Plot to kidnap Whitmer grew from the militia movement’s toxic mix of constitutional falsehoods – Salon

The U.S. militia movement has long been steeped in a peculiar and unquestionably mistaken interpretation of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and civil liberties.

This is true of an armed militia group that calls itself the Wolverine Watchmen, who were involved in the recently revealed plot to overthrow Michigan's government and kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

As I wrote in "Fracturing the Founding: How the Alt-Right Corrupts the Constitution," published in 2019, the crux of the militia movement's devotion to what I have called the "alt-right constitution" is a toxic mix of constitutional falsehoods and half-truths.

Private militias

The term "militia" has many meanings.

The Constitution addresses militias in Article 1, authorizing Congress to "provide for organizing, arming and disciplining, the Militia."

But the Constitution makes no provision for private militias, like the far-right Wolverine Watchmen, Proud Boys, Michigan Militia and the Oath Keepers, to name just a few.

Private militias are simply groups of like-minded men members are almost always white males who subscribe to a sometimes confusing set of beliefs about an avaricious federal government that is hostile to white men and white heritage, and the sanctity of the right to bear arms and private property. They believe that government is under the control of Jews, the United Nations, international banking interests, Leftists, Antifa, Black Lives Matter and so on. There is no evidence of this.

On Oct. 8, the FBI arrested six men, five of them from Michigan, and charged them with conspiring to kidnap Whitmer. Shortly thereafter, state authorities charged an additional seven men with, according to the Associated Press, "allegedly seeking to storm the Michigan Capitol and seek a "civil war." Included were the founders and several members of the Wolverine Watchmen.

As revealed in the FBI affidavit accompanying the federal charges, the six men charged claimed to be defenders of the Bill of Rights. Indeed, some of the men in April had participated in rallies in Lansing, the state capital, where armed citizens tried to force their way onto the floor of the State House to protest Governor Whitmer's pandemic shut-down orders as a violation of the Constitution by a "tyrannical" government intent upon sacrificing civil liberties in the name of the COVID-19 fight.

According to the FBI's affidavit, the conspirators wanted to create "a society that followed the U.S. Bill of Rights and where they could be self-sufficient."

Militia members imagine themselves to be "the last true American patriots," "the modern defenders of the United States Constitution in general and the Second Amendment in particular."

Hence, the Bill of Rights and especially the Second Amendment, which establishes the right to bear arms figure prominently in the alt-constitution. It is no accident that the initial discussions about overthrowing Michigan's so-called tyrannical governor started at a Second Amendment rally in June.

According to most militias, the Second Amendment authorizes their activity and likewise makes them free of legal regulation by the state. In truth, the Second Amendment does nothing to authorize private armed militias. Private armed militias are explicitly illegal in every state.

No restrictions on rights

Additional foundational principles of militia constitutionalism include absolutism. Absolutism, in the militia world, is the idea that fundamental constitutional rights like freedom of speech, the right to bear arms and the right to own property cannot be restricted or regulated by the state without a citizen's consent.

The far right's reading of the First and Second Amendments which govern free speech and the right to bear arms, respectively starts from a simple premise: Both amendments are literal and absolute. They believe that the First Amendment allows them to say anything, anytime, anywhere, to anyone, without consequence or reproach by government or even by other citizens who disagree or take offense at their speech.

Similarly, the alt-right gun advocates hold that the Second Amendment protects their God-given right to own a weapon any weapon and that governmental efforts to deny, restrict or even to register their weapons must be unconstitutional. They think the Second Amendment trumps every other provision in the Constitution.

Another key belief among militia members is the principle of constitutional self-help. That's the belief that citizens, acting on their inherent authority as sovereign free men, are ultimately and finally responsible for enforcing the Constitution as they understand it.

Demonstrating this way of thinking, the men arrested in Michigan discussed taking Gov. Whitmer to a "secure location" in Wisconsin to stand "trial" for treason prior to the Nov. 3 election. According to Barry County, Michigan Sheriff Dar Leaf a member of the militia-friendly Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officer Association the men arrested in Michigan were perhaps not trying to kidnap the governor but were instead simply making a citizen's arrest.

Leaf, who appeared at a Grand Rapids protest in May of Gov. Whitmer's stay-at-home order along with two of the alleged kidnappers, mistakenly believes that local sheriffs are the highest constitutional authority in the United States, invested with the right to determine which laws support and which laws violate the Constitution. The events in Michigan show how dangerous these mistaken understandings of the Constitution can be.

There will be more

The Wolverine Watchmen are not a Second Amendment militia or constitutional patriots in any sense of the word. If they are guilty of the charges brought against them, then they are terrorists.

[Deep knowledge, daily. Sign up for The Conversation's newsletter.]

The FBI and Michigan law enforcement shut down the Watchmen before an egregious crime and a terrible human tragedy unfolded. But as I concluded just last year in my book, "there is little reason to think the militia movement will subside soon."

Unfortunately, I did not account for the possibility that President Trump would encourage militias "to stand back and stand by," which seems likely to encourage and embolden groups that already clearly represent a threat. Expect more Michigans.

This story incorporates material from a story published on April 15, 2019 in The Conversation.

John E. Finn, Professor Emeritus of Government, Wesleyan University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Go here to read the rest:

Plot to kidnap Whitmer grew from the militia movement's toxic mix of constitutional falsehoods - Salon

Column: Plot to kidnap Whitmer grew from the militia movement’s toxic mix of constitutional falsehoods and half-truths Michigan Advance – Michigan…

The U.S. militia movement has long been steeped in a peculiar and unquestionably mistaken interpretation of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and civil liberties.

This is true of an armed militia group that calls itself the Wolverine Watchmen, who were involved in the recently revealed plot to overthrow Michigans government and kidnap Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.

As I wrote in Fracturing the Founding: How the Alt-Right Corrupts the Constitution, published in 2019, the crux of the militia movements devotion to what I have called the alt-right constitution is a toxic mix of constitutional falsehoods and half-truths.

The term militia has many meanings.

The Constitution addresses militias in Article 1, authorizing Congress to provide for organizing, arming and disciplining, the Militia.

We will find you: Whitmer warns extremists after thwarted kidnapping plot

But the Constitution makes no provision for private militias, like the far-right Wolverine Watchmen, Proud Boys, Michigan Militia and the Oath Keepers, to name just a few.

Private militias are simply groups of like-minded men members are almost always white males who subscribe to a sometimes confusing set of beliefs about an avaricious federal government that is hostile to white men and white heritage, and the sanctity of the right to bear arms and private property. They believe that government is under the control of Jews, the United Nations, international banking interests, Leftists, Antifa, Black Lives Matter and so on. There is no evidence of this.

On Oct. 8, the FBI arrested six men, five of them from Michigan, and charged them with conspiring to kidnap Whitmer. Shortly thereafter, state authorities charged an additional seven men with, according to the Associated Press, allegedly seeking to storm the Michigan Capitol and seek a civil war. Included were the founders and several members of the Wolverine Watchmen.

As revealed in the FBI affidavit accompanying the federal charges, the six men charged claimed to be defenders of the Bill of Rights. Indeed, some of the men in April had participated in rallies in Lansing, the state capital, where armed citizens tried to force their way onto the floor of the State House to protest Governor Whitmers pandemic shut-down orders as a violation of the Constitution by a tyrannical government intent upon sacrificing civil liberties in the name of the COVID-19 fight.

According to the FBIs affidavit, the conspirators wanted to create a society that followed the U.S. Bill of Rights and where they could be self-sufficient.

Militia members imagine themselves to be the last true American patriots, the modern defenders of the United States Constitution in general and the Second Amendment in particular.

Hence, the Bill of Rights and especially the Second Amendment, which establishes the right to bear arms figure prominently in the alt-constitution. It is no accident that the initial discussions about overthrowing Michigans so-called tyrannical governor started at a Second Amendment rally in June.

According to most militias, the Second Amendment authorizes their activity and likewise makes them free of legal regulation by the state. In truth, the Second Amendment does nothing to authorize private armed militias. Private armed militias are explicitly illegal in every state.

Additional foundational principles of militia constitutionalism include absolutism. Absolutism, in the militia world, is the idea that fundamental constitutional rights like freedom of speech, the right to bear arms and the right to own property cannot be restricted or regulated by the state without a citizens consent.

The far rights reading of the First and Second Amendments which govern free speech and the right to bear arms, respectively starts from a simple premise: Both amendments are literal and absolute. They believe that the First Amendment allows them to say anything, anytime, anywhere, to anyone, without consequence or reproach by government or even by other citizens who disagree or take offense at their speech.

Susan J. Demas: Protestors threatened Whitmers murder. GOP leaders havent condemned them.

Similarly, the alt-right gun advocates hold that the Second Amendment protects their God-given right to own a weapon any weapon and that governmental efforts to deny, restrict or even to register their weapons must be unconstitutional. They think the Second Amendment trumps every other provision in the Constitution.

Another key belief among militia members is the principle of constitutional self-help. Thats the belief that citizens, acting on their inherent authority as sovereign free men, are ultimately and finally responsible for enforcing the Constitution as they understand it.

Demonstrating this way of thinking, the men arrested in Michigan discussed taking Gov. Whitmer to a secure location in Wisconsin to stand trial for treason prior to the Nov. 3 election. According to Barry County Sheriff Dar Leaf a member of the militia-friendly Constitutional Sheriffs and Peace Officer Association the men arrested in Michigan were perhaps not trying to kidnap the governor but were instead simply making a citizens arrest.

Leaf, who appeared at a Grand Rapids protest in May of Gov. Whitmers stay-home order along with two of the alleged kidnappers, mistakenly believes that local sheriffs are the highest constitutional authority in the United States, invested with the right to determine which laws support and which laws violate the Constitution. The events in Michigan show how dangerous these mistaken understandings of the Constitution can be.

Militia threats just paralyzed Oregons legislature. The movements roots in Michigan run deep.

The Wolverine Watchmen are not a Second Amendment militia or constitutional patriots in any sense of the word. If they are guilty of the charges brought against them, then they are terrorists.

The FBI and Michigan law enforcement shut down the Watchmen before an egregious crime and a terrible human tragedy unfolded. But as I concluded just last year in my book, there is little reason to think the militia movement will subside soon.

Unfortunately, I did not account for the possibility that President Trump would encourage militias to stand back and stand by, which seems likely to encourage and embolden groups that already clearly represent a threat. Expect more Michigans.

This article is republished from our partners at The Conversation. Read the original article.

Originally posted here:

Column: Plot to kidnap Whitmer grew from the militia movement's toxic mix of constitutional falsehoods and half-truths Michigan Advance - Michigan...

Hong Kong and the University’s Free Speech Responsibility – The Chicago Maroon

The University of Chicago has a long, proud commitment to freedom of speech. After the Communist Party USAs presidential candidate called for the violent abolition of capitalism on campus in 1935, the University president defended the seditious speech before a special session in the Illinois Senate. More recently, the University administration generated controversy and earned plaudits for rejecting safe spaces and promoting Chicago Principles of free expression. The report that outlines these principles states, the University has a solemn responsibility not only to promote a lively and fearless freedom of debate and deliberation, but also to protect that freedom when others attempt to restrict it.

However, months into the most alarming restriction of campus free speech in decades, the University administration has not lifted a finger or said a peep. If it really does care about the freedom of speech, the University must do more than end its silence. It must act decisively and again lead academia on the issue.

After a year of protests, the Peoples Republic of China imposed a new national security law on Hong Kong this June. The law harshly penalizes broadly defined crimes including sedition, subversion, terrorism, and colluding with foreign forces and advocating secession from mainland China. Most disquietingly, the laws Article 38 asserts extraterritorial jurisdiction to prosecute activism and offenses committed against the Hong Kong Special AdministrativeRegion from outside the Region by a person who is not a permanent resident of the Region."

In other words, the law applies to everybody inside Hong Kong and out. It applies to you.

Beijing has a history of seeking the extradition of non-Chinese citizens to China for criminal prosecution. Students at American universities are not exempt from its pursuits and crackdowns. Just this year, a 20-year-old University of Minnesota student was sentenced to six months of imprisonment upon returning to China for tweets posted while in the U.S. The tweets were deemed to portray a national leader in an unflattering light because they likened him to a certain banned cartoon bear and "created a negative social impact."

Hong Kong student activists as young as 16 have already been arrested under the national security law for social media posts that called for regaining [Hong Kongs]right of self-determination. Hong Kong authorities have also released the arrest warrant for Samuel Chua Hong Kong-born activist and community organizer who has lived in the U.S. since 1990 and has American citizenship.

Many UChicago students unable to return to Hyde Park are currently taking classes remotely from Hong Kong and mainland China. As Zoom classes are recorded and stored as files, and many classes require blog posts, there is a real risk of immediate arrest for remarks made in class discussions and writing. While this risk is most acute for mainland Chinese and Hong Kongstudents, it exists for any and all students and faculty who may one day visit Hong Kong.

Classes at other universities now carry labels to alert students that they will cover material considered politically sensitive by China, and their professors are experimenting with blind grading, codes in place of individual names, anonymous online chats, and allowing students to opt-out of discussions without an impact on their grade.

UChicagos Tom Ginsburg, Leo Spitz Professor of International Law and Professor of Political Science, has a regional specialty in East Asia and has written specifically about the national security law. He confirmed that he has received no guidance from the University administration on what privacy precautions he should take. Ginsburg wrote to me, I do think that, in our era of remote attendance, those of us who teach relevant subjects should be aware if we have students who are physically located in Chinese territory, including Hong Kong, that might be at risk. He uses blind grading and supports giving such students the option to opt-out of discussions that may violate local law.

The University of Chicago must uniformly adopt the measures advised by the Association for Asian Studies and the additional suggestions of Asia Society scholars. While some may be, and have already been, adopted by individual faculty, technology policies and video software are university-wide concerns.

Zooms cooperation with mainland Chinese authorities is worrying, and the University must further inquire into which local laws its technology partners comply with to ensure that student and faculty data are secure. The collection of student and staff data of any kind must be minimized, and data storage must be decentralized. Overreliance on Zoom is dangerous; having multiple and redundant software systems would further decentralize and mitigate the risk of one company deciding to comply with Chinese law in ways that jeopardize data security and student safety.

Unless the University takes decisive action soon, an arguably more dangerous threat to academic freedom will worsen: self-censorship.

Author George Packer wrote, Fear breeds self-censorship, and self-censorship is more insidious than the state-imposed kind because its a surer way of killing the impulse to think, which requires an unfettered mind. At a time when U.S.-China relations have deteriorated to their worst state in decades, we cannot afford to suspend rigorous inquiry and research into the affairs of the worlds most populous country. Students and professors must be able to continue honest, candid, and complete discussions about Hong Kong and mainland China in line with the Chicago Principles of which the University administration is so proud.

Ginsburg emailed me, The purpose [of uncensored academic discussion] is not advocacy but analysis. I think it can be both. When students are arrested for social media posts and pro-democracy professors are fired for dissidence, to resist self-censorship and forthrightly analyze the politically sensitive are acts of solidarity. When under the shadow of totalitarian censorship, studying and speaking freely are not neutral.

Good people can disagree over whether Steve Bannon should speak on campus. But surely all can agree that being imprisoned for a Winnie the Pooh tweet is as unjust as it is absurd.

Until the University administration rises to the challenge of ensuring its communitys safety, let us continue to speak, study, think, and tweet freely and merrily. We must.

Devin Haas is a third year in the College.

Excerpt from:

Hong Kong and the University's Free Speech Responsibility - The Chicago Maroon

Attack on teacher in France rekindles debate on free speech and Islam – Vox.com

The murder last week of a teacher who used images of the Prophet Muhammad in lessons about freedom of expression by a teenage Muslim refugee has sparked a solidarity movement in France and reignited the debate over Islams role in the country.

History and geography teacher Samuel Paty, 47, brought scrutiny this month when he showed his 12- to 14-year-old students two caricatures of Muhammad published by the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo the same images that in 2015 inspired jihadists to kill 11 staff members at the magazine and six others in Paris. Parents and teachers at the school, located just 20 miles outside the capital, said Paty gave his Muslim pupils the opportunity to leave the classroom or look away so as not to anger them.

Idolatry is forbidden in Islam, and many devout Muslims believe any depictions of Mohammed, or any revered prophet, to be taboo. But many also found the Charlie Hebdo drawings particularly offensive not just because they depicted the prophet, but because they did so in a way that some critics said perpetuated racist, bigoted stereotypes of Muslims.

A weeks-long uproar ensued. One students father called for a mobilization against Paty including his firing and posted the schools address and the teachers name on social media. An Islamist militant even accompanied upset parents to the school to push for the instructors ouster.

But the situation turned deadly last Friday when Abdoullakh Abouyezidovitch, an 18-year-old refugee from Chechnya, beheaded Paty with a butcher knife as the teacher made his way home. French authorities said the suspected attacker, who lived about 40 miles away from the school, asked students to identify Paty moments before killing him. The teenager was shot dead after he tried to stab and shoot back at authorities who closed in on him.

Police found a Twitter account suspected of belonging to the attacker since he posted a picture of the severed head along with a message: I have executed one of the dogs from hell who dared to put Muhammad down.

French President Emmanuel Macron, who on Saturday visited the site of the murder, said the beheading appeared to be an Islamist terrorist attack committed because Paty taught freedom of expression. He added that the terrorist sought to attack the republic and its values, further noting this is our battle and it is existential. They [terrorists] will not succeed. They will not divide us.

On Monday, police raided numerous homes across France as part of its probe into Patys killing. About 15 people have been taken into custody and 51 Islamic organizations are under investigation, Interior Minister Grald Darmanin said on Monday. The enemies of the Republic wont be given a minutes respite, he told the Europe 1 radio station.

Its no surprise France is taking the suspected terror attack very seriously. Since the Charlie Hebdo assault in 2015, the last few years have seen high-profile knife attacks, strikes against police on the Champs-lyses, and a coordinated assault in Paris that killed 130 people and injured hundreds more.

But Fridays killing strikes at the core of two of Frances most turbulent debates, which of late have somewhat fused together: whether there should be limits on freedom of speech, and how Muslims should integrate into French society.

And its a conversation that could continue to roil the nations politics for years to come.

For over a year, Macron promised to detail his views on the role of Islam in Frances secular culture. On October 2, he finally delivered that address.

What we must attack is Islamist separatism, he told the nation, saying extremists preyed upon desperate Muslims in desolate neighborhoods, basically creating anti-French enclaves by spreading their radical Islamic ideology and project.

We built our own separatism ourselves, he continued, arguing French authorities made such a situation possible by huddling immigrants together in areas apart from good-paying jobs or French public schools. To solve the problem, he offered some reforms, like within four years forbidding foreign-trained imams (Muslim religious leaders) to preach in France. Instead, all imams must be certified in the country in order to lead a congregation.

It was clear Macron, who has long called for an Islam of France that seamlessly integrates Muslims into the countrys society, aimed to distinguish between extremists and all Muslims. Still, his speech, and the thinking underlying it, received mixed reviews.

Some said his statements namely, Islam is a religion that is in crisis today, all over the world were incendiary, not measured. They also accuse Macron, who is up for reelection in 18 months, of trying to garner some right-wing bona fides by taking a tougher stance against Islamic extremism. The repression of Muslims has been a threat, now it is a promise, tweeted Yasser Louati, a French Muslim activist.

Others, like the Atlantic Council think tanks Benjamin Haddad, said the speech and Macrons views on the issue set the right tone.

It underlined the urgency to fight separatism, Haddad, who has defended Macrons policies in Washington, DC, since 2017, told me. Its really more about certain neighborhoods and areas that arent necessarily violent ... but will progressively socialize radical ideology as French republican ideals cant get through anymore. Its more than an ideological fight, he added. Were talking about losing territory.

If you go to Paris, everyone will tell you theres a problem. Its one of the deepest societal problems in France today, he concluded.

But what the disagreement over Macrons speech underscores is how France has struggled to accept Muslims as they come. For example, the country has banned headscarves in public schools and for government employees while at work. The government says such measures are meant to help Muslims integrate with Frances secular culture, while critics say the focus on Islamic garb stems from bigotry.

This issue burst out into the open after the terrorist attack following the Charlie Hebdo cartoons. Local debate roiled over whether outlets should refrain from producing images of Mohammad, as Islamic teaching forbids, or whether doing so is a celebration of Frances history of criticizing all religions. After all, the magazine often lampoons religious leaders like the pope.

Thousands took to Frances streets to defend that history. On Sunday, they rallied in major cities like Paris, Lyon, and Marseille in defiance of the attack, in Patys memory, and to bolster the notion that freedom of expression in France has no limits even if that leads one to show images of the Islamic prophet.

We are the result of our history: These values of liberty, secularism and democracy cannot remain just words, a demonstrator in Paris told French media. We have to keep them alive, and being here helps do that.

Politicians who attended the rallies made similar comments. I want teachers to know that, after this ignoble act, the whole country is behind them, French Prime Minister Jean Castex said on Sunday. This tragedy affects each and every one of us because, through this teacher, it is the republic that was attacked.

Importantly, the number of racist attacks in France, including against Muslims, has dropped in recent years. Such statistics offer hope that the potential scapegoating of Muslims in the coming weeks and months may not lead to a rise in hate crimes.

But Macrons policies and the aftermath of the attack indicate that Muslims are once again under a national microscope. That, at the very least, wont help with the assimilation problems the country aims to solve.

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Attack on teacher in France rekindles debate on free speech and Islam - Vox.com

Why We Must Maintain Sanctity of Free Speech and Ethics in Journalism – The Leaflet

As a hallmark of modern society, freedom of speech and press has seen consistent erosion in recent times. Journalists must rededicate themselves to the ideals of objectivity and scientific inquiry that made journalism a noble profession, writes MOIN QAZI.

Comment is free, butfacts are sacred

-C P Scott

Free speech or the freedom of expression is the modern civilizations most precious gift to human society. Free-speech advocates typically claim that the value of unfettered expression outweighs any harm it might cause, offering assurances that any such harm will be minimal.

The key to the invention of free speech was the recognition of pluralismthat, in any human population, there will be people with irreconcilably different understandings of the truth.

While free speech is not absolute in most societies, the qualifying restrictions are only those which constrict speech which may be deleterious to the social good.

Repressing speech has costs, but so does allowing it.

A mature way to judge the system would be to look at both sides of the ledger. Free speech cant be reaffirmed by drowning out its opponents. It has to be defended as, in the words of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, an experiment as all life is an experiment.

Speech is a tool of change and revolution and a free press is the best public medium of expression of free speech.

A free press is the foundation of a healthy and vibrant democracy. Transparency and vigilance, which are hallmarks of an independent press, are critical to democracy. They also serve as powerful weapons against forces, ranging fromcorruptionto bad business practices that undermine economic prosperity.

The vision of better, stronger, and more robust economies is not possible without high-quality journalism.

In an ideal world, journalism is a profession of incredible integrity and journalists are among the most dexterous and skilled people in the world.

We have all benefited from the work of persistent journalists who put life, limb, family and even sanity on the line in their pursuit of truth. There is no sane, decent, and democratic polity possible without journalists who challenge power and relentlessly pursue to disseminate the truth.

It is however tragic that press freedom and independence, a staple ingredient of all great democracies worldwide, is declining.

Newspapers every morning have pages and pages of advertorial content, and newspaper editors know, as do we all, that it becomes impossible to distinguish between paid news and actual, unbiased news.

The press once seemed to have a conscience, thanks to historys painful social conflicts and questions of war and peace. The world, however, has changed, and many of us may be in the time warp of old values. Like all institutions, the media has also suffered. Whatever its position or character, a press should have a soul of its own.

In the modern journalistic paradigm, the news has become not what the facts are, but what men wish to see.

Human beings are poor witnesses, easily misled by a personal bias, profoundly influenced by their social environment. As products of their society, journalists are no exceptions

Perhaps the most vulnerable institution is the free press, and the most disposable people are journalists.

If theyre doing their job right, they can have friends in powerful places. Around the world, new systems of control are taking hold. They are stifling the global conversation and impeding the development of policies and solutions based on an informed understanding of the local realities.

We are seeing new abuses that were unimaginable earlier.

Newspapers every morning have pages and pages of advertorial content, and newspaper editors know, as do we all, that it becomes impossible to distinguish between paid news and actual, unbiased news.

Regulations for these malpractices have yet to be put in place.

Paid news is a fraud on the public and, when it is passed off as the real thing, must be regulated.

One good development in modern times has been technology. It has made it more and more difficult for a small group to effectively control the means of communication. This has also been aided by the proliferation of social media.

Yet, despite the safeguards for freedom of expression, several societies continue to use diabolic methods for chilling free speech and free press.

For the media to be credible, it has to take responsibility for getting its facts right.

That means digging deep, talking to a range of people to get the different sides of the story, and checking their facts rigorously. It should not hesitate to root out and expose lies, hypocrisy, and corruption, but has to be sure of its facts before doing so.

Walter Lippmann, who would become the most influential champion of journalistic objectivity, believed in the reimagination of journalism as a kind of scientific inquiry, subject to the disciplines of testing and verification.

Protecting the freedom of the press is a dynamic area of law.

Shifting trends and the advancement in communication technology require a re-examination of the underlying principle and its application in new contexts. The constant evolution requires deep thinking and the introduction of proper checks and balances. It may at times be difficult to strike the right balance. Freedom of the press, like several other precious freedoms, must be placed outside the reach of political exigency.

Walter Lippmann, who would become the most influential champion of journalistic objectivity, believed in the reimagination of journalism as a kind of scientific inquiry, subject to the disciplines of testing and verification. In his book, Liberty and the News, Lippman argues that good reporting must be based on the exercise of the highest scientific virtues. According to him, the best reporters are not slick persons who scoop the news, but the patient and fearless men of science who have laboured to see what the world really is.

Journalists will need to rededicate themselves to the mission that made journalism the noble calling of so many great women and men.

Journalists will need to rededicate themselves to the mission that made journalism the noble calling of so many great women and men. Their commitment to the values of liberty and freedom has earned the press the status of the Fourth Estate alongside the other three custodians of free speech and democracy.

It is time journalists reaffirmed their commitment to the credo of Joseph Pulitzer III (1913-1993), the founder of the worlds gold standard in journalism, the Pulitzer Prize: We will illuminate dark places and, with a deep sense of responsibility, interpret these troubled times.

(Moin Qazi is a development professional. Views are personal.)

Originally posted here:

Why We Must Maintain Sanctity of Free Speech and Ethics in Journalism - The Leaflet

Free speech should not be used to push a political agenda – Binghamton University Pipe Dream

On Oct. 8, Pipe Dream reported that Binghamton University is being investigated by the Department of Education for allegedly failing to protect the free speech rights of conservative student groups. Two months earlier, the BU College Republicans and Young Americas Foundation (YAF) had filed a lawsuit alleging the existence of a Speech Suppression Policy which supposedly authorizes [BU] officials . to prohibit, chill, oppose and shut down speech with which they, or other students and faculty, disagree. Now that one of the most tense cultural cleavages has made its way into BU, we must ask what exactly the debate over freedom of speech means in the realm of academia.

On Nov. 14, 2019, the College Republicans and Turning Point USA (TPUSA) held a preplanned tabling event, displaying pro-gun signs. Earlier that day, in Santa Clarita, California, there was a school shooting in which the gunman killed two students before shooting himself. Even after the news broke here in New York, the students chose to keep the pro-gun signs up. This crucial stipulation, in my view, is what led to roughly 200 students showing up to the Spine in order to protest the group.

We often overlook the reality that with freedom comes the responsibility of how we use our freedoms, and the associated consequences of our actions. Thus, whenever we express ourselves, particularly when expressing unpopular opinions, we must likewise be prepared to own up to the consequences of our actions. So when these student groups chose to continue displaying their signs, even after hearing there was a mass shooting and were well aware that these images may provoke a passionate reaction, they shouldnt be surprised, or even complain, when other students respond to them even in a group of 200.

Its also been noted that TPUSA has not yet been chartered by the BU Student Association (SA), nor did they receive a permit to table. However, since BU is a public institution, it is subject to First Amendment regulations, particularly the Supreme Court case Tinker v. Des Moines, which guarantees freedom of expression in public schools with the exception of speech which causes undue disruption to the educational process (e.g. inappropriate behavior in a classroom). So, for the sake of argument, lets assume that the First Amendment rights of these groups trumps University regulation.

That being said, I believe that some at the initial protest went too far in destroying the property of the student groups. Likewise, I also believe that the disruption of Arthur Laffers Trump, Tariffs, Trade Wars events was unacceptable. Even if one cant grant me that it is morally wrong to disrupt unpopular speech, from a practical standpoint there is no utility in doing so and is politically regressive, allowing groups such as TPUSA to use these incidents in order to demonize the opposition.

Despite the actions of these protesters, upon carefully and objectively examining the Universitys response to these events and the protests they sparked, although insufficient, it seems theres nothing to prove the existence of any Speech Suppression Policy. This isnt to say that no one should have been accountable for the disruption of Laffers speaking engagement, but that accountability falls on the individuals and the organizations which promoted the disruption of the event, not the University administration.

It has become typical of conservatives across the country to often deride institutions of higher education for allegedly promoting a liberal agenda, and by extension suppressing conservative viewpoints. As such, conservatives have taken the mantle as the defenders of freedom of speech and groups, such as TPUSA and its BU chapter have used Novembers events to catapult themselves into the national spotlight, garnering notoriety in conservative circles. Yet when Black Lives Matter protesters are assaulted by police, or detained without due process, these groups have remained silent, revealing the true purpose of these accusations and others like them across the nation.

Conservative groups dont really care about defending free speech rights, or at least the free speech rights of their opponents. Rather, conservative organizations employ a scorched Earth approach to politics, seeking to incite political tensions as they did last November not just for the purpose of publicity, but to take political conversations away from major issues and shift them toward the actions of individuals, who are framed as being representative of the entire political opposition (i.e. the Left).

Although I believe the traditional left-right binary is an inaccurate method of viewing our politics, this country is indeed divided. Not between left and right, however, but between students with a multicultural outlook and those who are more nationalistic two competing ideas of what the country should look like. The battle for free speech is the latest manifestation of the culture war, with students caught up in interpersonal conflict, calling one another every kind of -ist in the book (e.g. fascist, communist, etc.), while ignoring the substance of the issues they are fighting about.

But rather than debating the issues in and of themselves, one side seeks to incite others for political gain, while the other falls for it. Let me be clear that I, in no way, support the disruption of anyones speech, and I believe that progressive student organizations should avoid the temptation to lash out in the face of provocation. But whats most important is that all political conversations are substantive when we do discuss issues like freedom of speech, we must also consider them in the context of movements such as Black Lives Matter, which has seen massive suppression at the hands of state actors.

From police officers driving into protesters in New York City to masked Department of Homeland Security agents arresting protesters without proper due process, protesters and organizers for Black Lives Matter have systematically had their civil liberties violated, all while groups like our campus chapter of TPUSA have declared Its time for leftist thugs to pay. Rather than getting bogged down in petty arguments with conservative groups, leftists and those who claim to truly support free speech must stand in solidarity with movements like Black Lives Matter, which have actually seen their free speech rights violated only then do we actually defend the speaking rights of all people.

Colin Mangan is an undeclared sophomore.

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Free speech should not be used to push a political agenda - Binghamton University Pipe Dream

Crypto Tax Evasion Is A Criminal Offense – Forbes

The US Attorney Generals Cyber Digital Task Force recently issued a comprehensive report outlining the United States framework for enforcement against cryptocurrency-related crimes. This report explains emerging threats, enforcement challenges, and case studies. According to the task force report, tax evasion is one of the three major ways bad actors use cryptocurrency. This report adds to other reports issued in 2020 by regulators such as GAO, TIGTA, OECD where crypto taxes have been the main theme.

According to the IRS Tax Crimes Handbook, there are two kinds of tax evasion: evasion of assessment and evasion of payment.

Evasion of assessment is the more common of the two and occurs when someone willfully attempts to omit income from taxes, significantly underreports income, or overstates deductions. The Cyber Digital Task Force report points out: not reporting capital gains from the sale or other disposition of the cryptocurrency, not reporting business income received in cryptocurrency, not reporting wages paid in cryptocurrency, or using cryptocurrency to facilitate false invoice schemes designed to fraudulently reduce business income are examples of evasion of assessments

The report further states that these are frequently seen evasion of assessment scenarios in the cryptocurrency world. Evasion of payment occurs after the tax assessment is made and the taxpayer conceals funds or other assets that could be used to pay off the tax liability.

The recent indictment of John McAfee exemplifies both of these scenarios. According to the Department of Justice (DOJ), McAfee earned millions in income from promoting cryptocurrencies, consulting work, speaking engagements, and selling the rights to his life story for a documentary. From 2014 to 2018, McAfee allegedly failed to file tax returns, despite receiving considerable income from these sources (evasion of assessment). Further, McAfee attempted to evade the IRS by concealing assets, including real property, a vehicle, and a yacht, in the names of others (evasion of payment).

Tax evasion is a serious offense. Upon conviction, wrongdoers can be fined up to $100,000 ($500,000 for corporations) or imprisoned up to five years plus the cost of prosecution.

Local and global regulators have paid a tremendous amount of attention to the cryptocurrency world in 2020, specifically with a focus on taxes. This is a notable difference compared to previous years where regulators primarily focused on security fraud concerns related to Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs). At the beginning of the year, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) issued a report suggesting the IRS improve cryptocurrency tax enforcement efforts. This was reinforced again by the TIGTA report issued in October. And just this week, the OECD recommended tax authorities all over the world to form a uniform effective tax policy for cryptocurrencies. Governments everywhere are waking up to cryptocurrency taxes, so make sure that your filings are up to date.

Disclaimer: This post is informational only and is not intended as tax advice. For tax advice, please consult a tax professional.

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Crypto Tax Evasion Is A Criminal Offense - Forbes

McAfee Sets Terms of IPO, Hoping to Raise Up to $682 Million – TheStreet

McAfee, the cybersecurity company founded by tech eccentric John McAfee, has set the terms for its initial public offering, hoping to raise as much as $682 million.

McAfee, based in San Jose, plans to sell 37 million shares at a price of $19 to $22 each. The stock will trade on Nasdaq, with the ticker symbol MCFE, the company said in an SEC filing.

Of the 37 million shares, 30,982,558 will come from the company and 6,017,442 from existing stockholders. McAfee expects to have 165.44 million Class A shares outstanding after the IPO.

Including class B shares, the company would have a valuation of between $9.5 billion and $10 billion at the top of the pricing range.

In the six months through June 27, McAfee posted profit of $31 million, swinging from a loss of $146 million in the year-earlier period. Revenue rose 9% to $1.4 billion from $1.29 billion.

John McAfee founded McAfee Associates in 1987 and ran it until 1994, when he left the company.

McAfees anti-virus software was a market leader along with Norton in the 1990s and 2000s. It sold itself to Intel INTC for $7.7 billion in 2011.

In 2016, Intel sold a 51% stake to the San Francisco private-equity firm TPG for $1.1 billion. In its IPO prospectus, McAfee cites TPG and Chicago PE firm Thoma Bravo as investors.

After leaving McAfee Associates, John McAfee founded a raft of companies, including Tribal Voice, which offers the PowWow chat program; QuorumEx and Future Tense Central.

In 2016 he sought the Libertarian Party nomination for president, losing to former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson. He gave it another shot this year, to no avail.

McAfee was arrested last week in Spain and is facing extradition to the U.S. on tax evasion charges. In a statement announcing the charges, the Department of Justice noted "The indictment does not allege that during these years McAfee received any income or had any connection with the anti-virus company bearing his name."

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McAfee Sets Terms of IPO, Hoping to Raise Up to $682 Million - TheStreet

McAfee IPO: 5 things to know about the security-software company – MarketWatch

The McAfee logo is displayed at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona on Feb. 25, 2019. (Agence France-Presse/Getty Images)

McAfee Corp. plans to return to the public markets after nearly a decade as a private company, but the security-software company is re-emerging as a structured entity that would take a team of lawyers and accountants to truly explain.

On Tuesday, McAfee MCFE, established a projected price range for its initial public offering of $19 to $22 a share, after initially filing for an IPO in late September. The company plans to list under the ticker MCFE on the Nasdaq. Underwriters include Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, TPG Capital, BofA Securities, and Citigroup. The IPO involves 37 million shares, or 42.6 million if underwriters exercise all options to cover overallotments.

McAfee reportedly plans to price the IPO late Wednesday, with trading to begin on Thursday.

Here are five things you should know.

A little more than a decade ago, Intel Corp. INTC, +0.77% announced it was buying McAfee for $7.7 billion in a deal that closed the following year. About five years later,Intel sold a majority stake in McAfee to private-equity firm TPGfor $4.2 billion. The following year, Thoma Bravo cut a deal with TPG to take a minority stake.

Rumors that McAfee would go public have been circulatingfor more than a year, but its owners chose to make the leap amid a strong year for IPOs. The Renaissance IPO ETF IPO, -0.12% is up 80% this year, compared with a 34% gain in 2019 and an 18% loss in 2018. The S&P 500 index SPX, -1.63% is up 8% this year, following a 29% gain in 2019, and a 6% loss in 2018.

When all is said and done, TPG, Thoma Bravo and Intel will control about 82.2% of the voting power.

Following the IPO there will be two classes of stock, up to 166.7 million Class A shares and up to 264.7 million Class B shares, and each of those classes will carry one vote.

But thats where simplicity ends, because those class distinctions are mixed up with a witches brew of exchanges of management incentive units and LLC units and reorganization transactions, as shown in this chart from the companys filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

How all the moving parts fit together is not easy to deduce even after several readings of the SEC filing, but the bottom line appears to be that public stockholders will get 22.4% economic interest in the company with only 8.6% voting interest.

The security software company brought in $2.64 billion in revenue in 2019 for a loss of $236 million, according to McAfees S-1 filing. For the first 26 weeks of 2020, the company reported revenue of $1.4 billion and net income of $31 million, as long as you adjust the numbers for the massive reorganization and other factors

When the reorganization transactions and other pro forma adjustments are taken into account, McAfee ran at a $3 million loss for the first half of 2020.

McAfee said it plans to use about $525 million to repay all outstanding obligations with respect to our Second Lien Term Loan, while it estimates that if shares price at the midpoint of the range, or $20.50 a share, it will net about $612 million if underwriters exercise their full options of shares.

Thats only a drop in the bucket for McAfees debt after its private-equity flip, however. In its financial statements, McAfee lists $4.66 billion in debt, which it estimates should get cut down to $4.15 billion after the offering.

The recent arrest and federal charges against John McAfee, who founded the company in 1987 and left it in 1994, dont pose a risk to the IPO, according to the SEC filing.

In its indictment, the Justice Department noted that from 2014 to 2018, when John McAfee is alleged to have not filed tax returns, he did not receive any income or had any connection with the antivirus company bearing his name. In 2017, John McAfee and Intel settled a lawsuit where McAfee agreed not to use his name or trademark his name in any security-related products or services.

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McAfee IPO: 5 things to know about the security-software company - MarketWatch

SEC Regulatory Actions For September and October 2020 – Bitrates

The SEC has taken action on various cryptocurrency-related issues in recent weeks. These developments are notable.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is one of the most active regulators in the blockchain industry. Over the past several weeks, it has taken action against several crypto companies and startups. At the same time, it has put forward suggestions that could improve opportunities for cooperative companies. These are the SEC's most notable actions during September and October 2020:

On Oct. 5, the SEC charged crypto celebrity John McAfee with promoting ICO sales for profit. The SEC alleges that McAfee earned $23 million worth of cryptocurrency by endorsing the relevant projects, and by misrepresenting his relationship with those projects. The SEC now seeks to fine and penalize McAfee and prevent him from serving in leadership roles in a public company. The U.S. Justice Department has also charged McAfee with tax evasion for reasons related to the case.

On Oct. 2, SEC chairman Jay Clayton suggested that the regulator is open to tokenized stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Clayton stated that the SEC is "willing to try that" and that its "door is wide open." It does not appear that Clayton is open to a Bitcoin ETF, which has been a long-standing issue for the SEC. Rather, Clayton seems to be suggesting that traditional financial institutions may choose to represent their assets on a blockchain or digital ledger in the future.

On Sept. 21, the SEC commented on an OCC statement on stablecoins. The OCC's original statement effectively gives some banks and savings institutions the authority to handle tokens pegged to the U.S. dollar, as long as those tokens meet certain criteria. The SEC, however, intends to regulate stablecoins and determine whether those coins are securities, based on "facts and circumstances." This makes it clear that new stablecoin projects will not be exempt from scrutiny.

In early September, various news outlets reported that the trading firm Robinhood is facing a joint investigation from the SEC and FINRA. There appear to be two issues at stake. In the first, the SEC is investigating customer complaints around service interruptions in March. In the second, the SEC is investigating Robinhood's failure to disclose deals with high-speed traders. Though no public announcements have been made, insider sources suggest that Robinhood may have to pay a $10 million fine.

On Sept. 15, the SEC revealed that it has settled with Unikrn, a cryptocurrency-based eSports betting company. The SEC charged Unikrn with operating a $31 million unregistered securities offering; now, Unikrn will pay a penalty of $6 million and return funds to investors. Unikrn will not be forced to admit or deny the findings, and the company says that the business will continue to go forward. However, the company will abandon its native token in favor of established cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin.

On Oct. 30, the SEC charged SALT Lending with operating an unregistered ICO. The crypto lending and borrowing platform raised $47 million in 2017. Now, SALT has agreed to settle with the SEC by paying a civil penalty of $250,000 and establishing a claims process that allows investors to return their tokens for a refund. SALT does not need to admit or deny the findings, and like most crypto companies in a similar position, it will continue to operate as usual.

On Sept. 30, a lawsuit between the SEC and the blockchain company Kin produced a ruling. A district court in New York ruled that Kin's 2017 ICO constituted an unregistered securities offering. However, this is not the end of the story: the ruling only impacts the possibility of a summary judgment, and Kin and the SEC will continue to battle in court. Kin believes that the SEC's regulations are unclear, conflicting, and a problem for the entire blockchain industry. The conflict has been ongoing since January 2019.

The past several weeks have made the SEC's stance on crypto clear. Settlements and charges from the SEC have reinforced the fact that crypto startups will need to work quite closely with the regulator in the future if they want to succeed. However, the SEC has also made it clear that it is interested in seeking out new ideas and products. Hopefully, up-and-coming crypto firms are not discouraged by the strict situation.

Disclaimer: information contained herein is provided without considering your personal circumstances, therefore should not be construed as financial advice, investment recommendation or an offer of, or solicitation for, any transactions in cryptocurrencies.

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SEC Regulatory Actions For September and October 2020 - Bitrates

Corrections: Oct. 13, 2020 – The New York Times

INTERNATIONAL

An article on Friday about protests in Indonesia described incorrectly a jobs bill that was passed by Indonesias Parliament. Although the bill contained a provision allowing companies to eliminate paid maternity and menstrual leave, it was removed before final passage.

An article on Thursday about preparation by election officials anticipating unrest at the polls misstated the increase in volunteers recruited by the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. The group said its volunteers had increased from 5,000 to over 21,000, not from 500 to over 2,100.

A chart with an article on Thursday about polls of likely voters in Nevada and Ohio mislabeled the responses that voters could choose. To the question, How should politicians campaign in person? the responses were Large crowds and Small crowds, not Yes and No.

A chart with an article on Friday about stock market gains made by executives during the economic downturn sparked by the pandemic carried the wrong photograph for the president of Peloton Interactive. It showed John Foley, the companys chief executive, not William Lynch, the companys president.

An article on Wednesday about the arrest of the software engineer John McAfee referred incorrectly to the potential prison terms he faces. The five counts of failure to file taxes each carry a maximum one-year sentence, while the five tax evasion counts each carry a maximum of five years.

An obituary on Sept. 23 about the activist and adventurer Henrietta Boggs referred incorrectly to the civil war after which Jos Figueres Ferrer, her husband at the time, became president of Costa Rica in 1948. It lasted about six weeks, not four years; and Mr. Ferrer restored democracy to Costa Rica he did not establish a democracy.

An obituary on Friday about Stephen Barnes of the law firm Cellino & Barnes referred incorrectly to his niece Elizabeth D. Barnes, who died in the same plane crash that killed Mr. Barnes. She was a lawyer with the federal Department of Health and Human Services, not with Cellino & Barnes. The earlier version also misstated the number of lawyers employed by the firm in 2017. It was 50, not 250.

Errors are corrected during the press run whenever possible, so some errors noted here may not have appeared in all editions.

To contact the newsroom regarding correction requests, complaints or other comments about our coverage, please email nytnews@nytimes.com.

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Corrections: Oct. 13, 2020 - The New York Times

The Feds Are Watching: 3 Things To Know About Crypto Tax Evasion, A Crime – Moguldom

Written by Dana Sanchez

Oct 19, 2020

The Internal Revenue Service is paying an extraordinary amount of attention to cryptocurrency-related taxes. It wants you to know that crypto tax evasion is a criminal offense, and it wants you to be afraid. Be very afraid.

Fear appears to be working.

Chandan Lodha is chief operating officer of CoinTracker, a software firm selling crypto tax-prep services. Many of the companys new customers are seeking help, not just with 2019 forms but also for earlier yearspresumably to amend prior returns, Lodha told Wall Street Journal.

Based on what were seeing, people are starting to get scared, Lodha said.

Here are three things to know about crypto tax evasion.

The IRS this question to the front page of the standard 1040 form:At any time during 2020, did you sell, receive, send, exchange or otherwise acquire any financial interest in any virtual currency?

The question appears, just below the taxpayers name and address. Its the first question youll see and you have to check the box yes or no.

The government made an example out of Silicon Valley legend John McAfee, an antivirus software pioneer and former presidential candidate who was recently arrested in Spain on tax-evasion charges, the U.S. Justice Department said in an Oct. 5 announcement. The U.S. is seeking McAfees extradition.

McAfee allegedly earned millions in income from promoting cryptocurrencies, consulting work, speaking engagements, and selling the rights to his life story for a documentary. From 2014 to 2018, McAfee he allegedly failed to file tax returns. He evaded taxes by paying income into bank and crypto-exchange accounts in other peoples names. He is accused of concealing assets including real property, a vehicle and yacht.

U.S. Attorney General Bill Barrs Cyber Digital Task Force this month issued a report outlining enforcement against cryptocurrency-related crimes. Tax evasion is one of the three major ways bad actors use cryptocurrency, Forbes reported.

Tax evaders can be fined up to $100,000 ($500,000 for corporations) or imprisoned up to five years plus the cost of prosecution.

Listen to GHOGH with Jamarlin Martin | Episode 73: Jamarlin Martin Jamarlin makes the case for why this is a multi-factor rebellion vs. just protests about George Floyd. He discusses the Democratic Partys sneaky relationship with the police in cities and states under Dem control, and why Joe Biden is a cop and the Steve Jobs of mass incarceration.

The IRS treats virtual currency as property for tax purposes, which means that the general tax principles that apply to property transactions also apply to virtual currency transactions. It also means the I.R.S. can seize your cryptocurrency.

Income, including capital gains, from virtual currency transactions is taxable, and virtual currency transactions themselves must be reported on a taxpayers income tax return. Wages paid in virtual currency to employees are also taxable, reportable on a Form W-2, and subject to withholding and payroll taxes.

Tax cheats may believe that the Internal Revenue Service is not able to uncover or attribute their cryptocurrency transactions, and they mayeven use additional anonymizing features of cryptocurrencies to further obfuscate their transactions, according to the report. Tax cheats may then attempt tax evasion by, among other things, not reporting capital gains from the sale or other disposition of their cryptocurrency, not reporting business income received in cryptocurrency, not reporting wages paid in cryptocurrency, or using cryptocurrency to facilitate false invoice schemes designed to fraudulently reduce business income.

Read more: Looking For You, Bitcoin: IRS Moves Surveillance Crypto Question To The Top Of Page 1 On 1040 Tax Form

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The Feds Are Watching: 3 Things To Know About Crypto Tax Evasion, A Crime - Moguldom

April Freely Appointed Executive Director of Fire Island Artist Residency – Artforum

April Freely has been named the new executive director of the Fire Island Artist Residency, the New York organization founded in 2011 as the first residency to provide resources exclusively to emerging lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer-identifying artists and poets. Previously the program coordinator at the Vermont Studio Center, the largest arts residency in the US, Freely will succeed cofounder Chris Bogia, who will transition to the board of directors.

In this time of transformation, I am excited to learn and grow with this organization, building upon the impressive legacy FIAR has established as a home for LGBTQ+ artists and poets, said Freely, who was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and is now based in Harlem. It is my honor to serve this vibrant and dedicated community of artists and allies, and I look forward to our work together.

In addition to her credentials as an administrator and fundraiser, Freely is a poet and writer who holds graduate degrees in nonfiction and poetry from the University of Iowa and New York University. She is a professor at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, recently received a 20202021 Queer Arts Mentorship fellowship in literature, and has published essays on artists in The Kenyon Review and in several artist monographs includingJennifer Packer: Tenderheaded(Renaissance Society, 2018).

Other arrivals to FIAR include six new members of the board of directors: Brooklyn-based artist Paolo Arao; Washington, DCbased doctor of psychiatry Marc Dalton; Brooklyn-based artist Damien Davis; New Yorkbased lawyer Christian Escobar; Chicagoan artist Derrick Woods-Morrow; Chris E. Vargas, an artist based between Bellingham, Washington, and Los Angeles; and Brian Vines, a New Yorkbased journalist.

Aprils vision, exemplified by her own creative practice and professional and lived experiences, is the future face of FIAR, said board president Jeremy E. Steinke. We are excited to welcome April and all of our new board members to embark on our next decade of creating space for and amplifying the voices of LGBTQ+ artists and poets.

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April Freely Appointed Executive Director of Fire Island Artist Residency - Artforum

UFC Fight Island 6 Bonus Coverage – The Official Website of the Ultimate Fighting Championship

In her flyweight debut, Jessica Andrade announced herself as a fun and new flyweight contender with a bulldozing finish of Katlyn Chookagian in the first round.

Andrade showed that the height and length difference was no factor, closing the distance with ease and landing a takedown within the first minute of the bout. While Chookagian did well to return to her feet, but Andrades well-known strength helped to maintain pressure along the fence and wear on Chookagian. After dealing with some rangy strikes from the former title challenger, Andrade secured her signature slam and unleashed some ground-and-pound. As the two rose to their feet, Andrade unleashed a hook to the body that got a big reaction from Chookagian. Immediately, Andrade blitzed Chookagian, quickly landing another short shot to the body that crumbled the American, securing a win in her third weight class.

UFC 254 On The Rise

With the flyweight division wide-open and begging for a challenger to Valentina Shevchenko, Andrade is potentially the most interesting and most dangerous threat to the indominable 125-pound champion thus far.

Visit Abu Dhabi:http://www.abudhabievents.ae/

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UFC Fight Island 6 Bonus Coverage - The Official Website of the Ultimate Fighting Championship

Do not be pressured to expose our island – The Garden Island

An open letter to Mayor Kawakami, Gov. Ige, Lt. Gov. Green, and all Hawaii leaders:

I would like to begin by offering my most sincere compliments of adoration in the exemplary job you have done in protecting what you love: We The People of Kauai.

Because of your teams sane and scientific based approach to protecting our vulnerable island from the deadly global pandemic of COVID-19, we are a leader in the world of having zero to no cases on our tiny island of only nine ICU beds.

I first moved to Kauai in 1994 and then vowed to always protect what I love: The island of Kauai and her people. I keep my vow and implore you to please do the right thing: KEEP THE TWO-WEEK QUARANTINE UNTIL THE END OF THE PANDEMIC.

A someone who has been the sole caretaker of my frail, 85-yearold mother, who has lived on Kauai since 2009, my mom has bravely fought cancer, two major heart surgeries, and more, all in the past six years. My mother was in the ICU for three days during cancer as she battled for her life and won, thanks to the amazing job of our dedicated doctors at Wilcox Hospital. We all are very aware how easily overrun Wilcox can be with only nine ICU beds.

Exactly 100 years ago, The Spanish Flu came to Kauai and killed 500 Kauaians. We must not repeat history!

While I am very aware of how much our island is suffering from the economic depression we find ourselves in due to the fact that Kauai is so heavily co-dependent on tourism, the ends do not justify the means. We cannot sacrifice the health of the people for the profits of a few.

Whether you are Hawaiians or not, born and raised here or a kamaaina, Kauai lives matter! Kupuna lives matter!

We The People of Kauai have done such a wonderful job at keeping this virus at bay. We wear our masks. We social distance. We are following the law.

PLEASE DO NOT SELL OUT THE PEOPLE FOR PROFIT!

Myself, and many others voted for you to protect us, take care of us, as good leaders do.

Let it be known that myself and thousands of others implore you to do the right thing: DO NOT BE PRESSURED TO OPEN THE FLOODGATES TO NEGLIGENT TOURISM!

For once the virus takes hold here, all hope will be lost, and our island will never be the same again. One life lost is too many.

Please help me protect my mother, my neighbor, my community and myself from this deadly virus, of which there is currently no cure. The only cure is keeping it OFF of Kauai.

Also, please remember, that during times of a national crisis, the power is bestowed on you, dear mayor.

Mahalo nui loa for continuing to be of great service and protecting We The People of Kauai.

Abundant blessings of health to you and your ohana.

Mahana Dunn is the founder and president of Indigo Foundation, a 503-c-3 nonprofit of Hawaii.

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Do not be pressured to expose our island - The Garden Island

Joint Statement from the Citizens for Eagle Island and The Howard Hughes Corporation – hellowoodlands.com

The Howard Hughes Corporation and the Citizens for Eagle Island released the following joint statement on October 19, 2020.

Good Faith Agreement for the prudent development, of the island, where American Bald Eagles are present, at East Shore, that sets a limit of no more than 30 lots to be developed on the Island.

Today, the Citizens for Eagle Island (CEI) and The Howard Hughes Corporation (HHC) announced that, after a series of good faith meetings, they have reached a fundamental consensus on a vision for the future development of the island in East Shore, currently referred to by local residents, as Eagle Island.

HHC and the CEI are pleased to announce that HHC has committed to a revised development plan which would include 25-30 single-family detached homes, that will create an exclusive high-end residential development that sets aside green space for the American Bald Eagle family; complements the existing East Shore community; and harmonizes with the current real estate market.

According to the existing Initial Land Use Designation (ILUD), the island was to be used exclusively for up to nineteen (19) single-family detached residential units. On July 27, 2020, HHC filed a Replat with a Variance Request before the Houston Planning Commission (HPC) seeking to replat the island, which would have theoretically allowed the company to instead develop up to fifty-eight (58) single-family detached units comprised of three lot sizes.

Upon receiving notification of the replat with variance, local residents formed an organization called Citizens for Eagle Island; created an opposition letter and petition; and worked with community leaders to strongly voice their environmental and societal concerns to HHC aboutthe requested change. Following meetings with residents, HHC a long-standing and well regarded civic-minded business of The Woodlands withdrew its Replat Variance Request and committed to a series of meetings designed to find middle ground with the community.

President of the Citizens for Eagle Island, Ms. Tami Houston, welcomed the revised development plan. Having an environmentally sound ecosystem on the Island is clearly in the best interest of our entire community; both now and well into the future, she said. This is a real opportunity for The Howard Hughes Corporation and our citizens to jointly showcase a world-class green residential development and, that as a corporate citizen, HHC truly cares about the long-term health of our community; the American Bald Eagle species; and the generations to come. We will continue to work with the Howard Hughes team in good faith and our group looks forward to being kept in-the-loop with real time development drawings and updates. To this end, we plan to present our recommendations before The Woodlands Design Standards Committee (DSC) at their upcoming November 4, 2020 meeting.

Mr. Heath Melton, Executive Vice President, MPC Howard Hughes Corporation, stated, Guided by a commitment to transparency and cooperation, this revised application is the most recent example of our long history of working closely with residents, village associations, HOAs and Community groups to reach mutually acceptable development plans. Following several meaningful and productive conversations with the East Shore residents, we made the decision to change our plan from 58 to a maximum of 30 lots. As a demonstration of our commitment to this reduction, we have submitted a revised application for an amended Initial Land Use Designation (ILUD) to the Development Standards Committee of The Woodlands. Melton went on to say, We look forward to maintaining consistent contact with the East Shore residents as the planning process for the island proceeds.

HHC and CEI are very pleased with the dynamic community-based approach that facilitated a mutual resolution.

Source: The Howard Hughes Corporation

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Joint Statement from the Citizens for Eagle Island and The Howard Hughes Corporation - hellowoodlands.com

Donor offers $250K for lighthouse work near Mackinac Island, now its a race against winter – MLive.com

ROUND ISLAND, MI - Mother Natures clock is ticking when it comes to the Round Island Lighthouse. This iconic sentry, sitting in the Straits of Mackinac just across from Mackinac Island, is in serious need of more riprap rock. The massive stones placed in the water just off the base of the historic lighthouse are designed to prevent the waves and the coming winters ice from working together to damage the structure in this high-water era on the Great Lakes.

A fundraising campaign for the work got a big boost when an anonymous donor recently offered $250K to take the volunteer-run Round Island Lighthouse Preservation Society past the financial mark it needed to pay for the rock work.

The group is working with the U.S. Forest Service, which oversees the uninhabited island, to arrange for a marine contractor to do the work before winters harsh weather arrives. But there might be a timing wrinkle with the state permit needed for the work.

In order to get approval, the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy (EGLE) typically requires a 20-day public input stretch before the state permit can be issued, society members say.

Given the Great Lakes' penchant for November gales, theres no telling what that work window will look like next month, says Matt McMullen, board chairman of the preservation society.

We dont really have 20 days, McMullen said. We are trying to find a way to speed up this process. I know that there are procedures, but there is a fire burning and we need to put it out," he said, referencing the probability of the lighthouse being damaged this winter and spring.

There is a chance the permit approval process can be done faster, a state spokesperson said.

High water levels are affecting shoreline areas and structures around the state, including historic facilities such as the Round Island Lighthouse. To help property owners impacted by record-setting water levels, the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy has been expediting the review of shoreline protection permit applications where critical infrastructure, public health or private structures are in jeopardy, said Nick Assendelft, who handles EGLEs media relations and public information for Great Lakes issues. EGLE is reviewing the recently completed Round Island Lighthouse application for proposed shoreline protection. EGLE will work with the applicants to address this matter in an expedited manner if emergency measures are necessary.

Round Island's historic lighthouse, seen here with Mackinac Island's Grand Hotel in the background. High water has spurred a fundraising campaign to help protect the structure.

Without more protective riprap to keep the waves at bay, McMullen and other society members are worried that next springs thaw will break up a winters worth of ice, and it will be driven by waves into the structure. The lighthouse, built in 1895, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Lighthouse fans dont want to see a repeat of the damage done by storms in 1972 that famously took out a chunk of the buildings side, exposing it to the elements. Pictures of that crumbled lighthouse made it onto a postcard and spurred the first public fundraising efforts to save the lighthouse.

Since it has not been used for navigation in the Straits for decades, Round Island Lighthouse long ago was placed under the auspices of the U.S. Forest Service the Hiawatha National Forest unit, to be exact. The preservation society and Boy Scout members handle much of the annual maintenance, and spearheaded the funding drive for the new loads of rock when it was clear Forest Service didnt have the budget surplus to cover it.

Initially, it didnt look like the volunteers would raise enough money for the project this season. But a donor who wishes to remain anonymous reached out to McMullen recently, asking pointed questions about the project, then coming back with the large donation. The person said Round Island Lighthouse holds a sentimental place in their familys heart, and they wanted to pay for the riprap project.

I about broke down crying on the phone, said McMullen, who has been a big cheerleader for this project.

McMullen said the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has already given the project a green light, and hes looking into whether the marine contractor can stage the needed materials nearby, so workers can be ready to go once the state gives its approval.

The window of opportunity is fast closing, he said.

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Donor offers $250K for lighthouse work near Mackinac Island, now its a race against winter - MLive.com

On Brazils Island of Cats, Virus Led to Starvation – VOA Learning English

All the local people knew Furtada Island was full of cats.

People left food for the cats and even brought tourists. Then the coronavirus crisis hit, and human support for the animals stopped. That is when fishermen witnessed something very sad: a group of cats eating dead cats.

Furtada Island is widely known as Island of the Cats. It is just west of Rio de Janeiro and 20 minutes by motorboat from the city of Mangaratiba. It sits on one side of Brazils Green Coast, an area known for its mountainous forests and hundreds of small islands.

Over the years, fishermen threw unwanted pieces of fish and unneeded catch onto the island to feed the cats. Other people left containers filled with water and store-bought cat food. That has helped the hundreds of animals stay fed.

Some of the cats on Furtada Island are new arrivals. They lack the skills of their wild-born relatives, which climb trees to raid birds homes.

When the pandemic forced people to stay at home, tourism slowed and restaurants that serve seafood closed. Boat traffic around the island fell sharply and with it, the cats food and water supply.

Locals did not realize the situation on the island until the fishermen reported back in April.

The number of boats fell, the number of tourists, and we saw the condition of those animals on the island, said 58-year-old Jorge de Morais. He works with a local group that rescues animals from abuse. So, we went to work, he said.

He and other volunteers asked local businesses for donations. In April, they started putting simple food and water dispensers on the island. The dispensers were made from plastic pipes.

Now, volunteers make weekly trips to add food and water to the machines.

Recently, de Morais and three others returned to the island, where thick plant life spills down to meet a rocky coast.

Cats that are recently discarded, theyre more sociable, said Joice Puchalski, the organizer of the group. You saw we can get close and touch them, she said. But not the wild ones. They all are hidden. You see them at night, because of their eyes, she said.

The population of nearly 250 cats can be traced back to a man and woman who lived on the island around 20 years ago, Puchalski said. They left and did not take their two cats. So those animals did what most creatures, when left alone, would do. They had babies. As the cat population grew, people took notice. And some saw it as a place to leave unwanted cats from the city.

Brazilian officials are exploring ways to prevent people from leaving animals on the island. It is already a crime, but signs noting that have had little effect.

Karla de Lucas is responsible for animal protection in Rio state. She inspected the Island of the Cats in June. And she met with the Navy and environmental officials to explore punishments, a statement said. Last month, Brazils Congress passed a law increasing the punishment for abuse of cats and dogs. Those arrested for the crime can serve up to five years in prison.

There are no freshwater springs on the island and limited drinking water causes kidney problems for the cats, Puchalski said. But the biggest problem is bites from poisonous snakes. Another animal, a kind of lizard, will also attack and hurt young cats. And some cats are injured when boatmen throw them onto the rocks.

The volunteers bring cats to the mainland, as needed, for medical treatment. They try to find someone to adopt each animal. If that does not happen, they bring it back to the island so they can help others requiring medical attention.

It is a job that is never finished, Puchalski said.

We really need someone who can join forces with us to try to heal this criminality that, for us, is cruelty, she said.

Im Alice Bryant.

The Associated Press reported this story. Alice Bryant adapted it for VOA Learning English. George Grow was the editor.

________________________________________________________________

tourist n. a person who travels to a place for pleasure

pandemic n. an occurrence in which a disease spreads very quickly and affects a large number of people over a wide area or throughout the world

dispenser n. a machine or container that lets you take small amounts of something

discard v. to throw something away because it is useless or unwanted

trace v. to follow something back to its cause, beginning, or origin

kidney n. either of two organs in your body that remove waste products from your blood and make urine

snake n. an animal that has a long, thin body and no arms or legs

adopt v. to take a child (or animal) legally as your own child

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On Brazils Island of Cats, Virus Led to Starvation - VOA Learning English

Rock Island High hosts public forums on renovations – WHBF – OurQuadCities.com

The Rock Island-Milan School District will host three forums to gather feedback on the proposed Rock Island High School entrance renovation and building additions presented Sept. 23 to the Board of Education.

Representatives from Legat Architects and Bush Construction will present the building layouts.

The first forum virtual will be 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 21, via Zoom.Information to log on to the forum can be found at rimsd41.org.

The next two events on Oct. 28 will be in-person forums: one for RIHS students and one for parents and/or community members. Gatherings will be limited to 40 attendees each,and there will be a registration process.

All attendees must adhere to social-distancing guidelines and wear a mask during the hour-long events.

To see renovation and addition plans, forum details and feedback form, visitwww.rimsd41.organd click on the Capital Projects tab.

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Rock Island High hosts public forums on renovations - WHBF - OurQuadCities.com

The Third Day Theory: Helen Is The Mother Of Osea Island – Screen Rant

The Third Day has already (mostly) sealed Sam's fate on Osea Island, but could his wife Helen also be destined to join him on the island?

WARNING: Spoilers forThe Third Dayahead

In HBO's limited seriesThe Third Day episode 4, "Monday - The Mother", Helen (Naomie Harris) comes to Osea with her daughters, looking for her husband, Sam (Jude Law), but it's possible she might also be connected to the island and unable to leave.

Helen travels to Osea at first under false pretenses: she's trying to celebrate her daughter's birthday by indulging her interest in archaeology. However, the disgruntled preteen insists that she's no longer interested in archaeology, and her repeated insistence serves to further state that Helen's motivations likely run much deeper than what's presented on the surface. The ending of "Monday - The Mother" shows a family photo with Helen and her family, which includes the primary protagonist of the first three episodes, Sam. Sam initially came to Osea to grieve his murdered son, Nathan, who he sees in what appear to be strange visions as he spends more time on the island. Sam mentions his wife and two daughters repeatedly, but has an affair with Jess (Katherine Waterston).

Related: Every Way The Third Day Copies JJ Abrams' Lost

The first three episodes ofThe Third Daylargely tell Sam's story, and reveal that he's destined to become the Father of Osea. He's linked to the founder of the island, and was always meant to come home. Osea seems to have a greater influence on the rest of the world, which is why it's strange inhabitants are so keen on keeping the status quo and their strange traditions. It's said that Osea is the "soul of the world"; if the island is sick, the whole world will be sick. While it could just be a strange belief system or urban legend, the islanders take their role very seriously and, while Sam is hesitant to take on his birthright as Father at first, he later accepts his place in "The Big House" when he's told that he can be reunited with his son. Similarly, the final three episodes seem geared toward Helen's story, which could mean that she's meant to be Osea's "Mother" and reunite with her family for better or worse.

Sam and Helen both seemed to be drawn to Osea to find something precious to them that was lost. In Sam's case, he was going to grieve Nathan's death and find answerswhich he seems to hope will lead to closureabout the event. Helen is seemingly looking for answers about Sam's disappearance; his behavior was increasingly erratic before he left with a large sum of money, and the fact that he'd abandon his remaining family seemed suspect. Helen shows determination and grit from the beginning, outwardly refusing to be turned away when she tries to get the island's residents to honor her Air BnB reservation for her family vacation, and even going so far as to break into someone's house for shelter. She's relentless in her pursuit of answers, a far cry from Sam who wanted solutions, but was too caught up in his emotions and his affair with Jess to go after what he desired with the same tenacity.

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The Third Day Theory: Helen Is The Mother Of Osea Island - Screen Rant