gone from bad to worse, says Adam Marshall, who works on FOIA lawsuits for the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Jason Leopold, a senior investigative reporter at BuzzFeed who used the law to pry loose more than 40,000 pages of documents during the Trump years, says that in his everyday requesting and conversations with FOIA analysts, he noticed a culture during Trumps tenure of more of an active conversation taking place within the agencies to withhold records [and] to thwart the efforts of requesters to essentially ensure that information is not being released.

Though some of this took place behind the scenes, there were plenty of moments when that disdain for FOIA was publicly visible. At one point, the Department of Interior proposed new rules that would make it more difficult for members of the public to file requests, before retracting the changes due to public outcry. While serving as the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, John Kelly encouraged an official to avoid sending emails in order to evade FOIA. (Similar allegations about email shenanigans were later raised about Trumps Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.) Last March, a high-level Department of Justice official made the absurd charge that FOIA lawsuits had become a way for plaintiffs to generate attorneys fees (which would surely make them one of the least effective get-rich-quick schemes in American history). And later in the year, former Attorney General Bill Barr publicly griped, There is no FOIA for Congress or the CourtsYet Congress has happily created a regime that allows the public to seek whatever documents it wants from the Executive Branch.

COVID-19 slowed the gears of the federal FOIA-response machinery further. National Security Archive Director Tom Blanton says that the results of the pandemic were simple and dramatic: it shut down most agencies FOIA processes altogether.

BuzzFeeds Leopold says the laws administration is so flawed that to say its in disarray would not actually be a proper way of explaining it. Washington Post FOIA director Nate Jones adds, FOIA, today, [in December 2020], issignificantly worse off than it was four years ago.

Adam Marshall says that the national FOIA ecosystem is in such abysmal shape that when he conducts records-request training for journalists around the country, he shares a message at the beginning of each session: avoid it if you can. If you can get documents in some other way, either through a state or local public record request or through some other means, that is almost assuredly going to be faster than trying to get them through a federal FOIA request, he says.

And yet despite the laws age, its flaws, and an administration that was openly hostile to its ethos, FOIA still produced remarkable results during Trumps presidency. Indeed, one of the enduring lessons of the last four years is that, while FOIA may be badly broken, its far from useless or obsolete, particularly if youve got lawyers.

The Trump years saw FOIA put to powerful use as a fact-checking tool. When White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer exaggerated the crowd size at the previous days inauguration, requesters used FOIA to obtain surveillance video and aerial photos to disprove him. When Donald Trump tweeted accusations that the Obama administration had wiretapped Trump Tower, it was a FOIA lawsuit that compelled the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Justice Departments National Security Division to state, for the record, that it had no evidence to support such claims. More recently, the Washington Post used FOIA to access a State Department cable showing that the White House had no hard proof to back up its claims that COVID-19 had been deliberately or accidentally released by a Chinese laboratory.

FOIA also took us behind the scenes at executive agencies as employees reacted to an unpredictable, sometimes unhinged, president. FOIA-produced emails revealed anger and indignation from NOAA scientists over SharpieGate, when someone in the White House used a marker to hand-draw an extension of Hurricane Dorians expected path in order to match Trumps comments. The law also helped reveal chaos at the Pentagon following the presidents tweets about banning transgender soldiers, and shock and sadness at the FBI following Trumps dismissal of agency director, James Comey.

Meanwhile, FOIA helped us to more clearly see some most important moments and policies of the presidency. The best example of thisand surely one of the signature FOIA stories of the Trump Yearswas BuzzFeeds multi-part series on the Mueller Report, which unredacted key portions of the report, added hundreds pages of newly released background material, and, at one point, prompted a federal judge to lambast Bill Barr for the way his pre-release memo misleadingly spun the report in Trumps favor. BuzzFeed also used the law to produce information on deaths in Immigrations and Customs Enforcement custody during the Trump years.

Elsewhere, FOIA helped deepen our understanding of the pandemic. In July, a New York Times FOIA lawsuit prompted the CDC to release data showing that Latino and African-American residents of the United States have been three times as likely to become infected as their white neighbors. Thanks to another FOIA lawsuit, we learned that NFL star Tom Bradys company, TB12, received nearly a million dollars in aid under the Paycheck Protection Program, and that, overall, according to one expert quoted in the Washington Post, this program primarily benefited the well-banked and well-lawyered at the expense of the small businesses it was supposed to benefit. FOIA also helped produce one of the most remarkable documents of the Trump era: a draft press release from the United States Postal Service announcing plans to send five cotton masks to every household in the countrya total of 650 million masksduring the early days of the COVID-19 crisis. That policy never came to fruition and the release was never published, but thanks to FOIA, we have a glimpse of alternate history in which, perhaps, fewer Americans could have died.

Overall, the law was perhaps most effective in highlighting the various ways Trump worked the presidency to his financial advantage. Trump arrived in office with a dizzying tangle of conflicts of interest, and over the four years of his presidency, FOIA revealed the way he funnelled hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars through the Department of Defense, Department of Homeland Security, Department of State, Department of Commerce, and other agencies to properties he owned. According to one FOIA-based Washington Post report, Trumps golf club in Bedminster New Jersey charged the Secret Service more than $21,800 to rent a cottage and other rooms while the club was closed and otherwise off-limits to guests. In another case, FOIA helped ProPublica publish a taxpayer-funded $1,000 liquor bill for Trump staffers at Mar-A-Lago.

This exposure of questionable uses of taxpayer money extended to other high profile figures in Trumps orbit, as well. FOIA gave us emails showing that Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Director Ben Carson and his wife, Candy, spent $31,000 on furniture for a dining room at HUD headquarters. The Intercept used the law to shine a light on millions spent on security by Environmental Protection Agency Director Scott Pruitt, including $80,000 for radios and $1,500 for tactical pants. The organization Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) used the law to report on Secretary of State Mike Pompeos use of tens of thousands of taxpayer dollars to fund lavish dinners for GOP donors and other high-profile conservatives. CREW also used FOIA to highlight tens of thousands of dollars spent on Secret Service protection for a Donald Trump Jr. hunting trip to Mongolia.

Since its passage in 1966, the FOIA has led to embarrassing or alarming revelations about nearly every American president, including FBI surveillance of groups opposed to Ronald Reagans policies, the details of state-sanctioned torture under George W. Bush and the legal justification for drone killings under Barack Obama.

As of today, its too early to say how Joe Biden will approach and administer the FOIA. The law went unmentioned in the barrage of memos and executive orders he has issued in his first days on the job, an absence that was itself revealing about transparencys ranking on his list of priorities. And, a few weeks before inauguration, his transition team declined to answer questions from independent reporter Joshua Eaton, for an excellent New Republic piece exploring Bidens potential approach to transparency. For the moment, it remains to be seen if the new administration will adopt any of the open-government recommendations offered by the good-government advocacy group, Accountability 2021.

Adam Marshall describes the various challenges of the last four yearsincluding COVID-19, government shutdowns and political meddling in FOIA mattersas an unprecedented stress test for the law. The result?

FOIA is still standing and still turned to every single day by reporters trying to get information for the benefit of the public, he says.

This doesnt change the profound and numerous ways in which the law fails requesters, but its important to place the failures and successes side by side. You cant look at one aspect of FOIA over the last four years without the other, he says. Its both broken and more necessary than ever.

Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly named the former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security as Michael Kelly. He is John Kelly.

TOP IMAGE: Archived papers, Wikimedia Commons

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What the Trump administration meant for freedom of information requests - Columbia Journalism Review

Freedom and security: On social media platforms operating in India – The Hindu

By calling on social media platforms operating in India to follow the law of the land, as it did last week in Parliament, the government has not just stated the seemingly obvious but also delivered a warning to Twitter that it ought not to defy its orders again, the way it did in early February, when the government wanted certain handles blocked for spreading incendiary content. We respect criticism you can criticise even the Prime Minister, said Minister of IT and Communications Ravi Shankar Prasad in Parliament on Thursday. But if social media is used to propagate hate, then action will be taken. Further, he asked, why when police act in Washingtons Capitol Hill ransacking, a micro blogging site stands in their support, but when a similar action is taken at Red Fort, our national pride, the platform opposes it? That the government wanted problematic hashtags blocked is understandable, given the tense situation on the ground on the day of the farmer protests, but what is difficult to appreciate is that it also wanted handles of some journalists, activists and politicians to be blocked. Twitter eventually complied, but not fully. We have not taken any action on accounts that consist of news media entities, journalists, activists, and politicians, it said in its blog. To do so, we believe, would violate their fundamental right to free expression under Indian law.

After all this, the issue is still in the realm of statements and counter-statements. While keeping up the pressure on Twitter by threatening to take action, the government, at least for the time being, seems to have stopped short of taking action. And while being defiant initially, Twitter also seems to have stopped short of escalating it and going to court. This is significant because if either one of the parties had decided to escalate the issue, the contentious law under which social media platforms are required to comply with blocking orders could come under legal scrutiny. The reference is to Section 69A of the Information Technology Act, 2000, under which the government can order a digital intermediary to block any content on grounds including security of the state and public order. Sure, the Supreme Court did uphold the constitutionality of Section 69A in the Shreya Singhal vs. the Union of India case in 2015, but criticism over the secrecy of the process and the arbitrariness with which it has been used over the years has never ceased. This Section, in a way, represents the wide censorship powers that the government has. It is, therefore, important that freedom of speech is not seen as the antithesis of security of the state, but as one of its key facilitators.

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Freedom and security: On social media platforms operating in India - The Hindu

‘You have to stay strong’: 102-year-old freedom fighter’s message to Disha Ravi – Hindustan Times

Harohalli Srinivasaiah Doreswamy was 23-years-old and had joined a new job as a school teacher when he was first arrested and imprisoned for 14 months for organizing strikes against the British government. His second visit to the prison was at the age of 57 when he took on then prime minister Indira Gandhi during the emergency.

In an interview with Arun Dev, the 102-year-old draws parallels between the times he has lived through and the present state of affairs in the country. He says that a leader or a movement has always emerged whenever democracy was threatened in the country. He also has a message for 22-year-old activist Disha Ravi, who was recently arrested on charges of sedition in connection with the toolkit case you have to stay strong. Edited excerpts:

How do you look at the government using sedition against voices of dissent?

Isnt it clear? Those who do not support or speak up against the government are called traitors. What is even more concerning is that most of them have not been given a trial. Even the British had done the same (registered sedition cases) but when cases were filed against Gandhiji and (Bal Gangadhar) Tilak, they were produced before the court. By not producing them before the court, their (governments) intention is to harass and create an environment of fear for the others. They want to see people silenced.

How old were you when you were arrested during the freedom movement?

I was 23-years-old when I was arrested. I had just got a new job as a teacher in a high school then. I started working in June but by then, the Quit India Movement has begun. I helped organise a 14-day strike at the mills across Mysore state and also blew up government record rooms and postboxes with very small time-bombs. Our intention was to disrupt the British governments daily functioning.

By December, I was arrested, and I lost my job as well.

Was the jail term a difficult experience?

Not at all, it was a learning experience. I had a purpose in life, to fight the British rule. I was not worried at all; in fact, it was like a university for me. The other leaders in jail used to give lectures. I learnt new languages when I was there.

You lived through the Emergency also

Oh yes, there was an interesting incident from the time of Emergency. After the Emergency was announced, I wrote a letter to Indira Gandhi (then prime minister), saying she was a dictator. In the letter, I threatened to go village to village and mobilise the people against her dictatorship. Soon after that, I held the first meeting in Gandhi Bazar (in Bengaluru). I was arrested. But I was in jail only for four months.

During the trial, the prosecution said that I had criticised the prime minister and that I was an enemy of the state. But that judge who was hearing my case said that I had every right to criticise the government and there is no proof to say that I am an enemy of the state. The judge then told the prosecution to ask the government under what charge should I be booked and released me.

I hope our current judiciary will stand up for justice as that judge did then.

What are your views on the recent arrest of 21-year-old Disha Ravi by Delhi Police?

The police took a woman from Bengaluru to Delhi without informing the local magistrate it is very harsh on their part. But she has braved it. It is very brave of her.

If you could tell her anything, what would you say?

You have to be strong. We are facing a dictatorial regime that is merciless, you need to stay strong.

There are reports of parents telling their children not to take part in protests in the wake of the arrests of young activists. What are your views on it?

You dont worry about it. Todays youngsters are smart and wiser. The youngsters of the country have always fought for the right causes. They know what should be done and no one can stop them.

As someone who has seen the freedom struggle and emergency, what do you think of our countrys future?

Nothing is permanent. There will be ups and downs. During the freedom struggle there was Gandhi, during the emergency there was JP (Jayaprakash Narayan) and then Anna Hazare also came, even though he was misguided later. If not a leader, there will be a movement that takes on what is wrong in our country.

I see hope in the farmers protests, this has the power to unite people against this dictatorial government. The longer they stay on the streets, the stronger the resistance becomes.

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'You have to stay strong': 102-year-old freedom fighter's message to Disha Ravi - Hindustan Times

How White nationalists evade the law and continue profiting off hate – Action News Now

Weeks before the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017, a burly and bearded neo-Nazi told a CNN reporter on camera that "Jews are terrorists."

At the rally -- which turned deadly -- he participated with gusto, carrying a banner that, according to court documents, said, "Gas the kikes, race war now!" during a march past a synagogue.

But when Robert Warren Ray was indicted in June 2018 for using tear gas on counter-protesters at the event, police discovered he was nowhere to be found.

The fugitive, known in far-right circles as a prolific podcaster under a Bigfoot-themed avatar and the name "Azzmador," has vanished -- at least from real life.

However, Ray's podcast, which he calls The Krypto Report, later appeared on a new gaming livestreaming service that has become a haven for right-wing extremists who have been deplatformed from YouTube and other mainstream social media channels.

Called DLive, the live-streaming platform with a blockchain-based reward system allows users to accept cryptocurrency donations -- another perk for extremists barred from using services such as PayPal or GoFundMe, or who want to raise money internationally. Ray, a 54-year-old Texan, was a hit.

He quickly became one of the top 20 earners on DLive, according to an analysis by online extremism expert Megan Squire of Elon University in North Carolina, who studied the period from April 2020 -- the earliest data available -- through mid-January 2021.

It's not just the police who are searching for Ray. Since September 2019, he has been flouting court orders and missing appearances in a civil case that names him as one of 24 defendants accused of conspiring to plan, promote and carry out the violent events of Charlottesville.

"(Ray) has failed to communicate with Plaintiffs and the Court in any manner --even while continuing to participate on social media, post articles on the website of The Daily Stormer, and publish podcasts," said plaintiffs' attorneys in court documents filed in June.

As for the criminal case, which charges Ray with maliciously releasing gas, authorities have labeled him a fugitive since his 2018 indictment.

To be sure, Ray -- who mysteriously stopped podcasting from DLive a few months ago -- didn't get rich on DLive. But while he was ignoring court summonses for his alleged role in organizing Unite the Right, he earned $15,000 on the platform in just six months, according to Squire's analysis. He cashed most of it out, she said.

"The idea that he's wanted for all of this stuff, but then just gets to sit at home behind a microphone and make money on the side -- I thought that was just not good at all," Squire said.

Experts say the story of Ray and DLive underscores a reality about people who get chased into the shadows by lawsuits or deplatforming crusades: There will almost always be an entrepreneur who is willing to provide a venue for exiled promoters of hate.

"Where there is demand, eventually supply finds a way," said John Bambenek, a cyber security expert who tracks the cryptocurrency accounts of extremists.

Public scrutiny drives alt-right personalities deeper into the bowels of the internet, reducing their visibility.

And while their retreat to ever more obscure corners can make it more difficult to monitor the chatter, Michael Edison Hayden, a spokesman for the Southern Poverty Law Center, says the game of whack a mole is ultimately worthwhile.

"I have seen firsthand the degree to which figures who were...extremely successful in radicalizing large numbers of people, become extraordinarily marginalized, extraordinarily fast in so-called dark corners of the internet," he said.

There are few neo-Nazi figures who have been as widely deplatformed as Andrew Anglin, publisher of The Daily Stormer, one of the web's most notorious hate sites -- and where Ray gained prominence as a writer and podcaster. Anglin's Daily Stormer was dumped by Google and GoDaddy after Anglin in a post mocked the protester who was killed in Charlottesville as a "fat, childless 32-year-old slut."

This made it more difficult for laypeople to find his site, though it has managed to stay on the internet, partially through the work of an adroit webmaster. "There was just this ongoing battle of what (the webmaster) would do in order to keep Anglin's voice online," Hayden said.

Like Ray, Anglin is on the lam. He has evaded attorneys since the summer of 2019, when he lost a spate of lawsuits. In the biggest judgment against him, Anglin was ordered by a judge to pay $14 million to a Jewish woman in Montana who had endured anti-Semitic harassment and death threats from Anglin's "troll army" of supporters. (One voicemail said: "You are surprisingly easy to find on the Internet. And in real life.") Anglin, who did not respond to CNN's request for comment, has said in court documents that he isn't living in the country.

The woman, Tanya Gersh, recently told CNN that she has yet to receive a dime of the judgment and is appalled that people are profiting from hate.

"If knowing that doesn't disgust you, we have really, really been led astray in our country," she said.

Founded in 2017, DLive, which is owned by a 30-year-old Chinese national named Justin Sun, takes a 20% cut of its streamers' revenue, according to its website.

Although DLive initially allowed far-right figures -- including Ray -- it has purged several amid scrutiny in the wake of the deadly riot at the Capitol on January 6.

That day, Anthime "Tim" Gionet, better known as "Baked Alaska," used the service to live-stream his role in the incursion. In the video, he curses out a law-enforcement officer, sits on a couch and puts his feet on a table, and can be heard saying, "1776, baby," according to an FBI affidavit. Gionet was suspended from the site, as was Nick Fuentes -- part of a White nationalist group of young radicals called the Groypers -- who was also at the January 6 rally, though he says he did not enter the Capitol. Both had already been permanently jettisoned by YouTube and other social media outlets, though Fuentes remains on Twitter.

"DLive was appalled that a number of rioters in the U.S. Capitol attack abused the platform to live stream their actions," and when its moderators become aware of the live streams, they shut them down, the company said in a statement to CNN. "All payments to those involved in the attack have been frozen."

Ray's DLive account, too, has been suspended, a company spokesman said, although the action did not publicly appear on his page until a couple of days after CNN reached out to the company on February 5. The DLive spokesman said the decision to sanction his channel was unrelated to CNN's inquiry, and that the suspension amounts to a permanent ban.

In any case, Ray stopped posting to DLive about four months ago, around the time a judge in the Unite the Right case found him in contempt. He did not respond to CNN's requests for comment.

Gionet was arrested in Houston last month, but Fuentes and Ray have both since popped up elsewhere online.

Fuentes -- DLive's top earner, who took in about $114,000 in six months ending in January -- has been scrambling to keep his podcast streaming since DLive booted him. For a few weeks, he'd figured out a way to keep using YouTube, even though the platform had dropped him, largely by using intermediaries to embed a livestream from other YouTube channels on his own website.

Squire said she spent those weeks engaged in a game of cat and mouse with him, repeatedly finding the 22-year-old Illinois native and notifying the third parties, and YouTube, of Fuentes' actions.

The third parties have mostly acted swiftly and banned Fuentes' content, Squire said. And while YouTube didn't act on all of Squire's initial reporting, the company took action when CNN flagged it.

"We've terminated multiple channels surfaced by CNN for attempting to circumvent our policies," a YouTube spokesperson said last week. "Nicholas Fuentes' channel was terminated in February 2020 after repeatedly violating our policies on hate speech and, as is the case with all terminated accounts, he is now prohibited from operating a channel on YouTube. We will continue to take the necessary steps to enforce our policies."

Following YouTube's crackdown, Fuentes began experimenting with other blockchain based technologies that enable him to stream his nightly program without being deplatformed. His recent moves have left Squire frustrated. "I don't have an answer on how to do the take downs -- I just don't know," she said.

Ray, meanwhile, appears to have retreated to another obscure streaming site, called Trovo, which is so new it is still in beta mode.

In the chat section of what appeared to be Ray's new Azzmador page on Trovo, a follower said "we missed u Azz" on January 15.

Ray has yet to livestream any podcasts on Trovo. But in recent days -- after several months of silence -- a Telegram account bearing Azzmador's logo with a link to his DLive channel burst back onto the platform with a series of racist and anti-Semitic messages.

"Harriet Tubman and MLK are both fake historical figures who had Communist Jew handlers/promoters," read one February 7 message.

Some startups see the deplatforming of online firebrands as a recruitment opportunity.

"Hey @rooshv, so sorry to see you get censored!" a Canadian company called Entropy -- which targets YouTubers and other streamers seeking to avoid censorship -- tweeted at Daryush "Roosh" Valizadeh, an online personality in the so-called "manosphere," who has touted misogynistic ideas such as that women are intellectually inferior and that rape should be legal on private property. Valizadeh -- who authored an online post called "Why are Jews behind most modern evils?" -- had just been dumped by YouTube less than a week prior, on July 13. "We would be honored to support your streams," the tweet added.

In March 2019, Entropy's three young founders were interviewed by a podcaster about their new product, and excitedly touted their first big-name user, Jean-Franois Garipy, an alt-right YouTuber who frequently featured White nationalists on one of his shows.

"He was actually the first streamer to try us out," said co-founder Rachel Constantinidis. "He tried us out for a number of months, and we were able to really improve the stability of the platform based on his feedback."

In an email to CNN, Garipy denied a CBC news article's characterization of him as supporting "ideas of white superiority and white 'ethnostates,'" saying, "no proper context was provided by the journalist to understand the circumstances in which I discussed these subjects in the past."

Fuentes and Gionet did not respond to CNN's requests for comment, and Valizadeh declined an interview.

Just as far-right provocateurs are driven underground to more niche sites when they are booted from mainstream platforms, so, too, do they often gravitate towards cryptocurrency such as bitcoin when banished from using online payment services like PayPal and GoFundMe.

"Cryptocurrencies are indispensable to them at this point," said Squire.

Because many of them were early adopters -- and because bitcoin's volatile value has recently skyrocketed -- some are now sitting on vast sums.

Most successful in this realm has been Stefan Molyneux, a Canadian vlogger who has promoted ideas of non-White inferiority and has said, "I don't view humanity as a single species." Molyneux, dropped by PayPal in late 2019, starting taking bitcoin donations in 2013 and is holding onto a chunk of the cryptocurrency that amounted to more than $27 million as of Thursday morning, said Bambenek, the cyber security expert.

(Molyneux -- who is still on Facebook and Instagram -- has also been expelled from YouTube, and has since shown up on lesser-known platforms such as BitChute, DLive and Entropy, where his audience is considerably diminished. Molyneux told CNN in an email that he stopped covering politics last year, and is now writing about parenting. He declined to answer any questions about his finances.)

BitChute, Trovo and Entropy did not respond to CNN's requests for comment.

By publishing their wallet IDs online and urging followers to donate through cryptocurrency, extremists have -- perhaps unwittingly -- provided unprecedented insight into their financials. In an attempt to cut out the middleman and combat fraud, bitcoin transactions -- including sender and recipient identifiers -- are all recorded in a public ledger, available to anyone.

Individual donations to far-right personalities mostly appear to have been small, and Bambenek said they are shrinking on the whole.

One exception: Nick Fuentes received a single donation of 13.5 bitcoin, at the time worth about $250,000, in December from a person whom researchers believe was a computer programmer in France who apparently killed himself shortly afterward, according to a Yahoo News exclusive report.

Another notable cryptocurrency enthusiast is Anglin of The Daily Stormer who, in addition to owing Gersh of Montana $14 million, has another $4.1 million judgment against him for falsely branding comedian and CNN contributor Dean Obeidallah -- an American Muslim -- as a terrorist. He also owes money to Taylor Dumpson, who, after becoming the first Black female student body president at American University, endured a harassment campaign orchestrated by The Daily Stormer. That $725,000 judgment is against Anglin, the site and one of the site's followers.

Anglin, who claims on his website to be banned from PayPal, credit card processors and even his PO Box, has been directing his donations to bitcoin since 2014. Over the years, he received more than 200 bitcoin, but most appear to have been cashed out, according to Bambenek, who said Anglin is holding on to at least 10.1 bitcoin, worth more than $525,000 as of Thursday morning.

But Anglin's cryptocurrency holdings are becoming more difficult to monitor.

While Anglin was embroiled in the Gersh lawsuit, his website started advertising donations through a more obscure cryptocurrency called Monero, which -- contrary to crypto's ethos of transparency -- keeps transactions private.

Demonetizing and deplatforming aren't the only way to defang groups and individuals who espouse identity-based hate.

"You also need to sue them," said Amy Spitalnick, executive director of Integrity First for America, a nonprofit civil rights group.

Ray and Anglin are among a couple dozen defendants named in a lawsuit underwritten by Spitalnick's group on behalf of several activists who are Charlottesville victims. The two men are accused of being part of the leadership team that not only planned the Unite the Right rallies on August 11 and 12, 2017, but primed the pump for violence.

Four of the 10 plaintiffs in the civil rights lawsuit, which is scheduled to go to trial in October, were struck by the car driven by a neo-Nazi into a throng of counter-protesters, killing Heather Heyer, whose physical appearance Anglin would later disparage. Their injuries ranged from broken bones to concussions to torn ligaments. The other plaintiffs in the suit say they have suffered emotional distress either from physical injuries inflicted during the event or from psychological trauma and have missed work as a result.

In the days leading to the Unite the Right rally, much of the planning and coordination happened on The Daily Stormer, which -- with Anglin and Ray as principal authors -- began to take on a menacing tone, according to the suit.

On August 8, the suit says, Anglin and Ray said the purpose of the upcoming rally had shifted from being in support of a Confederate monument of Robert E. Lee, "which the Jew Mayor and his Negroid Deputy have marked for destruction" to "something much bigger...which will serve as a rallying point and battle cry for the rising Alt-Right movement."

"There is a craving to return to an age of violence," Anglin wrote, according to the suit. "We want a war."

The Daily Stormer advertised the rally with a poster depicting a figure taking a sledgehammer to the Jewish Star of David.

"Join Azzmador and The Daily Stormer to end Jewish influence in America," it said.

Prior to the event, the suit says, Ray and Anglin wrote on The Daily Stormer that "Stormers" were required to bring tiki torches and should also bring pepper spray, flag poles, flags and shields.

Anglin did not attend the rally in Charlottesville, but Ray did. During the march past the synagogue, the suit alleges, he yelled at a woman to "put on a fu**ing burka" and called her a "sharia whore."

The suit says he then proclaimed: "Hitler did nothing wrong."

Fast forward three-and-a-half years. By January, Ray's once-prolific podcast had been dark for several months. His fans began to notice. On a forum called GamerUprising, somebody started a thread on January 25 called "What happened to Azzmador????"

"He just disappeared and no one even seems to care," wrote the user, who goes by "Creepy-ass Cracker."

But there are signs that Ray plans a return to podcasting as Azzmador.

On February 3, a fan on his Trovo page asked when Azzmador would begin streaming.

He responded in a word: "soon."

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How White nationalists evade the law and continue profiting off hate - Action News Now

Deadly inspirations – What their chosen reading says about America’s far-right | United States – The Economist

PANDEMICS CAN have unexpected side-effects. One of them, according to a report last year by the New York Federal Reserve, may be a surge in support for extremist ideas. It observed how cities in Germany that suffered the most deaths from influenza by 1920 then voted in unusually large numbers for extreme-right parties, such as the Nazis, by the early 1930s. In the past year, too, according to studies in Britain and America, there has been a spurt in online searches for extremist content. Anger over lockdowns or loss of trust in government could be driving new interest.

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What texts might people be turning to? Researchers study literary habits of the far-right by monitoring reading lists traded on social media, texts promoted on podcasts or recited by enthusiasts as audiobooks on YouTube, output from right-fringe publishing houses and, most extreme, the diatribes that serve as manifestos of those who commit atrocities. Together they suggest several strands of hateful writing. Brian Hughes of American University in Washington, DC says that the sheer availability of online extremist ideology is, in part, responsible for the elevated rates of extremist mobilisation.

French writers have been strikingly influential, including those in the Nouvelle Droite movement. Alain de Benoist, an illiberal thinker, inspired members of Americas alt right such as Richard Spencer, a white supremacist. The works of a philosopher, Jean Renaud Gabriel Camus, also stand out. Ideas drawn from his book The Great Replacement (2011), are often repeated by those who say non-white immigration threatens Western countries. The book has been cited by mass shooters.

The work of another French writer, Jean Raspail, is championed by anti-immigrant activists in America. His dystopian novel from 1973, The Camp of the Saints, imagines the violent overrun of France by brown-skinned migrants. It is a weaponised retelling of an apocalyptic biblical parable, says Chelsea Stieber of Catholic University. The French understand it as literature, she says, whereas in America it gets to be this reality that could happen. Leading Republicans have promoted it, she points out, including Steve Bannon and Stephen Miller, both erstwhile close advisers of Donald Trump, as well as Steve King, a noxious ex-congressman from Iowa.

Apocalyptic writing is especially popular among a strand of the far-right known as accelerationists, meaning those who believe civilisation (or at least liberal democracy) will soon collapse. They hope the end can be hastened by violent acts or even civil war. In this vein an Italian fascist writer, Julius Evola, is also cited by Mr Bannon and Mr Spencer and lauded in far-right circles, along with his call for blowing everything up. He promoted an idea of heroic men who rise above history (Mussolini was a fan). Memes of him in his monocle are shared online by adoring followers.

Extremists turn to such writers because they justify using violence to clear the way for a supposed new golden age to begin. Others tell them how to achieve that. Siege, a book by James Mason of the American Nazi party, purports to be a guide to violent revolution. It had little impact when it was published in 1992, notes Graham Macklin of the Centre for Research on Extremism, in Oslo. But its rediscovery by neo-Nazis roughly five years ago has led to a surge of interest. PDFs of it are now shared widely online; the hashtag readSiege spreads periodically on social media. Now, its everywhere, he says.

The study of such writing matters, even if one researcher admits he feels like projectile vomiting while tackling some especially violent or cruel texts. Ideas can have deadly consequences, says Joanna Mendelson of the Anti-Defamation League. People are quoting and referencing books as a kind of reassurance that they are validated in their extremist views, she says. Many of the same ones reappear repeatedly among anti-Semitic and other extremist factions. A few, such as the Protocols of the Elders of Zion (an anti-Semitic conspiracy originating from Russia in 1903), or the racist, eugenics-based writing of Lothrop Stoddard in the 1920s, are repeatedly rediscovered or reinterpreted by new writers. What used to be called eugenics, for example, is today dressed up as race realism.

One book is still considered the bible of the far right. The Turner Diaries, a barely readable novel from the 1970s by William Pierce, another American Nazi, imagines an insurrection by a group called Order against a government that promotes egalitarian values and gun control. It has supposedly sold 500,000 copies. One avid reader was Timothy McVeigh, who bombed a federal building in Oklahoma City in 1995, killing 168 people. (He used a lorry full of fertiliser and explosives, a method depicted in the novel.) Others were inspired to form a real-world paramilitary group, also called the Order.

Jared Holt, who researches domestic extremism at the Atlantic Council in Washington, says such books are still powerful. Veteran members of groups pass them on to younger ones. They are used to build ties between adherents, to test new initiates and ease the anxiety of some by giving a sense of purpose to their lives. He notes, too, how younger readers are finding new writing. One rambling, self-published book called Bronze Age Mindset, for example, has won a cult following, reportedly including staffers at Mr Trumps White House. It draws on ideas from Nietzsche and tells readers to prepare for the military rule that will soon begin in America. For some readers such bilious writing is appealing. Finding out why is a first step towards confronting it.

This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline "Deadly inspirations"

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Deadly inspirations - What their chosen reading says about America's far-right | United States - The Economist