Macau | History, Geography, & Map | Britannica

Macau, special administrative region (Pinyin: tebie xingzhengqu; Wade-Giles romanization: te-pieh hsing-cheng-ch) of China, on the countrys southern coast. Macau is located on the southwestern corner of the Pearl (Zhu) River (Chu Chiang) estuary (at the head of which is the port of Guangzhou [Canton]) and stands opposite the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, which is some 40 miles (60 km) away on the eastern side of the estuary.

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Macau comprises a small narrow peninsula projecting from the mainland province of Guangdong and includes an area comprising the islands of Taipa and Coloane, which are joined by an expanse of land that was reclaimed from the sea and is known as Cotai. Extending up a hillside is the city of Macau, which occupies almost the entire peninsula. The name Macau, or Macao (Pinyin: Aomen; Wade-Giles romanization: Ao-men), is derived from the Chinese Ama-gao, or Bay of Ama, for Ama, the patron goddess of sailors.

Macau Peninsula is connected to the island area by bridges. Both the peninsula and the island area consist of small granite hills surrounded by limited areas of flatland. The original natural vegetation was evergreen tropical forest before the hills were stripped for firewood and construction. No part of Macau reaches any great elevation; the highest point, 565 feet (172 metres), is at Coloane Peak (Coloane Alto) on Coloane. There are no permanent rivers, and water is either collected during rains or piped in from the mainland.

Macau lies just within the tropics, and it has a monsoonal (wet-dry) climate. Four-fifths of its total average annual rainfall of 83 inches (2,120 mm) falls within the summer rainy season (AprilSeptember), when the southwest monsoon blows. Temperatures reach 84 F (29 C) in the summer and fall to 59 F (15 C) in winter. Besides being rainy, the summer months are also hot, humid, and unpleasant. Winters, on the other hand, are somewhat cooler and less humid and can be delightful.

Nearly all of the population, of which a great majority lives on Macau Peninsula, is ethnic Chinese, born on either the mainland or Macau. There are also small groups of other Asians (including people of mixed Chinese and Portuguese ancestry, often called Macanese). However, the once-significant Portuguese minority has been reduced to only a small proportion of the population. Of the ethnic Chinese, the vast majority are Cantonese speakers, and a few speak Hakka. Chinese (Cantonese) and Portuguese are both official languages; English is also commonly spoken.

Macaus population is overwhelmingly Buddhist, while others adhere to Daoism and Confucianism or combinations of the three. Among the small number of Christians, the great majority are Roman Catholics. About one-sixth of the population professes no religious affiliation.

Macau is one of the most densely populated places in the world, and the entire population is classed as urban. Macau has a relatively older population, with less than one-fourth being younger than age 25.

The service sector dominates the economy, employing about three-fourths of the total labour force. There are few natural resources, an exception being fish in the Pearl River estuary, which are used for local needs. Agriculture is minimal; small quantities of vegetables are grown, and there is some poultry raising (chickens and eggs).

Macau is a free port, and trade is vital. The mainland is of major importance as a supplier of food and inexpensive consumer goods, and a 2004 agreement with China that eliminated tariffs on many of Macaus goods helped increase exports to the mainland. Much of Macaus imports consist of raw materials or semifinished goods for manufacturing purposes. Other imports include machinery and apparatuses, and imported petroleum provides most of the power for domestic electric generation. However, some two-thirds of Macaus power requirements must be imported from Guangdong. Apparel and textile fabrics are the primary exports, and reexports constitute a small but significant proportion of the total value of exports. China is Macaus principal trading partner; trade with the United States and Hong Kong is also significant. In 1991 Macau became a member of the General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs, now the World Trade Organization.

In 1989 the Monetary and Foreign Exchange Authority of Macau replaced the Instituto Emissor de Macau as regulator of the currency, the Macau pataca, which is pegged to the Hong Kong dollar. Commercial and foreign banks, as well as banks of issue and a banking association, constitute Macaus banking and financial system. Since the mid-1990s the government has made efforts to attract foreign investors and thus diversify the economy away from its heavy reliance on tourism.

Nonetheless, tourism and gambling are the most important components of Macaus overall economy, and the region in effect serves as the playground of nearby Hong Kong and, increasingly, the Chinese mainland. High-speed hydrofoils, as well as some traditional but slower river ferries, carry tourists from Hong Kong and Shenzhen (just north of Hong Kong) to Macaus numerous gambling casinos, bars, hotels, and other attractions. Internal transport is good, and there are local ferries between the peninsula and the islands. Following the December 1999 transfer of administrative status from Portugal to China, Macau remained a free and open port. An international airport became operational in Macau in 1995.

Before it became a special administrative region of China in 1999, Macau followed the colonial constitution promulgated in 1976; it was administered by a governor, who in agreement with the Legislative Assembly was appointed by the Portuguese president. With the transfer of sovereignty over the territory to China, the Basic Law of the Macau Special Administrative Region, which outlined a policy of one country, two systems, went into effect. For a period of 50 years, Macau will thus retain its capitalist economy and some political autonomy, but foreign policy and defense matters will remain under Chinese administration.

According to the Basic Law, the chief executive, who serves a five-year term, holds executive authority but is under the jurisdiction of the central government in Beijing. An election committee of 300 members, who serve five-year terms, selects the chief executive, who can serve up to two consecutive five-year terms. The chief executive appoints an executive council, which consists of 7 to 11 members, to assist in policy making. The legislature is a single-chamber Legislative Assembly, headed by an elected president and vice president; the assembly has 33 members, who serve four-year terms and are selected by a combination of direct popular election (14), indirect election by a committee of special-interest groups (12), and appointment by the chief executive (7).

Law is based on the Portuguese system. The judicial system was completely administered from Portugal until 1993, when a high court of justice was established in Macau. A new penal code was authorized in 1996 in response to a rise in crime. The Basic Law states that the judicial system remains intact with the transfer of sovereignty and that all judges are appointed by the chief executive. The highest court is the Court of Final Appeal, headed by a chief justice. There are also lower primary courts, intermediate courts, and administrative courts. Macau has a small security force, but defense is the responsibility of the central government in Beijing.

Primary and secondary education in Macau is overwhelmingly at private schools, although the great majority of these schools receive government subsidies. Five years of primary education are officially compulsory, and education is free for children from age 6 to 15. Most receive instruction in Chinese (Cantonese), while the remainder are taught in either English or Portuguese. The University of Macau, formerly the University of East Asia, opened in the early 1990s. In the early 2000s plans were made to move the university from its location on Taipa Island to a parcel of land on Chinas Hengqin Island. An agreement for jurisdiction of the land to be transferred to Macau was reached in 2009 as part of a 40-year lease from China. The new campus was inaugurated in 2013, and relocation was completed in 2014. Literacy is now nearly universal in Macau; a slightly larger proportion of males than females is literate.

There are medical centres and hospitals in Macau, and traditional Chinese medicine is also practiced. The elderly receive medications free of charge. The average life expectancy is about 80 years, and the birth and infant mortality rates are both low. The government has constructed low-income housing units, and the private sector has introduced social housing with controlled prices.

Chinese culture predominates, overlaid by a veneer of Portuguese architecture (notably churches and cathedrals) and customs. Chinese temples and shrines coexist with restored villas from the colonial period. Barrier Gate, which links Macau Peninsula to the mainland, is a popular spot for tourists, as are such early 17th-century structures as Monte Fort and the nearby ruined facade of St. Pauls Cathedral (destroyed 1835). The historic buildings on the peninsula collectively were designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2005.

As is the case in Hong Kong, Cantonese pop (canto-pop) is a popular form of music. Spectator sports include both dog and horse racing. The Macau Grand Prix attracts numerous international competitors and fans of motor racing. Macaus major sports complexes include the Macau Olympic Complex and the Macau East Asian Games Dome; the latter was built for the 2005 East Asian Games, hosted by Macau. Football (soccer), track and field, volleyball, and roller hockey are popular team and individual sports. In the 1990s Macau hosted several roller hockey world championships.

The former Lus de Cames Museum, named for the Portuguese poet and writer of the epic Os Lusadas, was in a 17th-century house that once was used by the British East India Company; its collections are now part of the Macau Museum of Art and feature Chinese pottery, paintings, and artifacts. Adjacent to the art museum is the Macau Cultural Centre, with several performance and exhibition venues. Also of note is the Macau Museum in the Monte Fort compound, which has exhibits on the history of the region.

Local radio stations in Macau (one state-run) and a state-run television station broadcast programs in Chinese (Cantonese) and Portuguese. In addition, cable and satellite television broadcasting is available, and television and radio broadcasts also come from Hong Kong. Several daily newspapers are circulated; most are published in Chinese, but a handful are in Portuguese and English. Internet use is widespread, and mobile telephone usage is ubiquitous.

The first Portuguese ship anchored in the Pearl River estuary in 1513, and further Portuguese visits followed regularly. Trade with China commenced in 1553. Four years later Portuguese paying tribute to China settled in Macau, which became the official and principal entrept for all international trade with China and Japan and an intermediary port for ships traveling from Lisbon to Nagasaki (at the time, Japans only outport for trade). China, nonetheless, still refused to recognize Portuguese sovereignty over the territory. The first governor was appointed in the 17th century, but the Portuguese remained largely under the control of the Chinese. Missionaries carried over on Portuguese ships transformed Macau into an East Asian centre of Christianity. Even though Chinas trade with the outside world was gradually centralized in Guangzhou (Canton) toward the end of the 18th century, merchants were allowed into Guangzhou only during the trading seasonfrom November to Mayand the international merchant community established itself at Macau. By the mid-19th century the British colony of Hong Kong had surpassed Macau in trade, and within a few years the merchants had largely deserted the Portuguese possession, which never again was a major entrept.

In the 1930s and 40s Macau, declared a neutral territory during the Sino-Japanese War and World War II, became a refuge for both Chinese and Europeans. The Chinese population in the territory continued to grow when the communist government assumed power in China in 1949. In 1951 Portugal officially made Macau an overseas province. Following a military coup in Portugal in 1974, the government allotted more administrative autonomy and economic independence to the territory. The constitution promulgated in 1976 established the Legislative Assembly, which was dominated by the minority Portuguese. Until diplomatic relations were solidified between Portugal and the communist government in China in 1979, discussions on transferring Macau to Chinese control were fruitless.

In March 1984 the Portuguese governor dissolved the assembly in response to opposition within the government to extend the right to vote to the Chinese majority. A few months later new elections, which included Chinese suffrage, finally brought a significant number of Chinese deputies into the government. In April 1987 Portugal and China reached an agreement to return Macau to Chinese rule in 1999, using the Hong Kong Joint Declaration between Britain and China as a model. They agreed to provisions under the Basic Law that would ensure the autonomy of Macau for 50 years after the start of Chinese rule. These included Macaus right to elect local leaders, the right of its residents to travel freely, and the right to maintain its way of life, both economically and socially. Defense and foreign policy matters were to be administered by China, and those living in Macau without Portuguese passports would become Chinese citizens. Elections continued to turn out record numbers of voters and a Chinese majority legislature. On December 20, 1999, Macau became a special administrative region under Chinese sovereignty, as Hong Kong had in 1997.

The period since reunification has been peaceful and marked by increasing prosperity. Much of the regions economic growth has come from the tremendous expansion in gambling and gaming since 2000, which transformed Macau into one of the worlds largest gambling centres (in terms of revenue). Tourism also has risen sharply from levels in the 1990s. Major infrastructure projects have included continued land reclamation throughout the region and a third bridge (opened 2005) between Macau Peninsula and Taipa Island. The political situation has been stable, with orderly legislative elections. Ho Hau Wah (Edmund Ho) was named Macaus first chief executive at reunification in 1999; he was reelected to a second term in 2004. In 2009 Chui Sai On was elected president, succeeding Hau. By the mid-2010s his administration was facing a sharp decline in gaming revenues.

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Macau | History, Geography, & Map | Britannica

Macau International Travel Information

Criminal Penalties:You are subject to local laws. If you violate local laws, even unknowingly, you may be expelled, arrested, or imprisoned.

Drugs: Penalties for possessing, using, or trafficking in illegal drugs in Macau are severe.

ID: Police have the right to take you in for questioning if you are not carrying your passport.

Photography: You may be detained if you take pictures of certain buildings (please pay attention to no photography signs in casinos in particular).

DUI: Driving under the influence of alcohol or other drugs could land you immediately in jail.

Furthermore, some laws are also prosecutable in the U.S., regardless of local law. For examples, see our website oncrimes against minors abroadand theDepartment of Justicewebsite.

Arrest Notification:If you are arrested or detained, ask police or prison officials to notify the U.S. Consulate General immediately. Macau authorities regularly notify the Consulate if they know that a U.S. citizen has been detained or arrested. See ourwebpagefor further information.

SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES:

Currency:There are no currency restrictions for tourists in Macau. Pataca is the official currency in Macau. Hong Kong currency is commonly used and widely accepted in transactions. Credit cards and ATM network debit cards are widely accepted in Macau. Banks and major hotels accept traveler's checks.

Customs Regulations: Macau customs authorities may enforce strict regulations concerning temporary importation into or export from Macau of items such as firearms, ivory, certain categories of medications, and other goods. Please see theMacau Customs Servicewebsite for further information.

Macau customs authorities enforce strict regulations concerning controlled items you might be carrying while transiting or entering Macau. If you bring controlled items into Macau without the necessary Macau documents, you may be prosecuted and the goods may be seized. The penalty for trafficking in dangerous drugs can be life imprisonment and a heavy fine.

The following is a non-exhaustive list of controlled and/or prohibited items:

For more information on bringing controlled items into Macau please contact theMacau Customs Service at +(853) 2855-9944 orinfo@customs.gov.mo.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection encourages the use of an ATA (Admission Temporaire/Temporary Admission) carnet for the temporary admission of professional equipment, commercial samples, and/or goods for exhibitions and fair purposes.

For additional information, please visit theU.S. Council for International Business websiteand the U.S. Customs and Border Protection web page onTraveling with Samples.

Please see ourU.S. Customs Informationsheet for general information.

Importation into the United States of counterfeit items is prohibited by U.S. law. Please see ourU.S. Customs Informationsheet.

Dual Nationality:Dual nationality is not recognized underPRC nationality law. Be mindful of the following special circumstances for dual nationals when traveling in the region.

Enter Macau on your U.S. passportto ensure the U.S. Consulate General can provide consular assistance in case of arrest or other emergency.

Your child will be considered a PRC citizenif one or both of the parents are Chinese nationals regardless of U.S. citizenship.

If traveling onward to mainland China, enter China on your U.S. passport to ensure U.S. consular protection. SeeChina Country Specific Informationfor more information.

For further information on consular protection anddual nationality, please refer to our website.

Faith-Based Travelers:See our following webpages for details:

LGBTI Travelers: There are no legal restrictions on same-sex sexual relations or the organization of LGBTI events in Macau. See ourLGBTI Travel Informationpage and section 6 of ourHuman Rights reportfor further details.

Pets:You must have a permit to bring dogs and cats into Macau. Additionalinformation on importing pets is available directly from theMacau Customs Service at +(853) 2855-9944 orinfo@customs.gov.mo.

Typhoons: During the typhoon season (July through September),theMacau Meteorological and Geophysical Bureauissues typhoon warnings an average of six times a year. The Bureau has a good notification and monitoring system. General information about natural disaster preparedness is available from theU.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).

Travelers Who Require Accessibility Assistance:Macau law prohibits discrimination against persons with physical, sensory, intellectual, and mental disabilities in employment, education, access to health care, or the provision of other state services. The government generally enforces these provisions. The law mandates access to public buildings, usually in the form of a ramp, for persons with physical disabilities. Crosswalks are also required in Macau, and they generally include audible signals for hearing-impaired and raised-treading for visually-impaired pedestrians. Handicap-accessible parking is mandated in publically-owned parking lots. TheSocial Welfare Bureauis primarily responsible for coordinating and funding public assistance programs to persons with disabilities.

For Macau residents who are mobility impaired, theSocial Welfare Bureauoffers free transportation to medical appointments by accessible van through theCaritas Rehabusor theRed Cross Medical Transfer Service. Accessible van rental and Macau tours for the mobility impaired are available throughViagens Acessiveis(tel. +(853) 2840-3315, email:barrierfreemacau@gmail.com.

Students:See ourStudents Abroadpage andFBI travel tips.

Women Travelers: See our travel tips forWomen Travelers.

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Macau International Travel Information

History of Macau – Wikipedia

Macau SAR history

Macau is a Special Administrative Region (SAR) of the People's Republic of China. In 1557 it was leased to Portugal as a trading post in exchange for an annual rent of 500 tael in order to stay in Macau, it remained under Chinese sovereignty and authority until 1887, the Portuguese came to consider and administer it as a de facto colony. Following the signing of the Treaty of Nanking between China and Britain in 1842, and the signing of treaties between China and foreign powers during the 1860s, establishing the benefit of "the most favoured nation" for them, the Portuguese attempted to conclude a similar treaty in 1862, but the Chinese refused, owing to a misunderstanding over the sovereignty of Macau. In 1887 the Portuguese finally managed to secure an agreement from China that Macao was Portuguese territory.[1] In 1999 it was handed over to China. Macau was the last extant European territory in continental Asia.

The human history of Macau stretches back up to 6,000 years, and includes many different and diverse civilisations and periods of existence. Evidence of human and culture dating back 4,000 to 6,000 years has been discovered on the Macau Peninsula and dating back 5,000 years on Coloane Island.[citation needed]

During the Qin Dynasty (221206 BC), the region was under the jurisdiction of Panyu County, Nanhai Prefecture of the province of Guangdong.[2][3][4] The region is first known to have been settled during the Han dynasty.[5] It was administratively part of Dongguan Prefecture in the Jin dynasty (265420 AD), and alternated under the control of Nanhai and Dongguan in later dynasties.[4][6]

Since the 5th century, merchant ships travelling between Southeast Asia and Guangzhou used the region as a port for refuge, fresh water, and food.[citation needed] In 1152, during the Song dynasty (9601279 AD), it was under the jurisdiction of the new Xiangshan County.[2][3][6] In 1277, approximately 50,000 refugees fleeing the Mongol conquest of China settled in the coastal area.[4][6][7][4]

Mong H has long been the center of Chinese life in Macau and the site of what may be the region's oldest temple, a shrine devoted to the Buddhist Guanyin (Goddess of Mercy).[citation needed] Later in the Ming dynasty (13681644 AD), fishermen migrated to Macau from various parts of Guangdong and Fujian provinces and built the A-Ma Temple where they prayed for safety on the sea. The Hoklo Boat people were the first to show interest in Macau as a trading centre for the southern provinces. However, Macau did not develop as a major settlement until the Portuguese arrived in the 16th century.[7]

During the age of discovery Portuguese sailors explored the coasts of Africa and Asia. The sailors later established posts at Goa in 1510, and conquered Malacca in 1511, driving the Sultan to the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula from where he kept making raids on the Portuguese. The Portuguese under Jorge lvares landed at Lintin Island in the Pearl River Delta of China in 1513 with a hired junk sailing from Portuguese Malacca. They erected a stone marker at Lintin Island claiming it for the King of Portugal, Manuel I. In the same year, the Indian Viceroy Afonso de Albuquerque commissioned Rafael Perestrello a cousin of Christopher Columbus to sail to China in order to open up trade relations. Rafael traded with the Chinese merchants in Guangzhou in that year and in 1516, but was not allowed to move further.

Portugal's king Manuel I in 1517 commissioned a diplomatic and trade mission to Guangzhou headed by Tom Pires and Ferno Pires de Andrade. The embassy lasted until the death of the Zhengde Emperor in Nanjing. The embassy was further rejected by the Chinese Ming court, which now became less interested in new foreign contacts. The Ming Court was also influenced by reports of misbehaviour of Portuguese elsewhere in China, and by the deposed Sultan of Malacca seeking Chinese assistance to drive the Portuguese out of Malacca.

In 1521 and 1522 several more Portuguese ships reached the trading island Tamo off the coast near Guangzhou, but were driven away by the now hostile Ming authorities. Pires was imprisoned and died in Canton.

Good relations between the Portuguese and Chinese Ming dynasty resumed in the 1540s, when Portuguese aided China in eliminating coastal pirates. The two later began annual trade missions to the offshore Shangchuan Island in 1549. A few years later, Lampacau Island, closer to the Pearl River Delta, became the main base of the Portuguese trade in the region.[8]

Diplomatic relations were further improved and salvaged by the Leonel de Sousa agreement with Cantonese authorities in 1554. In 1557, the Ming court finally gave consent for a permanent and official Portuguese trade base at Macau. In 1558, Leonel de Sousa became the second Portuguese Governor of Macau.

They later built some rudimentary stone-houses around the area now called Nam Van. But not until 1557 did the Portuguese establish a permanent settlement in Macau, at an annual rent of 500 taels (~20 kilograms (44lb)) of silver.[9] Later that year, the Portuguese established a walled village there. Ground rent payments began in 1573. China retained sovereignty and Chinese residents were subject to Chinese law, but the territory was under Portuguese administration. In 1582 a land lease was signed, and annual rent was paid to Xiangshan County.[citation needed] The Portuguese continued to pay an annual tribute up to 1863 in order to stay in Macau.[10]

The Portuguese often married Tanka women since Han Chinese women would not have relations with them. Some of the Tanka's descendants became Macanese people. Some Tanka children were enslaved by Portuguese raiders.[11] The Chinese poet Wu Li wrote a poem, which included a line about the Portuguese in Macau being supplied with fish by the Tanka.[12][13][14][15]

After the Portuguese were allowed to permanently settle in Macau, both Chinese and Portuguese merchants flocked to Macau, although the Portuguese were never numerous (numbering just 900 in 1583 and 1200 out of 26,000 in 1640).[16] It quickly became an important node in the development of Portugal's trade along three major routes: MacauMalaccaGoaLisbon, GuangzhouMacauNagasaki and MacauManilaMexico. The GuangzhouMacauNagasaki route was particularly profitable because the Portuguese acted as middlemen, shipping Chinese silks to Japan and Japanese silver to China, pocketing huge markups in the process. This already lucrative trade became even more so when Chinese officials handed Macau's Portuguese traders a monopoly by banning direct trade with Japan in 1547, due to piracy by Chinese and Japanese nationals.[17]

Macau's golden age coincided with the union of the Spanish and Portuguese crowns, between 1580 and 1640. King Philip II of Spain was encouraged to not harm the status quo, to allow trade to continue between Portuguese Macau and Spanish Manila, and to not interfere with Portuguese trade with China. In 1587, Philip promoted Macau from "Settlement or Port of the Name of God" to "City of the Name of God" (Cidade do Nome de Deus de Macau).[18]

The alliance of Portugal with Spain meant that Portuguese colonies became targets for the Netherlands, which was embroiled at the time in a lengthy struggle for its independence from Spain, the Eighty Years' War. After the Dutch East India Company was founded in 1602, the Dutch unsuccessfully attacked Macau several times, culminating in a full-scale invasion attempt in 1622, when 800 attackers were successfully repelled by 150 Macanese and Portuguese defenders and a large number of African slaves.[19] One of the first actions of Macau's next governor, who arrived the following year, was to strengthen the city's defences, which included the construction of the Guia Fortress.[20]

As well as being an important trading post, Macau was a center of activity for Catholic missionaries, as it was seen as a gateway for the conversion of the vast populations of China and Japan. Jesuits had first arrived in the 1560s and were followed by Dominicans in the 1580s. Both orders soon set about constructing churches and schools, the most notable of which were the Jesuit Cathedral of Saint Paul and the St. Dominic's Church built by the Dominicans. In 1576, Macau was established as an episcopal see by Pope Gregory XIII with Melchior Carneiro appointed as the first bishop.[21][22]

In 1637, increasing suspicion of the intentions of Spanish and Portuguese Catholic missionaries in Japan finally led the shgun to seal Japan off from foreign influence. Later named the sakoku period, this meant that no Japanese were allowed to leave the country (or return if they were living abroad), and no foreign ship was allowed to dock in a Japanese port. An exception was made for the Protestant Dutch, who were allowed to continue to trade with Japan from the confines of a small man-made island in Nagasaki, Deshima. Macau's most profitable trade route, that between Japan and China, had been severed. The crisis was compounded two years later by the loss of Malacca to the Dutch in 1641, damaging the link with Goa.

The news that the Portuguese House of Braganza had regained control of the Crown from the Spanish Habsburgs took two years to reach Macau, arriving in 1642. A ten-week celebration ensued, and despite its new-found poverty, Macau sent gifts to the new King Joo IV along with expressions of loyalty. In return, the King rewarded Macau with the addition of the words "There is none more Loyal" to its existing title. Macau was now "City of the Name of God in China, There is none more loyal". ("No h outra mais Leal" [Listen(helpinfo)]).

In 1685, the privileged position of the Portuguese in trade with China ended, following a decision by the Kangxi Emperor of China to allow trade with all foreign countries. Over the next century, England, the Dutch Republic, France, Denmark, Sweden, the United States and Russia moved in, establishing factories and offices in Guangzhou and Macau. British trading dominance in the 1790s was unsuccessfully challenged by a combined French and Spanish naval squadron at the Macau Incident of 27 January 1799.

Until 20 April 1844 Macau was under the jurisdiction of Portugal's Indian colonies, the so-called "Estado portugus da India" (Portuguese State of India), but after this date, it, along with East Timor, was accorded recognition by Lisbon (but not by Beijing) as an overseas province of Portugal. The Treaty of Peace, Amity, and Commerce between China and the United States was signed in a temple in Macau on 3 July 1844. The temple was used by a Chinese judicial administrator, who also oversaw matters concerning foreigners, and was located in the village of Mong H. The Templo de Kun Iam was the site where, on 3 July 1844, the treaty of Wangxia (named after the village of Mong Ha where the temple was located) was signed by representatives of the United States and China. This marked the official beginning of Sino-US relations.

After China ceded Hong Kong to the British in 1842, Macau's position as a major regional trading centre declined further still because larger ships were drawn to the deep water port of Victoria Harbour.[23] In an attempt to reverse the decline, Portugal declared Macau a free port, expelled Chinese officials and soldiers, and thereafter levied taxes on Chinese residents. In 1848, there was a revolt of the boatmen that was put down.

Portugal continued to pay rent to China until 1849, when the Portuguese abolished the Chinese customs house and declared Macau's "independence", a year which also saw Chinese retaliation and finally the assassination of Gov. Ferreira do Amaral during the so-called Baishaling Incident. Portugal gained control of the island of Wanzai (Lapa by the Portuguese and now as Wanzaizhen), to the northwest of Macau and which now is under the jurisdiction of Zhuhai (Xiangzhou District), in 1849 but relinquished it in 1887. Control over Taipa and Coloane, two islands south of Macau, was obtained between 1851 and 1864. Macau and East Timor were again combined as an overseas province of Portugal under control of Goa in 1883. The Protocol Respecting the Relations Between the Two Countries (signed in Lisbon 26 March 1887) and the Beijing Treaty (signed in Beijing on 1 December 1887) confirmed "perpetual occupation and government" of Macau by Portugal (with Portugal's promise "never to alienate Macau and dependencies without agreement with China" in the treaty). Taipa and Coloane were also ceded to Portugal, but the border with the mainland was not delimited. Ilha Verde (Chinese: ; pinyin: Qngzhu; Jyutping: Ceng1 Zau1 or Cing1 Zau1) was incorporated into Macau's territory in 1890, and, once a kilometre offshore, by 1923 it had been absorbed into peninsula Macau through land reclamation.[citation needed]

In 1871, the Hospital Kiang Wu was founded as a traditional Chinese medical hospital. It was in 1892 that doctor Sun Yat-sen brought Western medicine services to the hospital.[24]

In the 1930s, Macau's traditional income streams related to illegal opium sales dried up, as the Royal Navy's Eastern Fleet suppressed piracy and smuggling in support of Hong Kong's growing commercial status. Traditional local industries of fishing, firecrackers and incense, as well as tea and tobacco processing, were all small scale, while Macau Government income from 'Fan-Tan' gambling was only around US$5000 (about US$100,000 in modern money) per day. So the financially pressed Portuguese government urged the colony's administrators to develop greater economic self-sufficiency. One channel that bore fruit was as a transit point for the new trans-Pacific passenger and postal flights, for competing airlines from the US and Japan which was at the time engaged in conflict with China. In 1935, Pan-Am secured sea-landing rights in Macau and immediately set about building related communications infrastructure in the enclave, allowing a service from San Francisco to begin in November that year.[25]

Intertwined with this economic progress was an alleged and much discussed offer (never officially confirmed) in 1935 by Japan to buy Macau from Portugal, for US$100 million. Concerns were raised by the British, and others. In May, the Portuguese government twice denied that it would accept any such offer, and the matter was closed.[25]

From 1848 to about the early 1870s, Macau was the infamous transit port of a trade of coolies (or slave labourers) from southern China. Most of them were kidnapped from the Guangdong province and were shipped off in packed vessels to Cuba, Peru, or other South American ports to work on plantations or in mines. Many died on the way there due to malnutrition, disease, or other mistreatment. The Dea del Mar which had set sail to Callao from Macau in 1865 with 550 Chinese on board, arrived in Tahiti with only 162 of them still alive.

Macau became a refugee center during WWII causing its population to climb from about 200,000 to about 700,000 people within a few years.[26] Refugee operations were organized through the Santa Casa da Misericordia.[27]

Unlike in the case of Portuguese Timor, which was occupied by the Japanese in 1942 along with Dutch Timor, the Japanese respected Portuguese neutrality in Macau, but only up to a point.[26] As such, Macau enjoyed a brief period of economic prosperity as the only neutral port in South China, after the Japanese had occupied Guangzhou (Canton) and Hong Kong. In August 1943, Japanese troops seized the British steamer Sian in Macau and killed about 20 guards. The next month they demanded the installation of Japanese "advisors" under the alternative of military occupation. The result was that a virtual Japanese protectorate was created over Macau.

When it was discovered that neutral Macau was planning to sell aviation fuel to Japan, aircraft from the USS Enterprise bombed and strafed the hangar of the Naval Aviation Centre on 16 January 1945 to destroy the fuel. American air raids on targets in Macau were also made on 25 February and 11 June 1945. Following Portuguese government protest, in 1950 the United States paid US$20,255,952 to the government of Portugal.[28]

Japanese domination ended in August 1945.

When the Chinese communists came to power in 1949, they declared the Protocol of Lisbon to be invalid as an "unequal treaty" imposed by foreigners on China. However, Beijing was not ready to settle the treaty question, leaving the maintenance of "the status quo" until a more appropriate time. Beijing took a similar position on treaties relating to the Hong Kong territories of the United Kingdom.

In 1951, the Salazar regime declared Macau, as well as other Portuguese colonies, an "Overseas Province" of Portugal.

During the 1950s and 1960s Macau's border crossing to China Portas do Cerco was also referred to as Far Eastern Checkpoint Charlie with a major border incident happening in 1952 with Portuguese African Troops exchanging fire with Chinese Communist border guards.[29] According to reports, the exchange lasted for one-and-three-quarter hours, leaving one dead and several dozens injured on the Macau side and more than 100 casualties claimed on the Communist Chinese side.[30]

In 1954, the Macau Grand Prix was established, first as a treasure hunt throughout the city, and in later years as a formal car racing event.[31]

In 1962, the gambling industry of Macau saw a major breakthrough when the government granted the Sociedade de Turismo e Diverses de Macau (STDM), a syndicate jointly formed by Hong Kong and Macau businessmen, the monopoly rights to all forms of gambling. The STDM introduced western-style games and modernised the marine transport between Macau and Hong Kong, bringing millions of gamblers from Hong Kong every year.[32]

Riots broke out in 1966 during the communist Cultural Revolution, when local Chinese and the Macau authority clashed, the most serious one being the so-called 12-3 incident. This was sparked by the overreaction of some Portuguese officials to what was a regular minor dispute concerning building permits. The riots caused 8 deaths and the end was a total climbdown by the Portuguese Government.[33]

On January 29, 1967, the Portuguese Governor, Jos Manuel de Sousa e Faro Nobre de Carvalho, with the endorsement of Portuguese Prime Minister Salazar, signed a statement of apology at the Chinese Chamber of Commerce, under a portrait of Mao Zedong, with Ho Yin, the Chamber's President, presiding.[34][35]

Two agreements were signed, one with Macau's Chinese community, and the other with mainland China. The latter committed the Government to compensate local Chinese community leaders with as much as 2 million Macau Patacas and to prohibit all Kuomintang activities in Macau. This move ended the conflict, and relations between the government and the leftist organisations remained largely peaceful.[citation needed]

This success in Macau encouraged leftists in Hong Kong to "do the same", leading to riots by leftists in Hong Kong in 1967.

A Portuguese proposal to return the province to China was declined by China.[citation needed]

Also in 1966, the Church of our Lady of Sorrows on Coloane opened up.[36]

In 1968, the Taipa-Coloane Causeway linking Taipa island and Coloane island was opened up.[36]

In 1974, following the anti-colonialist Carnation Revolution, Portugal relinquished all claims over Macau and proposed to return Macau back to Chinese sovereignty.

In 1990, the Academy of Public Security Forces was founded in Coloane.[36]

In 1994, the Bridge of Friendship was completed, the second bridge connecting Macau and Taipa.[36]

In November 1995, the Macau International Airport was inaugurated.[36] Before then the territory only had 2 temporary airports for small aeroplanes, in addition to several permanent heliports.

In 1997, the Macau Stadium was completed in Taipa.[36]

Portugal and the People's Republic of China established diplomatic relations on 8 February 1979, and Beijing acknowledged Macau as "Chinese territory under Portuguese administration." A year later, Gen. Melo Egidio became the first governor of Macau to pay an official visit to Beijing.

The visit underscored both parties' interest in finding a mutually agreeable solution to Macau's status. A joint communique signed 20 May 1986 called for negotiations on the Macau question, and four rounds of talks followed between 30 June 1986 and 26 March 1987. The Joint Declaration on the Question of Macau was signed in Beijing on 13 April 1987, setting the stage for the return of Macau to full Chinese sovereignty as a Special Administrative Region on 20 December 1999.

After four rounds of talks, "the Joint Declaration of the Government of the People's Republic of China and the Government of the Republic of Portugal on the Question of Macau" was officially signed in April 1987. The two sides exchanged instruments of ratification on 15 January 1988 and the Joint Declaration entered into force. During the transitional period between the date of the entry into force of the Joint Declaration and 19 December 1999 the Portuguese government was responsible for the administration of Macau.

The Basic Law of the Macau Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China, was adopted by the National People's Congress (NPC) on 31 March 1993 as the constitutional law for Macau, taking effect on 20 December 1999.

The PRC has promised that, under its "one country, two systems" formula, China's socialist economic system will not be practiced in Macau and that Macau will enjoy a high degree of autonomy in all matters except foreign and defense affairs until at least 2049, fifty years after the handover.

Although offered control of Macau as early as the 1960s, the Chinese deemed the time "not yet ripe" and preferred to wait until December 1999the very end of the millennium, two years after the Hong Kong handoverto close this chapter of history.

Upon the handover of Macau European colonization of Asia ended.

In 2002, the Macau government ended the gambling monopoly system and 3 (later 6) casino operating concessions (and subconcessions) were granted to Sociedade de Jogos de Macau (SJM, an 80% owned subsidiary of STDM), Wynn Resorts, Las Vegas Sands, Galaxy Entertainment Group, the partnership of MGM Mirage and Pansy Ho Chiu-king, and the partnership of Melco and PBL, thus marking the begin of the rise of Macau as the new gambling hub in Asia.

As one of the measures to develop the gambling industry, the Cotai strip was completed after the handover to China with construction of the hotel and casino industry starting in 2004. In 2007, the first of many resorts opened, The Venetian Macao. Many other resorts followed, both in Cotai and on Macau island, providing for a major tax income stream to Macau government and a drop in overall unemployment over the years down to a mere 2% in 2013.[37]

In 2004, the Sai Van Bridge is completed, the third bridge between Macau island and Taipa island.[36]

In 2005, the Macau East Asian Games Dome, the principal venue for the 4th East Asian Games, is inaugurated.[36]

Also in 2005, Macau government started a wave of social housing construction (lasting until 2013 at least), constructing over 8000 apartment units in the process.[38]

Similar to other economies in the world, the financial crisis of 200708 hit Macau leading to a stall in construction of major construction works (Sands Cotai Central[39]) and a spike in unemployment.[40]

With residential and development space being sparse, Macau government officially announced on 27 June 2009 that the University of Macau will build its new campus on Hengqin island, in a stretch directly facing the Cotai area, south of the current border post. Along with this development, several other residential and business development projects on Hengqin are in the planning.

In 2011 to 2013 further major construction on several planned mega-resorts on the Cotai Strip commenced.[41]

2014 marked the first time that the gambling revenues in Macau declined on a year-to-year basis. Starting in June 2014, gambling revenues declined for the second half of the year on a month-to-month basis (compared with 2013) causing the Macau Daily Times to announce that the "Decade of gambling expansion end[ed]".[42] Some reasons for the slowdown are China's anti-corruption drive reaching Macau, China's economy slowing down and changes of Mainland Chinese tourists preference of visiting other countries as a travel destination.[43][44]

This led the Macau government to attempt to reconstruct the economy, to depend less on gambling revenues and focus on building world-class non-gambling tourism and leisure centers, as well as developing itself as a platform for economic and trade cooperation between China and Portuguese-speaking countries.[45][46]

In 2015, the borders of Macau were redrawn by the state council, shifting the land border north to the Canal dos Patos and expanding the maritime border significantly. The changes increased the size of Macau's maritime territory by 85 square kilometers.[47]

Typhoon Hato hit southern China in August 2017 causing widespread damage to Macau, never before experienced major flooding and property damages, with citywide power and water outages lasting for at least 24 hours after the passage of the storm. Overall, 10 deaths and at least 200 injuries were reported. This caused widespread anger against the Macau government, accused of being unprepared for the typhoon as were as the delay of raising the no. 10 tropical cyclone signal; this caused the head of the Macao Meteorological and Geophysical Bureau to resign.[48] At the request of the Macau government, the Chinese People's Liberation Army Macau Garrison (for the first time in Macau's history) deployed around 1,000 troops to assist in disaster relief and cleaning up.[49][50]

On December 12, 2019, Macau officially opened its first rail transit system: the Macau Light Rapid Transit.[51]

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History of Macau - Wikipedia

Air quality in the Pearl River Delta improved in recent years – GBA report – Macau Business

Air quality in the region improved in recent years when it comes to respirable suspended particulates but worsened in terms of ozone concentrations, a report released today (Thursday) by the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macau Pearl River Delta Regional Air Quality Monitoring Network on its 2019 monitoring results indicates.

The network is a joint system established in 2005 between the Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macau jurisdictions for air quality monitoring network and regional air pollution reduction efforts.

The joint monitoring network includes 23 air monitoring stations located in the three regions and monitors six major air pollutants: SO2, NO2, O3, RSP, FSP and CO.

The recently released 2019 report indicated that Macau authorities introduced several air quality improvement measures to reduce pollution from mobile and stationary sources as included in its Five-Year Development Plan for 2016 and 2020.

Such measures include pushing forward the use of natural gas and construction of relevant facilities, upgrading the emission standards for newly-imported vehicles to Euro VI, optimising emission standards for in-use vehicles and phasing out polluting motorcycles with two-stroke engines, the report noted.

The measures also include promoting new energy vehicles, raising the standards for vehicle fuels to Euro V, requiring the installation of vapour recovery systems in petrol filling stations and implementing emission standards for large stationary sources such as sewage treatment plants, chemical and pharmaceutical industries, oil depots and power plants.

The report indicates that overall the emission reduction measures implemented by Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macau in recent years have contributed to the gradual improvement of the overall air quality in the Pearl River Delta.

The joint network alleges that when compared with 2006, the average annual concentration levels of sulphur dioxide (SO2), respirable suspended particulates (RSP) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) in 2019 decreased by 84 per cent, 37 per cent and 29 per cent, respectively.

Although the other two parameters, i.e. carbon monoxide (CO) and fine suspended particulates (FSP) were only added to the monitoring network in September 2014, their average annual concentration levels also decreased by 4 per cent and 14 per cent respectively in 2019 when compared with 2015, the report noted.

However, the research also showed that 2019 average annual concentration level of ozone (O3) increased by 36 per cent when compared with 2006, indicating that further alleviation of regional photochemical pollution is required

Ozone is a reactive gas thatcan trigger a variety ofhealthproblems including chest pain, coughing, throat irritation, and airway inflammation, and can worsen bronchitis, emphysema, and asthma and respiratory problems.

The increase in the led the Guangdong, Hong Kong and Macau governments to plan a three-year joint study from 2021 to 2023 on the Characterisation of photochemical ozone pollution in the Greater Bay Area and its regional and super-regional transportation

Concerning efforts made by the Guangdong Province to reduce atmospheric pollution in the region, the reporter stated that in 2018 regional authorises promulgated regulations on prevention and control of atmospheric pollution implemented in its three-year action plans on pollution control and plan on safeguarding blue sky for 2018-2020.

Under the new measures new projects subject to environmental impact assessment including steel, petrochemical and cement industries must comply with the specific emission standards for air pollutants and ll motor vehicle petrol and diesel sold in Guangdong must comply with National VI standards.

Guangdong Province is also taking forward full-scale electrification of public transport, implementing comprehensive control on polluting industries and premises, introducing joint inspections on volatile organic compounds report added, the

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‘High Seas’/’Alta Mar’ Season 3: Release date, plot, cast and all you need to know about the show’s return – MEAWW

As one YouTube commenter put it, the "pretty people on a boat show" is set to return as Netflix's Spanish original, 'High Seas' aka 'Alta Mar', returns in August with its third season. The plots of the first two seasons were almost completely set on the ship, Brbara de Braganza, which was making its way from Spain in Europe to Brazil in South America in the 1940s after the end of the World War II. It seemed like 'High Seas' had everything: Nazis, ghosts, stolen gold, to name a few but the new season is set to take a different direction since the ship docked in Brazil. However, it will still involve the Brbara de Braganza as an important site, albeit with a new mystery and new characters.

Read on to know more details about the Spanish show's return.

The third season of 'High Seas' / 'Alta Mar' will be available to stream on Netflix on Friday, August 7, at 12 am PST.

After disembarking in Brazil, sisters Eva and Carolina Villanueva find themselves in the middle of a new mystery in Season 3. Viewers might remember that their maid, Francisca fell off the top deck of the boat after it was revealed that Francisca killed Rosa Marin so that Carolina could marry Fernando Fabregas. The final few minutes of the Season 2 finale revealed Francisca was taken in an ambulance to the hospital but we don't know yet whether she survived. Meanwhile, the season's end also brought heartbreak for Eva after Nicolas Vzquez was reunited with his long-lost wife whom he thought was killed by the Nazis during the war.

Perhaps there's new romance lying ahead for Eva. In the promo for the new season, we are introduced to a new character who works for the British government's intelligence service. Eva teams up with this new British spy to uncover someone who is holding a "deadly virus". To stop the man from killing millions, they must find him on the Brbara de Braganza before the ship docks at its destination. While it looks like there may be some romantic developments between Eva and this new character, we are still hoping that Nicolas and her patch up their relationship.

The official synopsis for the new season is as follows: "When the Brbara de Braganza sets sail from Argentina to Mexico, a new mystery emerges again. The Brbara de Braganza sails off Buenos Aires and it will be up to the Villanueva sisters to find and stop a scientist carrying a deadly secret on board."

Ivana Baquero

Ivana Baquero plays the character of Eva Villanueva. She is best known for her roles in Pans Labyrinth and The Shannara Chronicles. In 'High Seas', she plays the role of the inquisitive Eva who steals the heart of the officer, Nicolas, played by Jon Kortajarena. She is instrumental in solving the mysteries on the ship. As such, in Season 3, she is roped in to help solve yet another mystery by a handsome British spy.

Marco Pigossi

Marco Pigossi is a Brazilian actor best known for his work on 'Edge of Desire', 'Land of the Strong', and Netflix's 'Tidelands'. In 'High Seas', he plays the new character of a British spy who ropes in Eva to help uncover a dastardly scientist's plot to release a deadly virus in Mexico.

Alejandra Onieva

Alejandra Onieva is a Spanish actress best known for her roles in 'Ella es tu padre' and 'Presunto culpable'. She plays the role of Carolina in 'High Seas', Eva's older sister who gets married on the ship in the first season.

Jon Kortajarena

Jon Kortajarena is a Spanish actor and model best known for his roles in 'Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga', 'A Single Man', and 'Quantico'. He plays the role of Officer Nicols Vzquez, a suave officer aboard theBrbara de Braganza, who helps Eva with her investigations.

Created by Ramn Campos and Gema R Neira and written by Ramn Campos, Gema R Neira Daniel Martn Serrano, Curro Novallas and Jos Antonio Valverde, the series was directed by Carlos Sedes who also serves as executive producer with Teresa Fernndez Valds and Ramn Campos. The team previously developed Netflix's 'Las Chicas del Cable' aka 'Cable Girls'.

'Cable Girls'

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'Grand Hotel'

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'Toy Boy'

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'High Seas'/'Alta Mar' Season 3: Release date, plot, cast and all you need to know about the show's return - MEAWW

Kosovo Pushes Ahead with Law to Protect KLA’s Reputation – Balkan Insight

A supporter of President Hashim Thaci wearing a hat with the American flag and a mask with the KLA emblem. Photo: EPA-EFE/ Valdrin Xhemaj

Kosovo MPs are pushing to finalize enforcement of a draft law on Protection of the Kosovo Liberation Army War Values, despite US concern that it may violate freedom of speech.

On July 29, the US Ambassador to Kosovo, Philip Kosnett, reminding Kosovos leaders to focus on the fight against COVID-19 and on economic recovery, on Twitter raised concern that the proposed KLA Values Law criminalizes free speech, intimidates citizens, and is costly.

The concern has arisen because the draft law obliges any public official and citizen of the Republic of Kosovo to respect and protect the war values determined by this law in any time and circumstance within the country and abroad.

The draft law attempts to legalize an institutional and civic obligation to protect the image of the guerrilla army that took on Serbian forces in the 1990s, and pioneered the creation of an independent state.

It predicts the establishment of a War Museum, and the Day of Remembrance of the war that ended in 1999 with the withdrawal of Serbian forces following a prolonged NATO campaign.

According to the law, the so-called values of war include the KLA itself as an armed military formation, its veterans, flag, soldiers oath, coat of arms, the General Staff, Political Directorate, Staffs of operational areas and archives, as well as the Adem Jashari Memorial Complex in Prekaz and other complexes.

Budgetary implications, if the Assembly approves the draft law, will be about 2.25 million euros, without considering construction of the War Museum.

The draft law was supported by the government on July 14 and forwarded to the presidency of the Assembly. It was proposed by the Democratic Party of Kosovo, PDK, on April 2018, but delayed by the change of government after former prime minister Ramush Haradinaj resigned in July 2019.

He was summoned by the Kosovo Specialist Chambers, KSC, based in the Hague, which was established to try former KLA members for war crimes.

The PDK and the Organization of War Veterans of the KLA are optimistic that MPs will back the law despite their political differences.

The draft law came back to the fore when President Hashim Thaci who was the KLAs political leader during the 1998-99 war was interviewed by the Hague-based warcrime prosecutors for four days from July 13. They can easily conclude that I have not committed any war crimes, Thaci had told the media on July 17 after the interview had ended.

The Hague-based Prosecutors Office announced on June 24 that it had filed a ten-count indictment with the KSC, charging Thaci, PDK leader Kadri Veseli and other former KLA members with a range of crimes against humanity and war crimes, including murder, enforced disappearance of persons, persecution, and torture.

Unlike the PDK and KLA veterans, Vetevendosje, the largest opposition party in Kosovo, has voiced some objections to the draft law. Rexhep Selimi, head of the Vetevendosje parliamentary group, said on July 18 that the content of the draft law did not match the topic it addresses. Despite that, Vetevendosje has said it support the adoption of a law to protect the KLA and its values.

In late April 2020, former Prime Minister Albin Kurti, from Vetevendosje, dismissed Shkelzen Gashi as his adviser following Gashis comments about crimes committed by KLA fighters.

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Sen. Rubio: NBA is a partner of the Chinese Communist Party, looks the other way on ‘atrocious’ actions – Fox News

On the heels of a bombshell report from ESPNallegingChina'sNBA training academies abused theiryoung players, Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio is calling on the United States to reexamine its relationship with the East Asian power player.

In aWednesday interviewon"Fox News @ Night,"theacting Senate Intelligence Committee chairman said he found the allegations from ESPN to be "troubling."

ACTIVISTS PUSH FOR INVESTIGATION OVER CLAIMS CHINA IS FORCIBLY HARVESTING ORGANS IF UIGHUR POPULATION

Rubio said while the NBA was seeing dollar signs in China's massive market, the problem is that it's "not just any other market."

"This is a totalitarian government that doesn't have any of the same concepts of freedom of speech or human rights that we have in the United States or in many parts of the world, and you've got to play by the rules," he said.

Rubio noted that the NBA was likely in the same position as a lot of other large corporations that do business with China under the watchful eye of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and its rules.

"They have to look the other way on some pretty atrocious actions on the part of the Chinese Communist Party," he said.

Host Shannon Bream highlighted recent Fox News Digitalreporting on the oppression of the beleaguered Uighur Muslim community which called attention toactivist complaints pushing for an investigation into claims that China was forcibly harvesting organs ofUighur workers.

"Earlier this month, two Uighur activist organizations the East Turkistan National Awakening Movement and the East Turkistan Government in Exile filed acomplaintto the International Criminal Court (ICC) against the Beijing leadership, alleging that the top brass had committed genocide and crimes against humanity against the Uighurs, including the stealing of organs from the mostly Muslim Turkic ethnic group and urging an inquiry," wrote Hollie McKay.

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - FEBRUARY 15: NBA Commissioner Adam Silver speaks to the media during a press conference at the United Center on February 15, 2020 in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Stacy Revere/Getty Images)

The move comes on the heels of a damningexpos finalized earlier this year by the seven-person, London-basedChina Tribunal...[which]determined with 'certainty beyond a reasonable doubt'that 'in China, forced organ harvesting from prisoners of conscience has been practiced for a substantial period of time,'" she continued.

Rubio said he had heard similar allegationsand that the "world deserves to know" if there is evidentiary support for these "horrific" claims.

"But, what we already know for sure is they've detained people, they put them in camps, they try to strip them of their identity, they forcethem to change their name, renounce their faith and religion. All sorts of terrible things," he listed. "And, forced labor -- they forced them to work.And, we know that there are Western companies that have benefited from that."

The senator said while the United States has to have a relationship with China -- the second-largest economy in the world, a nuclear power, and the most populous nation on the planet -- it must be "a balanced relationship."

"Meaning we can't continue to allow them to cheat, steal our jobs, and create unfair advantages over us," he explained. "And, it also has to be one that doesn't require us to abandon our fundamental print and essence that that requires us to look the other way when they do these horrible things, or when they crack down on free speech, or when they break the rules when it comes to the commitments they've made on Hong Kong."

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"The price of that balance of engagement cannot be that we abandon our principles, our ideals, and most importantly, our national interests," Rubio urged.

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Sen. Rubio: NBA is a partner of the Chinese Communist Party, looks the other way on 'atrocious' actions - Fox News

Egypt is cracking down on women’s freedoms on and offline. But they are fighting back – Middle East Eye

The jailing of five Egyptian influencers on charges of "violating public morals" over videos they published on TikTok has set a new precedent for controls that women face online, as well as the social limits increasingly placed upon them.

But though the internet is now apparently a place unsafe for Egyptian women to express themselves, it is also a platform where they are rallying - both to defend those convicted over their TikTok posts and to raise awareness for abuse meted out to them by men.

On Monday, five young women were sentenced by a court to two years in prison and each fined 300,000 Egyptian pounds ($18,750). Their alleged crime was to publish content that was morally problematic for the public and Egyptian family values.

The content, however, would seem to many as innocent and innocuous and has raised alarm bells for both women's rights activists and proponents of free speech.

'These women were simply being targeted for being women who dare to be different or autonomous'

- Reem Abdellatif, journalist

One of the women, Mowada al-Adham, used the app to share a video with her three million followers of the influencer dancing, lip-syncing and posing in a convertible car while listening to music.

Another, Haneen Hossam, who has a following of one million, uploaded footage detailing how others could use the app to earn money.

The videos are reminiscent of many of the trends TikTok users around the word take part in, including comedy sketches and voiceover skits. However, the Egyptian authorities' response has been swift and severe.

According to Egyptian media, Adham was asked to submit to a virginity test which was requested for the investigation, but refused to do so. The United Nations has previously called for a ban on virginity testing, which violates human rights and can cause pain, health issues and trauma.

Reem Abdellatif, an Egyptian-American journalist who has previously used social media to campaign for women's empowerment and education, said women in Egypt were afforded little freedom of speech, especially those who come from the working class.

It is unfortunate but common for vague and loosely worded laws to be constantly used to repress women and sometimes activists in Egypt These women were simply being targeted for being women who dare to be different or autonomous, she told Middle East Eye.

Egypt's al-Azhar poised to be stripped of its power

Women and girls in Egypt are still struggling to have their basic rights, such as bodily autonomy and personal freedoms, but working class women from low-income backgrounds struggle with this for more obvious reasons.

Much of the backlash against the influencers has come from Egypt's state-backed media.

In a teary video posted to Instagram in April, days before the five were arrested, Hossam said the media hadtaken her content and shared it out of context, claiming that what she is doing is inappropriate.

She said many do not understand how people can make money through social media, and stressed it is no different from presenters and public figures earning a living on TV.

Rumours have ruined lives. I have never said anything bad in my videos, I never said I wanted girls to do inappropriate things to earn money. I said respectable girls could earn money on social media. No one works without getting paid in return, so how is this different? she said.

In another video, which has been viewed over 800,000 times, Hossam added that she had been on the receiving end of an onslaught of harassment, which had caused her significant distress.

What are you benefiting from by destroying someone? Beating someone when they are down is wrong there are people doing much worse things, why are people focussing on me? Bloggers are not hurting anyone, why are people creating rumours with no evidence? she said.

According to Amr Magdi, a Middle East researcher at Human Rights Watch, the recent wave of arrests reflect the current state of the country, which is heavily monitored and censored by authorities.

Since the 2013 military coup that brought President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to power, human rights abuses have skyrocketed. Tens of thousands of Egyptians accused of being critical of the government have been imprisoned under Sisi.

Social controls are becoming ever more prevalent and punitive.

Its very concerning and its an abusive campaign of arrests and persecution mainly of women and girls, based on what they wear and how they behave it shows what direction the country is heading in, Magdi told MEE.

The Egyptian law is very vague and broad. They talk about acts which undermine family values, but the law does not define what these acts are, so citizens do not know when they are violating the law," he added.

"The punishments for these acts are also extremely disproportionate. It can be up to five years in prison, or sometimes more, with large fines.

All five of the TikTok influencers were prosecuted under Egypt's 2018 cybercrime law, legislation that has been widely criticised by human rights campaigners and activists for being vague and used to unfairly target people.

Not only can authorities imprison and fine people for content posted online deemed to be inconsistent with family principles or the values of Egyptian society, the law allows any social media accounts with more than 5,000 followers to be monitored.

Like Abdellatif, Magdi believes that the recent wave of arrests have unjustly targeted people from lower social classes, suggesting that the government allows wealthy Egyptians to behave in certain ways, but not the general public.

'What these women did you can see every day on TV and in high-class resorts, beaches, butno one goes there to arrest them'

- Amr Magdi, HRW

This perpetrates another type of discrimination against social economic status, because what these women did you can see every day on TV and in high-class resorts, beaches, butno one goes there to arrest them, he said.

The arrests have brought into question what the Egyptian government perceives as public morals and the role of women in Egyptian society. Magdi described the message being sent to society as "deeply chilling and frightening", predicting more crackdowns to come.

We have seen Sisi himself talking about women in derogatory ways on several occasions, for example the role of women at home and how they should support their families and husbands at home, he said.

Under Sisi, the Egyptian government has seized close control of the country's media. Not only does it heavily regulate how outlets are run, the government also influences the way people are presented in films and the arts.

Egyptian intelligence has moved to monitor and monopolise the media. One of the motives behind this has been to dictate how women should behave and look in TV dramas,"Magdi said."There are many indications that there is a coordinated effort by actors in the government to oppress women and strip women of some of their rights.

With traditional media closely regulated and street protests non-existent after the government's deadly crackdown on Egyptians demonstrating against the 2013 coup, women have been forced to turn their discontent online.

Activists and social media users have been using the hashtag "If the Egyptian family allows" to decry women's treatment and highlight the ease with which they can be arrested on such charges.

Meanwhile, a petition has been started online, where over 2,800 people have signed to call for authorities to stop targeting women on TikTok, and for the National Council for Women to provide legal support for the women currently detained.

The petition questions what the family values that are allegedly being violated are, and denounces the authorities for targeting and detaining women.

We fear and worry about this systematic crackdown which targets low-income women. We can't ignore the underlying guardianship over TikTok women. Because of their class, they are being punished and denied their own right to their bodies, to dress freely and to express themselves," the petition states.

Social media has taken particular prominence for Egyptian women in recent weeks, as thousands have used the platforms to highlight harassment and sexual assault, in what has been called Egypts #MeToo movement.

Waves of allegations and accusations have flooded social media, with women calling out their harassers and demanding for them to be held accountable.

'The online space has become almost unsafe for women, ironically, who are utilising social media to create awareness and press for change'

- Reem Abdellatif, journalist

It has shown that online pressure can work. The outpouring of accusations and solidarity online prompted an anonymity bill to be passed in Egypt, allowing victims of abuse to have their identity protected.

The bill came days after authorities arrested a 22-year-old who was accused by around 100 women of sexual crimes, including blackmail, rape and online sexual harassment.

That being said, as the TikTok case shows, the internet is far from a safe space for women. Recent reports show that women in the Middle East and North Africa region are facing increased harassment and abuse online, with little legislation to protect them.

According to Abdellatif, women in Egypt and around the Middle East are being targeted for the messages they post online, particularly when they go against societal norms or a patriarchal society.

The online space has become almost unsafe for women, ironically, who are utilising social media to create awareness and press for change," she said, adding that abuse has intensified in recent weeks due to the Egyptian MeToo movement and the coronavirus lockdown.

"What happens online is very similar to what happens offline: systemic silencing of women who dare go against the grain, or simply have an opinion that is independent of society's misogynistic mainstream teachings.

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Egypt is cracking down on women's freedoms on and offline. But they are fighting back - Middle East Eye

BLM billboard next to Confederate flag to be removed – The Chatham News + Record

BY HANNAH MCCLELLAN, News + Record Staff

PITTSBORO Last month, a GoFundMe started by a Chatham County resident to protest the large Confederate flag that stood on U.S. Hwy. 64 East Business Route in Pittsboro raised nearly $11,000. Since July 13, the flag has had a new neighbor a 24-foot Black Lives Matter billboard.

The GoFundMe raised enough funds to cover the cost of keeping the sign for a year, but now, the billboard will likely be taken down in September. Thats because Pittsboro resident Sam White the owner of the property both the sign and flag sit on is deciding not to renew his lease for the billboard, according to an email from Lamar Advertising Company, which owns and updates the board.

In that email, posted to the Facebook page Chatham Takes Action, Lamar Advertising said the owners decision to not renew the lease will cause the board and the entire structure to be removed from that property. The company said it would assist in finding an alternate location for the billboard or grant a refund for the unused time.

To learn more about the timeline of the BLM billboard and its neighboring Confederate flag, click here.

The billboard, funded by residents as a way to show Confederate flags do NOT represent Pittsboro, was backed by social justice organizations Emancipate NC and RREPS (Recidivism Reduction Educational Program Services) after Lamar Advertising required a legal entity or organization to accompany a Paid for tagline at the bottom of the billboard. Kerwin Pittman, the founder and director of RREPS, organized the backing from the organizations.

The GoFundMe was organized by a Pittsboro resident who began going by the initials LC after the campaign gained traction on social media. In just two days, the GoFundMe raised enough money for the sign to be erected for six months. In the end, the group raised enough money to pay for the sign for a full year and to donate extra funds to local social equity organizations. On July 15, the organizer posted an update message to the GoFundMe that $1,000 of the extra contributions was donated to both Chatham Organizing for Racial Equity (CORE) and Emancipate NC.

Its been an exciting couple of days since the billboard went up! And it is simply beautiful, the organizer posted. It brought me to tears the first time it came into view as I drove down business 64 into Pittsboro! I am so grateful for all of the messages of support I have received, and for those who are giving their input to the press and news outlets.

Pittman, who has attended multiple protests in Pittsboro, said he believes the flag is not representative of the majority of the town.

My opinion, especially as a Black man if Im riding into a small town and one of the first things I see is a Confederate flag, that lets me know what type of town that is, he said.

Thats why adding the Black Lives Matter sign right next to the flag was so important, he added.

Seeing it seeing it was a triumphant moment, he said. But it was a sad moment at the same time it was a triumphant moment because individuals in Pittsboro wanted that sign, and it was sad because they had to do this right beside this Confederate flag.

This is not the first time there have been debates in Pittsboro surrounding Confederate flags.

On June 14, Chatham resident Tami Schwerin emailed Pittsboro and Chatham commissioners requesting symbols of terrorism be outlawed locally. Schwerin listed the Confederate flags throughout the county specifically as symbols of intimidation.

This would also put us on the right side of history, said Schwerin, who leads the nonprofit Abundance NC. I guarantee it would make national news and other municipalities would follow. Lets set the trend for creating a place of peace, inclusion and prosperity for all.

In the email, Schwerin included links to articles referencing NASCARs banning of Confederate flags at its events and the Department of Homeland Securitys addition of white supremacy to its list of domestic terrorism threats in 2019.

Chatham County Commissioner Diana Hales responded over email and said that though we may disagree with their message, all citizens are granted the freedom of speech. Hales added that the board asked the county lawyer for guidance, who advised that granting such a request would be a violation of First Amendment rights.

What people display on private property is their business, as long as they adhere to whatever setback regulations the Town or County has in place for things such as flagpoles and signage, she wrote. (Some) may see it as hate speech, but they have the right to speak. And, others have the same right of free speech to put up a billboard countering their message.

It remains to be seen whether this countering billboard standing for just a few days before organizers learned it would be removed from its spot next to the Confederate flag will be relocated.

Reporter Hannah McClellan can be reached at hannah@chathamnr.com.

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BLM billboard next to Confederate flag to be removed - The Chatham News + Record

Paul Gosar, Conservatives Introduce Legislation to Protect ‘Political Speech’ on the Internet – The Jewish Voice

Sean Moran(Breitbart)

Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ) and a host of other House conservatives introduced legislation on Wednesday that would block big tech giants from censoring lawful political speech on the Internet.

Reps. Doug Collins (R-GA), Ralph Norman (R-SC), Lance Gooden (R-TX), Steve King (R-IA), Jim Banks (R-IN), Matt Gaetz (R-FL), Ted Yoho (R-FL), Tom Tiffany (R-WI), Ron Wright (R-TX), and Gosar introduced the Stop the Censorship Act of 2020, which would revoke big tech companies Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act legal immunity if the tech platform were to remove lawful speech on their platform.

The House Republicans legislation aligns with recommendationsproposedby the Department of Justice.

Gosar said in a statement on Wednesday that Congress can no longer allow big tech companies to deem what is and what is not allowable free speech on the Internet. Gosar said:

Online platforms should not have special immunity to censor competition and lawful political speech. The broad and undue immunity for content and user removal granted by Section 230 must be reined in by Congress. We cannot continue to subsidize, deputize, or blackmail Silicon Valley to decide what is or isnt an allowable conversation. Stop the Censorship Act empowers users and limits Big Tech to the same rights and liabilities as everyone else.

Gosarintroducedthe legislation as Breitbart Newss Allum Bokhari reported on Tuesday that Internet search giant Google, whichcontrols88 percent of the Internet search market, had purged Breitbart News from its search results.

The House Judiciary Committee also plans toholdan antitrust hearing on Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Googles dominance on the Internet on Wednesday.

Freedom of speech and market competition are two of the strongest pillars of American freedom. But Big Tech, has shown little regard for either. Congress must protect the values that make America great.Banks said.

Gosars Stop the Censorship Act of 2020 would promote free speech, big tech transparency, and competition on the Internet.

The legislation would revoke big techs immunity for removing otherwise objectionable material in Section 230 and create a new standard that would set a new legal protection for the removal of unlawful, or that promotes violence or terrorism. Gosars office contended that the new legal immunity would incentivize platforms to be more transparent and abide by their own terms of service.

The Arizona conservatives office also noted that Silicon Valley companies have argued in cases such asEnigma Software v. Malwarebytesthat the otherwise objectionable term creates a legal immunity from antitrust claims.

The Stop the Censorship Act would ensure that Section 230 does not extend to antitrust claims and aims to promote competition.

The legislation also empowers users with the ability to choose their own online content filters.

Collins, a former ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, said:

Freedom of speech is paramount to the fabric of America. No one should have the power to censor political speech, including Big Tech, Gooden said.

Sean Moran is a congressional reporter for Breitbart News.

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Paul Gosar, Conservatives Introduce Legislation to Protect 'Political Speech' on the Internet - The Jewish Voice

Thousands in Bulgaria’s streets demanding government resign – Trumbull Times

Updated 10:32pm EDT, Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Photo: Valentina Petrova, AP

Thousands in Bulgaria's streets demanding government resign

SOFIA, Bulgaria (AP) Tens of thousands of people took to the streets Wednesday in cities across Bulgaria for a third consecutive week to demand the resignation of the government and the chief prosecutor.

In the biggest anti-government protests in seven years, those in power are being accused of maintaining links to the mafia, refusing to fight corruption and reform the judiciary and suppressing freedom of speech.

President, Rumen Radev, a vocal critic of the government, is backing protesters, saying the center-right Cabinet of Prime Minister Boyko Borissov and chief prosecutor Ivan Geshev should step down.

In a public address to the nation, Radev spoke about the deep anger of the protesters. It has been piling up for years and cannot be suppressed by fear and force, he said.

Although the rallies have been mostly peaceful, there have been occasional clashes and some arrests.

In Sofia on Wednesday, protesters blocked several key intersections during business hours, bringing traffic almost to a standstill.

In the evening, a huge crowd gathered in front of the government headquarters singing the national anthem and waving national flags. People chanted Borissov, you are shame and disgrace and Resignation. Many were following calls by the organizers to set up tents outside the Cabinet building and remain there until their demands are met.

In a video on Facebook, Borissov said everyone has the right to demonstrate, but not to block roads and intersections.

Elections are coming, everyone will be able to vote. This is democracy. Imagine we lose the election and start shutting down crossroads. Is that democracy? Borissov said.

Borissov has been in power since 2009 and his third term is scheduled to end next March

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Thousands in Bulgaria's streets demanding government resign - Trumbull Times

THIS WEEK IN HISTORY: Freedoms Davis adds to banner year – Morganton News Herald

It was a surprise, Davis said pf the MVP honor. I didnt expect it. I felt good about the way I played, but I could have played better.

Freedom's Lin Lattimore (right) fakes his defender and starts his drive to the basket in the 1995 NCCA East-West All-Star Game for men's basketball.

Likewise, Lattimore was also surprised by his production in the boys game. Unfortunately, his surprise was as a result of the fact he did not manage to score or grab a rebound in 12 minutes of play.

I couldnt get it going, said the Northwestern 4A Conference co-player of the year, who led Freedom at 19 ppg and 8.5 rpg last season. Im sort of disappointed I didnt get the ball more than I did. I was asking for it, but it didnt come my way. I had fun though.

Davis is headed to UNC to play next season, and among those watching the game was Lady Tar Heel coach Sylvia Hatchell. Lattimore, who like Davis played on a FHS state title, is headed to Northeastern.

The boys game also included Antawn Jamison (UNC), Terrell McIntyre (Clemson) and Tyrone Outlaw.

(NOTE: The following three articles originally appeared in July 1970 editions of The News Herald. They have been edited.)

Former Morganton High basketball player Edward Powell goes in for a layup in this 1970 photo.

Morganton High School produced its first prep All-American basketball star two years ago. If it is to do it again, Morganton may have to make it a family affair.

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THIS WEEK IN HISTORY: Freedoms Davis adds to banner year - Morganton News Herald

Two years after Janus, more workers are exercising their freedom of association – San Bernardino County Sun

Two summers ago, in Mark Janus v. AFSCME, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down as unconstitutional the arrangement that forced government workers to pay union fees for the privilege of keeping their jobs.

The court ruled that forced dues violate government employees First Amendment rights because public-sector unions are political organizations, bargaining with public officials over such matters as government spending, employee discipline, budgets, and taxation.

The Janus decision is a necessary check on government unions, which are among the most potent political forces in the country today. Their influence is especially strong in California. Golden State government unions collect hundreds of millions of dollars a year in dues, and spend millions on political activities that help elect candidates, who, once in office, pass laws that increase union power and funding.

For instance, the California Teachers Association gave $1.2 million directly to Gov. Newsoms 2018 election campaign. In return, the governor has waged war on the states charter schools, which are independently run and often forgo union labor. In this mutual backscratching exercise, no one represents taxpayers, who see their taxes rise and freedoms curtailed as unions and politicians work in tandem to advance their respective interests. Unlike the role of management in the case of private-sector unions, nobody is on the other side of the bargaining table countering public-sector union demands just politicians who have been bought and paid for by union leaders. Lets call this corruption what it is.

While the broader impact of the Janus decision is immense, its direct impact on government unions is difficult to tally. The Bureau of Labor Statistics, in its annual report on union members, quantifies the number of union members nationwide. Yetit doesnt distinguish between private- and public-sector union membership by state. This report also suffers from the traditional limitations of surveys, including potential respondent misunderstandings of the question: Are you covered by a union or employee association contract? While thisdatademonstratesthat the share of unionized workers in California has dropped since the Janus decision, our own research gives a more complete picture of the change.

To quantify the drop in payers to government unions post-Janus, the California Policy Center has been issuing Public Records Act requests to nearly all the government agencies in the state including counties, cities, and school districts to ask about the number of union dues payers before and after the Janus decision. We now have records covering about one-third of the states public-sector workforce.

Our finding: The Janus decision has reduced the number of Californians in government unions by about 13 percent. Some unions, such as those representing public safety officials, have seen small decreases.Others, such as SEIU, which represents service-sector employees who have more trouble coughing up monthly dues payments,have seen larger drops.

A 13 percent drop in dues payers represents a significant curtailment of union power. Would we like the number to be higher? Given the fiscal threat that government unions pose to the state, yes.

But union-backed Democrats in Sacramento have passed a web of laws designed to thwart workers trying to exercise their Janus rights. Exhibit A is Senate Bill 866, signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown on June 27, 2018, the same day as the Janus decision.

That law bars employers and managers in government from discussing employees Janus rights in the workplace. CPC has sued the government over this gag law on First Amendment grounds, and we expect to win. As workers learn about their rights to stop paying unions with whom they disagree, the number of dues payers will fall further.

The Janus decision was monumental, and it is already paying handsome dividends for California taxpayers and workers. Happy second anniversary to all California government workers.

Will Swaim is the president of the California Policy Center.

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Two years after Janus, more workers are exercising their freedom of association - San Bernardino County Sun

Freedom of speech is a right, but is there a line drawn for teachers – MyFoxZone.com KIDY

West Texas school districts have their own way of dealing with how to balance freedom of speech on social media.

SAN ANGELO, Texas Getting our thoughts out has never been easier. With the use of social media, freedom of speech is at the palm of your hands.

With every tweet, post and snapchat a person can use it as a platform to voice opinions.

Many say freedom of speech doesnt mean freedom from consequences.

Earlier this week, a story from Colorado said a teacher was facing dismissal for her comments on her personal social media account.

Does the First Amendment apply to everyone? What about teachers in the community who may have taught students about the First Amendment? Its a very fine line that school districts in West Texas have to address daily.

Christoval High Principal John Choate said the rules have not changed, and social media for teachers is no exception.

"The way the laws are written, the way all the regulations regarding teachers use of digital communication with students, it's really the same," Choate said. "They're under the same expectation that they would be in person."

The Christoval Independent School District is not the only school district trying to police the use of social media without infringing on the First Amendment.

Brownwood Independent School District Director of Human Resources Doug Bonsal referred all questions to the districts employee handbook.

The handbook states "All district employees should perform their duties in accordance with state and federal law, district policies and procedures and ethical standards."

According to the Texas Education Agency, it means the Texas educator should be maintaining the dignity of the profession, shall respect and obey the law, demonstrate personal integrity and exemplify honesty.

Choate does not have the time to police the social media pages of his teachers, and he respects his teachers right to use the First Amendment to post what they want. However, if the post brings negative attention to student, or the school that is where Choate draws the line.

"If a teachers statements or an educator statements on social media constitutes hatred towards these students protected status then it would be a problem," Choate said.

If a problem such as that were to occur, Choate and the CISD administration would have to investigate and act accordingly. Choate encourages everyone to exercise the First Amendment, but when it comes to social media, use whatever you put out there it is hard to take down, and to make sure you are mindful before hitting send.

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Freedom of speech is a right, but is there a line drawn for teachers - MyFoxZone.com KIDY

Berta Cceres in her own words – Toward Freedom

Much of what has been written about Lenca/Honduran activist Berta Cceres has focused on her identifications as an Indigenous woman and as an environmentalist. While neither is false, those two facts alone paint an anemic picture of Bertas militancy, and that of COPINH (the Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras). While she strategically organized alongside her fellow Lencas and other feminists, her struggle was not rooted in identity per se, but in her analysis of the legacies of colonial and capitalist violence.

This whole project of domination has been consolidated in Honduras, she said, clarifying that the concept of power created from within capitalismis very patriarchal and racist in its form of domination.

On March 27, 2015, Honduran sociologist Ass Castellanos interviewed Berta at a mall in Tegucigalpa. The two spoke a month prior to her famous Goldman Prize acceptance speech in which she proclaimed: Wake up, humanity! There is no more time. Their meeting came a little less than a year before Berta was murdered in her home by military hitmen in the pay of powerful local interests with connections to international financial institutions.

The 2015 interview questions were pre-determined, as on this occasion Castellanos was working as a research assistant to a professor who required the data for study on Social Movements and Democracy in Honduras. He faithfully kept to script, with results that, years later upon transcribing and translating the interviewand knowing Berta as we didwe found hilarious.

One by one, Berta brilliantly dismantles each question, demonstrating the flaws in its underlying assumptions. In her responses, she turns the questions around, reframes them, and proposes powerful, coherent revolutionary alternatives. When the fixed follow-up questions fail entirely to acknowledge her masterful exposure of the vapid U.S.-friendly democratization logics that frame the entire interview, Berta patiently answers each one, time and again demonstrating that his questions would produce nothing but pro-capitalist, pro-imperialist results, if answered on their own terms.

In this interview, Berta instead presents ideas that are anathema to the interviews framework: ideas like decisive democracy, in which groups engaged in democratic processes have full sovereign power to decide what happens in their territories and communities, in contrast to electoral or other less sincere performances of democracy that permit politicians, corporations and international lending institutions to check off the box requiring consultation before moving forward as planned with harmful projects.

The ongoing logics of the liberal North (despite recent powerful counter-examples of the Standing Rock protests and #ShutDownCanada movements, to name just a couple), tend to preclude the possibility of Indigenous people being revolutionary, anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist scholar-activists and powerful leaders of diverse movements. Instead, Indigenous people are often limited in the liberal (white) left imaginary to identity-based and ecological advocacy.

Berta refused to be bound by these logics, rather she was driven by the conviction that the most effective leadership cannot be bound up in an individual or her ego, but rather must be horizontal. I dont share [that] understanding of the concept of democracy For us what is important is respect for human dignity, the right to happiness for collectivities. Democracy needs to be exercised as a horizontal power, built by the people, and defined by their participation not just in terms of their numbers but rather through their actual participation. It should be decisive, and I think it has a lot to do with which concept of power we have in mind when we speak of democracy, she said during the 2015 interview.

Bertas close relationships with Zapatista organizers and anti-hierarchical Indigenous movements throughout the Americas, as well as her collaborations with non-Indigenous-identified anarchist-leaning organizers were mutually beneficial and constitutive. Though her leadership, revolutionary clarity and vision were undeniable (as her words demonstrate), her praxis centered on building broad-based, radically democratic, horizontalist movements and coalitions capable of confronting the murderous power of capital and creating in its stead a profoundly different model of social organization.

After her death, instead of a burial, her children and COPINH organized Bertas siembraher planting, attended by thousands of grieving Hondurans. In Honduras, there is a saying that goes, blood of martyrs, seed of freedom.

Hundreds of other lesser-known Honduran revolutionaries and land defenders have been killed since the 2009 coup, including dozens of Indigenous activists from COPINH and other organizations alongside which COPINH continues to fight.

In the small Tolupan community of San Francisco de Locomapa alone, for example, 10 community members resisting logging and mining projects were killed between 2013 and 2019.

And as of this writing, the whereabouts of four Garifuna men from Triunfo de la Cruz, including three OFRANEH (Black Fraternal Organization of Honduras) members fighting to protect their collective ancestral lands from rapacious developers, are still unknown.

Elected council president Sneider Centeno and three other community members were kidnapped from their homes on Saturday, July 18th by heavily-armed men dressed in Military Police uniforms. Community members fear their names will be added to the long list of victims of the Honduran states brutal repression of the Garfuna people.

Berta and the many other brave Honduran activists murdered since the coup were targeted because they refused to be silenced by entities far more powerful than them.

In Bertas case, the primary entity in question was Banco Ficohsa, owned by the Atala family, a major financier of the DESA hydroelectric project opposed by COPINH. Since her murder and despite ongoing threats to COPINH, the organization (whose coordinating committee includes two of her daughters, Bertha and Laura Ziga) has continued to denounce Ficohsa for its destruction of ancestral Lenca lands and waterways, and for its likely role in the murder of Berta and other Lenca leaders under the hashtag #FaltanLosAtala.

As part of a diverse toolkit of tactics aimed at countering the violence of finance capital against their communities, COPINH has warned international financial institutions to not partner with Ficohsa (a threat backed by the promise of international direct action). Their bravery in standing up to the Atala family is shared: just last week, Congresswoman Mara Luisa Borjas, who was fired from her position as Police Commissioner in 2002 for blowing the whistle on police death squads, was convicted of defamation, a crime that carries a nearly three-year prison sentence, for naming Camilo Atala, president of Ficohsa, as the probable intellectual author of Bertas murder in 2017.

Another saying, originally attributed to the 18th century martyred Aymara leader Tupac Katari, was popularized following Bertas murder: I will come back, and I will be millions. The expansion of Bertas legacy internationally, following her murder, is indeed a powerful opportunity to grow this solidarity movement. But Berta and so many other courageous Honduran martyrs planted seeds in life as well as in death, by organizing relentlessly toward a radically democratic, anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist society.

Having known and loved Berta like so very many of our friends and compaerxs did, we urge readers who did not know her personally not to idolize, essentialize or mourn her. Instead, we can listen to and learn from her own words, and follow her example.

Alongside her compaerxs in COPINH, Berta spent her life building democratic processes and organizing local, regional, national and international coalitions of struggle. She tells us: It is impossible to exercise democracy from below under capitalism, it cant be done. Coming from Berta, this frank assessment is not meant as discouragement. It is a call to join in the struggle to dismantle capitalism and empire through militant, collective direct action, as the path to sovereignty, democracy and liberation.

What follows is the second of two audio-recorded interviews Castellanos recorded with Berta, whom he had known for many years. It has been translated and edited slightly for length and clarity. We look forward to publishing the transcript and translation of a much longer interview with Berta, conducted in 2014, shortly.

Ass Castellanos: Good afternoon, could you begin by saying your name, and your position within COPINH?

Berta Cceres: Berta Isabel Cceres Flores, and I am the General Coordinator of COPINH.

AC: What are your thoughts about democracy?

BC: Well, first of all I dont share the understanding of the concept of democracy that was a creation of the financial organizations that came here after the Second World War with their ideas about democracy and development, which today are also mixed up with the theme of human rights, from the perspective of Western law that constrains the very liberties and concepts that they are pushing.

And for us what is important is respect for human dignity, the right to happiness for collectivities. Democracy needs to be exercised as a horizontal power, built by the people, and defined by their participation not just in terms of their numbers but rather through their actual participation. It should be decisive, and I think it has a lot to do with which concept of power we have in mind when we speak of democracy.

Power is closely related to this, and what we are seeing now is a despotic power that imposes, that violates. So it is from that exercise of power that you build that concept of democracy. We understand democracy differently; for us it entails the full and just exercise of rights and freedoms that an entire nation should enjoynot just one family.

AC: From the 1980s to the present, what democratic advances have you seen?

BC: It has all been window-dressing, because from the 80s to today we are living the same situation. The imposition of structural adjustments, which they call modernization of the state, has meant that a state that is very militarized, backwards and conservative, gives off an appearance of modernizing through its discourse, through technology. But what it really means is giving away all collective property and natural resources and more militarization, only in a more technocratic way, more structured, more planned, with better financing, and completely tied into transnational capital and the mandates of capitalist financial organizations.

So the democracy that we have here, for me its just a discourse that the politicians roll out every four years; it is governments that hand over the countrys sovereignty and identity, that destroy its liberatory identities, that have institutional and legal structures that they themselves have created and solidified but with precisely the intention of catering to the interests of big capital and powerful economic, political and military organizationsnot to the people.

I believe things have actually gotten worse since the 80s. Even though there was armed conflict in Central America, there were certain norms that were still respected. But today, the level of impunity if we compare it with that era the level of impunity, of social injustice, of denying the right, for example, to land. The concentration of lands, of territories, the plunder, in comparison with what was happening in the 80s; today its done in a way that is shameless and the institutions, the laws, the system of justice that is carried out in this country only exists to support that process, not to support the peoples [of Honduras]. So for me, what they call democracy here, which is actually something else, has gotten worse.

AC: In what areas have there been fewer democratic advances to date?

BC: The economic injustice in this country is striking. I cant get it through my head. The economic rights of peoples are inseparable from the exercise of democracy. In this countryrecent studies on economic injustice show thisthe situation is dire in Honduras. The other thing is that access to justice and access to land and territories and the right for peoples to live a full life with dignity has been completely minimized.

And this is happening in the context of increasing militarization, not just Honduran militarization but also the military occupation by the United States, which isnt just coming in with more and more bases that were seeing in Honduras, but is also replicating its role from the 80s, but worse because of the Colombianization [of the military], because we have been positioned as a failed state like Mexico, to justify further intervention and the murder of young people in this country.

Its very hard to tell you what the worst facet of it is. But the violation of human rights and the absolute lack of opportunity for the Honduran people to exercise power as a sovereign nationsince the constitution says the sovereign power is the peoplebut when the people tried to exercise that power, for example, answering a question in a regular old poll, they overthrew the government in a coup. I think we continue to be a laboratory for cruelty against nations, and I think its going to continue like this for a long time and I believe it will get worse.

AC: What are the main obstacles to democratization in this country?

BC: For me its the system that we live in. It is impossible to exercise democracy from below under capitalism, it cant be done. We can engage in struggles to advance, to build[but] there are huge obstacles designed to prevent it from happening. Powerful groups like the ones I mentioned, 25 powerful families from this country, the transnational mining and energy companies, the issue of privatization, of the financial organizations, of giving even more power to the military, plus everything that has been woven into the legal framework of CAFTA [US-Central America Free Trade Agreement] and also criminalization. For example, the criminalization of human rights defenders, the criminalization of those of us who defend our lands, in laws written to define us as terroristsall this is a huge challenge.

But on our side as well, as social movements, we have challenges. I think we have to start with ourselves, working on the processes of internal democratization of social movements in order to build something coherent. And if it is possible to build spaces of internal democracy, with new practices, with political ethics that honestly reflect principles that are profoundly human, revolutionary, re-foundational, Indigenous, feminist, environmentalist, however we want to call them, the important part is that they dignify Honduran society and they dignify us as human beings.

So its a huge obstacle that we live in an unjust system in which people dont think democracy or the exercise of democratic processes are possible, because there is so much lack of hope too and a crushing media war that makes people believe that if you have a good television and a good cell phone, if we can come here to the mall, if the middle class can go to Miami once in a while to have a good time, then that is democracy. So the concept, the lack of a critical consciousness about that is also an obstacle.

AC: Who are the actors who are most committed to the democratization of Honduran society?

BC: I think that whenever we exercise our rights, when we fight for our right to life, to create different logics of power, any and all of us who are in that struggle are committed. All of the social and political processes working to decolonize our thinking and practice, to break down the oppression that has to do with [the concentration of] power and those ideas about democracy, that is our commitment.

The problem can also be in our internal practices. There are many organizations focused on territorial defense, on justice, against corruption, religious movements, feminists, alternative media, academicsalthough only a few of them are on boardand the diversity of all of us who are in the social and political movements working toward an emancipatory process. I think that when we fight ethically, and build ethical politics, that we are all in it together. It would be very difficult to point to any one person in particular.

AC: Which are the most authoritarian or anti-democratic actors in Honduran society?

BC: The state itself, the government itself, because its aim is to maintain its power and idea of democracy that has already lost all its legitimacy. And it has been overcome; other forms of democracy are being built by people in struggle. For example, in Bolivia they propose a democracy that is not just representative, not just participatory, but which is decisive.

The ones who are impeding the development of democracy here are the State of Honduras, the government itself and its institutions, the legal framework, its all part of a broader ideological and media machinery. And Ill say it againthey are working to keep us from thinking critically and continue colonizing our way of thinking. The media is anti-democratic, and the political class of this country is one of the main actors in blocking the exercise [of democracy].

AC: What is your assessment of the impact of the Coup dtat of June 28, 2009 on Honduran democracy?

BC: It has several effects. One is that it institutionalizes the violation of human rights; it institutionalizes an act that results in dictatorship, imposed by force with the clear intention of preventing the Honduran population from having a sense of what it means to exercise a right, to truly be democratic. Or at least to begin to exercise that right, because the Fourth Ballot Box [the proposed November 2009 referendum, which would have asked Honduran citizens whether or not they approved the formation of a popular Constituent Assembly to work on the formation of a new, more democratic constitution] didnt represent true democracy either.

Building democracy is a life-long project, together, as part of a collectivity, in society. It also has to do with making an anti-democratic attack permanent, a project of domination which has not only invaded all of our [Honduran] territories, our neighborhoods, our communities, urban and rural alike, but which has expanded and is being consolidated: model cities, the Alliance for Prosperity, military bases, the whole national territory being offered to transnational mining corporations on a silver platter. And criminalization, in order to finish off the opposition by any means necessary. This whole project of domination has been consolidated in Honduras.

This is an impact that, for me, has to do with powerwith the concept of power created from within capitalism, which is very patriarchal and racist in its form of domination. And its sucking us dry from all sides, advancing. And they carried out a coup dtat in order to not have to cede anything. Its what weve been saying since day one. They carried out the coup because they are not willing to cede an inch.

Today we live in a state with a government that is effectively a dictatorship, it murders, it violently represses us, it does not permit different ways of thinking, diversity or plurality. It does not allow a plurality to work together to improve conditions in this country; quite the contrary. The effect is profound and long-term, and also has to do with how they have changed the Honduran people, who are so suppressed, so humiliated. But there are also other sides to it; one is that as a result [of the coup] a large sector of the population had its conscience shaken up, another is that people began to imagine other ways of building power, of democratic life in a country. I believe this is also an undeniable effect, despite the fact that it was a terrible, shameful event.

AC: What have been the contributions of social movements and civil societies to the process of democratization of Honduran society?

BC: We have a great responsibility to this country as political and social movements, as the popular movement, which brings me back to the internal issue: What are our own democratic processes? Are we dismantling these unethical practices of power within our own movements? Are we allowing and making way for the creation of internal democratic processes, through training, [collective] leadership, debate, analysis, arguments, self-critique, constructive criticism? Are we dismantling the patriarchy, which has to do with power? Anti-democracy, injustice, inequityare we dismantling racist practice? If we accept these things as natural, then what are we ever going to accomplish?

For me, this is where we have to begin, and of course we also need to strengthen ourselves to face outward, with a very strong platform. But voices from the social movement proposing projects for the democratization of this country are few and far between, because at the core there are many other debates, for example, about social and economic injustice in a system that is imposed by plunder, colonization, death, repression, murder.

The debate around democratization is more than simply a conversation about going back to elections with a new, progressive political party. It has to do with a discussion about what kind of power we want; it requires a serious ethical commitment.

AC: How would you characterize electoral processes in Honduras?

BC: They are backwards, despite the participation of new political party [Libre and the Anti-Corruption Party] actors. And this is important, Im not denying it. But at the same time its a step backward because the State, the government, and the power elite have managed to refresh their image by incorporating these new actors. After the coup dtat, they had been completely denigrated and discredited worldwide.

Although the people in the new parties are waging interesting battles, there is so much more to do. The electoral process in Honduras is a process that in reality has very little to do with democracy, since as we know there is fraud, there is abstention and lack of interest among the population, the political discourse is washed-out, the people hate it and this discourages much of the population. Its a machinery created to guarantee the status quo.

AC: How would you assess the contributions of political parties to the process of democratization of Honduran society?

BC: I could speak about the new parties: they are making efforts, they are trying to include a different voice. But by and large they continue with the same practices of the conservative political party system, and furthermore this is preventing the development of a sustained, long-term construction of what should be a different kind of democracy, of power. Its very short-term. They can have important fights that overlap with the demands and causes of social movements, but theyre still very isolated [from them]. They replicate the practice, for example, of using certain organizations just for their electoral benefit, and this has to improve.

AC: What is your evaluation of citizen participation and democratic political culture among Honduran citizens?

BC: Its very poor, very uncritical, with very little analysis of reality or understanding of how to read what is happening. And this is due to historical marginalization, to subjugation. Its not that we are stupid, its that our people are bombarded with a machinery telling them to think that everything is fine, and the effect of this is that there is little critical citizen participation and they are not questioning the big problems in this country with a structural analysis.

They might have an immediate analysis of things that happen on a day-to-day level, but what are the causes of these? For example, of migration, which is a huge phenomenon in this country; the murder of boys and girls; how the national budget is allocatedthere is so much room for more critical thought and participation among the population. For [such analyses] to be decisive I believe that is where, as movements, we face a monumental challenge.

AC: Thank you very much.

BC: [laughs] Cheque.

Click here to listen to the audio of this interview (in Spanish).

Author Bios:

Adrienne Pine is a medical anthropologist and coeditor of Asylum For Sale: Profit and Protest in the Migration Industry. She teaches at American University.

Ass Castellanos is an Honduran Miskitu sociologist and researcher with CESPAD (Center for Democracy Studies).

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Berta Cceres in her own words - Toward Freedom

Letters: An alarming threat to our freedom to speak freely – HeraldScotland

JOHN Mason MSP (letters, July 27) claims that the Hate Crime Bill is mainly a consolidation and really only tweaks existing law. and that those of us opposed to it are too worried about future vague potential threats to expressions of free speech.

The consolidation is acknowledged, but those parts of the Bill that extend the criminal law go far beyond a mere tweak.

Take as just one example Clause 3 (1) (b) (ii): a person, with no motive to stir up hatred, can find that the words used are deemed likely that hatred will be stirred up and so commits a criminal offence.

Who will deem it likely that words written or spoken, or a cartoon, or a play, where no motive exists, can be turned into an offence? The police, acting alone or on the instruction of the Crown Office. Organs of the state and not the originator of the words, who had no intention of stirring up hatred. What has happened to the need for mens rea?

John Mason might be happy with that. I am not; because the only protection from that kind of law is self-censorship. Making people afraid to speak what is in their minds is the pernicious way chosen by authoritarian regimes to clamp down on freedom. That a Scottish parliament should be asked to put a foot down that road, and contemplate passing a Bill in which protection by self-censorship is implicit, requires the most robust opposition from Left, Right and Centre.

Jim Sillars,

Edinburgh.

IN John Masons defence of the proposed Hate Crime Bill he seeks to reassure us that this is no big deal: all of the powers enacted in the Bill are unlikely to be used.

If this is so, would it not make sense not to enact them in the first place? Then we could be certain that those powers could not be misused.

Why create a law with the intention of not enforcing all of it?

Insofar as sectarianism may be a problem in Scotland, that is something which manifests itself in the minds and actions of a few misguided people. Its a moral or spiritual deficit in individuals which is not amenable to cure through the blunt instrument of Criminal Law.

If existing Hate Crime legislation is faulty we could just repeal it and leave it at that. It doesnt need a replacement. Other laws cover the real crimes that matter.

I prefer the analysis of your correspondent, T. Marshall: we have stumbled into a minefield of attacks on free speech; and our police could do without the burden of having to enforce ill-conceived legislation.

Did we learn nothing from the Offensive Behaviour at Football Stadia debacle?

John McArthur,

Rutherglen.

IN a submission to the consultation on the Hate Crime Bill I suggested that in addition to the failings of the proposed Bill on lack of evidence and substance, its drafting was, in my opinion, poor.

Just to confirm this we had the Justice Secretary confirm this week that we can still say offensive things. Just dont do it in a threatening or abusive way

So if the Government wishes to continue, will Mr Yousaf tell us who is to define and decide what is threatening or abusive in a spur of the moment?

Added to the Bills statement that a single source (i.e., uncorroborated?) is sufficient to prove that an offence is aggravated by prejudice, who in these moments is to decide what is threatening or abusive? Are we to lumber an already overloaded police force with interpretation of that type of badly-drafted law?

Mr Yousaf should drop the Bill now. It is a disaster waiting to happen. He should pay heed to the initial consultation where clause 44 of this Bill indicated the majority of individuals consulted were not supportive of hate crime laws.

I suggest the Justice Committee, in its review, follows Voltaires maxim and it be tested against the paradigms of free speech and thought. As it stands it doesnt meet either of these criteria and should be withdrawn.

Chic Brodie,

Ayr

THE Bill no doubt had its roots in good intentions, but surely the SNP government must realise the steep road it will have to climb before the Bill can become law.

To quote a Labour MP in your article yesterday (Police warn hate crime Bill will paralyse freedom of speech), With police officers, lawyers and religious groups expressing concerns about the stirring up hatred proposals, it is clear Mr Yousaf has got this badly wrong.

The Scottish Police Federation submission is particularly worrying, given that it represents 17,000 frontline officers - the very men and women who would be charged with upholding the new law.

It is difficult to see how Mr Yousaf can satisfactorily deal with all of these well-founded, serious complaints and steer the Bill through Holyrood. Its advance publicity has largely been negative and I would say that the general public is now wary, to say the least, about it.

It might be better for him to go back to the drawing-board and start again. Which is a pity, as the broad strokes of the principles behind the Bill suggest that there is a problem in Scottish society that needs to be addressed.

M. Lipton, Glasgow

MY experience is as a journalist and not a lawyer, so there may be legal points in this Bill which I overlook. Nevertheless, here are some questions for our parliamentarians.

Since 2012, people in Scotland have been protected by specific laws on grounds of disability, race, religion, sexual orientation and transgender identity. Apart from adding age to the list, what need is there for this Bill?

Section 1 discusses aggravation of offences by prejudice. The Latin, pre-judice, means judging ahead. While growing up, most people have to form some sort of pre-judgements. In normal conversation, that is one way of getting to know and understand people.

This Bill declares society will not tolerate crimes motivated by prejudice and aims to create new offences relating to stirring up hatred in relation to all listed characteristics, disability, age, sexual orientation, transgender identity and variations in sex characteristics.

Surely stirring up hatred is already a well-kent sin? It is always wrong. Prejudice is only occasionally a sin. If all prejudices are to be designated crimes, must we all be put in prison?

Section 2 deals with Stirring up Offences. It lists threatening, abusive and insulting behaviour in stirring up racial hatred. But unlike the first two, insulting behaviour can be a purely subjective judgement. Lord Bracadale was right to ask for it to be removed. He also called for a clear distinction to be made between legitimate debate and rabble-rousing.

Almost from its very beginning, Scotland has been a Christian country. Christianity, by founding and supporting the universities, has encouraged debate and freedom of speech. Some modern governments, whether communist, fascist or socialist, have clamped down on this (witness todays China). It will be a sad day when the Scottish Government starts enforcing what it believes to be politically correct and gagging the public.

But again and again in this Section, it is being emphasised that there do not have to be any specific victims of hate crime, only that crime may have been aggravated by prejudice. Does this smack of George Orwells Thought Control?

Paragraph 23 maintains that there does not even have to be legal corroboration to prove that an offence was aggravated by prejudice. This gainsays the just and ancient Scottish legal tradition of the necessity for corroboration.

Section 4 considers culpability where an offence is committed during the public performance of a play. Not even works of imagination are to go uncensored. Yet

The plays the thing/

With which to touch the conscience of the King.

In Section 5, paragraph 47 creates an offence of racially inflammatory material. It provides that it is an offence for a person to have in the possession threatening, abusive or insulting material to another person. Does this include libraries?

In paragraph 56, we are told, A constable or member of the police staff may enter premises (by force of necessary), search them and seize and detain any material found there. Will they have to read all our books?

In paragraph 65, what is the Public Policy which is affirmed? Do the public know what the Public Policy is? People should feel free to examine religious beliefs robustly, and indeed have courageous discussion about sexual orientation and same-sex marriage.

Last but not least, we are told that the existing laws protecting religion and race and the listed characteristics are repealed as a consequence of this new legislation.

Does this put Parliament under pressure to hastily pass this Bill in order to protect the very basic human rights pertaining to race and religion which they already had?

Lesley J. Findlay,

Fort Augustus.

MIGHT I just quote a few lines from the Scottish Government website, with reference to this seemingly controversial Bill?

It says: We are clear that any form of hate crime or prejudice is completely unacceptable and will not be tolerated.

We are committed to building strong, resilient and supportive communities. Hate crime and prejudice threaten community cohesion, and have a corrosive impact on Scotlands minority communities as well as broader society.

It describes hate crime as something that can be verbal or physical and has hugely damaging effects on the victims, their families and communities, and we all must play our part to challenge it.

A few ago the government launched a campaign to raise awareness of hate crime, and which, as I recall, victims were encouraged to report such behaviour.

It was based on the fact that more than 5,000 cases of hate crime had been reported that year.

This suggests there is a very real problem to hand in modern-day Scotland. It is unfortunate that this is the case, in the 21st century, but many old habits die hard.

Given the prevalence of such disturbing behaviour, surely it is incumbent on the government to do something about it? All it is doing is seeking to enact into law a provision that will make hate crimes a thing of the past.

As Mr Mason said, the Bill is only starting on its progress through parliament. Its flaws and there are some will be ironed out over the weeks and months ahead.

But let us not lose sight of the fact that minority communities are still suffering every day. We cannot just sit on our hands and pretend that everything is fine.

T. A. Stewart, Glasgow

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Letters: An alarming threat to our freedom to speak freely - HeraldScotland

How the automobile is giving us back our freedom in the summer of COVID-19 – Driving

A neighbour texted me recently for car-buying advice, and her reason caught my eye: it isnt her whos looking. Its her teenage daughter. And her friends.

The kids are not all right, it seems. Thanks to the coronavirus pandemic, theyve been cooped up for months, and some of them are suddenly realizing the value of getting drivers licences and spending squirreled-away money on buying their first vehicles.

With car-sharing and public transit feeling unnecessarily risky every bus I drive past has at least one person on it not wearing a mask correctly our cars are proving to be the safest way to get out of the house.

Tell this to folks of a certain vintage and they turn starry-eyed. Once upon a time, standing in line on ones 16th birthday to get a learners permit was a rite of passage, and the ability to drive singlehandedly opened the door to a long-anticipated freedom.

The summer of COVID-19 has, in many ways, allowed us to rekindle our romance with the automobile. As the long commutes and hectic schedules of our previous lives have been stripped away, the things that driving opens up for us today are those that nourish the soul: art, music, nature, and quality time with those closest to us.

Numerous innovative ways to make the most of these experiences have emerged in recent months and shown that, for as long as physical distancing is needed to contain the virus, our cars still have the power to keep us moving and living.

When was the last time you went to a drive-in movie theatre? It had been years for me and Id never taken my daughter, but after one visit we agreed that this is our new favourite way to take in a film. Drive-ins still arent getting the latest releases even as theyve been the only theatres operating, but the charm of eating popcorn and cotton candy while taking in classics under the stars really is just as rich as you remember.

On top of the established drive-in theatres and a quick Google search reveals there are more still around than you might think there are also numerous drive-in film festivals cropping up this summer.

In Toronto alone, the province has invested $2 million to create a new drive-in entertainment space at the Ontario Place grounds, where the Italian Contemporary Film Festival is running through July 31 and the Toronto International Film Festival will hold screenings during its run from September 10 to 19, some of which will be free of charge.

And as part of the City of Torontos DriveTO initiative, more free screenings will be shown at Ontario Place, including programming by Hot Docs and imagineNATIVE. Plus, the old drive-in at Polson Pier is being resurrected for the Inside Out LGBTQ Film Festival, Reel Asian Film Festival, Reelworld Film Festival, and Regent Park Film Festival. Downsview Park will host Friday Night Lights presented by MADE featuring free made-in-Canada films, and movie nights will also be offered at Sherway Gardens in Etobicoke. This is a very Toronto-centric rundown, but similar programs are being offered across the country.

Some pro tips that might help if youre taking in a movie on wheels for the first time: bring a battery-powered FM radio to pick up the audio broadcast if you can running a modern car in accessory mode without the lights on is a pain at best and impossible at worst and if you have kids along, throw a fitted sheet over their seats, invert the bottom half, and tuck their legs inside. Sticky hands will land on the fabric and popcorn crumbs will get caught in the pocket, so you wont be wiping and vacuuming for weeks. (Youre welcome.)

Its going to be a while yet before we can safely cram crowds into stadiums, concert venues, and bars or clubs. Music is one of the things that unites people most, and yet the close contact thats inherent to an event like a concert is one of the most difficult things to replicate in a summer of physical distancing.

The first hints of innovation in this space were the drive-in raves in Germany that made the news early May. Since then, small-scale drive-in concerts have become relatively common, from Thursday night live music at Polson Pier in Toronto to rock bands holding multi-city tours in western Canada and a concert series at Cavendish Beach in Prince Edward Island.

For a different experience, some larger acts such as country music stars Garth Brooks and Blake Shelton are hosting concerts that will be screened at multiple drive-in movie theatres across Canada on the same night.

In the visual arts space, the Immersive Van Gogh exhibit touts itself as the first drive-in art exhibition in the world. The display, which is set up in the former printing press warehouse at 1 Yonge Street in downtown Toronto, is a 35-minute meld of 360-degree projections through the evolution of Van Goghs art set against a mood-setting soundtrack. Its fairly costly for how quickly it goes by, but its quite captivating.

The initial run of drive-in tickets sold out, but additional showings are available through September 7. Tickets are time-controlled and there are vehicle size limitations and rules to follow, so be sure to read the fine print to verify you can make the most of it.

The Toronto Zoo is only open to walk-in visitors now, but its Scenic Safari driving tour was one of the best activities going for kids while it lasted. Fortunately, there are still plenty of wildlife-oriented activities families can enjoy from the safety of their vehicles.

Northeast of Peterborough, Ontario, the Indian River Reptile Zoo has a reasonably priced drive-through dinosaur park thats fun for younger dino enthusiasts and can be combined with a walking visit in the reptile sanctuary and Canadas largest alligator and crocodile exhibit. And then theres the classic African Lion Safari near Cambridge, Ontario, which has always been a drive-through experience, as has Parc Omega near Montebello, Quebec; and Parc Safari, located south of Montreal close to the U.S. border.

Amid the endless barrage of disappointments this summer, nature is the one thing that is definitely not cancelled.

Parks across Canada have largely reopened with distancing protocols in place, which means that hiking, camping, and roasting marshmallows over fires to a soundtrack of loon calls in other words, the very best of what Canada has to offer all remain on the table and important for our mental and physical health. And stargazing is the perfect excuse to escape the city: the comet NEOWISE will be visible with binoculars or a telescope for a while longer in the northwestern sky, and the annual Perseid meteor shower peaks in mid-August.

It should be said that certain high-traffic experiences that tend to attract large crowds, such as the Grotto on Bruce Peninsula or Lake Louise in Banff National Park, are best left for another time. The circumstances this summer offer a great excuse to seek out more remote parks or locally managed conservation areas.

And if you plan to camp overnight, take the time ensure youre aware of the rules and regulations. All shower stations are closed in Ontario Parks for the 2020 season, for example, and portable units are not permitted, so dont plan to stay for longer than you can manage to rough it.

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How the automobile is giving us back our freedom in the summer of COVID-19 - Driving

Weekend Protest Round-Up: Massive Crowds, Unpredictable Tear Gas, More Freedom for the Press – The Portland Mercury

Mathieu Lewis-Rolland

But this weekend also saw a few notable developments. Here's what we witnessed on each night:

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Mathieu Lewis-Rolland

FRIDAY, JULY 24

This informal assembly of blocs congregated at Salmon Springs fountain, where comedian Christian Burke (AKA Creme Brulee) encouraged attendees to dance to a critical mass of thundering drums.

This is not a peaceful protest. This is a joyful protest! he shouted.

At 9:30 pm, the Salmon Springs assembly marched three blocks west to join the ongoing protest in Chapman Park and Lownsdale Square. However it was already so crowded, the marching ground to a halt in a manner reminiscent of the 2017 Portland Women's March, leaving them nowhere to go. Altogether the crowd reached upward of 4,000 people protesting in defense of Black lives.

The dense crowd contained helpful volunteers passing out burritos and snacks in utility buckets, a table of free helmets and knee pads, and the national-headline grabbing Wall of Moms in gas masks with their backpacks worn forward-facing for protection.

If the federal officers gave a warning before they tear gassed the immense crowd of people at 11 pm on the dot, we didn't hear it. Thousands of demonstrators were caught completely unaware.

Federal officers regularly deployed tear gas and munitions into the crowd for the rest of the night, but an estimated 1,000 protesters remained, most of them far enough back, they could avoid the worst of the gas clouds. Dodgeball was cancelled and has not yet been rescheduled. Federal officers came out of the courthouse and dispersed what was left of the crowd around 2:30 am.

Mathieu Lewis-Rolland

SATURDAY, JULY 25

The downtown protest pulled in an estimated 3,000-4,000 attendees, even before the North Portland demonstrators joined up with them around 11:30 pm. When the North Portland marchers arrived, they ran up against a solid wall of protesters on SW 3rd and Salmon, much like the career blocs did the night before.

The deployment of tear gas from federal officers seemed less intense than Friday nightat least until 1:40 am when demonstrators succeeded in partially pulling down the fence surrounding the courthouse. That led to swift deployment of munitions, and soon after federal officers marched up SW Main and Salmon, pushing demonstrators to the west. They allowed press to stand on a corner and film them without incident, thanks to a two-week restriction from a US district judge on the interactions federal officers can have with journalists and legal observers.

A little after 2 am, federal officers retreated to stand in mass at the intersection of SW 3rd and Salmon. (Earlier in the week, PPB was ordered to cease cooperation with federal officers.) Soon after, Portland police bull-rushed the remaining protesters, chasing them north on SW 4th. Most dispersed afterward.

Suzette Smith

SUNDAY, JULY 26

Also during the day, Portland Police attempted to conflate the large number of shields that were being passed out by volunteers at a recent protest with the idea that demonstrators meant to harm law enforcement officials. This attemptalong with another tweet in which they depicted a bag of Molotov cocktails and ammunition that was allegedly found in the park was met with wide scorn and general disbelief by many online.

Early on Sunday evening, various speakers addressed the slowly growing crowd at the neighboring Justice Center. Speakers included included city council candidate Loretta Smith who asked the gathering for their votes in the upcoming August special election.

The demonstration attracted more people by 11 pm, and by midnight, the first attempts to breach the fence surrounding the Federal Courthouse were made, and fireworks were launched at the building. Federal officers quickly declared the situation an unlawful gathering and began launching munitions and CS tear gas at the crowd.

The feds would repeat this tactic at least two more times during the night, eventually leaving federal property to push the crowd out of the area, and reportedly detaining several protesters.

More protests are scheduled for tonight, and tomorrow (Tuesday, July 28) will mark two full months of sustained demonstrations in Portland.

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Weekend Protest Round-Up: Massive Crowds, Unpredictable Tear Gas, More Freedom for the Press - The Portland Mercury

Does Mesothelioma Spread to the Brain? – Mesothelioma.com

In rare cases, mesothelioma cancer may metastasize (spread) to the patients brain. Mesothelioma often begins in the lungs, abdomen or heart after exposure to asbestos. Mesothelioma is a rare disease, accounting for only 0.19% of new cancer diagnoses from 2013 to 2017.

Mesothelioma metastasis to the brain is unlikely. Brain metastasis occurs in only about 3% of mesothelioma patients. Some studies analyze the prevalence of mesothelioma in the brain. They provide insight into how it occurs and potential treatment options.

Though rare, mesothelioma may spread to the brain. A 2016 study from researchers at Okayama Rosai Hospital studied 150 malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) patients. The researchers found eight patients, or 5.3%, developed brain metastasis.

A study by Australian and British researchers found a lower likelihood of brain metastasis, at 3%. The study confirmed mesothelioma is more likely to metastasize to other areas first. Around 87.7% of MPM patients had metastasis sites somewhere in the body. According to this research, mesothelioma is more likely to spread to the lymph nodes and chest cavity.

Metastasis to the brain can occur when cancer cells spread:

The lymphatic system is a network of lymph nodes that filter waste from the body. Cancerous cells may reach the lymph nodes and collect there. If this happens, metastasis in the lymph nodes can occur.

From the lymphatic system, cancer can cross into the bloodstream and enter the circulatory system. Once mesothelioma cells are in the bloodstream, they can cross the blood-brain barrier. The cells can then spread to the brain and lead to tumor development.

Symptoms reported by mesothelioma patients with brain metastasis include:

These symptoms differ from common mesothelioma symptoms. Patients experiencing any of these symptoms should contact their doctor immediately. In some cases, individuals may not experience these symptoms, even with brain metastasis.

One study identified age and cancer stage as common factors among patients with brain metastasis. This study was done by the Okayama Rosai Hospital.

The study found patients over the age of 65 and in stage four of mesothelioma were most likely to have brain metastasis. These factors show brain metastasis is most likely in patients who have lived with mesothelioma for a while. There are no documented cases of brain metastasis appearing first in mesothelioma patients.

The longer a patient lives with untreated mesothelioma, the more likely they are to have brain metastasis. Treating localized mesothelioma first may prevent metastasis.

Due to the rarity of brain metastasis in mesothelioma patients, few patients have received treatment. Patients with brain metastasis are often in late stages of cancer. As a result, they may prefer to treat the symptoms rather than remove the tumors.

Early diagnosis and treatment before metastasis are the best ways to prevent brain tumors.

However, there are three potential treatment options for mesothelioma brain metastasis. This includes surgery, chemotherapy and dexamethasone.

These treatments may help patients with mesothelioma brain metastasis. However, metastasis to the brain is very rare in this cancer. More research is needed to study treatment effectiveness. If you or a loved one with a mesothelioma diagnosis experiences these symptoms, contact your doctor.

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Does Mesothelioma Spread to the Brain? - Mesothelioma.com

Mississippi Mesothelioma Victims Center Urges the Family of a Navy Veteran with Recently Diagnosed Mesothelioma in Mississippi to Please Call Attorney…

(MENAFN - EIN Presswire)

JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI , USA, July 30, 2020 / EINPresswire.com / -- The Mississippi Mesothelioma Victims Center says, "We are urging the wife, adult son-daughter or a loved one of a Navy Veteran who has just been diagnosed with confirmed mesothelioma in Mississippi to please call 800-714-0303 for direct access to attorney Erik Karst of the law firm of Karst von Oiste. Mesothelioma compensation for a Navy Veteran can frequently exceed a million dollars-if the lawyers representing the person with this rare cancer caused by asbestos exposure know what they are doing. Erik Karst is one of the nation's most experienced mesothelioma attorneys and he knows what he is doing when it comes to mesothelioma compensation for Navy Veterans and people with this rare cancer caused by asbestos exposure.

"We do not want a Navy Veteran or person with mesothelioma in Mississippi rolling the dice on their compensation. Before you retain the services of a lawyer to assist with mesothelioma compensation please call Erik Karst of the law firm of Karst von Oiste at 800-714-0303. Erik and his colleagues at the law firm of Karst von Oiste have been assisting Navy Veterans and people with mesothelioma for decades and they are responsible for over a billion dollars in financial compensation individuals like this. Attorney Erik Karst of Karst von Oiste is a much better deal than a 'free' booklet about mesothelioma." [To enable links contact MENAFN]

Important Note from the Mesothelioma Victims Center: "If your loved one is a Navy Veteran, or person over 60 years old and you know he a had significant exposure to asbestos in the navy or at work prior to 1982-please tell the doctors who are treating him about the asbestos exposure-if he is now in the hospital with suspected Coronavirus-COVID-19." [To enable links contact MENAFN]

For the best possible mesothelioma treatment options in Mississippi the Mississippi Mesothelioma Victims Center strongly recommends the following heath care facility with the offer to help a diagnosed victim, or their family get to the right physicians at this hospital:

* University of Mississippi Medical Center Jackson, Mississippi: [To enable links contact MENAFN]

The Mississippi Mesothelioma Victims Center's initiative is a service available to any diagnosed victim of mesothelioma throughout Mississippi in every community such as Jackson, Gulfport, Southaven, Hattiesburg, Biloxi, and Tupelo. [To enable links contact MENAFN]

High risk work groups for exposure to asbestos in Mississippi include Veterans of the US Navy, power plant workers, shipyard workers, oil refinery workers, factory workers mill workers, plumbers, electricians, welders, auto mechanics, machinists, and construction workers. Typically, the exposure to asbestos occurred in the 1950's, 1960's, 1970's, or 1980's. [To enable links contact MENAFN]

According to the CDC the states indicated with the highest incidence of mesothelioma include Maine, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, Virginia, Michigan, Illinois, Minnesota, Louisiana, Washington, and Oregon. However, mesothelioma does happen in Mississippi.

For more information about mesothelioma please refer to the National Institutes of Health's web site related to this rare form of cancer: [To enable links contact MENAFN] .

Michael ThomasMississippi Mesothelioma Victims Center+1 800-714-0303email us here

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Mississippi Mesothelioma Victims Center Urges the Family of a Navy Veteran with Recently Diagnosed Mesothelioma in Mississippi to Please Call Attorney...