How the "Most Normal Person Ever" Became the Face of a Movement to Decriminalize Magic Mushrooms – Washingtonian

Lavasani with her husband,Daniel Conner, and children Ramsey and Lola.

Melissa Lavasani hesitated last December as she prepared to submit the paperwork for a ballot initiative that would decriminalize natural psychedelics like magic mushrooms, mescaline, and ayahuasca. What are the moms at school going to say about this? she remembers thinking.

Lavasanis neighbors in the H Street, Northeast, neighborhood were likely to know her as the budget officer for the DC Department of Energy & Environment, or perhaps as the mother of two young neighborhood kids. What few knew at the time, though, is that Lavasani felt that substances many people think of as recreational drugs might have saved her life.

Lavasanis transformation into an advocate for drug-law reform began with a difficult second pregnancy in 2017. She developed sciatica and chronic pain so intensethat she often crawled up the stairs at night to go to bed. Things got even worse after she delivered a healthy baby and was hit with anxiety, severe depression, panic attacks, and suicidal ideation. A doctor prescribed antidepressants but, wary of the difficulties friends had encountered in finding the right medication, she decided to try talk therapy first. It was expensive, and it didnt help enough: It just got to a point where it was very clear that if something didnt change, I was going to take my life, she says.

Salvation arrived in the form of a friends recommendation to listen toan episode of the Joe Rogan Experience that featured the mycologist Paul Stamets speaking about the benefits of psilocybin mushrooms on mental health. This was not advice Lavasani, who holds two graduate degrees, normally would have followedI assumed people that took psychedelics were people that were trying to escape their reality, that couldnt deal with adulthood, she saysbut these werent normal circumstances. She ordered spores over the internet and tried to grow them at home using advice from online forums. That wasnt easy, she says, and she was extremely worried about using illegal drugs. But after a few days of microdosing, she began to feel normal again. Another friend recommended she visit an ayahuasca healer, which she tried in early 2019 against every good instinct I had. After a few sessions, she says, it was like I was I turned out to be not only back to myself, but almost like a better version of myself.

After learning of a campaign to decriminalize psilocybin mushrooms in Denver (which squeaked through last year), Lavasani began to wonder whether such an initiative could pass in DC as well. She and her husband, Daniel Conner, met with Kevin Matthews, an organizer of the Colorado initiative, who connected her with David Bronner, the top executive at Dr. Bronners soap company, who has put substantial resources behind decriminalization and legalization efforts and had been interested in working on a campaign in DC.

That led to Lavasani and her husbandhooking up with Adam Eidinger, a veteran advocate who had been instrumental in getting cannabis legalized in the District with Initiative 71 in 2014. Lavasani was interested in potentiallycontributing to the campaign or playing a background role, but after a dinner in November 2019, Eidinger worked to convince her that she would be an effective face of be psychedelic reform in DC. Eventually, she agreed:This kind of controversial topic has to come from the most normal of people, she explains.

The measure, Initiative 81, was worded very carefully and conservatively. (Yeah, were pretty limited on what we can do in the District, Lavasani says.)It doesnt call for legalization of entheogenic plants and fungi; it asks that the DC police make psychedelic-related arrests among its arrests because of them among its lowest law enforcement priorities and that DCs Attorney General and the US Attorney for DC cease prosecution of people accused of drug offenses involving these substances. DCs Metropolitan Police Department did not respond to a query about how many people are arrested and accused of drug offenses involving psychedelics, but public data shows that marijuana arrests declined steeply between 2012 and 2019.

Almost as soon as Decriminalize Nature DC came together as an electoral force, though, the pandemic arrived. As part of the process of getting a question on the DC ballot, you must collect 25,000 signatures. With prompting from the campaign, the District government passed legislation in May that made it easier to collect signatures remotely. Decriminalize Nature DC sent out a mailer to 220,000 households that yielded thousands of signatures and, as the District began its phased reopening, set up tables outside grocery stores, knocked on doors, and solicited signatures in parks. In all, the campaign turned in more than 35,000 signatures in early July.

Before the Board of Elections could decide whether the campaign had fulfilled the requirements to get its issue on the ballot this November, an old foe of DC self-determination reappeared: US Representative Andy Harris, a Republican from Maryland who had previouslyhobbled the marijuana-legalization initiative with a budget rider. Harris threatened to force a vote in the House Appropriations Committeeon another budget rider to prevent the District from including I-81on the ballot.

Unlike in 2014, though, Harris is now a member of the Houses minority party. While it was never clear he could actually thwart the legislation, the publicity his threat received may have unintentionally contributed to growing Democratic sentiment toward statehood for the District. DC Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton framed his interference as meddling with DCs right to self-government, and voting members of the Congress apparently viewed it similarly. Harris withdrew his amendmentin mid-July.

Lavasani notes with some frustration that Congressional Republicans tended to speak about psychedelics as a way to party rather than as a therapeutic tool. (Psilocybin in particular hasshown some promise in researchabout treatment-resistant depression). That actually matches with some of the feedback Decriminalize Nature DC has received about the initiative, she says: The idea that this is just some white kids that want to party with this stuff. Ayahuasca in particular, she says, can be an extremely not-fun experience. Its emotionally painful, its physically painful, but afterwards the healing that you have experienced and continue to experience after the ceremony is really astounding.

Now that the issue is before the Board of Elections, she says her group will prioritize educating the publicabout the substances it hopes to decriminalize. Among residents of DCs predominately Black areas in particular, she says theres a tendency to conflate psychedelics with PCP, which although mind-altering is not a psychedelic and has had many deleterious effects in DC.

Lavasani says shes confident Initiative 81 will appear on the ballot and that her groups goal is to pass the initiative with overwhelming supportits shooting for 70 percent. (Initiative 71 passed with almost 65 percent support in 2014.) I think we can, she says. We got over 36,000 signatures in the middle of a pandemic.

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How the "Most Normal Person Ever" Became the Face of a Movement to Decriminalize Magic Mushrooms - Washingtonian

Lighthouse to hobbit hole: 13 unusual and quirky places to holiday in Scotland – Ardrossan and Saltcoats Herald

IF you are looking for a staycation that stokes the imagination, Scotland has no shortage of unusual and quirky gems.

With the nations tourism sector now reopened, weve put together a list of some of our favourite awe-inspiring holiday accommodation.

Places that bring together architectural wizardry and painstaking refurbishment to breathe new life and use into everything from a lighthouse to a modern-day broch and erstwhile modes of transportation, including buses, train carriages and even a helicopter.

Roulotte Retreat, near Melrose, Scottish Borders

There is something wonderfully romantic about this circle of seven colourful roulottes (Romany-style caravans) located in a pretty wildflower meadow below the Eildon Hills.

Each roulotte faces onto a lochan at the centre of the site. Facilities include sunset decks, wood-burning stoves, eco saunas and hot tubs. Its a perfect getaway for nature lovers with owls, deer, foxes, and badgers among the regular visitors.

Prices start from 115 per night. Call 07990 744044 or visit roulotteretreat.com

Helicopter Glamping, Mains Farm Wigwams, Thornhill, Stirling

Stay in a Sea King helicopter complete with mini kitchen, bathroom and a cockpit seating area offering stunning views over the Forth Valley. The helicopter part of Mains Farm Wigwams sleeps two adults or a family of five (two adults and three children). Theres a double bed, a single bed in the tail and seating which converts into a second double bed. The owners are currently renovating a 1959 Scottish Aviation Twin Pioneer plane set to open for overnight stays next year.

Prices start from 170 per night. Call 01786 850735 or visit mainsfarmwigwams.com

Sleeperzzz, Rogart, Sutherland

Choose between a vintage railway carriage, a freight wagon or the Waiting Room B&B.

Located beside a functioning train station at Rogart (on the line between Inverness to Thurso and Wick), Sleeperzzz offers budget accommodation for backpackers, families, walkers, cyclists or those who simply fancy spending the night somewhere a bit different such as a 12-ton goods van from the 1950s.

A great base for exploring Dunrobin Castle and the North Coast 500.

Prices from 22pp per night. Call 01408 641343 or visit sleeperzzz.com

Craighead Howfs, Dunblane, Perthshire

Be transported to The Shire which could be Perthshire or JRR Tolkiens fictional Middle-earth in The Lord of the Rings, depending on how you look at it with these magical Hobbit Howfs.

The Burrow and Bagend are built into the hillside with grassy roofs and round doors for an unforgettable glamping experience. Craighead Howfs also offers the chance to stay in a treehouse with panoramic views over the Ochils and a secluded summer house.

Prices start from 105 per night. Call 01786 880321 or visit craigheadhowf.co.uk

The Bus Stop, Gifford, East Lothian

If you have ever wanted to enjoy a Summer Holiday in the vein of the 1963 film, look no further. This fleet of buses in a field belonging to an arable farm in East Lothian have been transformed into holiday accommodation with armchairs, sofas, lanterns, hot flasks, log stoves and beds.

Each bus has a private wood-fired hot tub and barbecue/fire pit. Choose from rustic or luxury the latter have en suite bathrooms and swish mod cons. Oh, and theres gorgeous views of the Lammermuir Hills.

Prices from 180 for a two-night stay. Call 07508 421888 or visit thebusstop.scot

Brockloch Eco Retreat, Kirkpatrick Durham, Castle Douglas

Featured on George Clarkes Amazing Spaces, Brockloch Eco Retreat is small but perfectly formed. Located on a working farm, theres two units: a contemporary, off-grid, micro-timber bothy facing into an open field and an incredible treehouse hideaway within a bluebell wood where the closest neighbours are red squirrels.

The treehouse has a built-in double bed with a skylight to gaze at the treetops and stars as you drift off to sleep. This part of the world is a great place to see red kites.

Prices from 300 for a two-night stay. Call 01556 650249 or visit brockloch.co.uk

Black Isle Yurts, Eathie Hill, Rosemarkie

Set in private woodland, all of the yurts within this eco-sensitive, wild-glamping site are based on designs used by nomadic people in Central Asia for thousands of years.

In keeping with the Scottish climate, the traditional felt outer shell has been replaced with a waterproof canvas and theres a wood-burning stove to stay cosy on cooler nights. The site is a short drive from Chanonry Point which is fantastic for dolphin spotting.

Prices from 180 for a two-night stay. Call 01381 620634 or visit blackisleyurts.co.uk

Rua Reidh Lighthouse, near Gairloch, Wester Ross

Built in 1912 by David Alan Stevenson, a cousin of the writer Robert Louis Stevenson and one of the famous Lighthouse Stevensons, this beautiful, remote location offers B&B and self-catering, the latter in the charmingly named First Officers Quarters.

Endless views, a glorious stretch of coastline, abundant bird and sea life, tranquillity, solitude and the thrill of potentially catching a glimpse of the Aurora Borealis on dark, starry nights awaits.

Prices start from 115 per night. Call 01445 771263 or visit stayatalighthouse.co.uk

Calgary, Mull

Not to be confused with the skyscraper-filled city in Alberta, this little corner of Mull is a delight.

A byre, hayloft and dovecote are among the self-catering properties available at Calgary, each with its own distinctive character. Calgary also has an excellent cafe, art gallery and a woodland sculpture walk.

Theres a beach within strolling distance where Robins Boat sells Isle of Mull ice cream. Sea eagles, otters and basking sharks can all be seen nearby.

Prices start from 400 for a seven-night stay. Call 01688 400256 or visit calgary.co.uk

The Scriptorium Apartments at St Benedicts Abbey, Fort Augustus

The Scriptorium the once secret writing room of the monastery has two one-bedroom apartments with vaulted ceilings, gothic archways and stained-glass windows. Theres plenty to do in the grounds and gardens, be it tennis, badminton, croquet or giant chess. The former Monks Refectory has been converted into a Club Lounge and a chapel refurbished to incorporate a heated pool, sauna and steam room.

Prices start from 500 for a two-night stay. Call 07748 867825 or visit parrandier.com

The Brochs of Coigach, near Achiltibuie, Ullapool

Brochs are an ancient dwelling found only in Scotland, dating back to 500BC. Gille Buidhes Broch and Scals Broch are a bit younger than that (around a decade old) and beautifully enchanting structures.

If you love upcycling, they will impress, built using stones from old, crumbling walls on nearby land and timber recovered from a dilapidated Victorian pier. Oil paintings by John Bellany hang on the walls, alongside display cabinets filled with weird and wonderful objects.

Prices from 140 per night. Call 01854 622368 or visit thebrochs.co.uk

The Four Sisters Boatel, Edinburgh

Tucked away in the heart of the Scottish capital, this houseboat is permanently moored at the Lochrin Basin on the Union Canal the eastern terminus for the 32-mile stretch of water that comes all the way from Falkirk. Sleeping up to six adults and two children, it is an ideal base to explore Edinburgh, with Bruntsfield and the West End, as well as the Old and New Towns, all just a stones throw away.

Prices start from 120 per night. Call 07445 494331 or visit thefoursisters.co.uk

The Sawmill at Glen Dye, Banchory, Aberdeenshire

Talk about enjoying the great outdoors in style. Stay in a sleek, refurbished 1950s Airstream Safari caravan in a small pine wood beside the fast flowing lade of a sawmill.

A rustic, wooden seed store with roots back to the 1800s serves as the kitchen, dining and sitting room. There are games, books, a record player and a memorable barbecue spot. Glen Dye also offers a river cabin, a bothy and two steading cottages, as well as running residential courses in crafts and wild food.

Prices start from 490 for a two-night stay. Call 01330 850689 or visit glendyecabinsandcottages.com

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Lighthouse to hobbit hole: 13 unusual and quirky places to holiday in Scotland - Ardrossan and Saltcoats Herald

SpaceX to Attempt First Full-Scale Starship Test Flight This Week – Futurism

First Flight

A full-scale SpaceX Starship prototype is about to finally make its first-ever attempt at getting off the ground.

When asked on an update on the companys SN5 Starship prototype, the fifth of its kind, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk responded yesterday that it will attempt to fly later this week.

The massive SN5 prototype is expected to hop to just 150 meters (492 feet) according to road closure filings released earlier this month.

The test flight would follow flight attempts by the space companys Starhopper, an early scaled-down but still massive prototype, which successfully flew to 150 meters in August 2019. SN5 is substantially larger, currently towering above the companys test facilities in Boca Chica, Texas.

SN5 will likely still have to go through a fueling test and a static fire test of its Raptor rocket engine, according to Teslarati, before it can attempt its first test flight.

Avideouploaded to YouTube byNASA Spaceflight earlier this month also showed SpaceX mounting a mass simulator on top of the SN5 prototype, likely an effort to simulate a payload during test flights.

READ MORE: SpaceX Starship kicks off busy week of tests to prepare for flight debut [Teslarati]

More on the test: SpaceX Is Planning Starships First Test Flight for Next Week

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SpaceX to Attempt First Full-Scale Starship Test Flight This Week - Futurism

NASA Is Using a Robot to Search for Leaks Outside the Space Station – Futurism

Automated Spacewalks

NASA and Canadian Space Agency (CSA) scientists were just able to automate one of the dangerous jobs on the International Space Station, sending a robot out on spacewalks so humans dont need to put themselves at risk.

Dextre, a CSA robot that looks like a multi-armed tower sticking to the side of the space station, recently checked the outside of the ISS for signs of leaks specifically looking for ammonia that the space station uses as a coolant, according to a NASA press release. And now, with a newly-installed robot hotel, its far easier for the robot to do its job and keep the dangerous work out of human hands.

On Tuesday, ISS astronauts installed the Robotic Tool Stowage (RiTS) unit that was first launched to space in December. NASA calls it a robot hotel, but its really more of a tool shed. In this case, it gives Dextre a place to store parts of RELL, its ammonia leak-detecting tools, on the exterior of the ISS where theyre easier to access.

RELL is a great example [of] how robots with the right tools can simplify life for astronauts, RiTS hardware manager Mark Neuman said in the release. Dextre can use RELL to detect ammonia leaks, eliminating the need for astronauts to perform the same task during a spacewalk.

For now, the new tools like RiTS and RELL can help astronauts stay safe by automating riskier tasks, but NASA suspects that the same technology could help establish orbital habitats.

NASA has big plans for its Deep Space Gateway habitat, and finding ways to give robots all the hard work could help make it a reality.

READ MORE: NASAs robot hotel gets its occupants [NASA]

More on the ISS: The Space Station Is Getting a New Toilet

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NASA Is Using a Robot to Search for Leaks Outside the Space Station - Futurism

How much time do you really need to spend in the office? – The Australian Financial Review

"I think increasingly [it will be] about finding and framing problems. [And] how we tell stories and create compelling narratives around a vision."

The ability to collaborate to solve complex problems and innovate, as well as sharing knowledge and experience, are often cited as key benefits of working in the same physical environment.

Atlassian has employed various tools to encourage collaboration remotely. One method is to encourage staff to share information they have learnt.

Price said this week: "The best example is how we share openly. So when I finish [the panel] today and I've got to hear all your amazing comments, I could just go back to my home and think: that was a great event. But what I'm going to do is write a blog and share with the company what I learnt.

From left, BOSS editor Sally Patten, Atlassian's Dominic Price, Gilbert + Tobin partner Dianne Banks and behavioural scientist Juliette Tobias-Webb.Janie Barrett

"That gives no value to me. But it gives value to everyone else in the organisation. That's collaboration. Someone might make comments or ask me a question. We start the incidental conversation. When we work in a distributed way, we need to find other avenues to have these moments to connect. We don't have to bump into each other around the water cooler for that to happen.

"If you make this compulsory, people do it for all the wrong reasons. We try and make it because people genuinely see value in it."

Atlassian has also developed tools to help staff to learn and develop knowledge and skills remotely. The software company operates a program called Brainary, whereby anyone who considers themselves to have a good idea and be proficient in a particular skill is able to run a training course that can be attended by anyone.

"You do that to create social learning. You do it to create digital learning, because everyone has a unique learning style," Price said.

"If we pick one way of doing it, we'll probably fail. We pick a way where people can build their own adventure. You still need to be intrinsically motivated to do it. You can't force someone to learn something. But if you set up the system and make it easy to access, we believe the smart people will access that and they will continually grow and develop."

Dr Juliette Tobias-Webb, a behavioural scientist, also points to tools that can help staff learn effectively even if they are not physically at work. Digital platforms mean employees can observe how colleagues present, while the ability to share documents means staff can see how colleagues work and think.

Atlassian is also using a variety of tools to help build relationships and trust among colleagues. These can range from posting holiday snaps to conducting a "Pinot and Picasso" night.

"We got overly competitive for about two hours, drinking wine, painting terrible pictures, and what I learnt through that was there is no correlation between IQ and artistic ability," Price said.

Debbie Taylor, chief information officer, NBN Co

"We looked at a call centre and we compared February, before COVID-19 hit, and the month of June, when 100 per cent of our call centre agents were working from home, and we found some amazing information. The call centre agents were 6 per cent more productive, absenteeism was 50 per cent less and the average speed to answer a call was over 40 per cent quicker."

Alicia Purtell, people and culture director, Lion

"[If you want to get noticed by your leaders in this environment], I think the big thing is don't wait. You know you can't have politeness at a point when you want to discover and learn and be curious. You might not have normal channels so you have to utilise the ones that work best for you. Be really curious; share the learnings; put your hand up to be involved in new initiatives."

Dr Juliette Tobias-Webb, behavioural scientist

"There's a range of ways that we can watch and observe others now. We obviously have digital platforms where we can see people presenting. If you think about the gaming space, you can watch each other. Also there are digital tools that we use now, like a Google doc. When I was doing my PhD, I would sit over my supervisor's shoulder and watch him type away. I can actually now do that in a remote setting.

"The other thing that I'm quite curious about is the trade-off with innovation. Are you more innovative [when you are learning by yourself]? Do we come up with new ways of actually working or doing the task at hand, rather than just watching others?"

Dominic Price, resident futurist, Atlassian

"Ignore perfection because it will kill innovation. We've got to experiment with imperfection, and so many leaders struggle to do that. It's not fail fast. It's learn fast."

Dr Sean Gallagher, director of Centre for the New Workforce, Swinburne University

"[If you are going to put a number on the ideal split between working from home and the office], maybe 60 per cent at home and 40 per cent in the office. But I actually think this is a fantastic opportunity to completely reimagine what we mean by work and why we actually come together into a physical space. I think the workplace is no longer about coming in to process email or to do routine or predictable kind of work. That's just a waste of office space. I think increasingly [it will be] about finding and framing problems; how we tell stories and create compelling narratives around a vision.

Dianne Banks, partner, Gilbert + Tobin

"One of my clients which is Canadian headquartered has decided to move to hybrid remote working permanently. They're going to reduce their footprint and give people the option of working flexibly. I think we're a long way from that here. A number of employers I speak with still have this mentality of employees being "in the office". I think what it's going to take is the war for talent to drive change because the Fair Work Act doesn't help people in terms of flexible work practices in real terms."

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How much time do you really need to spend in the office? - The Australian Financial Review

The Second Amendment is not restricted to white conservatives – Chicago Sun-Times

Last Saturday in Louisville, Kentucky, about 300 armed members of the NFAC (Not F---ing Around Coalition), a self-described Black militia based in Atlanta, had what the Louisville Courier-Journal called a tense standoff with about 50 armed Three Percenters, which the paper described as a far-right... militia.

While the incident, which ended without violence, could be seen as yet another sign that the country is descending into 1968-style chaos, it was also a striking illustration of the Second Amendments enduring practical and symbolic importance that scrambled conventional stereotypes about the right to armed self-defense.

Since Kentucky allows the open carrying of firearms without a permit, the two groups, both of which disavow aggression, were acting lawfully. And while their motives may look different, both are drawing on a long American tradition of gun ownership as a safeguard against tyranny.

NFAC members came to Louisville in support of protests provoked by the shooting of Breonna Taylor, an unarmed 26-year-old African American woman who was killed by white police officers during a fruitless drug raid on March 13. The circumstances of Taylors death gave the guns carried by those militia members added significance.

Plainclothes police officers broke into Taylors apartment in the middle of the night based on meager evidence that a detective used to obtain a no-knock search warrant. Mistaking the armed invaders for robbers, Taylors boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, grabbed a gun and fired a single shot that struck one officer in the leg.

The cops responded with a hail of bullets, at least eight of which struck Taylor and several of which entered a neighboring apartment. Prosecutors initially charged Walker with attempted murder of a police officer but dropped that charge in May.

As Rep. Tom McClintock, R-California, observed last month, the invasion of a persons home is one of the most terrifying powers government possesses, and every person in a free society has the right to take arms against an intruder in their homes.

While McClintock was emphasizing the dangers posed by no-knock warrants, his comments also raised the question of how Americans, no matter their skin color, can defend themselves against police officers who behave like criminals.

NFAC has one answer. By parading with military-style rifles of the sort that Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, wants to ban, the militias members show they are prepared to exercise the Second Amendment rights that gun control supporters typically portray as a fetish of white conservatives.

The assertion of those rights resonates historically, since modern gun control laws have their roots in the efforts of Southern states to disarm freedmen, depriving them of a constitutional right that Chief Justice Roger Taney, author of the Supreme Courts infamous 1857 decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford, warned Black people would enjoy if they were recognized as citizens.

Under Jim Crow and during the civil rights movement, the right to armed self-defense was vitally important to African Americans resisting government-imposed white supremacy.

The Three Percenters, by contrast, were responding to NFACs presence in Louisville, aiming to aid police (as the Courier-Journal put it) in maintaining order. Yet, the group, which rejects the militia label and disavows racism, also describes itself as defending civil liberties and resisting the illegitimate exercise of government power.

You need not endorse the tactics or ideologies of these organizations to recognize that both are relying on a legal legacy that makes mainstream Democrats like Biden uncomfortable. As the Supreme Court recognized in its landmark 2008 decision overturning the District of Columbias handgun ban, the Second Amendment was based partly on the premise that when the able-bodied men of a nation are trained in arms and organized, they are better able to resist tyranny.

The fact that two opposing groups are dedicated to defending the right of armed self-defense should not be surprising. The Second Amendment, like the First, is of value to people with divergent backgrounds and political views.

Gun controllers should stop pretending otherwise.

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine.

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The Second Amendment is not restricted to white conservatives - Chicago Sun-Times

Kathleen Sullivan: Either primary candidate will lose to Shaheen, but which still matters – The Union Leader

New Hampshires September 8 state primary election is less than six weeks away. The biggest Republican race is for the United States Senate nomination and the unenviable task of trying to defeat Senator Jeanne Shaheen.

The two GOP candidates are Colorado lawyer and recent (really recent) Granite State resident Corky Messner and retired Brigadier General Don Bolduc.

Messner is weak on policy specifics. His web site reads like a checklist of old Republican National Committee talking points: hold the line on spending; the national debt threatens prosperity; stop crime by ending illegal immigration; support the Second Amendment; and, fix health care through the free market.

He says nothing about climate change, the environment, or the cost of college, has no proposals to help working and/or middle class families, does not mention racial justice, and provides no substantive alternatives to the ACA to provide health insurance. I was unable to find any policies supported by Messner regarding the war in Afghanistan, and little about the pandemic.

He touts his endorsement by Donald Trump. This is ironic, given that under Trump the national debt has mushroomed (even before the pandemic). Messner calls for strengthened ties with our allies, yet doesnt mention Trumps effort to blow up NATO and his abandonment of the Kurds.

If you want a Republican who has nothing new to say and appears to have missed the last three years, Messner is your man.

Unlike Messner, Bolduc is a New Hampshire guy who did not move here to run for office. He also has done admirable work on the effect of PTSD on active military and veterans. But much of his web site is also just checking old boxes, while ignoring the environment, climate change and racism.

Unlike Messner, he does address the burden of student debt, proposing a service program through which students can earn reduced tuition. Like Messner, he opposes regulation by the federal government, but suggests replacing it with regulation by individual states.

A patchwork of state regulation seems unworkable when it comes to corporate issues of national impact, but give him credit for at least thinking beyond the talking points.

I listened to their interviews on NHPR, which are available on the NHPR website. Bolduc, who has a bad habit of veering toward fringe notions, was asked about wearing masks to prevent COVID-19. He stated that he is unapologetically of the opinion that masks cause more problems than they solve. I am unapologetically of the opinion that he needs to stop listening to right wing talk shows.

Messner was asked whether he supports Black Lives Matter. He said no, that it was a revolutionary movement.

So was the American Revolution, Corky. Black Lives Matter wants our country to live up to the promise of that revolution that all are created equal.

You can obtain more information about Bolduc and Messner by googling their names, or doing a search of this papers web site. I encourage anyone planning on voting in the Republican primary to do so, as what I say about each of them is through my partisan Democrat lens.

And that partisan lens says neither one will be able to defeat Jeanne Shaheen.

Manchesters Kathy Sullivan is the former chairman of the New Hampshire Democratic Party.

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Kathleen Sullivan: Either primary candidate will lose to Shaheen, but which still matters - The Union Leader

Hill Seeks Another Term In State District 1 – WUWF

Sandra Averhart talks to incumbent Mike Hill about his bid to retain the district 1 seat in the Florida House.

The race for Florida House of Representatives District 1, which covers the vast majority of Escambia County, features primaries on both sides of the political aisle. One the Republican side, one-term incumbent Mike Hill faces a challenge from political newcomer Michelle Salzman.

Today, WUWFs series on the 2020 election highlights Hills re-election bid.

Hill is a 10-year Air Force veteran, who spent his formative years at Eglin Air Force Base, when his father was in the Air force. Now 62 years old, he has owned and operated an insurance agency in Northwest Florida for the past three decades.

I am a conservative constitutionalist, declared Hill. Why? Because I said that oath; that is so important to me because of my faith.

Hill went on to say that he believes what the public generally wants from their elected officials is good public policy.

For me, good public policy consists of four things. Number one - is it constitutional? Number two - is it fiscally responsible? Number three will it fix a problem or create a problem? And, number four is it morally sound?

This is Hills fifth run for state office. He was elected twice to the House District 2 seat, lost a 2016 bid for State Senate, and is now seeking re-election to the House District 1 post he won two years ago.

As he did in 2018, Hill is making his final push for votes going door to door. But, like other candidates, hes facing new challenges on the campaign trail in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic and the recent spike in cases.

So, we havent been able to have meetings where you can have gatherings to have debates and even for fundraising, cant do that, Hill began. And, even the traditional knocking on doors, we just started that recently; and, it was just before this second wave took over that we started it. Now, we may even need to slow down doing that again because of the second wave that were experiencing.

Hill supports the governors reopening strategy, including the order to reopen schools in August, believing it can be done safely by following CDC guidelines.

In terms of economic recovery from COVID-19, he says the fastest path is to keep businesses open and operating.

Businesses owners will take the appropriate steps to make sure their customers are going to be safe; were seeing it right now, he said. You cant go into Sams or to Walmart without face coverings. They only allow a certain number of people in at a time. They did that without government mandating that that happen. And, I think businesses will take those sorts of steps and thats whats going to turn the economy around.

Sticking with current affairs, Hill was asked about the Black Lives Matter movement and what legislative actions he would propose to address racial injustice.

Hill, whose son works for the Escambia County Sheriffs Office, reflected back on improved conditions for racial minorities due to the 1964 Civil Rights Act. But, for the most part, he believes the existence of racism in government is more of an individual problem, not systemic and not a job for state lawmakers.

I think, first of all, government itself cant stop racial injustice because that is a product of mans nature, Hill declared. There are going to be people who just have that bent toward racism. Thank goodness, in America and in Pensacola and Escambia County, that is not a prevailing sentiment. It may have been in the past, but its not at this time, where racism is really a big issue. So, I think what we have to focus on instead is family values.

A closer review of the history of racial injustice is resulting the removal of Confederate monuments, including plans to relocate the one at Pensacolas Lee Square. On this issue, Hills position has been well chronicled in his online video posts.

Im conservative, Republican Mike Hill. Im here to stand in defense of this Confederate monument, begins one of his Facebook posts.

Hill, a Republican who happens to be black, seems out of touch with the prevailing stance of most African Americans in the area and across the county. He acknowledged the atrocities at the (Pensacola) site over the years, but he disputes historical conclusions that the 1890s monument is a symbol of white supremacy. Further, he believes its removal is illegal. Hes vowed to fight such efforts, and has made preserving all historic monuments one of his platforms.

My bill listed 16 conflicts, major conflicts that the U.S. was involved in, starting with the Spanish-American War and going all the way up to our current conflicts, he explained. And, of course, it had to list the Civil War. In the Civil War, we lost more people, over 600,000, than any other battle we were involved in, so it had to be in there. But, the word 'confederate' is nowhere in that bill.

That bill and the vast majority of others sponsored or co-sponsored by Hill failed to win approval. Further, his critics say hes been totally ineffective.

For his part, he says its not unusual for proposed legislation to fail, noting that more than 3,000 bills were introduced last session and only 200 of them eventually passed.

His plan is to keep trying with the monuments measure and his other priority issues.

Number one is protecting the life of the pre-born, proclaimed Hill as he pointed to his plan to continue pushing for passage of a fetal heartbeat bill to drastically limit abortions in Florida.

Number two, protecting our constitutional rights, in particular the Second Amendment.

Specifically as it relates to the Second Amendment, Hill wants to eliminate gun control provisions included in the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act.

And, number three, trying to get rid of as many unnecessary rules, regulations, taxes and fees, which hinder our economy.

For the third contest in a row, Hill is facing a female opponent, this time from political newcomer, Michelle Salzman.

Following the recent trend for those running on the Republican Party ticket, both candidates describe themselves as conservative.

Hill says for him that term reflects his deep-rooted belief in limited government, low taxes, personal freedom and individual responsibility.

I know why Im a conservative. Its not just because Im just saying so, he declared. Its because I know how Ive studied government that that is what works, and I believe that is going to be best for our constituents.

Hill is seeking reelection to the Florida House of Representatives District 1 seat.

More information about Hills campaign is available on his Mike Hill for Florida Facebook page.

Next time, WUWF will profile his Aug. 18 GOP primary opponent, Michelle Salzman.

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Hill Seeks Another Term In State District 1 - WUWF

UFC Fight Island: Five memorable takeaways from the cards on Yas Island in Abu Dhabi – CBS Sports

Watch Now: Analysis: Khabib Nurmagomedov To Fight Justin Gaethje For Lightweight Title (6:24)

From the time UFC president Dana White announced he had "secured an island," the concept of Fight Island became larger than life. While it was impossible for Fight Island to live up to the expectations of fights in an Octagon on the beach of a jungle island, the unique conditions of a world experiencing a global pandemic and the UFC securing a chunk of land on Yas Island in Abu Dhabi on which they created a fighting paradise made plenty of memories for fight fans.

The promotion held four events on Fight Island over three weeks, starting with a massive UFC 251 card that saw three title fights top the card and ending with a Fight Night clash between former middleweight champion Robert Whittaker and rising contender Darren Till. Scattered across those four cards on Yas Island in Abu Dhabi were plenty of memorable moments and incredible performances.

Let's take a look at five of the biggest, most memorable moments from the UFC's ambitious Fight Island experiment.

1 . Jorge Masvidal proves he's the BMF: The end result may not have been the thrilling performance some fans wanted, but Jorge Masvidal stepping up on six days' notice during a global pandemic to fly halfway around the world and fight the best welterweight on the planet solidified his Baddest Motherf--k-er credentials. An unfortunate dispute with the UFC over financial details moved Masvidal behind Gilbert Burns in the welterweight title challenger line. But when Burns tested positive for COVID-19 ahead of UFC 251, Masvidal was willing to jump through an increasingly complicated series of hoops, including several COVID tests, an international flight, mandatory quarantine and the need to lose 20 pounds in a matter of days, all to take his shot at an elusive world championship.

In the cage, Masvidal was unable to overcome the lack of preparation and the solid, if unexciting, gameplan of Kamaru Usman; life isn't an inspirational sports movie, after all. But there was no more memorable way to kick off the UFC's trip to Fight Island than for Masvidal to roll the dice on his shot at glory.

2. The rise of Khamzat Chimaev: When Khamzat Chimaev ran through John Phillips on July 16 on Fight Island, it felt like we all were witness to a new UFC star. Two takedowns, easy passing on the ground and a second-round submission, all while absorbing a total of one strike in 6:12 of cage time. Chimaev then turned around 10 days later to face Rhys McKee and somehow was even more impressive. Chimaev blew through McKee in just 3:09, this time landing 40 strikes while McKee landed zero. 9:21 in cage time over 10 days and Chimaev out-struck his opponents a combined 83-1.

With such impressive performances, it's no wonder UFC president Dana White said the promotion will try to grant Chimaev his request to fight again in mid-August, and even said he might be ready for a fight with Usman. "We were sitting in here this morning trying to figure out what we think is next," White said. "If you ask this kid, he's ready to fight Usman. You know what I mean? Is he ready for Usman? The way he looks, who knows? Maybe."

3. Petr Yan takes over the bantamweight division: There were plenty of reasons to question the UFC's decision to insert Jose Aldo into a fight with then-bantamweight champion Henry Cejudo. Those questions remained after Cejudo retired and Aldo was matched with heavy-hitting Petr Yan. Aldo did plenty to prove he deserved to be in the cage with Yan, giving as well as he received until Yan utilized an all-out blitz to finally put Aldo away late in Round 5.

Yan was the man who truly deserved the shot at Cejudo prior to the former champ's retirement, and now the division is his to guide. The 135-pound division is fast becoming a minefield, with established contenders and fast-rising potential stars -- not to mention the looming threat of Cejudo potentially returning to try to reclaim his throne. Yan, though, is dangerous enough to potentially fend off all those threats for a very long time.

4. New king emerges at flyweight: Deiveson Figueiredo was already the uncrowned UFC flyweight champion, having knocked out Joseph Benavidez in a battle for the vacant title back in February. Figueiredo only had himself to blame for not leaving that night as champion, though, having missed weight and left ineligible to win the title. The rematch was set up for Fight Island, and Figueiredo had to win both on the scales and in the Octagon to not experience a similar level of disappointment.

Figueiredo did just that, completely dominating the rematch with Benavidez after making weight successfully. While Benavidez could blame the first loss on an accidental headbutt that left him rocked or the fact that Figueiredo didn't drain himself completely to make weight, there were no excuses the second time around. Figueiredo blew through Benavidez en route to a rear-naked choke victory before the first round even came to a close, erasing any doubt and presenting the flyweight division with an undisputed champion once again.

5. Jiri Prochazka makes a big impression:With 24 knockouts in 27 career wins, there was little doubt of Jiri Prochazka's ability to finish a fight. Of course, many of those victories came against lower-tier opponents or name fighters who were on the back-side of their careers. Volkan Oezdemir was an established product as a former light heavyweight title challenger, so it was easy to see why the veteran entered the cage as a slight favorite.

Prochazka immediately established himself as a unique talent, taunting the always-dangerous Oezdemir and throwing powerful strikes while occasionally striking a karate pose. After a wild first round, Prochazka lashed out in the opening minute of Round 2, crumbling Oezdemir and immediately announcing himself as a new force to be reckoned with in the 205-pound division.

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Locals try to escape the heat, flood Sauvie Island – KOIN.com

Temperatures neared the triple-digits in the metro area

by: Jennifer Dowling, KOIN 6 News Staff

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) With temperatures soaring, many took off for the beach and the mountains Sunday to beat the heat. Sauvie Island was a popular spot for those who didnt want to venture too far from the metro area.

The island has such a long beach that folks were able to keep their distance while enjoying the water. Folks on the beach said they were very aware of the need to stay six feet away from one another. Most people said that everyone was polite and mindful of the space.

This place is great. If you look around, everybody is distancing and we are staying safe and enjoying the water and just enjoying being outside and thats what we were looking for, said Roger, who was out on the island Sunday.

I like to come hereits always a good time, said Molly, who was at the beach with Roger.

A lot of people said that getting out to the beach on Sunday was the best option, compared to staying in stuff homes or apartments with no air conditioning, as temperatures neared triple-digits.

Warm weather is upon us so I went out to Sauvie Island Beach to see how peole are dealing with the heat. Ive never seen so many cars out here! Zero Parking, long traffic lines. Maybe avoid this area today and try somewhere less crowded. Many ppl are turning around. #heat #beach pic.twitter.com/LgPKKFd0Ht

We biked out here to Sauvie from downtown Portland, sand another beach-goer. Beautiful weather, wanted to catch the breeze.

Locals know that summers in Oregon are fleeting, so they have to take advantage of the sunshine before its gone and the rain starts up again.

Follow KOIN 6 for the latest news and weather

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Locals try to escape the heat, flood Sauvie Island - KOIN.com

Toronto’s wildest island beach was dangerously crowded this weekend – blogTO

Concerns about the imminence of asecond wave continue to swirl in Torontothis week asCOVID-19 restrictionslift and young people either misunderstand or blatantly disregard orders to practice social distancing.

As is often the case on sunny, sweaty-hot weekends in the summer, Hanlan's Point Beach was packed with party people on Saturday.

Photoand video footage from the popular, clothing-optionalbeach on the Toronto Islands shows hundreds, if not thousands of people hanging out in close proximity along the roughly one-kilometre-long stretch of sand.

Scorching temperatures drove many beachgoers into the water as well, where dozens of boats, jet skis and giant floatieshosted even more bodies.

Few masks were observed among the masses, which irked some observers though it's important to note that facial coverings are only required indoors under the City of Toronto's mandatory face mask bylaw.

Indoors or outdoors, however, all people are required to maintain a distance of two metres between themselves and anyone who doesn't live with them or appear in their 10-person social circle.

Under Stage 3 of the provincial government's economic reopening plan, gatherings of up to 100 people are permitted outdoors, but the crowds observed at Hanlan'son Saturday appeared to exceed this number.

Furthermore, Toronto isn't in Stage 3 yet. Under current regulations, no gathering is allowed to exceed 10 people.

Like Trinity Bellwoods Park, Cherry Beach and several King West bars before it, Hanlan's has become the target of intense scrutiny among people who seem to hate millennials.

We do know that cases of COVID-19 have been rising among Ontario residentsbetween the ages of 20 and 39 over the past few weeks.

"I must urge all Canadians, particularly younger adults, to not give in to COVID-19 fatigue," said Canada's chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam of the phenomenon late last week. "Younger age groups are not invincible against COVID-19."

Premier Doug Ford warned similarly last week that young people need to better heed the advice of public health officials (not to mention actual emergency orders) and stop partying.

The City of Toronto itself has taken steps to crack down on the massive beach gatherings and park parties that have been springing up since summer weather settled in.

In addition to sending out officers to warn offenders, city officials are nowrestricting parking at local beacheson weekends to help prevent crowding and slow or stop the spread of COVID-19.

There doesn't appear to be much social distancing enforcement on the Islands just yet, however, as some who were at or passed Hanlan's Point Beach on Saturday pointed out.

The Islands don't exactly have public parking lots to block off, as the only way over (for those who don't live there) is by taking thepublic ferry or a private taxi service.

The recently-relaunched ferry isonly running at half capacity, though water taxis seem busier than ever, shuttling people back and forth across Lake Ontario.

We've yet to see any COVID-19 spikes related to young people partying at Hanlan's Point Beach, but Toronto Police say aman did tragically drown in the area on Saturday night.

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Toronto's wildest island beach was dangerously crowded this weekend - blogTO

Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market 2020-2026 scrutinized in the new analysis – WhaTech Technology and Markets News

Wiseguyreports.Com Publish New Market Research Report On-Covid-19 Impact on Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market 2020 Global Analysis, Size, Share, Trends, Opportunities and Growth, Forecast 2026 Research details advancements in the Global Analysis by Key Players JDA Software, Oracle, Descartes, SAP SE

Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market 2020

The global report discussing the factors impacting the Transportation Management Systems (TMS) market and will expand between 2021 to 2026, the forecast period. The intent of this report is to increase the chance of comprehending the global market and chart routes that, if explored, can produce a better profit margin in the coming years.

This study has a strong knowledge of the market. It encompasses a thorough understanding of service or product, a properly-chalked segmentation to inspire better decision-making procedures, regional impact, enriched supply-demand curve, support from end users, and trends that are affecting the flow of the global Transportation Management Systems (TMS) market.

Request Free Sample Report @www.wiseguyreports.com/sample-et-2019-by

Competitive Analysis:Research analysts have dug deep into the changes made by several companies in the past few years to understand how they have impacted the Transportation Management Systems (TMS) market. In the process, they have included strategic mechanisms like innovation, acquisition, better research and development facilities, merger, and others to facilitate a proper understanding of the way the market is working.

This will also help in gauging trends that can inspire the market outcome.

The top players covered in Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market are:JDA SoftwareOracle CorporationManhattan AssociatesDescartesSAP SEBluJayTMW SystemsOmnitracsORTECHighJumpMercuryGateOne Network EnterprisesPrecision SoftwareCargoSmartNext Generation Logistics

Market Dynamics:The Transportation Management Systems (TMS) market report puts in efforts to understand various dynamics that are at play in the market. Their inter-relations are helping the market in gaining prominence.

A better understanding of it would help in forming strategies that could ensure the furthering of the market. It also includes a study of the production flow, its impact on the end user, and maintenance of the supply chain, which can boost the market understanding.Segmentation:Market reviewers of the global Transportation Management Systems (TMS) market bank on segmentation to have a profound knowledge of the market that can help in decision-making. These segments are backed by scientific approaches, factors, figures, charts, graphs, and others.

A proper analysis of the volume and value is also needed to understand how well the market can perform in the coming days.Regional Analysis:An all-inclusive region-specific analysis reveals aspects like demographic challenges that would play a prominent role in the Transportation Management Systems (TMS) market. These hindrances mostly deal with regional preferences, channelizing resources, generating demand in the market, cultural impact, investment scope, associated industries, and others.

In doing so, it takes into account aspects like a proper study of Europe and drawbacks witnessed in West and East Europe, Asia Pacific, details of both North and South America, and countries of both economic uncertainty and stability from the Middle East & Africa to mark various regional possibilities.

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Table of Contents Analysis of Key Points

1 Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market Overview

2 Company Profiles

3 Global Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market Competition, by Players

4 Global Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market Size by Regions

5 North America Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Revenue by Countries

6 Europe Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Revenue by Countries

7 Asia-Pacific Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Revenue by Countries

8 South America Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Revenue by Countries

9 Middle East and Africa Revenue Transportation Management Systems (TMS) by Countries

10 Global Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market Segment by Type

11 Global Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market Segment by Application

12 Global Transportation Management Systems (TMS) Market Size Forecast (2020-2026)

13 Research Findings and Conclusion

14 Appendix

List of Tables and Figures

Continued..

NOTE: Our team is studying Covid-19 and its impact on various industry verticals and wherever required we will be considering Covid-19 footprints for a better analysis of markets and industries. Cordially get in touch for more details.

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Treasury Management System (TMS) Market by Technology Innovations and Growth 2020 to 2027 – Bulletin Line

New Jersey, United States,- The research report on Treasury Management System (TMS) market comprises of insights in terms of pivotal parameters such as production as well as the consumption patterns alongside revenue estimations for the projected timeframe. Speaking of production aspects, the study offers an in-depth analysis regarding the manufacturing processes along with the gross revenue amassed by the leading producers operating in this business arena. The unit cost deployed by these producers in various regions during the estimated timeframe is also mentioned in the report.

Significant information pertaining to the product volume and consumption value is enlisted in the document. Additionally, the report contains details regarding the consumption graphs, Individual sale prices, and import & export activities. Additional information concerning the production and consumption patterns are presented in the report.

In a word, the Treasury Management System (TMS) Market report provides major statistics on the state of the Treasury Management System (TMS) industry with a valuable source of guidance and direction for companies and individuals interested in the market. In the end, Treasury Management System (TMS) Market report delivers a conclusion which includes Research Findings, Market Size Evaluation, Global Market Share, Consumer Needs along with Customer Preference Change, Data Source. These factors will raise the growth of the business overall.

Regions Covered in the Global Treasury Management System (TMS) Market:

The Middle East and Africa (GCC Countries and Egypt)

North America (the United States, Mexico, and Canada)

South America (Brazil etc.)

Europe (Turkey, Germany, Russia UK, Italy, France, etc.)

Asia-Pacific (Vietnam, China, Malaysia, Japan, Philippines, Korea, Thailand, India, Indonesia, and Australia)

Highlights of the Report:

Accurate market size and CAGR forecasts for the period 2020-2026

Identification and in-depth assessment of growth opportunities in key segments and regions

Detailed company profiling of top players of the global Treasury Management System (TMS) market

Exhaustive research on innovation and other trends of the global Treasury Management System (TMS) market

Reliable industry value chain and supply chain analysis

Comprehensive analysis of important growth drivers, restraints, challenges, and growth prospects

The scope of the Report:

The report offers a complete company profiling of leading players competing in the global Treasury Management System (TMS) marketwith a high focus on the share, gross margin, net profit, sales, product portfolio, new applications, recent developments, and several other factors. It also throws light on the vendor landscape to help players become aware of future competitive changes in the global Treasury Management System (TMS) market.

Reasons to Buy the Report:

About Us:

Market Research Intellect provides syndicated and customized research reports to clients from various industries and organizations with the aim of delivering functional expertise. We provide reports for all industries including Energy, Technology, Manufacturing and Construction, Chemicals and Materials, Food and Beverage, and more. These reports deliver an in-depth study of the market with industry analysis, the market value for regions and countries, and trends that are pertinent to the industry.

Contact Us:

Mr. Steven Fernandes

Market Research Intellect

New Jersey ( USA )

Tel: +1-650-781-4080

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Treasury Management System (TMS) Market by Technology Innovations and Growth 2020 to 2027 - Bulletin Line

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Your Healthy Family: Getting help with the stress of uncertainty during a pandemic – KOAA.com Colorado Springs and Pueblo News

COLORADO SPRINGS In our last story Dr. John Fleming, MD, is a Board Certified Psychiatrist and a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association with Southern Colorado TMS Center in Colorado Springs talked about the impact of uncertainty we are all facing in regards to the pandemic right now. But how do you know if the struggles are taking an emotional toll on you and what can you do to feel better, with no end to the uncertainty insight?

If we are lucky in life, we have someone close to us who cares enough to help us be aware of how our emotions, actions, and behaviors are affecting ourselves and others, but thats not always the case.

Dr. Fleming says, Emotionally most of us are not wired that way, to automatically be able to access our feelings.

If thats not the case there are warning signs we can look for that indicate there may be a mental health issue that needs to be addressed. Dr. Fleming says ask yourself these questions, Am I sleeping all right? Am I kind of cranky? Am I doing something that is assigned to me, like overeating or under-eating or turning too much to alcohol or pot, or avoiding people or desperately interacting with people?

If the answer is yes to those negative behaviors, its important to find positive coping skills to deal with the ongoing societal uncertainty. If we can realize that we're facing an extended period of uncertainty we can realize we need to do stress management. We need to take care of ourselves each day. The way you do that - is to the extent that you can - get regular sleep, eat quality food, get regular exercise, and every day try to take some time - even if its just 10 or 15 minutes where you're not involved in the same old thing.

Finding the right activity for you depends on you. Dr. Fleming says not doing the same old thing will be different for different people. Maybe it's reading a book, maybe it's watching a video, maybe it's going for a walk and just enjoying the weather. Perhaps it's a chat with an old friend where you don't talk about current things, but you recall wonderful times together in the past. Find your bliss, and engage in it actively.

Since most of us are not in a position to come up with a vaccine for COVID-19 and fix societys problems, the only thing we do have control over is ourselves. Dr. Fleming explains, I can embrace how I really feel, I can manage my stress - those are things I can do. You may be trying and a lot of people are trying, but then they have anxiety or depression that expands. This is a good time if you already suffer from things such as anxiety, panic, depressive feelings, suicidal thoughts, to reach out and get help. Most clinicians in El Paso county are doing Zoom sessions, and some are even holding in-person sessions in rooms where people can be far enough apart.

If you have been battling anxiety and depression, and the pandemic has pushed it to new levels and the medications or therapy you have been trying are not working, it may be time to try something new, says Dr. Fleming. Here at our center (Southern Colorado TMS Center), we have unusual treatments. I called them unusual only because most people don't use them or have not heard of them, but they're medically certain. Such as the use of TMS (Transcranial magnetic stimulation) or Ketamine for people that the usual medications aren't working for. All these things are open and available. Demand for services is increasing because you don't do human beings any favors when you make life uncertain, and that's what's happened to us.

Finally, Dr. Fleming says many times a conversation with ourselves simply isnt enough, and fears or concerns about seeing a shrink shouldnt stop you from giving it a try. I've been doing this for about 43 years now, and I joke that I'm not a shrink - I'm an expander. Hopefully, the service that I provide to people is to listen to them. I don't have a stake in their life per se. If I try to talk to my wife about how angry I am, and she's having to live with me, who knows how that conversation will go? If I go to a third party such as a therapist, they will be concerned for you and your feelings. So if you're having a rough day they can relate to you without their feathers getting ruffled. That's the advantage I think of a professional conversation.

If they thought of getting counseling or professional help has ever crossed your mind, now is a good time to take that step.

Southern Colorado TMS Center is a proud sponsor of Your Healthy Family

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How the war on drugs killed Breonna Taylor – Leafly

For decades, the war on drugs has blistered American lives, leaving a legacy of denigration and disaster.

Often, we manage to adapt and absorb the pain it leaves behind while working to dismantle unjust laws and institutions, comforting ourselves and others who are disturbed by the very same issues. Other times the harm becomes so great it creates a wound that stops us in our tracks. One such moment occurred with the killing of Breonna Taylor earlier this year in Louisville, Kentucky.

At 26 years old, Breonna Taylor had already figured out how she could lift her community and those around her. As an emergency medical technician, she dedicated her time and life to others safety and well-being.

Her life was cut short just before 1:00 am on March 13, when three other public servants, Officers Jonathan Mattingly, Brett Hankinson, and Myles Cosgrove, executed a no-knock warrant and fired more than 20 rounds into her home. Eight of those bullets struck her body, and no medical assistance was provided by the police officers who so jarringly awoke her and her boyfriend that night.

And while her death occurred over 100 days ago, the wound remains fresh today because she continues to receive no justice. The men who killed her walk free, and two maintain their jobs as police officers even after they displayed such disregard for the loss of an innocent.

But this is how the war on drugs works, and how it will continue to work until the United States deems otherwise. As we fight and wait for that day, Breonna Taylors death forces us to stop and face the hard truth. It is not just about the war on drugs as a strategy, but also about its tactics, and the people who suffer due to its enforcers carelessness and brutality.

The Louisville Police investigation that lead to Taylors death centered around two men suspected of selling drugs roughly 10 miles away from her home. Breonnas address was included in the investigation under suspicion that her ex-boyfriend received drugs and stored cash there.

The warrant was a so-called no-knock warrant, which gave police permission to enter Taylors apartment without warning and without identifying themselves as police.

In the middle of the night, Taylor and her current boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, were awoken by a loud banging at the door. The police officers claim they identified themselves as law enforcement though Walker said he heard no such identifying claim. He only knew, he later said, that someone was breaking down the front door in the dark of night.

Defending himself, Taylor, and their home, Walker fired his legally licensed firearm, invoking protection from Kentuckys castle doctrine and stand your ground law. These measures mean a person who uses a gun in self-defenseagainst, say, midnight intruders breaking into their homeis not liable for criminal or civil charges.

The shot fired by Walker struck one of the unannounced men in the leg, and the police fired back, striking Breonna Taylor in the hallway of the home. Taylor was killed, and Walker was unhurt but arrested. Even after the gunfire, he appeared unaware that the men firing at him and his girlfriend were police officers. He had the presence of mind to call 911 and tell a dispatcher that somebody kicked in the door and shot my girlfriend.

The police found no drugs in Breonna Taylors apartment. And though Walker was initially charged with the attempted murder of a police officer, prosecutors later dropped the charge. As it turns out, the suspect, Breonnas ex-boyfriend, was already in custody when the officers executed the warrant.

Without any previous drug convictions or related incidents on Taylor or Walkers records, this warrant and its mishandling were both aggressive and unprofessional. The Louisville Metro Chief of Police has since stated publicly that no-knock warrants are usually executed by SWAT, making the events of March 13 seem more askew. Since the fatal night that Taylor died, the Louisville city council has banned the use of no-knock warrants with a new ordinance called Breonnas Law. And while this regional progress is meaningful, there is much to do to realize it on a national scale.

With more than $1 trillion spent on classist and racist tactics like these since 1971, no-knock warrants are just one tactic in an overflowing toolkit used to carry out the war on drugs.

Additionally, Breonnas family has filed a lawsuit against the Louisville Metro Police, claiming that the pressure to raid her home was compounded (or even originated) from gentrification efforts in west Louisville, alleging a Place-Based Investigations team was targeting Taylors neighborhood. While it has yet to be proven by the court of law, what is true is that gentrification continues to be a powerful weapon in the war on drugs.

The police report of the incident isnt merely sparse and lacking detailit contains outright fabrications. It lists Breonna Taylors injuries as none. The report claims police used no force to enter the apartment, when in fact, they used a battering ram to break open the door. The discrepancies arent mistakes, but intentional erasure of the facts.

Knowing what we do, we must take it as evidence that Breonnas death wasnt just coincidental, but an example of systemic racism.

(AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley)

The officers who killed Breonna Taylor have faced almost no consequences for their reckless actions. After a long public outcry, Louisville officer Brett Hankinson was fired from the department effective June 23, 2020. Jonathan Mattingly and Myles Cosgrove remain on the job. None of the three have been arrested or charged for killing an innocent woman while she slept.

But this is how the war on drugs works: Accuse, arrest, kill, and cover up. Excuse it all by tarnishing the victims as drug dealerseven dedicated public servants like Breonna Taylor.

The war on drugs rests in part on the widespread assumption that police are telling the truth, but case after case after case, we can see thats simply not true. They are assuming guilt before innocence, delivering punishment before protection, and ruining lives. In the case of Breonna Taylor, thelies and the behavior are too blatant to ignore or explain away.

The United States has complex problems layered with systemic racism, mishandling of funds, sexism, and injustice. Breonna Taylors case is just one example of many. The war on drugs is one of many strategies used to enforce antiquated laws and make space for police brutality. But its important to not gloss over her murder just because shes not alone.

There are so many more names and storiesGeorge Floyd, Atatiana Jefferson, Tamir Rice, Eric Garner, Philando Castile, Sandra Bland, Trayvon Martin, Michael Brownand each one has a story as compelling as Breonna Taylors. She paid the ultimate price for doing nothing more than sleeping in her home in the middle of a pandemic between shifts as a public servant, saving lives.

(AP Photo/Darron Cummings)

What can you do to help? Plenty. Work to change unjust drug laws, of course. But there are several other actions you can take to bring more visibilityand perhaps justiceto Breonna Taylors case, including:

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How the war on drugs killed Breonna Taylor - Leafly

How Conspiracy Theorists Have Tapped Into Race and Racism to Further Their Message – FRONTLINE

The claim making the rounds was false: That Barack Obama, elected in 2008 as Americas first Black president, had not in fact been born in the United States.

That didnt stop the smear from gaining traction, in an effort fueled by people including hard-right conspiracy theorist Alex Jones of InfoWars and by future president Donald Trump himself, who fanned the birther flames in 2011 as he advanced in the political arena.

According to Trumps longtime associate Roger Stone, it was an effective strategy: Trump understands among Republicans theres a very substantial majority who have questions about Obamas origins and how he just pops up out of nowhere to become a national figure and whether he was, in fact, eligible to serve as president, Stone told FRONTLINE in 2016.

Jones, Stone and Trump have all vigorously denied allegations of racism, with Jones saying he has protested against the KKK; Trump saying, I dont have a racist bone in my body!; and Stone pointing among other things to his opposition of the racist war on drugs.

But the success of the false theory embraced by Jones and Trump has been found to be correlated to racial grievance. One academic study found that among white Americans, birther beliefs are uniquely associated with racial animus; another indicated that belief in birtherism is a function of both partisanship and racial resentment.

Experts FRONTLINE spoke with echoed that assessment.

In birtherism, what you see is a group of Americans who resent the fact that there is an African American president in the White House, reporter Yamiche Alcindor of PBS NewsHour says in the FRONTLINE documentary United States of Conspiracy. And Alex Jones and all sorts of other people hand them this excuse that its, well, he wasnt born in this country, this is really all a lie, and he is actually not who he says he is.

Anna Merlan, a journalist who has covered conspiracy theories and misinformation for years, is blunt. The conspiracy caught fire because people were uncomfortable with the idea of a Black president, and they were eager to believe any number of racist smears against him, says the author of Republic of Lies: American Conspiracy Theorists and Their Surprising Rise to Power. I mean just plainly, it was racism.

Birtherism would not be the first or last time conspiracy theorists like Jones whether wittingly or not tapped into aspects of race or racism to further their message. Described by the Southern Poverty Law Center as almost certainly the most prolific conspiracy theorist in contemporary America, Jones has at times stoked fears about racial conflict and the spread of Islam while making his primary argument that global elites are part of a secret conspiracy that controls the world. Jones has also made false claims about the LGBTQ community.

Additionally, critics say Jones has fanned anti-Semitic flames as part of his conspiratorial worldview. He has tapped into stereotypes about Jewish people, though he denies that he is an anti-Semite. The term globalist, heard often on his programs, has complex roots and has been described in some use cases as an anti-Semitic dog whistle.

Hes been able to mobilize people based on their fears. And based on for some, for many their ignorance, says Christina Greer, author of Black Ethnics: Race, Immigration, and the Pursuit of the American Dream.

Sometimes, Jones has been forced to apologize. Thats what happened as part of a settlement after he published a video that falsely said the yogurt maker Chobani, which makes a point of employing refugees, had been caught importing migrant rapists. But Jones claims have found an audience.

I think that Alex Jones is able to tap in to some real deep, dark fears that white Americans explicitly have about the future of their country, whos in it, whos controlling it, and their placement in it, Greer says.

In the aftermath of George Floyds killing, Jones and InfoWars have pushed conspiratorial narratives warning that Black people are violently targeting white people. Another InfoWars host, Owen Shroyer, described the Floyd circus as a total hoax of police brutality, and then riots and protests, and then an empty casket. Jones has denied that he is racist. He also claims that the media, leftists and Black Lives Matter are stoking racial tensions as part of a George Soros-funded plot to control humanity.

On his July 13 show, he said, I dont sit here and say that I care about brown people, Black people, pink people, polka-dotted people, speckled people humans because Im some virtue signaler. I genuinely want to see humanity work together. I genuinely want to see us all use our skills together to go to the stars and beyond. I hate watching the really Satanic, pedophile Satanists at the top play us off against each other, and Im really tired of it.

In the same episode, Jones claimed that when he was younger, he got in over 100 fights with Black people, and almost every time, they initiated it, and said that, I guarantee you, theres no Black people out there that have ever had 100 white people start fights with them.

The conspiratorial worldview promoted by Jones has served as a gateway drug and an entry point for the radicalization of white supremacists, Reveal reported in 2018. Thats in part because seeing the whole world as a massive conspiracy is a foundational part of the white nationalist mindset, Reveals Aaron Sankin and Will Carless wrote. The story Jones tells his audience about the world and their place in it requires an oppositional other and, often, that other is defined by racism, anti-Semitism and Islamophobia,they wrote.

In an interview conducted with FRONTLINE during the making of United States of Conspiracy, a former InfoWars staffer spoke out about his experience working with Jones. Josh Owens, a former InfoWars video editor, says he was sent by the host to report on a community of Muslims in the U.S. that Jones believed was training extremists and that when Owens found nothing sinister, he felt pressured to post a false story anyway.

We posted headlines that were made up, that Sharia law was in America, that this was a training camp, that these people were extremists, Owens said. And none of it was true; it was all fabricated, it was all made up it was built on a foundation of Islamophobia.

Calling it wrong and reprehensible, Owens said that experience was part of what spurred him to eventually leave InfoWars. I will probably carry that guilt with me the rest of my life. So there is no excuse for it. And Jones is not to blame for that entirely; Im also to blame because I was the one there doing it.

Conspiracy theories have long existed. They help disenfranchised ordinary people talk about systems of power that exclude them, Anna Merlan says. But as the FRONTLINE documentary United States of Conspiracy explores, conspiracy theorist thought made fresh inroads into the American political mainstream when Roger Stone, a longtime Republican operative, began appearing on Jones show and when he brokered an appearance by then-candidate Donald Trump.

Earlier this month, Stone himself came under fire for appearing to dismissively refer to a Black radio show host who was pressing him on President Trumps commutation of his prison sentence as a Negro with whom he didnt feel like arguing. Though it was heard live, Stone denied making the remark, said there had been technical audio difficulties, and said in a statement that any person who knows him knows I despise racism! He has used the term in connection with insults of other Black figures in the past, for which he has apologized.

As conspiracy theories some reflecting bigotry have spread, the internet and social media have helped to fan the flames.

We all know of conspiracy theorists from the days before Twitter or Facebook. And those people were sort of isolated and shunned, and everybody felt like they had their number, Elizabeth Williamson ofThe New York Times tells FRONTLINE. But with social media and the internet, they find each other. And they push that message to millions of people.

Though Jones and InfoWars have been banned from platforms like YouTube, Facebook and Twitter, he has still successfully harnessed the internets power to unite people who have a shared anti-elite ideology that sometimes intersects with and thrives on bigotry.

The interesting thing about the Internet is that it builds community for good or for ill, Greer says. And so, you can find support groups if youve been through a tragic situation. You can also find people who feed in to your negativity or your fears or your bigotry. You can become radicalized because you can find a community who can groom you in a lot of ways to sit in your feelings where you believe that they are correct and that they are okay. And so, thats what Alex Jones has been able to do.

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How Conspiracy Theorists Have Tapped Into Race and Racism to Further Their Message - FRONTLINE

Berkshire Roots opens as Bostons second recreational marijuana shop – MassLive.com

Berkshire Roots has opened for recreational marijuana sales in East Boston, becoming the citys second adult-use store and the first in the neighborhood.

Located at 253 Meridian St., Berkshire Roots is currently offering online orders and in-store pickup service. Customers are asked to look at the online menu and schedule a pickup time, the company wrote in a news release. The store is open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Monday through Saturday and from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday.

Opening during the coronavirus pandemic, Berkshire Roots said a face covering or mask is required to enter the shop. Social distancing guidelines are in place inside the location and on the sidewalk, and the store is adhering to cleaning protocols required by the state, the news release said.

Berkshire Roots is headquartered in Pittsfield with a retail store and cultivation facility. There, Berkshire Roots produces branded products including flower, edibles, topicals, tinctures, capsules, concentrates and vape cartridges. The company also works with Massachusetts wholesale partners.

Our goal is to bring the Berkshires to Boston by replicating the warmth of our dispensary, providing best-in-class training to our retail team and delivering our unique Berkshires inspired products, Berkshire Roots CEO James Winokur said. The store is ready, we have great neighbors and its really a special place in Boston given the mix of cultures, language and history. We have a heavy emphasis on hiring from East Boston and surrounding neighborhoods and bringing in products that will fit our East Boston patrons needs and palette.

In March, Bostons first retail marijuana store opened. Pure Oasis, an applicant in the states economic empowerment program aimed to benefit people and communities disproportionately harmed by the war on drugs, on Blue Hill Avenue in the Grove Hall part of Dorchester.

Berkshire Roots opened in Pittsfield in April 2019, the second store to open in Pittsfield following Temescal Wellness.

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Berkshire Roots opens as Bostons second recreational marijuana shop - MassLive.com

The year after the rat: How Trump could still help Baltimore and himself | COMMENTARY – Baltimore Sun

Mr. President, you could make a difference here. What if you stood on the steps of Johns Hopkins Hospital and declared that anyone who needs drug treatment or mental health care in the United States should have it? What if you went back to Fort McHenry, not for a Memorial Day photo op, but to announce a war on systemic racism? What if you simply sat down with Baltimores mayor and its police commissioner and explored ways federal resources could be used to reduce homicide, not with storm troopers but by attacking the underlying social problems, including the failed war on drugs, that feed the body count? What if you walked the streets of West Baltimore and acknowledged that yes, Black lives matter and always have? Americans would surely take notice.

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The year after the rat: How Trump could still help Baltimore and himself | COMMENTARY - Baltimore Sun

Business Of Drugs: What The Netflix Documentary Leaves Out – Screen Rant

Netflix's The Business of Drugs explores narcotics trafficking, but doesn't fully address America's war on drugs. Here's what is missing.

Hosted by Amaryllis Fox, Netflix documentaryThe Business of Drugsoffers valuable insight about worldwide narcotics trafficking, but doesn't fully succeed indeconstructing America's war on drugs. To be fair, thedocuseries aims high by investigating the bigger picture, and how certain regions of the world are affected by modern drug production and distribution, but the downside is that many Netflix streamers, certainly in the United States, may looking for a proper breakdown of how the business of drugs specifically affects their community or region.

As a whole, The Business of Drugscovers the essentials and plenty more. Fox begins with a report about cocaine, a drug that can be easily correlated to pop culture figures, however The Business of Drugssubsequently strays from familiar talking points in favor of commentaries aboutlow-level workers who are far removed from big money exchanges. Many of Fox's intervieweesare merely pawns in a dirty game that's controlled by the big-time dealers. At its heart, The Business of Drugs on Netflix is mostly about regular, everyday people whoeither contribute to the modern drug trade or realize that it's best to stay under-the-radar. When Fox does meet up with influential figures, she doesn't hold back. And therein lies the value of watching The Business of Drugs, as the host - a former CIA agent -knows her stuff.

Related:The Business of Drugs: Why Amaryllis Fox Is The Perfect Host

The Business of Drugs on Netflix features six episodes about cocaine, synthetics, heroin, meth, cannabis, and opioids. Each standalone episode includes fascinating insight from Fox, along with insider information from people who truly understand how drug production and distribution has changed in recent years, and how the dark web affects business in America and beyond.If there's a critique to be made, it's that a world of streamers may want aclear A-B-Cnarrative rather than six episodes that continuously shift to different locations. Overall, theNetflixdocumentary effectively shows how everything connects across the globe. Buthere's whatmany streamers may be curious about.

The Business of Drugs may not necessarily be about the United States'decades-long war against narcotics, but many Netflix streamers will indeed correlate the term "war on drugs" with American culture, whether it's Ronald Reagan's presidency during the '80s or the rise of cocaine distribution in Los Angeles. The first episode features an interview with a Compton, California cocaine dealer, who offers a Drug Distribution 101 commentary about pyramid structures. The second episode about synthetics references the bizarre K2 "Zombie Outbreak" in Brooklyn, and the MDMA episode acknowledges an American counterculture that's mostly associated with California. What's missing, it seems, is a proper investigation about what transpiresbetween coastal cities like New York and Los Angeles.

To its credit, The Business of Drugs doesn't point out that Amaryllis Fox is the inspiration for a new Apple TV+ series starring Brie Larson. The Netflix docuseries also doesn't acknowledge that Fox is married to Robert Kennedy III, the grandson of the late Robert F. Kennedy, the 64th Attorney General of the United States.Such information could easily distract viewers from the central message, and could affect one's perception of the host, in one way or another. The fact remains that Fox is an accomplishedCIA veteran, a woman who was inspired to investigate terrorism after the 9/11 attacks on America. Fox's commentariesare sharp and blunt,but the Netflix documentarywould've benefitted more with extra emphasis on the host's credentials.

The Business of Drugson Netflix features a revelatory sequence about coca production in Colombia, and how the port town of Buenaventura is so crucial to international distribution. There's also a segment about low-level coco producers who understand their place in the overall infrastructure, and know that they need to accept their bosses' price levels (which seeminglyhaven't changed for decades). The Business of Drugs' first episode even includes a sharp comparison between the modern cocaine "monopsy" (Mexican cartels) and Walmart. What the docuseries lacks, however, is a commentary about COVID-19and how the Coronavirus has affected the business of drugsin 2020. But isn't that that a fascinating premise for The Business of Drugs season 2 on Netflix?

More:Athlete A True Story: What Netflix's Documentary Leaves Out

Batwoman Season 2 Won't Recast Ruby Rose, Replacing With New Character

Q.V. Hough is a Screen Rant staff writer. He's also the founding editor at Vague Visages, and has contributed to RogerEbert.com and Fandor.

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Business Of Drugs: What The Netflix Documentary Leaves Out - Screen Rant

Most Wanted an arresting true crime tale of drug smugglers – Boston Herald

MOVIE REVIEW

MOST WANTED

Rated R. Streaming on Netflix, Amazon Prime and Google Play.

Grade: A

A true crime saga of yesteryear that remains eternally relevant, Most Wanted recounts a complex caper that spans nations and involves law enforcement, grifters, crusading journalists and a sap, a Canadian drug addict railroaded into a Thai prison for 100 years.

With echoes of Midnight Express, the drug smuggling classic of the 70s that put gullible Westerners in Third World nightmares, Most Wanted is far more sophisticated.

It doesnt romanticize its sweet but dim (very dim) junkie Daniel (Antoine-Olivier Pilon) and sees him, rightfully, as a pawn of just about everyone he meets.

Out of prison and homeless, Daniel is happy to find work on a yacht. Picker (Jim Gaffigan, just terrifically sleazy) is also a druggie, inveterate liar and supreme hustler who cons Canadian undercover cops into believing hes connected to Thailands international drug trade.

Sure, hes transparently, comically devious but not to the Canadian Security Intelligence Services undercover cops, led by Stephen McHatties Frank Cooper, who have no qualms giving him thousands of dollars for information and, crucially, a drug kingpin whom they can nail for importing kilos of Thai heroin.

Thats where dim Daniel is so useful.

Writer-director Daniel Roby has such a terrific eye for faces and an incisive way of photographing his large cast, that the story with its many facets could unfold silently, for these pictures really do tell the story.

Roby uses Gaffigans hairy bulk like a bulldozer that seethes and steams over every obstacle, whether its Cooper the cop whose pinched features suggest his bloods been sucked dry by Dracula or the very pale, frequently half-naked Daniel, who is continually seen as a figure ready to be lain on an altar and sacrificed.

This is a notorious if terribly familiar look at corrupt, lawless police, entrapment, intimidation. And a couple of good guys.

They are led by Toronto investigative journalist Victor Malarek (Josh Hartnett), who really did pursue a story no one cared about, even though it was an innocent Canadian citizen jailed for life and a patsy for a coverup by law enforcement.

Hartnett, strikingly tall, lean and fearless as Malarek, conveys the bitter realities of a diminished press with diminished resources.

This being 1989, the war on drugs meant headlines and lots and lots of money for drug buys and information. And virtually no progress with the war.

Pilon, a ringer for Caleb Landry Jones of The Outpost, almost makes us forgive Daniels frequent and continued stupidity. In reality, Daniel was Alain Olivier. As the films postscript makes clear, for the crooks and slimebags involved, justice was hardly served, mostly evaded.

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Most Wanted an arresting true crime tale of drug smugglers - Boston Herald