Kermis: Is Oregon prepared to pioneer new approach to drug abuse? – McMinnville News-Register

In November, Oregon voters will have the opportunity to vote on Measure 110, the Drug Addiction Treatment and Recovery Act. And action couldnt come too soon.

The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the already deadly addiction epidemic in America, increasing the desperate need in Oregon for drug and alcohol rehabilitation services.

Joseph Kertis is a veteran healthcare professional turned journalist. Former clinical director at a drug and alcohol treatment center, his experience in substance abuse and addiction recovery give him a unique insight into our nations opioid epidemic. He uses this knowledge in his writing to present an expert view in hopes of spreading awareness through education. Based in neighboring Lincoln County, he is a featured author on the healthcare website, http://www.addicted.org.

According to proponents, one of every 11 Oregon residents is struggling with a substance disorder. And Oregon ranks dead last in the nation in providing the treatment they need.

Given the lack of national focus on expanding human services, and Oregons poor record on addiction treatment, youd think the measure would be headed for a landslide win. Its hard to imagine anyone opposing a measure with such a laudable title and goal.

However, Measure 110 has managed to draw considerable controversy, mainly due to its decriminalization component.

The initiative aims to decriminalize simple non-commercial possession of nearly all drugs within the states borders. Now a Class A misdemeanor subject to a year in prison and $6,250 fine, possession would become a Class E violation with a $100 fine or submission to an addiction assessment.

Those found in possession of a small, personal amount of most drugs would be given a citation, much like a traffic ticket. Instead of paying the associated fine, they would have the option to participate in a drug and alcohol assessment to determine their need for treatment.

The measure would leave stiff criminal penalties unchanged for those engaged in manufacture and sales. However, that requirement doesnt sway the opposition.

Opponents are concerned the initiatives treatment orientation might cause lazy voters unknowingly to decriminalize possession for a wide range of drugs, including cocaine, methamphetamine and heroin.

Thats something they oppose. They maintain it causes addiction rates to skyrocket and and alienate law enforcement officers as allies in the war on drugs.

The official ballot title reads, Provides statewide addiction recovery services; marijuana taxes partially finance; reclassifies possession penalties for speecific drugs. Opponents feel that misses the mark when it comes to decriminalization.

Another controversial aspect is the proposed treatment funding source tax revenue from the sale of legal marijuana.

Oregon has a history of being on the cutting edge, and so it was with Measure 91, passed in 2014. The measure went beyond previous decriminalization to authorize legal recreational marijuana consumption and cultivation.

Since then, Oregon has continued to reap financial benefits from the highly taxed industry. In 2019, Oregons cannabis tax revenue topped $102 million, a 24% increase from 2018.

Currently, 25% of that revenue is split between prevention and treatment for mental health issues and drug abuse, almost $50 million over the last two years.

Should Measure 110 pass in November, revenue exceeding $45 million would be used to fund increased access to substance abuse treatment. That figures to nearly double current funding for the addiction component.

The move to decriminalize possession and expand treatment options has gained impetus from the recent unrest triggered by the death of George Floyd at police hands. A keynote of the Black Lives Matter movement, which has been drawing a sharp increase in media coverage and public support in the wake of Floyds death, is changing the emphasis from punishment to treatment for those caught in the throes of addiction.

Its no secret African American and other ethnic minority groups are disproportionately targeted for drug arrests.

A recent report from Albany, New York, noted 97% of the 134 marijuana cases prosecuted criminally there focused on Black defendants. Systemic racism is still prevalent in the criminal justice system, despite the attention focused on reform in recent months.

Drug arrests can ruin someones life. They can trap people in the legal system and tag them with a permanent criminal record, severely limiting their future options.

Assessing fines such defendants are often unable to pay inevitably leads to further violations and charges. Before they know it, they become engulfed in the system.

Black Americans remain the target of these charges more often than not, despite representing a vastly smaller percentage of both the overall population and population of drug abusers. Despite Oregons recent status as a bastion of progressive policy, its history is fraught with racism.

Oregon at its inception was the only state to ban Black people from its borders. As a legacy, Portland remains 72.2% white, making it the whitest major city in America. This demonstrates the lasting impact systemic racism can have on shaping the landscape of America.

As with any ballot measure, valid arguments can be made both for and against. And incorporating two layers of complexity adds to the dilemma.

Voters are not just choosing to increase funding for addiction treatment. Having already voted to decriminalize marijuana, they are now being asked to allow harder drugs as well a step no other state has taken.

However, proponents feel the two issues inextricably connected.

Two separate measures, one to decriminalize drug use and the other to expand treatment for drug addition, could produce different results, they argue. And that could leave one hand working without the other.

So far, the opposition has focused mainly on the Drug Addiction Treatment and Recovery Act title. It considers omission of the interconnected decriminalization element deceptive.

Maybe its time opponents moved on to issues raised in the actual workings of the act.

Perhaps they should be considering questions such as how many times a user can afford $100 to put off seeking help. Or what happens to people who cant even pay a $100 fine the first time, because they are homeless and without resources. Is it fair to deny them a choice?

As an addiction recovery advocate of long standing, Measure 110 seems to contain more positives than negatives to me, upon full examination of the big picture. But this doesnt mean its an entirely sensible and unflawed proposal.

Thankfully, those who want to know before making up their mind can read the full measure in advance.

There are multiple sources. Heres one: https://ballotpedia.org/Oregon_Measure_110,_Drug_Decriminalization_and_Addiction_Treatment_Initiative_(2020)

If we dont care enough to vote at all, or to reach reasoned judgments when we do cast ballots, what do the results matter anyway?

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Kermis: Is Oregon prepared to pioneer new approach to drug abuse? - McMinnville News-Register

Letters to the Editor: September 4, 2020 – West Hawaii Today

Residents cleaning highway should be honored for service

If there were awards for meritorious citizen service it should go to Kaeti Ecker and Sarah Govier, the two ladies who on their own time have for the past few months been picking up trash from the side of Queen Kaahumanu Highway between Palani Road and Kaiminani Drive as reported in West Hawaii Today on Aug. 27.

This stretch of road has long been an embarrassment for us residents and a Third World eyesore for visitors, though perhaps the latter are so dazed by being in paradise they dont notice all the trash. I have contacted state and county agencies about this, but the answer is always limited manpower or other priorities, which I can believe since its all the government can do to keep the weeds mowed in the center dividing strip.

Now that Ecker and Govier have shown what two motivated people can do to improve our community, how about one of the service clubs or tourism promotion groups stepping up to take this on as their ongoing project? What do you say Lions, Rotary, Kiwanis, Kona-Kohala Chamber of Commerce, Hawaii Island Visitors Bureau or others? Youve got some woman and manpower and I cant think of a better use to which it could be put then to help these two women to make Kona an attractive community when the tourists return. And to Kaeti and Sarah, a big mahalo.

John Kitchen

Kona

More of a deterrent needed

I read about those aquarium fish poachers recently and wondered why arent they penalized more. Just having their equipment taken is not enough to deter them from breaking the law again. Why not tell them the next time it will be their boats as well? Maybe that might put fear into them. Frankly, Im sure these guys have done this before and gotten away with it. so charge them for what they would have made on their haul of poached fish.

Colleen Wallis

Kailua-Kona

A step toward racial justice

In the time of COVID-19, while living on an island with very few Black people, what can we do to help ensure that Black lives really matter? Certainly, Black Americans need something more concrete than our thoughts and prayers.

First, and foremost, we should abolish two institutions that represent modern slavery: private prisons and the so-called War on Drugs.

The USA has 4% of the worlds population and 25% of the worlds prisoners. Most inmates are incarcerated on drug charges, with people of color imprisoned at four times the rate of other people, despite using drugs at the same rate as white people. Clearly the War on Drugs is really a War on People. Any politician who will not work to end the War on Drugs should never get our vote.

Private prisons create a powerful and sinister lobby that works to keep the prisons full. That might be the stupidest idea in history. We need to end this vested interest that wants its citizens in jail.

This is just a start, but implementing these two changes could be a wonderful step forward toward racial justice for our beloved land of the free.

Charlie Webb

Kailua-Kona

Letters policy

Letters to the editor should be 300 words or less and will be edited for style and grammar. Longer viewpoint guest columns may not exceed 800 words. Submit online at http://www.westhawaiitoday.com/?p=118321, via email to letters@westhawaiitoday.com or address them to:

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Letters to the Editor: September 4, 2020 - West Hawaii Today

After 50 Years of Prohibition, Here Is How to Decriminalize Drugs – Shepherd Express

An important birthday is approaching. The War on Drugs turns 50 years old, and experts are trying to ensure it wont live to see 51.

The day is Tuesday, Oct. 27, 1970. The newest thing on the radio is The Jackson 5; The Brady Bunch and Colombo are just getting started on TV. The current President of the United States, Richard Nixon, does not suspect it yet, but in three years,almost to the day, his impeachment process will start. But on this day, Nixon is not thinking about answering for his numerous crimes. Today, he is signing theControlled Substances Act that will rule how the U.S. acts towards drug possession for the next 50 years.

The Controlled Substances Act classifies illicit substances into five schedules, and it categorizes marijuana as a Schedule I drug, the hardest, alongside heroin. The act claims that marijuana has a high potential for abuse, no accredited medical use, and a lack of accepted safety. Despite the later admission that Nixon chose to repress drug use for political gain, the act became law. Starting in 1971, even for first offenders, possessing any amount of marijuana was punishable by one year in prison, and growing or selling the plant could mean a life sentence, even for non-violent offenders. Fought by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) that Nixon would go on to create, the burgeoning War on Drugs led to tens of millions of arrests, mostly for possession of small amounts of marijuana. Countless Americans who would never have been arrested otherwise saw the inside of a cell and were subsequently treated like criminals.

The question of reform is back on the table, nowadays. Democratic presidential nominee, Joe Biden,famously said, Nobody should go to prison for marijuana, and his partys platform explicitly calls for the federal decriminalization of cannabis. To pave the way to the realization of that promise, a leading nonprofit organization, the Drug Policy Alliance, has released a drug decriminalization model, a roadmap to effectively end the criminalization of people who use drugs and begin repairing the harm drug law enforcement has caused,the organization said.

Decriminalizing marijuana is not as simple as the president declaring it donenor is it as simple as descheduling cannabis, which means removing it from the list of Schedule I drugs. Prohibition is deeply entrenched in our institutions and laws, and those need to be untangled. The Drug Policy Reform Act, brought forth by the Drug Policy Alliance, addresses the multifaceted question of ending the War on Drugs as we know it.

The first promise of the Act is not to address cannabis schedule, but to shift regulatory authority away from the DEA, which has been directly responsible for most of the damage of the War on Drugs. The DEA has a long and violent history of treating substance abuse as a crime to be fought rather than as a health issue requiring help. Instead of the DEA, the nonprofit suggests that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) should be responsible for the classifications of drugs under the Controlled Substances Act. The people in charge of a public health issue should have a medical degree, not a gun.

In a time where defunding the police has become a popular rallying cry, the Drug Policy Alliance recommends defunding the War on Drugs enforcers and reinvesting the money thusly saved in more productive endeavors. Agencies that must be defunded include the DEA, the Office of National Drug Control Strategy (ONDCP), the Bureau of International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement Affairs (INCLE) and other agencies that play a part in drug prohibition. Programs that facilitate the militarization of these agencies, such as the Department of Defenses 1033 Program, which fast-tracks the obtention of excess military equipment to these agencies, should be ended.

Because of federal funding and defense equipment transfer schemes directly tied to drug arrests, the drug war incentivizes and funds the kind of militarized policing that has led to the overwhelming demand for reform in recent months, said Queen Adesuyi, policy manager for the Drug Policy Alliance.

The second step would be to shift the legal apparatus surrounding substance abuse towards harm reduction instead of repression. Of course, the most important step would be to repeal all criminal penalties for simple possession of a controlled substance, as well as penalties for distributing small personal use quantitiestoo often, those laws are used to escalate the charges against people who dont traffic drugs but give small quantities to relatives and loved ones. That means removing minimum sentencing and sentencing enhancements for drug charges. The Drug Policy Alliance identified numerous passages in a large number of bills passed in the past century that all need to be repealed in order to truly end Prohibition.

Shifting the focus to harm reduction also includes drafting rules based on current, peer-reviewed research to define personal use thresholds, as well as measures allowing addicts to come forward and receive help instead of a prison sentence. Currently, access to substances that can help with addiction treatment, such as methadone and buprenorphine, is extremely restricted, and it should be made more widely available. Procedures such as no-knock warrants and civil asset forfeiture have been shown time and time again to be easily abused by law enforcement in drug-related cases, and they should be prohibited entirely.

Even when someone has been convicted of drug charges, their voting rights should be protected, they should still be able to access federal benefits, employment and housing. Anyone who has been convicted solely for drug possession or minor selling charges should be released from prison immediately and have their records automatically expunged without needing to petition for it.

Just removing laws that currently criminalize drug use is not sufficientnot by a long shot. It is up to the federal government to create new laws to cement these new procedures into law and force states to cooperate. Congress needs to actively prohibit state funding that is used for drug prohibition. Instead of using funds to crush drug use, that money would be better used in positive programs, such as programs providing social and health services, affordable addiction treatment, drug research and evidence-based drug education.

All these proposals are included in an all-encompassing bill that the Drug Policy Alliance intends to present to Congress ahead of the Controlled Substances Acts 50th anniversary.

To read more Cannabis Connection articles, click here.

To read more articles by Jean-Gabriel Fernandez, click here.

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After 50 Years of Prohibition, Here Is How to Decriminalize Drugs - Shepherd Express

Australian and Briton arrested in Bali over alleged drug offences – ABC News

Two men, one from Britain and one from Australia, have been arrested on the Indonesian island of Bali for possession of methamphetamine and ecstasy, police say.

Collum Park from Britain was arrested on Tuesday night with 11.8 grams of methamphetamine and 15 ecstasy pills, Denpasar police chief Jansen Panjaitan said in a statement. Denpasar is Bali's capital.

Mr Park has been in Bali since 2019, he said.

Police allege Aaron Wayne Coyle, an Australian who has been in Bali since early 2020, had 1.2 grams of methamphetamine on his person at the time of arrest.

"We suspect that the Briton is the drug dealer and distributor, while the Australian is the courier," Mr Panjaitan said.

Both men are being held by Denpasar police for further investigation.

They are being charged under an article of the narcotics law which provides a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a fine.

A Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Spokesperson confirmed the arrest to the ABC and said the department "stands ready to offer consular assistance".

That assistance may include visits to the prison and liaison with local authorities to monitor Mr Coyle's welfare and assistance in communicating with local lawyers and family members.

Many countries in South-East Asia have some of the globe's harshest anti-drug policies, where convicted traffickers are often executed by a firing squad, while in Singapore convicted drug traffickers continue to be hanged.

For those convicted for personal drug possession, sentences can mean years of jail time.

While thousands of drug convicts sit on death row in prisons across South-East Asia, the local trade in methamphetamine and other illicit drugs is flourishing.

Out of 14 countries identified as actively applying the death penalty for drug crimes by watchdog Harm Reduction International (HRI), nearly half are in South-East Asia: Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam, Laos and Thailand.

Despite the region's hard-line approach, a July 2019 report by the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime (UNODC) found that South-East Asia was producing methamphetamine in "quantities unimaginable a decade ago" much of which is making its way to Australian shores.

The report found the illicit methamphetamine market of South-East Asia and its neighbours in East Asia, Australia, New Zealand and Bangladesh, was worth between $US30.3 and $US61.4 billion ($44.5$90 billion).

The Philippines, under President Rodrigo Duterte has garnered global attention for his bloody 'war on drugs', which has resulted in thousands of alleged extra-judicial killings by police and armed vigilantes, while prison populations have swelled.

A UN Human Rights Council report released in June found Mr Duterte's policies has lead to a "culture of impunity", with thousands of people slaughtered under the drug purge.

In nearby Indonesia, the country has also raised eyebrows with President Joko 'Jokowi' Widodo generally presented as a moderate who has been an enthusiastic advocate of the death penalty for drug-related crimes.

It was under his watch that Bali Nine members Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran were killed by firing squad in 2015.

Several other Australians convicted of drug offences in the country have served significant jail time, including Schapelle Corby, who was sentenced to 20 years jail for cannabis importation in 2005.

Presently, more than 150 people are on death row in Indonesia, mostly for drug crimes, and about a third of them are foreigners.

The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) has been approached by ABC for comment.

ABC/AP

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Australian and Briton arrested in Bali over alleged drug offences - ABC News

Election May Determine Whether Marijuana Will Be Decriminalized – Pain News Network

By Dr. Lynn Webster, PNN Columnist

Times have changed. Marijuana should not be a crime, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) said last year when she and Rep. Jerry Nadler (D-NY) introduced the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement Act (MORE Act). The current Democratic vice-presidential nominee called the legalization of marijuana an important step "toward racial and economic justice."

We need to start regulating marijuana and expunge marijuana convictions from the records of millions of Americans so they can get on with their lives," said Harris.

"Racially motivated enforcement of marijuana laws has disproportionally impacted communities of color. Its past time to right this wrong nationwide and work to view marijuana use as an issue of personal choice and public health, not criminal behavior," added Nadler, who chairs the House Judiciary Committee.

Thirty-three states and the District of Columbia have legalized medical cannabis and several states allow its recreational use. If it became law, the MORE Act would decriminalize marijuana at the federal level by removing it as a Schedule I controlled substance.

That wouldn't instantly remove all restrictions; states could still prohibit the sale of cannabis. But the MORE Act would give states more latitude to create laws to suit their needs, establish a trust fund to support programs for communities impacted by the war on drugs, and destroy or seal records of marijuana criminal convictions.

This week the House Judiciary Committee passed the MORE Act and later this month the full House is expected to approve the bill and send it to Senate. Chances are the bill will not pass the Senate, because Majority Leader Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) opposes it -- while paradoxically supporting hemp farming.

However, if the MORE Act passes, it would be a game changer. It could open the floodgates for the development of products that contain tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), which is the psychoactive compound in marijuana. Some research suggests THC alone, or THC and cannabidiol (CBD) combined, could be more effective than CBD alone for treating pain, anxiety, insomnia and other conditions. More research could discover life-changing new treatments.

Since THC has rewarding properties, such as inducing euphoria, any drug that includes THC would likely be a controlled substance. Nevertheless, decriminalizing marijuana would create enormous economic opportunities for growers and anyone in the business of finding solutions to medical problems for which marijuana or its derivatives may be useful.

It doesnt seem likely that marijuana will be decriminalized at the federal level this year. Congress criminalized marijuana in 1937 and all attempts to reform the law at the federal level have ultimately failed. Our current Senate is unlikely to change the status quo.

But the upcoming election will likely determine whether the MORE Act has a chance to become law in the near future. Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden supports legalization and decriminalization at the federal level, while President Trump is generally opposed to changing federal marijuana laws. The election will also determine which party controls the House and Senate.

It behooves every voter to become familiar with the candidates' positions regarding cannabis. Criminalizing marijuana has caused great harm. We, as voters, have the power to change that.

Lynn R. Webster, MD, is a vice president of scientific affairs for PRA Health Sciences and consults with the pharmaceutical industry. He is author of the award-winning book The Painful Truth, and co-producer of the documentary It Hurts Until You Die. Opinions expressed here are those of the author alone and do not reflect the views or policy of PRA Health Sciences. You can find him on Twitter: @LynnRWebsterMD.

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Election May Determine Whether Marijuana Will Be Decriminalized - Pain News Network

EXCLUSIVE: Arrests as drug cops smash organised crime gang in Aberdeen – Aberdeen Evening Express

Four men have been arrested following a major crackdown on drugs and organised crime in Aberdeen.

The investigation, code-named Operation Hidden, focused on an alleged gang linked to the trade of crack cocaine and heroin in the Granite City.

Four properties were targeted in a series of early-morning raids and a quantity of class A drugs, worth five-figures, was seized.

It was the culmination of around two months hard work by North East Police Divisions Organised Crime Group (OCG).

Led by Detective Inspector Martyn Thomson, Operation Hidden focused on protecting Aberdeens most vulnerable communities and keeping drugs off the citys streets.

DI Thomson said: This operation was in response to an organised crime syndicate who have embedded themselves in Aberdeen. We have been investigating them over a number of months.

Tackling serious and organised crime and protecting vulnerable people in the north-east police division has been a key priority.

We have a dedicated team who tackle this kind of crime in the north-east.

Officers, using a battering ram, smashed their way into properties in the Kittybrewster and King Street areas yesterday.

Nearly 10,000 of Class A drugs were recovered, while four men aged 33, 39, 47 and 48 were arrested.

They are expected to appear at Aberdeen Sheriff Court on Monday.

DI Thomson said: We are absolutely committed to tackling serious and organised crime operating in the north-east and across county lines. Its a local and national priority.

It is very much at the forefront of our minds to tackle these groups and protect the vulnerable.

These groups exploit some of the most vulnerable people in our communities, and we want to give the public assurances that we are tackling serious crime and drugs.

We will continue to take action against those who cause harm in our communities.

Officers working on the operation have been complying with Covid-19 regulations and DI Thomson vowed the war on drugs would continue despite the challenges posed by the pandemic.

In August, more than 120,000 of drugs were seized as police teams continue to crack down on the trade.

Of that total, 15,500 was Class A drugs, 60,000 Class B and 48,500 Class C.

DI Thomson added: We have had to be mindful and conscious of the impact of the pandemic but we have been resilient.

Just because there is a pandemic, it doesnt mean crime ends.

I continue to reassure and encourage anyone with any concerns or information to contact Police Scotland on 101 or via the website.

Anonymous reports can be made to the independent charity Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

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EXCLUSIVE: Arrests as drug cops smash organised crime gang in Aberdeen - Aberdeen Evening Express

Fix what is wrong and push for equality – bdemo.com

There are many reasons why people of color are not much better off today than they were before the Civil Rights Act was passed. These are easily explained:

1. Single-parent households: The war on drugs swept people of color into prison at disproportionate rates. The number of black people incarcerated in 2000 was 26 times the level of 1983. For Latinx in the same timeframe 22 times more. For white people 8 times more. This is true even though most drug users and dealers nationwide are white. People of color are no more likely to be guilty of drug crimes than whites despite the meteoric rise in incarceration.

Mandatory minimum sentences are also responsible for an increase in single-parent households. A first-time drug offense likely means five years in prison regardless of amount or drug. The Anti-drug Abuse Act, emphasizing drug enforcement over treatment, encouraged mass incarceration and family separation.

2.Education: After Brown v. Board of education, San Antonio ISD v. Rodriguez upheld property tax as the primary source of school funding, ignoring residential segregation and discriminatory housing practices. This decision allowed the continuation of unequal funding to schools in low-income and districts where most residents are people of color.

The decision in Milliken v. Bradley actively upheld school segregation. The state of Michigan was funding transportation for suburb districts but banned state funds for transportation for districts within the Detroit city limits. Funding is a major determining factor in the quality of the school and the education. If the supreme court is allowing discrimination in schools, how can people of color advance?

3.Crime: People of color do not commit more crimes than white people. Their neighborhoods are disproportionately affected by discriminatory laws and policing policies. Also, violent crime rates fluctuate and have little correlation to incarceration rates which have skyrocketed since the mid-80s. Violent crime has been on a decline over the last decade, but incarceration rates continue to climb.

It is well documented that the rights and freedoms of people of color have been eroded due to discriminatory policing and prosecuting related to the war on drugs. A lot of those policies and practices are still in use today.

Affirmative action was introduced to help reduce racial and gender gaps in higher education and employment. The goal of the program was to encourage employers/schools to include women and people of color to a more representative percentage. Since the 80s affirmative action has been under attack and has been eroded so that it is almost ineffective today. The continued need for affirmative action is evidenced in the gender and racial pay gaps, education disparities, and hiring disparities, most notably the misrepresentation of the American people in the federal government.

The idea of reverse racism is preposterous. Racism is a system of control from the racial majority through legal and institutional means. Black, Latinx, Indigenous, and Asian peoples have never had the legal or institutional control. Thus, reverse racism is an impossibility.

To summarize, the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act have been eviscerated by the Supreme Court. The war on drugs decimated communities of color. Affirmative Action, an attempt at the advancement of women and people of color has been rendered mostly ineffective.

Our good intentions are not working, because they werent allowed to work properly. We need to fix what is wrong and keep pushing for equality. We all have a self-interest in equality as it could make our country truly great!

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Fix what is wrong and push for equality - bdemo.com

George Pyle: Liberty and license in a time of pandemic – Salt Lake Tribune

The state of nature has a law of nature to govern it which obliges every one; and reason, which is that law, teaches all mankind who will but consult it that, being all equal and independent, no one ought to harm another in his life, health, liberty, or possessions.

Somehow, in this country and in this state, we have come to a pass where reasonable and educated people have an understanding of some important things that is precisely backward. It is as if they were insisting that 4+4=2.

Here we are, wishing our children could go back to school and all of us could go for a haircut, a movie and a beer, while vocal groups of people are pulling the levers of government in attempts to make things worse.

The Provo City Council recently passed a local mask mandate in an attempt to slow the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic. It is the best chance we have of life returning to something resembling normal. Mayor Michelle Kaufusi vetoed it, because, well, freedom. The council overrode her veto.

Then a group of Provo residents launched a petition drive to reverse the council. It is too late to have the question on Provos November ballot but, if the drive gathers enough signatures, the law will be set aside until an election can be held, in November 2021.

If we miraculously develop a vaccine before then, it wont matter much. If we dont, the delay will literally cause sickness and death, and not just for those who signed the petition.

And now we hear that a group of parents has gone to state court in an attempt to void Gov. Gary Herberts various orders designed to curb the pandemic and save lives. In their view, the orders amount to an unprecedented and unlawful suspension of their most sacred and fundamental rights.

How about the right to not be infected with a horrible virus that, even if it doesnt kill you, can leave you with long-term heart and kidney damage, unending fatigue and a feeling of unending guilt because, even though you made it through OK, your mother died?

This is what John Locke, a British philosopher who was among the leading influencers of Americas Founding Fathers, was on about when he examined the difference between liberty -- the natural right to govern yourself and your property -- and license -- unjustified actions that harm other people.

We heard a lot about that in the 1960s, when a rising generation was experimenting with the use of drugs and new ideas about sexual expression and gender equality. Those who opposed those trends generally did not base their arguments just on the fact that such behaviors were icky, but insisted such behaviors harmed people, and not just those who were participating. That liberty had been supplanted by license.

To the degree that the conservatives won that debate, we were left with the totally overdone War on Drugs and delayed struggles for racial and gender equity, marriage equality and LGBTQ rights.

But now, you might say, the mask is on the other mouth.

Now it is generally the more progressive strains of society insisting everyone wear masks and keep our distance, while it has become the relatively conservative folks who demand the right to do whatever they please. At the top of that list is the claimed right to not wear masks and to not force their children to wear masks.

Their claim would make some modicum of sense if the purpose of wearing a mask were to protect the person wearing it. In that case, the risk-benefit analysis of dont-get-sick-later vs. dont-feel-like-wearing-a-mask-right-now could reasonably be thought a personal decision, left to individuals and parents.

But that is not why the state wants us to wear masks. They want us to wear masks because doing so protects other people. We dont know everything about how the insidious COVID-19 virus works, but we are as certain as people can be about these things that a great many of us harbor the virus and spread it to others even as those carriers have utterly no symptoms.

Saying you dont want to wear a mask to protect others, because, nyah, nyah, nyah, you cant make me, is not like not wanting to wear a seatbelt. It is not like insisting on the right to drink what you want, smoke what you want and sleep with whomever you please.

Refusing to wear a mask is the legal and moral equivalent of not wanting to stop at stop signs, not liking to obey speed limits and refusing to turn the keys over to someone else when you are too drunk to drive. Because you dont feel like it.

People who wont wear a mask in a time of coronavirus are not taking a risk. They are a risk.

George Pyle, editorial page editor of The Salt Lake Tribune, actually looks better with his face covered.

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George Pyle: Liberty and license in a time of pandemic - Salt Lake Tribune

What to Know About the MORE Act, the Bill That Would Deschedule Cannabis – Self

In a historic move, the House of Representatives is set to vote this month on the Marijuana Opportunity Reinvestment and Expungement (MORE) Act, Politico reports. The bill would deschedule cannabis (marijuana), and therefore decriminalize it at the federal level. Unfortunately, the bill doesn't have the best chances of making it through Congress due to Republican opposition in the Senate. But the fact that it has made it this farand that it will actually be voted onis a big deal.

Thanks to the Controlled Substances Act of 1970, drugs in the U.S. are classified by schedules based on their potential for abuse, how much we know about their effects, and any medical value they have, the Drug Enforcement Agency explains. Currently cannabis is in Schedule I, the most restrictive classification, meaning that the government believes it has a high potential for abuse and no medical value.

The original decision to put cannabis in Schedule I was steeped in racism and xenophobia far more than scientific evidence. And, based on what we've learned about cannabis and its potential medical uses in the past several decades, we know that's not necessarily an accurate assessment of the evidence. But the current scheduling still causes harm, especially for Black and brown people, and restricts the amount of research we can do with cannabis. So advocates have been working toward descheduling cannabiswhich would put it in a less restrictive schedule or remove it from scheduling entirelyfor a long time now.

The MORE Act, which was sponsored in the Senate by vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris, would remove cannabis from scheduling and, well, more. The bill would also take some measures to address the harms that cannabis prohibition has caused. It would expunge and seal previous nonviolent federal cannabis-related arrests and convictions for those who are not currently serving their sentences. Those who are currently serving sentences for federal cannabis arrests or convictions would have the opportunity to have their sentences reviewed and, possibly, have their records expunged and sentences vacated.

It would also create a community reinvestment grant program that would fund job training, health education, youth mentoring programs, and legal aid for individuals most adversely impacted by the war on drugs. Additionally, the bill would establish a cannabis justice office to ensure the implementation of those programs.

Descheduling cannabis at the federal level would effectively decriminalize it across the country, but individual states would still have the power to legalize it (or not) on their own. Passing this bill would not mean that weed would suddenly become legal everywhere, but it does mean that those states that have legalized cannabis for medical or recreational (adult) use don't have to worry about the federal government interfering with their legal cannabis practices.

Passage of the MORE Act is essential in order to truly right the wrongs of federal marijuana criminalization, and to once and for all allow the majority of states that have legalized cannabis for either medical or adult-use to embrace these policies free from the threat of undue federal prosecution or interference, Paul Armentano, deputy director of NORML, said in a statement.

Although the MORE Act may never become law, it shows just how much public and political opinion has changed on the subject of cannabis legalizationand marks an important step forward in addressing the past and ongoing harms of the war on drugs, which continue to disproportionately affect communities of color.

We believe that the responsible regulation and control of marijuana will be more beneficial to society and the publics health than prohibiting and criminalizing it, reads an open letter organized by the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA) and signed by 16 organizations and more than 100 individuals, including epidemiologists and public health experts.

What makes the MORE Act absolutely essential is that it will help communities avoid the very real harms they face daily due to the criminalization and enforcement of our marijuana lawsparticularly Black, Latinx, Indigenous, and low-income communities," Danielle Ompad, Ph.D., associate dean for education and associate professor of epidemiology at the NYU School of Global Public Health, who also signed the DPA letter, said in a statement. Federal prohibition is an utter failure, and has only served to worsen public and community health. We have waited far too long and it is essential that Congress act now.

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What to Know About the MORE Act, the Bill That Would Deschedule Cannabis - Self

Black on Black crime is a myth The Famuan – Famuan

Columnist Amari Jarrell photo courtesy Jarrell

Earlier this week I read an opinion piece in the Tallahassee Democrat by Donna Brown, a retired police sergeant. In this piece, she wrote: People are demanding the good cops stand up and speak out against bad cops. I support that, but why are they not demanding that members of the community stand up and speak out against those who take the lives of innocent children?

While everyone is entitled to their own opinion, here is why I disagree.

Black on Black crime is a myth. Every race commits acts of violence against members within their own communities. It is not exclusive to the Black community. You will never hear anyone say, White on White crime. If you are not in this community, why are you speaking on my communitys business?

In this article, Brown, who is white, also writes: Does a life matter less if they die from the actions of a community member versus a law enforcement officer?

Why is it assumed that the Black community does not mourn for the loss of a member within its own community? While any death of a member of your own community should be something sad, this point is purposely used to negate the reason for Black Lives Matter.

I believe that killing within the Black community is rooted within the conditions some of us may happen to be in such as poverty, oppression, etc. Not to mention that we are still seeing the effects of the War on drugs. If we were in better conditions and had access to more resources, these deaths would surely go down.

I strongly believe that the violence at the hands the people sworn to serve and protect us is deeply rooted in racism and abuse of power.

You may see many non-POC speaking on what happens during the interactions between an unarmed man and a police officer. Many will try to justify it by saying they resisted the arrest and were reaching for something when that is just not true. Too many videos circulate around social media and these news outlets for people to still act blind to what is going on within our country.

Im tired of people spinning protesting around to make it look as if members of my community are the aggressors. Im tired of yelling, Say his name or, Say her name, because these trained officers dont know how to deescalate a situation without murdering my people. Im tired of the unjust and senseless killings of my people just because of the color of our skin. Im tired of it all.

If you dont see a problem, youre part of the problem.

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Black on Black crime is a myth The Famuan - Famuan

Sicario Depicts a Forever War on the Final Frontier – The Escapist

Sicario is a 21st century western. It is also a war film. It is a film about liminal spaces and the inevitable chaos that unfolds at the edge of the frontier.

Sicario is directed by Denis Villeneuve and bears many of the hallmarks of the directors mainstream Hollywood work the polished production, the oppressive atmosphere, the cold detachment. However, Sicario is perhaps best understood as part of writer Taylor Sheridans frontier trilogy. This disconnected trio of films from three distinct directors updates the western for a new age, juxtaposing that quintessential American genre with a larger story of decline and collapse.

Villeneuves Sicario would be followed by David Mackenzies Hell or High Water. In Hell or High Water, the descendants of settlers who had displaced the indigenous population were themselves being dispossessed by the relentless churn of capitalism. Taylor Sheridan would wrap up the triptych with Wind River, a film more explicitly focused on the experience of those Native American communities that had originally populated the frontier.

Sicario is set at the literal edge of the frontier, albeit to the south rather than the west, against the established border between Mexico and the United States. The western genre is built on the fantasy of expansion, a continent waiting to be tamed by settlers pushing westward in an expression of manifest destiny. That makes a border by definition the end of the western, a barrier on that mythic frontier.

Sicario is fascinated with boundaries. Villeneuve populates the film with shots structured around clear lines and demarcations: the suburban communities trying to impose order on the desert, the fences that delineate the border, the overhead shots of long stretches of highway that cut across the terrain like scars, even the familiar road markings visible in headlights in the dead of night. Characters are always aware of the lines in the world around them.

Some of these boundaries are metaphorical rather than literal. FBI Agent Kate Macer (Emily Blunt) spends most of Sicario confused and disoriented by the operation that she has joined. However, she repeatedly tries to establish ground rules. When Matt Graver (Josh Brolin) tells her to follow the lead of the mysterious Alejandro Gillick (Benicio del Toro), she replies, Im not authorized to follow orders from Alejandro! Later, she protests, Im not a soldier. This is not what I do.

Over the course of the film, it becomes clear that Macer has been drafted into a CIA operation on American soil to effectively provide legal coverage. Macers supervisor, Dave Jennings (Victor Garber), assures her that it is all technically legal. If your fear is operating out of bounds, I am telling you, you are not, he assures her. The boundarys been moved. However, these boundaries are still very precise. Much is made of what Macer can or cannot witness. She is herself bound.

Of course, these fragile barriers and boundaries exist to be crossed. They are not strong enough to withstand attack. The films opening sequence literalizes this, with a truck smashing through the wall of a suburban house. During a raid on a cartel safehouse, a stray bullet reveals horrors lurking in the wall: There are countless decaying corpses arranged within the walls of the house. It is a none-too-subtle visual metaphor for what happens when these constructed barriers come tumbling down.

Sicario is populated by characters who cross these boundaries. Macers partner, Reggie Wayne (Daniel Kaluuya) correctly deduces that Graver is a CIA operative. CIAs not supposed to work this side of the fence, he explains. The climax involves a raid into Mexico, which represents a dramatic overreach. We have no jurisdiction in Mexico, Macer points out. However, it is all lawless. Naturally, that operation takes place at twilight, although night vision renders it in black and white.

Sicario is a war movie. However, it is an abstract war movie. Although it is set against the backdrop of the War on Drugs and stars Benicio del Toro, it is not intended as a snapshot of that conflict in the way that Traffic was. While it is frequently likened to Kathryn Bigelows Zero Dark Thirty, it is nowhere near as precise in its frame of reference. Sicario exists at the blurred edges of the War on Drugs and the War on Terror. After all, Wayne recognizes men like Graver from his time in Iraq.

In this context, the very idea of war becomes an expression of the frontier myth. Wars provide another world to be conquered, another wilderness to be tamed. Wars provide purpose. They shape identity. They forge the most important of boundaries, the line between us and them. However, the challenge of wars is that they end. Much like the North American continent gives way to the unyielding Pacific, war gives way to peace. This is true even of ideological wars, like the Cold War.

The War on Terror and the War on Drugs are different. The War on Terror is difficult to define and such a war has no end. President George W. Bush repeatedly defined the War on Terror as a task that does not end. The frontier becomes limitless. Over the course of Sicario, it becomes clear that Graver is not fighting to end the war, but to perpetuate it. Whats our objective? Macer asks. To dramatically overreact, Graver replies. He is trying to shake the tree and create chaos, to make noise, to stir the pot.

Critics like Chris Ryan have observed that Sicario is a descendant of Francis Ford Coppolas Apocalypse Now, a Vietnam War movie that is ultimately a meditation on mankinds obsession with these acts of mutual destruction. Matt Barone described Kate Macer as the Capt. Willard (Martin Sheen) in Sicarios Apocalypse Now-like hell-storm of bleakness. These comparisons are apt. Apocalypse Now was drawn from Joseph Conrads Heart of Darkness, lending its exploration of war a primal quality.

However, there is an interesting distinction to be made. In Apocalypse Now, Willard makes a linear journey down river to find and eliminate Colonel Walter E. Kurtz (Marlon Brando). As Willard embarks on his journey, he pushes deeper and deeper into madness. In the Redux cut, he even seems to journey back in time. The journey in Apocalypse Now might be as metaphorical as literal, and might be inward rather than outward, but it is still a clear progression.

In contrast, Sicario skips back and forth across the border, demonstrating that these boundaries by which the characters define themselves are ultimately meaningless. CIA operative Steve Forsing (Jeffrey Donovan) evokes hell in his description of Juarez as the Beast, but the underworld is not exclusive to one side of the border. As he prepares to waterboard Guillermo Daz (Edgar Arreola), Alejandro taunts the captive, Now youll learn whats hell in Yankee land.

Villeneuves camera is repeatedly drawn to the rubber bands that hold the cartels money. After a raid outside a Texan bank, itself a western trope, the film lingers on the loose bands as agents gather up the cash. Later, a senior cartel figure fidgets with a band as he watches the news. Texan police officer Ted (Jon Bernthal) exposes himself as a cartel operative when he pulls a band from his pocket. These bands seem a more honest reflection of the situation than the films rigid lines: They are flexible, theres no beginning or end, and they loop around.

Sicario is full of twisted reflections. Graver rejects Wayne from his task force because there are no lawyers on this train, even though Alejandro used to be a prosecutor in Mexico. Alejandros entire family was brutally murdered at the behest of Fausto Alarcn (Julio Cesar Cedillo), and he responds by brutally murdering Alarcns family. Before he dies, Alarcn asks, Do you think the people that sent you here are any different? Who do you think we learned it from?

This equivalence runs through Sicario. Dazs prisoner convoy is attacked at the border crossing. What are the rules here? asks one voice in the radio, as the tension heightens. We must be engaged to engage, comes a response. When the team asks whether they can leave their vehicles to establish a protective parameter, they are instructed, You can do what they do. If they get out, you get out. The border is no longer a boundary, but a mirror.

This is the horror of Sicarios frontier war, a conflict waged for no greater purpose than to perpetuate its own existence. In its own way, this is a purer distillation of the idea of war than that depicted in Apocalypse Now; here is no progression, no journey, no introspection. There is only a forever war and with it a forever frontier.

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Sicario Depicts a Forever War on the Final Frontier - The Escapist

Parents put kids to sleep with stories of Pradeep – The Daily Star

When he was the officer-in-charge of Teknaf Police Station, Pradeep Kumar Das earned such a name that parents put small children to sleep by telling them scary stories about the OC.

Cox's Bazar Deputy Commissioner Kamal Hossain said this last year at a public event while praising Pradeep.

"The war on drugs has started and we cannot backtrack from it. I would like to thank the OC [Pradeep] of Teknaf Police Station after whose arrival I heard that locals put their children to sleep saying Pradeep would visit. We want it to continue like this," the DC told the event, marking the surrender of 102 yaba dealers and smugglers, on February 16.

During the animated speech, Kamal Hossain also said, "We want to enforce the law and wipe out the drugs menace."

This newspaper has a video clip of the speech.

Pradeep was suspended after he was accused in a case for killing Major (retd) Sinha Rashed Md Khan. The fallen officer is now behind the bars.

Contacted, Cox's Bazar DC Kamal Hossain on Wednesday said, "Yes, I said that. We want to enforce the law and wipe out the drugs menace. We want to enforce the law while staying within the law."

Sinha, who served in the Special Security Force (SSF) and took voluntary retirement from the army two years ago, was killed in police shooting at Shamlapur Police Checkpost on July 31.

The general people of Teknaf, who lived in fear when Pradeep was the OC, recently came forward with allegations that he took hefty sums from locals by threatening to kill them in so-called shootouts with police.

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Parents put kids to sleep with stories of Pradeep - The Daily Star

A Response to Governor Wolf’s Call for the Legalization of Recreational Cannabis – Cannabis Industry Journal

As a medical cannabis professional, I, like most industry leaders, have been left out of the conversation around the Governors call to legalize recreational cannabis. Much like flying a plane without the advice of the pilot, those of us who are rooted in this space should be given a seat in the cockpit if were headed in this direction.

While Governor Wolf has called for legalization, which is absolutely necessary, those who understand where legislation has gone wrong and what works well including business owners and most importantly, patients have been largely left out of the conversation.

I meet regularly with legislators and unlike many, I speak and listen to both sides. I applaud the call for legalization by Governor Wolf, however, I question his true intentions. Is this political posturing to make Republicans look out of touch? Any political strategist would say that if you actually want something done, you must work with the opposition. Like many issues today, change can only be created once we come together. This is no different.

Few people understand that cannabis was used as medicine for thousands of years and legal in the U.S. until 1969. In 1971, Nixon told us that cannabis was bad and drug abuse was public enemy number one, so Americans listened. Nixon then goes on to break American law, be impeached, resigns, and yet, Americans continue to follow his lead, vilifying cannabis users, 46 years later. As a society, we are taught to conform to what we are told by elected officials and community leaders as truth.

Act 16 legalized cannabis a term illegal to use by someone like me, who has been mandated by The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, to use ONLY the racist term marijuana but in a way that shames users. The system fails our patients at every turn leaving business owners hostage to an unmanageable seed to sale platform, leaving many patients without access to their medicine. Low income patients have been left out of our program by high prices and have not received any of the subsidies they were promised, even though the program has produced hundreds of millions of dollars.

Pennsylvania law strictly prohibits anyone charged with the use of cannabis to work in the industry. You cannot own a cannabis business or work for a cannabis company if you have been arrested for possessing a $10 joint. Yet, my customers skip to their cars with hundreds of dollars of weed in their bags and go about their day. Meanwhile, a 19-year-old black kids life just ended after he was pulled over, driving while black and the officer finds a joint. He can never receive financial aid for college or get a job because he has a record. The reality is, the black teens life will most definitely come to an end because of a joint while others can smoke walking down Broad Street and no one blinks.

Pennsylvanians want legal cannabis. It has a consistent history of reducing opioid deaths, state by state, by 25%. How many lives would be saved if we allowed those who cannot afford legal cannabis but fear prosecution for illegal use, to grow their own?

I have no judgement against those who have been conditioned to believe cannabis is an illicit drug because this is how weve been programmed. Cannabis has healed but has killed no one. We must educate our legislators before we vilify them. There are more Republicans quietly for legalization than against, but they need information, not shaming.

Legalization of cannabis is necessary to preserve our health and welfare, because weve become a society addicted to chemically derived pharmaceutical drugs designed to cause dependence. Cannabis is not physically addicting. It can prevent and eliminate seizures, shrink and even kill cancer tumors, settle the nervous system from diseases like Parkinsons and MS and help those with anxiety, depression and PTSD. Legalize cannabis and clean up our homelessness, allow people of color to profit from an industry which has capitalized on them, allow low income people and all people to grow their own medicine, and reduce the violence in our streets caused by prohibition.

Pennsylvania needs a legalization law that includes real, hard-working Americans. I am one of the few, born and bred small business cannabis owners in Pennsylvania and I want opportunity for my neighbors and fellow Pennsylvanians in this space. We need legalization to save our communities, but we need two separate application processes one that is directed toward those disproportionately impacted by the war on drugs which should be crafted to protect applicants who cannot afford thousands of dollars of application fees and the uncertainty of losing hundreds of thousands of dollars via legislative delays. The system is broken. There must be two points of entry.

Pennsylvania Republicans will legalize cannabis. Pennsylvania Democrats will not. Democrats hold no power or authority in our Republican controlled state, and they have shown no attempt to educate. Cannabis legalization is necessary to save the state, but money should not be the reason. Pennsylvanians deserve the education to understand what they do not understand.

Instead, lets legalize and allow 50% of the licenses to be awarded to social equity applicants (those disproportionately affected by the war on drugs) with a bill that is written in the best interest of the social equity applicant and the consumer. The other 50% of the applications should be open to current license holders (who should be grandfathered in with a high price license acceptance fee) and small business owners from Pennsylvania. (It is federally illegal to require residency requirements).

We must not eliminate the Multi State Operators (MSOs) because a free market depends on expertise and stability and whether anyone wants to hear it or not, being disadvantaged is not enough to be a successful businessperson. We need a balance, but more importantly, as with our nation in crisis, we need to come together.

We CAN

All of this is a cry for peace. As a wise person once said, Drunk men in a bar start a fight, high men start a band. Spread peace not hate. Thousands die from excessive alcohol consumption every year, but legalization of cannabis does not increase usage. No one has ever died from cannabis. Tell me again why we shouldnt legalize? Those who believe we should not might as well push for alcohol prohibition again it has no medicinal properties and kills.

Hopes and dreams will not help our humanitarian crisis but action and education just might

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A Response to Governor Wolf's Call for the Legalization of Recreational Cannabis - Cannabis Industry Journal

As Trump Calls for Law and Order, Can Chicagos Top Prosecutor Beat the Charge That Shes Soft on Crime? – ProPublica

ProPublica Illinois is a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. Sign up to get weekly updates about our work.

Last month, just hours after businesses in downtown Chicago were struck by looters, former judge Pat OBrien told a local TV interviewer that Cook Countys top prosecutor was to blame.

Certainly Kim Foxxs policies of not prosecuting, of dismissing cases, of dismissing all narcotics charges, of letting people who loot out on I-bonds to return to the looting it is a dog whistle for these criminals to do exactly what they did last night, said OBrien, a Republican whos challenging Foxx for Cook County states attorney on the November ballot. We are going to become Detroit if we dont fight Kim Foxx.

Most of OBriens claims were simply untrue; for starters, judges, not prosecutors, ultimately decide whether suspects can post bond and go free before trial. But he touched on the very real concerns of many Chicagoans who believe crime is out of control and officials like Foxx arent doing enough about it.

Our newsletter is written by a ProPublica Illinois reporter every week.

Foxxs election four years ago, with backing from national reform groups, powerful local politicians and some Black Lives Matter activists, was viewed across the country as a pivotal event. She promised to restore trust and fairness to the states attorneys office a step toward making the criminal justice system more just.

Since the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, the demands for change have intensified as part of a national conversation about racism and law enforcement.

But after months of protests, occasional explosions of rioting and a surge in violence in Chicago, a number of politicians have declared that its time to get tougher on crime. The loudest is, of course, President Donald Trump, stoking fears of chaos and destruction as he campaigns for reelection on law and order. Challenger Joe Biden and other Democrats have noted that the unrest and violence are occurring on Trumps watch, but that doesnt mean theyre not worried that the political backlash is real.

In a history-turning year, some in Chicago are wondering about the previously unthinkable: Could a Republican actually win countywide office?

More important, the growing fear of crime ensures that not just Foxx but the reform agenda she promised will be up for a vote. In a time of turmoil and anxiety, how many Democratic voters will respond to the call for law and order? Is justice more than locking people up?

The optics are also telling: Foxx, who grew up in the Cabrini-Green public housing development, is the first African American in decades to serve as top prosecutor, and the first African American woman ever. While shes been embraced by voters in neighborhoods most affected by crime and policing, shes been vilified in communities where most of the citys police officers live. OBrien, who is white, has to hope he can connect with voters in mostly white and Hispanic areas in the rest of Cook County.

As the Trump administration publicizes its latest show of federal force in Chicago, advocates say there are better ways to prevent violence.

Foxxs predecessor, Anita Alvarez, was a career prosecutor. Asked to describe her mission, she said: We stick up for victims of crime.

That is a worthy goal, but Alvarez talked far less about justice. A product of the tough-on-crime era of the 1980s and 1990s, she was slow to respond to a stunning series of false confessions and wrongful convictions. She was also widely seen as too friendly with police, and too dependent on them to build her cases, to hold them accountable when needed.

In 2015, a judge ordered the release of video showing Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke shooting 17-year-old Laquan McDonald 16 times the previous year. Alvarez charged Van Dyke with murder but not until hours before the video was made public, more than a year after the shooting.

Four months later, Foxx beat Alvarez decisively in the Democratic primary. She was part of a small wave of reform-minded prosecutors around the country promising to bring new transparency and fairness to the work.

Foxx has followed through on many of her promises, such as reinvigorating her offices conviction integrity unit and creating a data portal that allows the public to track every case the office handles. She also has taken a new approach to some nonviolent offenses that she said would not only be more humane, but would free resources for fighting violent crimes.

For instance, people arrested for shoplifting charged formally with retail theft now face misdemeanor charges unless theyre accused of stealing at least $1,000 of goods. The move was welcomed by reform groups as well as officials at the jail, where homeless or mentally ill shoplifters often ended up when they couldnt afford bail. But it was blasted by some business and political leaders.

Her reforms, including calls for police accountability, have also made her deeply unpopular with officers, including the local leadership of the Fraternal Order of Police.

Several clear mistakes have given more fire to her critics. Exhibit A is the fiasco with actor Jussie Smollett. Arrested for allegedly staging a hate crime against himself in January 2019, Smollett avoided prosecution or even making an admission of wrongdoing when Foxxs office dropped the charges. Foxx has yet to fully explain the series of events, which has only fed the media frenzy around the case. Last month, a special prosecutor cleared Foxxs office of criminal wrongdoing but said it had committed substantial abuses of discretion.

We certainly recognize that the public had a deep interest in the case and we had an obligation to be fully transparent with them and we didnt handle that well. I own that, Foxx told me in an interview this week. But that still means we have to do the work that I was put here to do.

In March, Foxx faced three primary challengers who attacked her handling of the Smollett case and questioned whether her office had let too many criminals off the hook. Though Foxx was formally endorsed by the Cook County Democratic Party, several elected officials from mostly white areas declined to back her.

State Sen. Robert Martwick, the 38th Ward Democratic committeeperson, said members of his ward organization voted not to endorse anyone in the race.

Martwick said he respected Foxx for working with state legislators to enact criminal justice reforms. The 1980s lock-em-up-and-throw-away-the-key approach, shes partnered with the legislature to change some of those policies, he said.

But in the 38th Ward, on the Northwest Side, either a police officer is a member of your family or your neighbor or your kids coach in little league baseball. And among those police officers, theres a lot of concern that shes making their lives more difficult. Whether its right or wrong, that is the perception.

Foxx lost the 38th Ward as well as many other majority-white city wards and suburban townships. But her huge margins in Black areas sent her to victory with 50.2% of the vote.

Given the Democratic dominance of Cook County, Foxx was expected to have little trouble with OBrien in November; only two Republicans have served as states attorney in the last 60 years. But the tenor of the race changed after the unrest following Floyds killing in May.

A few weeks later, Foxx announced that her office would not prosecute protesters arrested for nonviolent offenses such as curfew violations. Progressives praised the move for backing the right to demonstrate peacefully. Others saw it as another sign that Foxx didnt have the backs of the police.

On the night of Aug. 9, businesses in downtown Chicago and the Near North Side were struck by looters in an ugly repeat of the chaos in the spring.

The next morning, Mayor Lori Lightfoot suggested that criminals were emboldened because Foxx and her office werent doing their jobs to keep them in jail. Lightfoot, a Democrat, had supported Foxx, and the two later appeared at a press conference declaring they were working together with other public safety officials. But the narrative was set. Downtown Alderman Brendan Reilly blasted Foxx in an email newsletter to constituents, and other Democrats signaled they would not back her reelection.

OBrien joined in the attacks. Like many others, he mixed criticism with outright falsehoods.

When I spoke with him this week, he argued that it was fair to link Foxx to the looting. He said that, as he understood it, prosecutors in her office didnt fight judges who let accused looters out on bond before trial. But thats not what he had said after the unrest, when he claimed she had let them out herself. OBrien also admitted he had no evidence that looters had been released on bond and then gone back to looting, but insisted that criminals have an understanding that the states attorney isnt serious about enforcing the law.

When he looked closely at Foxxs record, he said, it seemed that there was a real bias she favored defendants over victims.

On Aug. 13, Foxxs office announced that prosecutors had approved charges against 42 of the 43 people police had arrested for felonies during the looting.

Still, OBrien has enjoyed a boost in funding and attention since the second round of unrest. From Aug. 10 through Sept. 3, Foxxs campaign reported six donations adding up to $19,900, mostly from wealthy longtime supporters. OBrien, meanwhile, received 42 contributions adding up to $199,000. His biggest check, for $57,800, came from the police union. Other police backers have also donated, including lawyers who have defended officers accused of misconduct, former top aides to Alvarez, and former judge Matthew Coghlan, who had a record of handing out harsh sentences before voters decided in 2018 that he shouldnt be retained.

Foxx said the accusations from OBrien and others that she has helped create a revolving door of criminals going in and out of jail is not supported by evidence. She noted that from 2017 through early this year, crime, including violent offenses, dropped even as her office was implementing reforms.

The notion that the states attorneys office cant simultaneously pursue public safety and a broader sense of justice is false, she said, and it would be a mistake to stop the reform efforts now.

All of those bad justice policies came out of fear, and we know it: three strikes laws, mandatory minimums, the war on drugs, Foxx said. Thats the extreme irony. We know how we got here.

OBrien himself served as a prosecutor in a case that ended up putting four men in prison for a 1986 rape and murder they were later cleared of through DNA evidence. In this case the justice system failed those four men and I was part of the failure, he said. If elected, OBrien said, he would commit to more vigorous testing of crime scene evidence.

A key witness in that case offered testimony that experts concluded was false. But OBrien said the case was not a sign of overzealous policing or prosecution. As states attorney, he said, he would keep the community safe and stick up for victims.

Thats exactly how Alvarez described the job.

Update, Sept. 4, 2020: This story has been updated to reflect the races of both candidates for states attorney.

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As Trump Calls for Law and Order, Can Chicagos Top Prosecutor Beat the Charge That Shes Soft on Crime? - ProPublica

Watching four disturbances in the Atlantic Basin; one in the Caribbean – Wink News

The 8 p.m. update added yet another tropical disturbance to watch, bringing the total to five.

Were almost to the peak of hurricane season, and right on cue, were watching five disturbances in the tropics. Four are in the Atlantic, while one is in the Caribbean. The two that are furthest away from the US have a high chance of becoming a tropical depression this week.

The front-runner is INVEST-92L, which is producing a disorganized cluster of storms this morning. 92L is expected to push off to the west-northwest in the central Atlantic over the next several days, where conditions will be favorable for it to become a tropical depression or storm. The National Hurricane Center gives this disturbance a high 100% chance of development over the next 5 days.

Behind 92L, another vigorous tropical wave, titled 93L, is forecast to push off the west African Coast today. A tropical depression is likely to form by the middle of next week as it pushes westward across the eastern tropical Atlantic. Right now, the National Hurricane Center is giving it a high 90% chance of development over the next 5 days.

Per the 8 p.m. update, a third wave has the potential to form over the next 5 days. It has a 20% of development.

Computer models are bullish on development of these two waves, and while its too early to know if they will affect land, its worth mentioning models signal that steering currents will favor a path out to sea. Either way, both disturbances are 3000-4000 miles away from the United States, so plenty of time to watch!

Another tropical wave in the central Caribbean has flared up over the past day or so. Conditions are unfavorable for slow development over the next couple of days, however, once it reaches the western Caribbean midweek, upper level winds will become hostile, likely halting any organization. The National Hurricane Center gives this disturbance a 0% chance of development over the next 5 days.

Yet another area of disturbed weather has developed just south of Bermuda overnight. Conditions will be somewhat favorable for slow development as it slides west-northwest over the next several days. This may produce impacts along the Carolina coastlines. The National Hurricane Center gives this disturbance a low 30% chance of development within the next 5 days.

Next names are PAULETTE, RENE, and SALLY. By the way, only six more names left until the Greek Alphabet! The only time that ever happened was the historic 2005 Atlantic Hurricane Season.

Stay tuned at WINK for the latest on the tropics!

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Watching four disturbances in the Atlantic Basin; one in the Caribbean - Wink News

Why Rich Americans Are Fleeing To The Caribbean This Winter – Forbes

Getty Images for The Capri Hotel & NAIA Hamptons

Rich Europeans and Americans are flocking to the Caribbean, but not for the usual winter sun. More and more wealthy individuals are moving for longer periods than usual.

Citizenship advisers, government agencies and real estate developers say they have seen a rapid increase in business over the past few months. Even luxury hotels say they are booking in guests for long-term stays.

The increase in American arrivals has been most stark, they say. Mohammed Asaria, whose Range Developments is working on a new Six Senses resort, says U.S. citizens are coming to "hide it out.

"You've got the election coming. That's number one. You've had Covid and certain places in the U.S. have been challenged through that, and more working remotely."

U.S. inquiries for residential villas at Secret Bay in Dominica have jumped 66%. "Its the first time the U.S. has gone through a period like this and it's not just the Covid-19 situation," says Gregor Nassief, its proprietor. "It is the fear of what an extreme outcome on the left or right may look like after the presidential election."

Secret Bay in Dominica

Others are keen to escape with new-found working from home freedoms. "Digital nomad is not a new thing," says Petra Roach, head of Global Markets for Visit Barbados. "Before we didn't really think about it."

But then in July Barbados launched a new 12 month"Welcome Stamp" designed to attract remote workers to the country. Since its launch there have been around 1,100 applications, 42% of which are from the U.S. British and Canadians are the next largest nationalities to apply.

Barbados's new temporary residents are checking into Airbnbs while real estate agents rush to find rental properties. Hotels are even offering long stays. Both the Hilton and Marriott in Barbados have announced month-long packages.

But the wealthier clients want something more than just a hotel room. Many want actual citizenship of the islands where they are staying. Barbados does not offer this but Grenada, Dominica and other Caribbean nations do.

"Citizenship By Investment," or CBI as it is known, first started in St Kitts and Nevis in 1984. Traditionally it attracts Chinese and Middle Easterners who want a passport with more travel freedoms.

But in the past few months it too has seen an increase in U.S. inquiries. "We have seen an uptick in applications from the U.S. for people who want an alternative passport," says Les Khan, chief executive of the St Kitts and Nevis Citizenship by Investment Unit.

Normally the two-island nation hands out passports to investors who never visit their country. This year is different: Its new citizens actually want to come to the islands. Some want to stay.

A house on St. Kitts

This is putting a strain on the supply of government approved real estate projects that qualify for citizenship. A minimum of $200,000 must be spent on real estate to access citizenship, but currently only approved developments count and most of these are linked to hotels.

"We're looking at alternatives outside of our hotels," says Khan. "Individuals are looking for opportunities outside of those hotels and get access to our citizenship through private homes. Its something that we're exploring."

This is largely due to a change of lifestyle, he says: "Individuals who are from the U.S. apply for St Kitts passport are doing so to want to come and change their lifestyles and live on the island."

Six Senses Residential Villas

Grenada is also having to come up with more room. Range Developments Six Senses resort will include a branded residential component in Grenada. "People want a second or third home in a place where they're not going to be affected by any of this should a second or third wave come," says Asaria.

Real estate is not the only path to Caribbean citizenship. St Kitts and Nevis, Dominica and Grenada allow a contribution to a sovereign fund as an cheaper route. Citizenship advisers tout Caribbean passports for their visa-free travel freedoms, or, in Nassief's words, "A useful insurance policy" should things at home go awry.

However, more and more duel national Americans are renouncing their U.S. citizenship. A total of 5,816 Americans gave up their citizenship in the first half of this year, a 1,210% jump on the previous six months and more than double 2019's total says Bambridge Accountants.

"The huge increase inU.S. expatsrenouncing from our experience is thatthe current pandemic has allowed individuals the time to review their ties to the U.S. and decide that the current political climate and annual US tax reporting is just too much to bear," says Alistair Bambridge, partner at Bambridge Accountants New York.

Tax reporting plays a large part in this: The U.S. is unique in requiring its citizens to pay tax wherever they are domiciled. Most of those renouncing are likely to have moved abroad several years previously. However, some now armed with a Caribbean passport and the power to work from wherever they want may have decided to take the leap.

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Why Rich Americans Are Fleeing To The Caribbean This Winter - Forbes

Travel (virtually) to the island of Curaao through these photos – USA Today 10Best

Photo courtesy of iStock / texpan

The island of Curaao, one of the Caribbeans ABC Islands (along with Aruba and Bonaire), feels like a corner of the Netherlands was dropped into the Caribbean. Colorful Dutch colonial architecture, stunning beaches, underwater coral walls and a UNESCO-listed capital make this island a favorite in the Southern Caribbean.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

This green building in the Scharloo District, a neighborhood once inhabited by wealthy merchants, is known as the Wedding Cake House for its tiered structure and intricate architectural detail. Scharloo is one of four districts in Willemstad, along with Otrobanda, Punda and Pietermaai.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

A cross between a milkshake and a smoothie, a batido ranks among the most popular ways on the island to cool off after a day at the beach. Youll find this combination of fresh or frozen fruit, milk and sugar sold at roadside trucks around the island.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Blue Curaao is distilled and bottled in Curaao (and has been since 1896). During the distillation process, dried peels of Laraha oranges are mixed with eight different spices. The resulting liqueur is clear, but blue coloring is added, giving it its distinct look.

You know you have the real thing from the round glass bottle, which has a rough texture resembling a Laraha orange peel.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Its easy to see why this submerged cave in the cliffs of Curaaos west coast is named the Blue Room. Only accessible by sea, the cave exhibits electric blue water, a phenomenon of sunlight refraction. Go snorkeling inside for the chance to spot schools of fish and lobster.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Sun seekers can choose from more than 35 beaches on the island, including the popular Cas Abao. This white sand beach has calm, clear waters ideal for swimming, plus a reef just offshore for snorkeling and scuba diving.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Dutch influence is evident throughout the island, including in its cuisine, where seafood is always a star. Lawyer-turned-chef Helmi Smeulders teaches Caribbean cooking classes to visitors, one of many delicious local food experiences on the menu in Curaao.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Chill Beach Bar & Grill at LionsDive Resort is known for its tropical cocktails, beach barbecues and lively happy hours. Settle into a hammock to sip on a coconut-infused libation, or tuck into fish and meat skewers hot off the grill. This toes-in-the-sand spot is particularly lively on Friday afternoons.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Head to Playa Piskado, a tiny fishermens beach, to watch the fishing boats haul in their catch. Once ashore, you can see the fishermen clean the fish right on the beach; keep an eye out for sea turtles, who come toward shore to eat the scraps tossed into the water.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Locals and visitors alike gather at Playa Forti to experience the adrenaline rush of cliff jumping into the clear turquoise water. This 40-foot cliff behind Restaurant Playa Forti gets particularly busy on weekends around sunset.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Its well worth tearing yourself away from the beach to visit one or two of the islands excellent museums. Pictured here is the Museo di Tamb Shon Cola, where a local musician demonstrates how to stretch a tambu drum.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Handelskade, a stretch of pier in the Punda District of Willemstad, ranks among the most photographed spots on the island thanks to its brightly painted Colonial Dutch buildings on the water of St. Anna Bay. Set aside some time for a drink at one of the outdoor cafes as you watch the floating Queen Emma Bridge swing open and shut.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

No trip to Curaao would be complete without a meal at Jaanchies, one of the islands most popular local restaurants. Instead of a formal menu, Jaanchie often takes a seat at the table to share the days options. The leafy outdoor dining area is a hot spot for birds.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

The Mikv Israel-Emanuel Synagogue, the oldest continually used temple in the Western Hemisphere, was first dedicated in 1732. The sand-covered floor is said to symbolize the sand used during the Inquisition to muffle the sounds in houses of worship, as well as the 40 years the Jewish people spent wandering the desert.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Punda, Willemstads first colonial settlement, is also one of its most colorful. Many of the preserved colonial buildings now house art galleries and studios, like the Nena Sanchez Gallery. Sanchez was a self-taught local artist known for capturing the bright colors of the island in her work.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Shete Boka means "seven mouths" in Dutch, even though there are more than seven coves in Shete Boka National Park. Come watch the waves crash against the rocks and underground cave at Boka Tabla, or watch for nesting sea turtles along the small beaches.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

For some of the best oceanfront views, spend an afternoon or evening sipping cocktails at St. Tropez Ocean Club in Willemstad. This sleek seaside lounge, a go-to on Friday nights, features a large swimming pool, private cabanas and a DJ spinning during happy hour.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Curaao enjoys one of the most colorful street art scenes in the Caribbean, with murals dotting the streets of Willemstad and beyond. For the best concentration of street art, talk a stroll through the streets of Otrobanda, or take an art tour to hear more about the stories behind the art.

Photo courtesy of Eduardo Gato / Curaao Tourist Board

Dinner in Curaao doesnt have to be a formal event. For a relaxed, al fresco meal, head to a late-night truk di pan. These food trucks serve barbecue dishes and typically open after 9 pm. Popular options include grilled chicken or steak with fries, served with spicy onion relish and peanut sauce.

Photo courtesy of iStock / Flavio Vallenari

While flamingos dont breed in Curaao, they do gather in the islands salt ponds to feast on brine shrimp. You can often spot flocks of wild flamingos in the ponds of Jan Kok, about 30 minutes west of Willemstad, as well as in Salina St. Marie.

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Travel (virtually) to the island of Curaao through these photos - USA Today 10Best

Caribbean Flavors to Shift the Palate, from Yardy – The New Yorker

The other day, as I ate a salad that Id ordered from Yardy, an event-production company started by the twenty-seven-year-old artist, chef, and model DeVonn Francis, my brain kept short-circuiting. Every time I bit into a cube of yellow fruit, dusted with Franciss riff on Tajn (a Mexican chili-and-lime seasoning powder), I expected pineapple; in fact, it was mellow, sunny-fleshed watermelon. Between the cognitive glitch and the heat of the spice mixheavy on dehydrated Scotch-bonnet pepper, ubiquitous in West Africa and the Caribbeanit was a dish that reframed my palate as much as it brought me pleasure.

Reframing the American palate by skillfully wielding pleasure, not to mention style, is one way to describe what Francis aims to do with Yardy. Before the pandemic, the company was focussed on food-centric gatherings, some publica one-night roller disco in Bushwick, an Afro-Caribbean-themed dinner at the Lower East Side restaurant Dimesand some private, for companies such as Gucci and Squarespace. Francis, whose Jamaican-immigrant parents owned a restaurant in Norfolk, Virginia, when he was a kid, waited tables at the restaurants Estela and Caf Altro Paradiso while he was in art school, at Cooper Union. After he graduated, in 2015, he chose foodwoven together with event production and designas his medium for exploring the threads of his identity as a queer Black Caribbean-American.

Parties may be on pause, but Yardy is not. In some ways, Francis told me recently, this strange new world has motivated him to move faster toward his biggest ambitions. For a long time, I was, like, Imagine if Yardy could be in everyones home, he said. I spent so much time watching food shows that helped me get to where I am right now. Wouldnt it be great if Yardy could be a beacon of what it meant to be a queer Black chef who has hit a certain amount of notoriety?

Although the past few months have been a huge challenge, Francis said, its been a really great way to amplify our message. His Living Room series, which, until March, took the form of ticketed dinners featuring discussions with artists, poets, and chefs, has moved to Instagram Live, where anyone can watch. Hed like Yardy to be a household brand, offering Caribbean-inspired ice cream or condiments made with ingredients grown by Black farmers, packaged so that a little Jamaican kid walking down the aisle at Whole Foods will feel an immediate sense of recognition. As a precursor, hes offering takeout from the SoHo caf Smile to Go.

The menu is short and features essential-feeling dishes found across cultures, made with Caribbean ingredients that Francis wants to spotlight and demystify for a broad audience. The blackened skin of his roast chicken is coated in tamarind and ginger; his brown-rice bowl is dotted with cubed mango, black beans, and pickled cabbage, and comes with a papaya vinaigrette. He reimagined the chayote squash of his childhood, usually boiled in chunks in soup, as a thinly sliced filling for a rich, savory tart, delicately arranged atop caramelized onions, in a thick but flaky pte brise, and garnished with culantro, a tropical cousin of cilantro. Hes also collaborating with the Black Farmer Fund, which supports Black farmers and food entrepreneurs in New York State, to source produce to use in his prepared dishes and to sell as grocery items.

Making things that feel like they just live with you, and are accessories to what youre already doing, is a great way to introduce people to unfamiliar food concepts, Francis told me. The watermelon salad was inspired by his favorite food to buy from a street vender: a plastic baggie of ripe mango sprinkled with Tajn. Its such a beautiful gesture of convenience and utility, to have a snack that you travel with thats in a bag, he said, clearly nostalgic for life as we knew it before March. I finished the watermelon in minutes. Most everything else I ordered from Yardy kept well for a least a week, playing happy accessory to life as we know it now. (Dishes $8-$32.)

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Caribbean Flavors to Shift the Palate, from Yardy - The New Yorker

Soca Artists Kes The Band Is Back With New Live Album Just In Time For Labor Day Weekend – Essence

When I think about how soca music makes me feel, I beam from the inside.Charge it to my Trinidadian roots, but whenever a big chune plays (old or new)my eyes close, hands go up,head tilts backand my waistline sways to the rhythm.

For meand millions ofothersocafans worldwide, no other genre of music exudes the euphoria that soca does. The up-tempo groovy beatsa modern twist to its forefather calypsoinstantly elevate any mood. (Press play on these classics for an instant mood booster: Dollar Wine by Collin Lucas; Nani Wine by Byron Lee & The Dragonaires or Turn It Around by Andy Armstrong & Square One). In many ways, soca fuels the Caribbean diaspora providing the vibes that anyone can levitate to. So the timing couldnt be more perfect for a fresh new live album from the icons ofthe genre, Kes.

Hailing from the twin islands of Trinidad and Tobago, the hub of carnivalin the Caribbean, the band breathesnewlife into a culture that has been largely sidelined due to the pandemic. We Home, the first major soca release since the COVID-19 outbreak hit T&T, ispure vibes from the moment the album begins. Neveronesto be boxed in, Kes has alwaysdelivereda sound that is was indistinguishably alltheir ownatrueeclecticfusion of islandmusic includingsoca, reggae, dancehall and pop.

Having previously shared the stage with music legends John Legend, Will Smith and Major Lazor,this new Kes collaboration features rising T&T calypso star Jimmy October and Tobagonian jazz performer Etienne Charles.

We Home gives fans a direct connection tothethe band, comprised of brothers Kees Dieffenthaller (lead vocals), Hans Dieffenthaller (drums), and Jon Dieffenthaller (guitar), along with long-time friend Riad Boochoon (bass guitar). It isgood vibes in a bottle, Kees told ESSENCE, who shared that the live version was purposeful and a way to give fans a front-row seat to the culture, even thoughcurrently,were all socially distant.

The color of paint that soca has become is happiness, so we really wanted this album to remind people what it is to feel happy again. This is really our personal concert for you, said Kees.Celebrations have also alreadybegun for the album asHello, the lead single on the live album, now holds the title for most YouTube plays of anysoca song in the last decade.

Althoughmost international travel may beinterrupted indefinitely, enjoy a true taste of Caribbean culturewith this eclectic live album until you can experience the islands in-person again. The chunes on Kes We Home provide the perfect playlist to kick back, pour a drink and, as the locals say, free up yourself.

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Soca Artists Kes The Band Is Back With New Live Album Just In Time For Labor Day Weekend - Essence

Global Warming Could Bring More Hurricanes to the Caribbean: Study – Nearshore Americas

Global warming is set to bring more extreme hurricanes to the Caribbean, but the likelihood of such disasters can be reduced dramatically if the countries in the region meet their climate change goals, the University of Bristol has stated in a report.

Under the current climate, the Caribbean will experience devastating hurricanes once or twice in a period of 100 years, but the increasing rate of global warming means that such hurricanes could occur more often.

Extreme hurricanes, such as Hurricane Maria, occur once in a hundred years. But with the earth becoming warmer with each passing day, an event of similar size to Maria would be more than twice as likely, occurring once every 43 years, the report added.

In an agreement signed in Paris, countries around the world have agreed to cut carbon emissions, vowing to ensure that the global average temperature increase does not exceed 2C.

Researchers say that rainfall statistics took into account several factors including land features and large scale winds.

They claimed to have found that the Caribbean is more vulnerable to climate change than cooler regions such as the United States and Canada.

Hurricane research has previously focused on the United States, so we wanted to look at the Caribbean region, which has fewer resources to recover, said lead author Emily Vosper, Research Student at the School of Computer Science, at the University of Bristol.

The findings are alarming and illustrate the urgent need to tackle global warming to reduce the likelihood of extreme rainfall events and their catastrophic consequences, particularly for poorer countries which take many years to recover.

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Global Warming Could Bring More Hurricanes to the Caribbean: Study - Nearshore Americas