Philando Castile, the War on Drugs and the Lynching of Black Humanity – The Root

Philando Castile (Facebook)

Before Malcolm Shabazz, 28, the grandson of El-Hajj Malik el-Shabazz (Malcolm X), was assassinated in 2013 in Mexico City, he, like his entire familyand like too many black people in the United States of Americahad been hunted and harassed by law-enforcement officials.

It had gotten so bad that Shabazz spoke about the recipe for public assassinations two months before his death:

The formula for a public assassination is: the character assassination before the physical assassination; so one has to be made killable before the eyes of the public in order for their eventual murder to then be deemed justifiable. And when the time arrives for these hits to be carried out youre not going to see a C.I.A. agent with a suit and tie, and a badge that says C.I.A. walk up to someone, and pull the trigger. What they will do is to out-source to local police departments in the region of their target, and to employ those that look like the target of interest to infiltrate the workings in order to set up the environment for the eventual assassination (character, physical/incarceration, exile) to take place.

I immediately thought of young Malcolms words when, on July 6, 2016, Philando Castile was killed in broad daylight by St. Anthony, Minn., Police Officer Jeronimo Yanez. I thought of his words not because I believe that Castile was specifically the target of a CIA plot, but because the public assassination of black humanityand the character of black peoplehas been an ongoing project in this white-settler colonial project that flag wavers call the greatest country on earth.

The way we look, the way we talk, the way we attempt to live free in a country founded on our violent oppression, have all been reasons successfully used to render us killable in the eyes of society and to justify our state-sanctioned lynchings.

Black people are born into this world with targets on our backs and often leave this world the same way. Castile had already been pulled over an estimated 46 times before Yanez claimed that the 32-year-old mans wide-set nose made him look like a criminal suspect. Further, he was a legal gun owner in a nation that weaponizes blackness and steals black lives but loves steel weapons.

In Toni Morrisons 1987 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, Beloved, the character Baby Suggs has

When Castile calmly and respectfully explained that he had a gun in the car, the trigger-happy Yanez feared for his life because a black man with a gun has always been viewed as a clear and present danger. This nation assigns us to that category so that state-sanctioned executions will be deemed necessary. And for those scarce times when blackness alone does not give officers a license to kill, marijuana smoke conjures up the rest.

The Washington Post reports:

I thought, I was gonna die, Officer Jeronimo Yanez told investigators from the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension fifteen hours after the shooting. And I thought if hes, if he has the, the guts and the audacity to smoke marijuana in front of the five year old girl and risk her lungs and risk her life by giving her secondhand smoke and the front seat passenger doing the same thing then what, what care does he give about me. And, I let off the rounds and then after the rounds were off, the little girl was screaming.

A wide-nosed black man in a car that allegedly smelled of marijuana had the audacity to carry a legal gun; that made him an enemy of the state.

Killable.

The war on drugs has been used to escalate a general sense that black people are beasts and that our communities are urban jungles, asha bandele, senior director of Drug Policy Alliance, told The Root.

Throughout so many of these horrific police shootings, drugs have been used to justify the slaughter of innocents, bandele continued. We saw it with Michael Brown, we saw it with Trayvon Martin, we saw it with shootings throughout the country, including that of Philando Castile. All you have to do is raise the specter of drugs, and supposedly no other question is supposed to be asked.

Sometimes when drugs are not the issue itself, the criminalization, the use of drugs, drug selling and drug usea criminalized feature in our nationis used to justify killing, bandele continued.

Killable.

Bandele points out that the war on drugs is a living, breathing manifestation of the hatred this country holds for black people, and a cover for police hypermilitization and the occupation of black and brown communities.

Once you declare something a war, you got to declare someone an enemy, bandele told The Root. The drug war has been used as a justification for police killings of 92-year-old grandmothers in their homes, where all they had to say was, Oops, wrong house. Its been used to justify the killings of 7-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones.

This declaration of war and the continuous war crimes that shape this war directly led to the lynching of Philando Castile, bandele said.

Bandele, like Malcolm Shabazz, was also clear that sometimes skinfolk are used to weed out members of the black community that some people find disposable.

We need to understand how we contribute to deaths like Philando Castiles when we contribute to stigmatizing people, or determining whos a decent black person and whos not a decent black person, bandele said. We may have, in progressive communities, a broader idea of who matters and who doesnt, but until we accept that every life has value and we see that in our communities, then were almost participating in who they say they can kill, and who they cant.

Killable.

This is why, bandele says, ending the war on drugs, dismantling white supremacy brick by brick and eradicating stigma is the necessary foundational work we need to engage in if we are ever to be free.

If we want to begin to roll back police militarization significantly, we have to work to end the drug war, bandele said. If we want to disrupt a major tool that they can wield against us, in not only killing us, but them not being held accountable for killing us, we have to end the drug war. If we want to begin to disrupt extraordinary levels of black poverty, then we have to begin to end the drug war.

In doing that, bandele continued, we will say, Were not going to spend money on over-incarceration or over-surveillance, or any of the other facets that make up mass criminalization. Were not going to have one more Philando Castile. Not on our watch.

Bandele gets to the root of the matter.

Black people have been shamed for financial poverty in a nation that is morally bankrupt; still, reparations for theft of our land, our labor and our lives is considered too much to ask for.

We are told that our lives come with white supremacist conditions. Young black men, women and gender-nonconforming people are corralled into deep pockets of destitution, then shot to death for trying to hustle their way out to some semblance of security and safety.

The so-called gentler war on drugsa necessary shift from draconian drug policies to something focused on health and humanityis not for us.

We are still under fire from heavy enemy artillary. We are still living in occupied territory. We are still considered warm bodies to fill cold prisons and balance bloated budgets. We are still lynched in broad daylight in front of our children, and the allegation of marijuana smoke is more than enough for killers with badges to walk free.

Because in the United States of America, to lynch a black person, state-sanctioned killers dont need a reason; all they need is an excuse.

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Philando Castile, the War on Drugs and the Lynching of Black Humanity - The Root

Sky Lake, owner found guilty in gambling case – Huntington Herald Dispatch

IRONTON Sky Lake and its owner, Tracy L. Ellis, were found guilty of several gambling-related charges Thursday in Lawrence County Common Pleas Court.

More than 20 slot machines were confiscated from Sky Lake along County Road 32 north of Chesapeake three years ago when authorities executed a search warrant at the pay fishing lake.

Authorities also confiscated $68,071.96 during the 2014 raid on the property. While the pay lake remains in business, the three-story building at the property underwent two fires in late January 2015. At least one of those fires was determined to be arson, according to Chesapeake fire officials.

Ellis entered no contest pleas to two misdemeanor gambling charges and four counts of possession of criminal tools. Two other charges of money laundering were amended to possession of criminal tools and he also entered no contest pleas to those charges.

Lawyers representing Sky Lake entered no contest pleas to two charges of money laundering and a charged of engaging in a corrupt activity was amended to attempt to engage in a pattern of corrupt activity.

Judge Andy Ballard set final sentencing in the case for 9 a.m. Friday, July 21.

Ballard made a finding of guilt in the charges against Ellis and Sky Lake.

The case was prosecuted by Dan Kasaris, an assistant Ohio attorney general, serving as special Lawrence County prosecutor.

Since Ellis has no prior criminal record, he can't be sentenced to prison on the low felony counts under Ohio law.

A business can be indicted under state law if the business is involved in criminal activity, Prosecuting Attorney Brigham Anderson said earlier.

An investigation into Sky Lake was undertaken by the prosecutor's office, the sheriff's office and the gambling enforcement section of the Ohio Attorney General's office.

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Sky Lake, owner found guilty in gambling case - Huntington Herald Dispatch

A bad bet: Expanded gambling is no state budget solution – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A bad bet: Expanded gambling is no state budget solution
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
A 2014 report by TheStreet.com ranked Pennsylvania as the second-heaviest gambling state in the nation after Nevada. While revenue sources for the new fiscal year's budget remain up in the air, legislators in Harrisburg seem determined to increase the ...

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A bad bet: Expanded gambling is no state budget solution - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

One Percent Of Keno Profits To Go Toward Gambling Addiction Treatment – New Hampshire Public Radio

More than five decades after establishing the first state lottery, New Hampshire is for the first time dedicating a portion of lottery profits toward treatment for gambling addiction.

Governor Chris Sununu signed a bill Wednesday that legalized the electronic lottery game Keno, using the revenue to boost funding for full-day kindergarten programs.

Under the bill, 1 percent of Keno revenue will be set aside for treatment, prevention, and research to address problem gambling.

New Hampshire Council on Problem Gambling Executive Director Ed Talbot says that funding is much needed.

Currently there are limited services in the state, he said. Myself and one of the people on the board have a Massachusetts certification to counsel people with a gambling problem. Theres no certification currently in the state of New Hampshire, nor a program to do it. Wed like to be involved in setting up something.

Its not yet clear how much revenue Keno will generate.

While the game is now legal, individual cities and towns must decide whether to allow it in their communities before it can operate.

You can read the entire Morning Edition interview with Ed Talbot below:

This council was formed three years ago what does it do?

The council is meant to serve as the resource for the state of New Hampshire for problems associated with gambling. So far, there hasnt been anything in the state other than three gamblers anonymous meetings all located in the southern tier of the state. Estimates in terms of the number of problem gamblers in the state range from 8,000 pathological or compulsive gamblers to 40,000 problem gamblers.

Whats the definition of a problem gambler?

A problem gambler is a person who may encounter a problem with their gambling, whether it be something on the home front, a financial situation, something with employment, a legal thing. He or she addresses the problem and then either refrains or refuses to gamble, or gambles responsibly again. The compulsive or pathological gambler is a person who crosses that line where theres no turning back. Its only going to get worse. That can result in death, imprisonment, or hopefully treatment.

And you suffered from a gambling addiction at one point in your life. Given that experience, what concerns do you have about expanded gambling and relying on it for revenue?

First of all, the NH Council itself and me personally dont take a position for or against gambling. Ninety-five percent of the population can gamble and gamble responsibly. They take a fixed amount of money they want to wager, go down to Foxwoods or Mohegan Sun or even in the state, and make their wagers. Win or lose, thats it, and they leave and have a good time. But that other 5 percent is the percent we want to address. Weve been fortunate in New Hampshire from day one, the executive director of the NH Lottery Commission Charles McIntyre has always said he feels theres a social obligation for those that provide gambling to address the downside, which is problem or pathological gambling.

And the NH Lottery Commission is your funding source.

Yes. Theyve provided $25,000 each year for the last three years.

One percent of the revenue brought in by Keno will go toward funding gambling addiction treatment. Where will that money go?

I definitely think it will allow us to expand services. The 1 percent that is dedicated in the bill actually goes to the Department of Health and Human Services, and then that money will be dispersed by them for problem gambling services in the state. Two years ago at their request, we drew up a comprehensive plan for problem gambling services in New Hampshire that involved treatment, recovery support, research, educational things, advocacy, all of those things that should be addressed. Currently there are limited services in the state. Myself and one of the people on the board have a Massachusetts certification to counsel people with a gambling problem. Theres no certification currently in the state of New Hampshire, nor a program to do it. Wed like to be involved in setting up something.

Is there an estimate of how much this 1 percent of revenue will bring in?

I dont know if they have any idea of how much Keno will actually bring in. I think it will be a substantial amount of money.

Are you envisioning having staff?

Yeah, we would definitely have staff. Right now, Im a one-man show. I try to do as many presentations as I can. I man the cell phone I use for a help line. I dont mind that because this is something Ive always wanted to do. And I also feel like if I can help one person, and pass on that message of hope that theres a better life out there.

Can you walk me through the process of what happens when someone calls you looking for help?

I have to tell you most of the calls we get are not from the problem gambler. Theyre from the spouse, a loved one, or a parent. But when the gambler does call, I initially try to meet with that person if I can, get them to a gamblers anonymous meeting and accompany them if that can be set up. But most of the time its talking to a loved one. The advice I give to everyone is theres two things you can do: you support every attempt the person makes toward recovery, except give them money. Two, you do nothing to that encourages them to keep gambling, especially giving that person money.

The infrastructure has been lacking overall, and I imagine with a dramatic expansion of gambling, theres going to be more call for these services. How do you see that playing out? How do you get services to the North Country and rural areas?

One of the things I think is very beneficial to us is working with the people in the substance use disorder field. Ive been very fortunate to be able to go around to recovery coach academies. Theres a lot of these people who are in recovery from substance use, and talk about problem gambling and identifying, and doing some screening. Seventy-two percent of problem gamblers have an alcohol problem. Thirty-eight percent of problem gamblers have a drug problem. Theres a lot of people who are dually addicted. I know myself if I had continued to gamble I positively would have had an alcohol problem.

So is the hope to use the knowledge and expertise of these addiction counselors around the state to screen for that and get problem gamblers into services?

What Id like to see is in these recovery centers across the state, which is a wonderful resource for people who have a substance use disorder, and get a gamblers anonymous meeting in there. Go in there periodically, screen people. We dont have to reinvent in the wheel or create a whole new division. That is already in place and I think we could work through there and really provide some help.

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One Percent Of Keno Profits To Go Toward Gambling Addiction Treatment - New Hampshire Public Radio

Gambling ballot initiative tops 100000 signatures – Holmes County Times Advertiser

News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSEE - Backers of a proposed constitutional amendment that would restrict the expansion of gambling in Florida have submitted more than 100,000 petition signatures to the state.

The political committee Voters In Charge spent about $472,000 from April 1 to June 30, with almost all of the money going to petition printing, gathering and verification, according to finance reports. The committee had submitted 104,416 valid petition signatures as of Thursday and needs to submit a total of 766,200 to get on the November 2018 ballot, information on the state Division of Elections website shows.

The proposed constitutional amendment, if approved next year, would give voters the "exclusive right to decide whether to authorize casino gambling" in the state. It would require voter approval of casino-style games in the future. The Florida Supreme Court this spring signed off on the proposal's ballot wording, a key first step in the process. Disney Worldwide Services has been a key backer of the initiative, contributing $400,000 in June and $250,000 in April, finance records show.

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Gambling ballot initiative tops 100000 signatures - Holmes County Times Advertiser

Growth of Cryptocurrencies Drives Esports Gambling Further – TheStreet.com

As cryptocurrencies bubble, esports arelooking to take advantage.

Two companies announced initial coin offerings of cryptocurrencies on the Ethereum blockchain for esports gambling within a week of each other in June. Their developers said the burgeoning industry of professional video gaming and soaring value of virtual currencies have fed the interest for such ventures that could further develop the betting community within esports, including on competitive matches such as the new Overwatch League.

"People want to bet, and they want to bet on esports," John T. Holden, a visiting scholar at Florida State University's department of sports management, told TheStreet recently. "What we're seeing in North America is a legitimization of esports."

As an industry, esports is expected to grow 41% in 2017 to nearly $700 million in revenue and to $1.5 billion by 2020, according to video game research company NewZoo. That does not even include gambling, which is estimated to contribute billions more.

Meanwhile, Bitcoin has increased 142% in 2017 to date, and Ether, another cryptocurrency, is now worth25 times more than it was on Jan. 1, trading now at around $210. Ether's platform allows developers to create their own virtual currencies based off its blockchain, which makes starting a virtual currency easier.

An initial coin offering, or ICO, is an unregulated way for startups to raise funds for a project, selling a percentage of the cryptocurrency to its backers in return. FromMarch to May, the number of ICOs multiplied by six times, TechCrunch reported.

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Growth of Cryptocurrencies Drives Esports Gambling Further - TheStreet.com

When death comes calling: Top diseases leading to veterinary euthanasia – dvm360

Shutterstock.comPain and death. Death and pain. They often go hand in hand. But for Dani McVety, DVM, and her fellow veterinarians in the Lap of Love hospice and in-home euthanasia network, the goal is to minimize painand the anxiety that often accompanies itas much as possible before the end. Maybe even to prevent it altogether.

We as veterinarians are very comfortable with the concept of quality of life, she told her audience at a recent CVC. But I want to provide a good quality of death as well. That means no panicky trips to the ER in the middle of the night. Id rather have the family out on the dock with the pet at sunset, everyone saying a prayer before I push the plunger. Whatever it takes to give that family and that pet a peaceful experience.

A major part of creating that peaceful experience is educating and preparing clients for what to expect as their pet reaches end of life, along with helping them know when euthanasia is an appropriate choice. Here are the top six conditions Lap of Love veterinarians see in association with euthanasia (based on data collected by the company) and how Dr. McVety handles each one with clients.

1. Old age

Obviously old age isnt a disease, but it sure is a killer, Dr. McVety says. Its the No. 1 reason Lap of Love clients call to request euthanasia, and what it really means is that the pets medical condition is undiagnosed. That means anything can happen, so client and doctor alike should brace for the unexpected. Problems with cognition, along with stroke, seizures and organ failure, are all possibilities.

2. Osteoarthritis and mobility issues

This painful disease is the second-most-common reason Dr. McVety receives calls requesting consultation on euthanasia for pets. The pain increases with progression, and clients should be instructed to watch for signs of intensifying discomfort. Sundowners syndromeawakeness or awareness in the middle of the night, accompanied by panting, pacing, whining and cryingis very common with osteoarthritis (as well as a number of other end-of-life conditions).

While the pet should be on an osteoarthritis treatment protocol, clients may also need rescue drugs to get the pet through a pain crisis before the euthanasia takes place. Dr. McVety says she leaves rescue medications with clients if theyre not ready to euthanize yet or if theyre trying to make a deadline, such as getting through Christmas or waiting for Mom or Dad to get home to say goodbye.

Along with gabapentin, Dr. McVety uses tramadol for osteoarthritis patients as a rescue drug. Weve learned that tramadol is not necessarily fantastic for pain, but Ill tell you how I use it, she says. Tramadol is like a glass of winesometimes we need one glass of wine to get through the night; sometimes we need three or four. Of course, if were using three or four doses multiple nights in a row, we have a quality-of-life issue and we need to have a conversation about that.

Dr. Dani McVetyAs far as knowing the right time to euthanize, we have the curse and the luxury of time, Dr. McVety says. With osteoarthritis patients there is major variation in when a client and veterinarian can make the decision and have it be appropriate and ethical. Sometimes animals will eat through pain and wag their tail right up to the end, so cessation of these activities is not always a reliable indicator, Dr. McVety says. Tell clients this, and let them know its still OK to say goodbye if pain and anxiety are detracting from the patients life.

3. Renal failure

With chronic kidney disease, pain is variable depending on the patient: It can range from uncomfortable to very painful. Again, its best to educate clients on signs of pain and watch for progression in their pets. Rescue drugs can include buprenorphine, tramadol, fluids, anti-emetics and appetite stimulants.

When is it right to euthanize a kidney disease patient? Again, we have the curse and the luxury of time, Dr. McVety says. The goal for a high quality of death is to make it a peaceful experience and avoid a crisis that leads to an ER trip.

4. Heart failure

As with chronic kidney disease, pain associated with congestive heart failure (CHF) can range from uncomfortable to sufferable, Dr. McVety says. The main thing she tells her clients to watch for is change, particularly changes in eating. If a CHF patient comes in and is still eating, we can usually mitigate, says Dr. McVety, who worked in emergency practice before founding Lap of Love and has seen her share of heart failure. Not at the very end. If the pet stops eating, thats a huge red flag.

Rescue drugs for heart failure include high-dose furosemide, and Dr. McVety will even sometimes leave an oxygen machine with the family if theyre trying to delay euthanasia until a family member can be present.

When is the right time to euthanize? Much sooner than you want to if you want a peaceful end-of-life experience, Dr. McVety tells clients.

5. Hemangiosarcoma

Pain associated with hemangiosarcoma, the fifth-most-common condition leading to euthanasia requests, ranges from uncomfortable (in hypoxic patients) to sufferable (discomfort related to pulmonary metastases and pressure from ascites).

Hemangiosarcoma declines rapidly under most conditions in elderly patients. Thismakes the use ofrescuemedications (those that act rapidly to mitigate pain) not as applicable in these cases. But theyre still useful, if only for their placebo effect with both patient and pet parent, Dr. McVety says. Oxygen may also help certain patients.

A key factor with hemangiosarcoma patients is to educate their owners about what the end will look likeit might be a slow bleed and it might be a fast bleed. We need to let clients know what to expect so they dont freak out, Dr. McVety says. I told one lady about the possibility of a fast bleed, and she said later that because she knew what was happening, her dog died peacefully in her arms and she didnt panic. She gave me a huge hug and a thank you that she knew what to expect.

With hemangiosarcoma, its also important to tell clients that euthanasia sooner rather than later is better for a peaceful goodbye experience.

6. Osteosarcoma

Rounding out the top six end-of-life conditions from Dr. McVety, osteosarcoma ranges in painfulness from discomfort to sufferability. Awareness of progression is key for clients, and rescue drugs for controlling pain are very important. The answer to when should I euthanize? is, again, Sooner than you want to, Dr. McVety says.

Whether its one of these conditions or any other health problem that makes euthanasia a reasonable choice for client and patient, the bottom line is to let pet owners know what the dying process looks like in their pets disease context. This helps them stay calm and make good decisions, with your help, about their pets care. After all, death comes calling for all animals, whether veterinarians step in or not, so everyone involved can release judgment and guilt and focus on the petthe joy it has brought in life, and the peace and love it can experience with its family at the end.

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When death comes calling: Top diseases leading to veterinary euthanasia - dvm360

Canadian bishops grapple with legal euthanasia and funerals … – America Magazine

Physician-assisted suicide is legal in five states and Washington, D.C., and supporters of the practice say they have plans to push for legalization in a dozen more states. The number of Americans who ask doctors to prescribe lethal doses of medication is relatively small, but support for the practice is growing. End-of-life issues have garnered attention north of the border, as well. Last year, Canadian lawmakers legalized euthanasia, a practice that differs slightly from physician-assisted suicide in that doctors administer the drugs rather than simply prescribe them. The law allows individuals whose deaths are reasonably foreseeable to request lethal doses of medication to end their lives early, though some lawmakers want to expand the law to include those who are suffering but who are not near death.

With Canadians now free to request euthanasia, some Catholic bishops there are grappling with a difficult question: Should those who end their lives with the assistance of medication be given a Catholic funeral?

Cardinal Grald Lacroix, the archbishop of Quebec, where euthanasia has been legal since 2014, told America that it is difficult to know why a patient chose to end his or her life early. As a result, the church should err on the side of mercy when it comes to funerals. He said that many elderly people are made to feel burdensome, are afraid to be alone in their final days or are nervous about experiencing pain. Increasingly, he said, society tells them that an early death is preferable.

Culturally, theyre bombarded with this [message] all the time, he said. So who are we to judge why they are like this? he asked, referring to patients who decide they want to take advantage of what proponents have dubbed medical aid in dying.

We do the best we can and leave the rest to the Lord. If the Lord accuses us of being too merciful, well, Ill take it, he said.

But not all bishops in Canada are on the same page when it comes to how the church should proceed for people who end their lives with the assistance of doctors.

Last fall, six bishops from western and northern Canada signed a statement that suggested some individuals who use euthanasia would not be eligible for a Catholic burial, especially if that person was a high-profile figure. The document notes that the church offers funerals for those who commit suicide, as pastors are not able to judge the reason the person has taken that decision or the disposition of their heart.

But when it comes to physician-assisted suicide, the bishops write, there are sometimes more clues about the intentions of the deceased. In such cases, it may not be possible to celebrate a Christian funeral, the statement reads. If the Church were to refuse a funeral to someone, it is not to punish the person but to recognize his or her decisiona decision that has brought him or her to an action that is contrary to the Christian faith, that is somehow notorious and public, and would do harm to the Christian community and the larger culture, it continues.

A few months later, bishops in Canadas eastern provincesreleased their own statement suggesting that the question of funerals was too complex for written guidelines and proposing that each case be dealt with individually.

Persons, and their families, who may be considering euthanasia or assisted suicide and who request the ministry of the church, need to be accompanied with dialogue and compassionate prayerful support, the statement reads. The fruit of such a pastoral encounter will shed light on complex pastoral situations and will indicate the most proper action to be taken including whether or not the celebration of sacraments is appropriate.

Cardinal Lacroix seems to come down somewhere in the middle, suggesting that people who opt for euthanasia could still be eligible for a Catholic funeral, so long as they and their loved ones are not promoting the practice or using the funeral to make a statement about the law.

Plus the family might not support a loved ones decision to end his or her life.

Do you think they need consolation? Of course, he said. We accompany everybody.

Still, he suggested that there are cases where a Catholic funeral would not be prudent.

The only time we will say noit hasnt happened yet but it could happen as far as Im concernedis if somebody says: Im getting euthanasia, and Im going to have a [Catholic] funeral. I deserve this, and at my funeral, those who are going to speak are going to say, Were promoting this, he said. No, no this isnt a show.

Cardinal Lacroix recalled two episodes in which pastors were asked to minister to patients considering euthanasia. In one, a frail woman dying of cancer had decided to end her life early. The hospital chaplain, a Catholic priest, asked her why, and she explained that she feared being a burden to her busy children, now with families of their own. He suggested that she talk to them about her concerns, and when she did, they were shocked and convinced her to change her mind. Accompaniment, he said. The priest didnt do it. But he helped her make the decision. He didnt tell her: What! You cant do that! Thats immoral! He helped her think.

In another instance, Cardinal Lacroix said, he visited a dying woman at the request of a friend. The woman had planned her death, which would include a final meal with her family before doctors administered the drugs. He recalled listening to the patient talk about her life and her family, but she was determined that she did not want to suffer at the end. She went through with the practice, and in her obituary, the cardinal said, the woman thanked lawmakers for legalizing euthanasia. In that case, had the woman asked for a Catholic funeral, he said it probably would have been inappropriate to grant her request.

We accompanied her, we accompanied her family, he said. Thats what we can do. We can harp and harp, and say, This is bad, this is bad, and it is and we do in some ways. But he prefers a more proactive approach, and to that end, he has supported a program that will train hundreds of volunteers to spend time with those in their final days, so that people are not alone when it is time to die.

Thats what we do. We accompany life, in real situations. We propose the best we can offer, which is what the church teaches, Cardinal Lacroix continued. The rest is not in our hands.

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Canadian bishops grapple with legal euthanasia and funerals ... - America Magazine

Former Premier supports Euthanasia push – Ten Eyewitness News

Euthanasia has long been debated in Australia on both sides, and now former longtime Victorian Premier Steve Bracks has thrown his support behind the Andrews governments campaign to legalise the assisted-dying method.

Mr Bracks, Victorias second-longest-serving premier from 1999 to 2007, is a Catholic and was widely regarded as a conservative during his time in power.

Speaking on the topic, Mr Bracks recognised that during his stint as Premier, the timing wasnt right to put forward to the bill, even though he has long been a supporter.

I think it would be a sensible and appropriate change, done well and considered well, Mr Bracks told The Australian.

I think its good timing, it is an appropriate and sensible reform, one which is not without controversy but one which should go ahead.

His comments come as an Independent panel works on recommendations for a framework that will be Australias first attempt at government-supported legislation on assisted suicide.

This panel is expected to hand down its finding within the next few weeks, and The Australian reports a bill could even be tabled in the Victorian Parliament as early as the week of August 22nd.

There has been a parliamentary committee which has worked on this in Victoria and the product of that work will be extremely useful in finding a way forward and one which can allow for the consideration of parliament.

The proposed legislation would contain strict criteria, with eligibility for euthanasia limited to Australians who are suffering from a serious and incurable condition.

It is expected the legislation would be amongst the most conservative euthanasia models in the world, and those wishing to undertake must request three times to die, including once in writing.

Mr Bracks backed a conservative approach to euthanasia, citing concerns over the potential for families to coerce vulnerable patients into assisted-suicide.

If it is done well and effectively with proper and appropriate referrals that will not be the case and I think that is the experience internationally; across Scandinavia that has not occurred, he said.

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Former Premier supports Euthanasia push - Ten Eyewitness News

Dodgy scam site uses Kiwi pro-euthanasia protest imagery to sell bogus suicide drugs – Stuff.co.nz

MATT STEWART

Last updated15:28, July 13 2017

STUFF

The Painless Path website uses a Stuff picture of supporters protesting outside the assisted suicide case of Wellington euthanasia advocate Susan Austen. The site purports to sell the suicide drug Nembutol.

Pro-euthanasia lobby group Exit International is warning its members off a scam website, based in the Ukraine, which is fleecingthe elderly by selling the popular and costly suicide drug Nembutal, which never arrives.

Those falling for the scam are mostly elderly people, many in poor health and with little internet savvy.

They are being gouged about $1100 - the price of a 25gm dose of the drug - and are too frightened to go to the authorities to complain about buying an illegal substance.

GLENN CAMPBELL

Exit International founder Philip Nitschke says scam sites claiming to sell Nembutal are on the rise as the elderly increasingly look for end of life choices.

Exit founder Philip Nitschke said about three of its members were in contact every week about the ripoff as the market for the lethal Class C controlled drug, used in assisted suicide, grows worldwide.

READ MORE: * Jury trial over assisted suicide case to proceed in Wellington for Susan Austen * Elderly importers of lethal drug used in assisted suicide are getting pinged by Customs * Wellington woman Annemarie Treadwell's death trigger for Police euthanasia furore * We know where you've been, police tell 76-year-old who attended euthanasia meeting

The Painless Path website uses aStuffpicture of supporters protesting outside the assisted suicide trial of Wellington euthanasia advocate Susan Austen.

STUFF

Susan Austen leaving Wellington District Court after an appearance in May.

Austen, 66, a Lower Hutt teacher, was charged in October2016with having twice imported pentobarbitone, more commonly known by its trade name Nembutal. In high doses, it causes death by respiratory arrest.

Nitschke was gobsmacked the site offered cheaper rates for teenagers and said the use of a news photo featuring euthanasia lobbyists in genuine protest was perfect for a scam site as it appeared credible and featured people from an older demographic.

Exit's handbook lists a handful of legitimate sites in Mexico, Peru, Venezuela and China but Nitschke says there are nearly 100 scam sites, a number that is growing in parallel with the rising global demand for the drug as an end-of-life option.

ROSS GIBLIN/STUFF

The original Dominion Post photo of supporters of Susan Austen outside the Wellington District Court used by the bogus Ukrainian website Painless Path.

"Luckilythey don't sell anything, just take your money. We'll be alerting members ... the steady growth in internet scams over the past decade is an indication of the growing global market in this drug ," he said.

The handbook had been updated to list bogus sites.

Nitschke said sites like Painless Path relied on those who fell for the scam being too frightened or sick to report it to the authorities.

"This is a vulnerable group who can hardly go to authorities saying I lost money buying this illegal drug. They'd be admitting to breaking the law."

The maximum penalty for importing a Class C drug is eight years' imprisonment.

-Stuff

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Dodgy scam site uses Kiwi pro-euthanasia protest imagery to sell bogus suicide drugs - Stuff.co.nz

Triple suicide on Gold Coast prompts euthanasia concerns – Catholic Leader

Euthanasia push: With the push to legalise euthanasia gaining momentum in states across Australia, its a chilling end-of-life strategy, with grave implications according to Catholic ethicists. Photo: CNS

IT happened in our midst an apparent planned and researched triple suicide on the Gold Coast.

With the push to legalise euthanasia gaining momentum in states across Australia, its a chilling end-of-life strategy, with grave implications according to Catholic ethicists.

To choose to limit ones life to choose to miss out on life with its blend of joys and sorrows this is never a reasonable choice, Queensland priest Fr Kevin McGovern, who until last year was the director of a health ethics centre in Melbourne, said.

On June 27, mother Margaret Cummins, 78, and her daughters Wynette and Heather, aged 53 and 54, took their own lives in a luxury residential apartment on Ephraim Island.

Police reported the husband of one of the daughters found the women dead after returning to the apartment.

He was understandably upset, but not surprised at the discovery.

The women were followers of controversial euthanasia advocate Dr Philip Nitschkes group Exit International, having joined the pro-euthanasia group about six months ago.

Dr Nitschke, the man known as Dr Death, confirmed from Amsterdam that he didnt know them personally, but they had subscribed to the groups online Peaceful Pill eHandbook, which provides research and information on voluntary euthanasia and assisted suicide.

The handbook includes practical information about end-of-life strategies such as over-the-counter and prescription drugs, gases and poisons.

Dr Nitschke said the triple suicide pact was unusual three members had never ended their lives at the same time before but the planning and research by the women that took place over a number of months indicated that this was a rational decision.

Each of the women involved was said to have had a diminished quality of life recently.

Wynette suffered brain cancer in the 1980s, and Margaret reportedly suffered dementia.

They chose to electively access a peaceful means to end their lives and obviously carried it out very effectively, Dr Nitschke said.

Respecting a persons rational decision to end their life is fundamental.

Fr McGovern fundamentally disagrees.

In Victoria, euthanasia advocates want assistance in dying for those with a terminal condition who are in the last few months or years of life, he said.

This sad story reveals that if euthanasia is ever introduced, it will not remain limited to a small and narrowly defined group.

None of these women were terminal. Yet euthanasia advocates support their choice.

Paul Russell, a Catholic and the executive director of HOPE: Preventing euthanasia and assisted suicide described it as a marketing ploy for Dr Nitschke and others to say that people commit suicide rationally.

Whereas suicide is generally understood to be characterised by anguish, mental health, loss etcetera, Nitschkes claims are a dangerous and entirely erroneous ploy for legitimacy, he said.

He said Dr Nitschke would have us believe that changing the law to allow assisted suicide or euthanasia was not so much about pain, but autonomy and self-determination.

Fr Kevin McGovern: If we take this big step, there will be many little steps which will extend this assistance to more and more people.

Just days after the Gold Coast triple suicide, University of Notre Dame Australia bioethics professor Margaret Somerville, delivered an address entitled End of Life Choices in which she tackled the same issue, but from the opposite pole, describing euthanasia as an inevitable and perilous slippery slope.

She set out the alternatives facing society in simple, stark terms debate on physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia, or PAS-E, involving a conflict between respect for individual autonomy and respect for human life.

Pro-PAS-E advocates give priority to autonomy; anti-PAS-E adherents to respect for life, she said.

Pro PAS-E argue it is an issue of medical treatments, extensions of palliative care.

Anti PAS-E consider doctors killing patients or helping them kill themselves as a disruption of our societal values.

In the Netherlands, psychiatrist Boudewijn Chabot, a PAS-E advocate, now expresses horror at what is happening in his country.

Chabot has written that legal safeguards for euthanasia are slowly eroding away and that the law no longer protects people with psychiatric conditions and dementia.

He recognises we are dealing with a morally problematic act how do you kill someone who does not understand that he will be killed?

We should think of that in relation to vulnerable Australians. The Australian Law Reform Commission has warned that 4 to14 per cent of elderly Australians are abused.

Financial abuse takes the form of early inheritance syndrome the old person lets another person, often their child, handle their financial assets and they use it for themselves.

Imagine early death syndrome added to that.

Professor Somerville described an extreme example of the logical slippery slope unfolding in Canadas Quebec province.

Dr Yves Robert, registrar of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Quebec (the medical licensing authority), was an instigator of the movement to legalise euthanasia, she said.

He regarded it as good palliative care a continuum of good end-of-life care, which included euthanasia.

As in the Australian debate, pro-euthanasia advocates claimed it would be rarely used and estimated about 100 cases a year in Quebec.

In the first year, there were more than 400 cases in Quebec and almost 1500 in Canada.

Some Quebec cases breached the legal requirements in one, the patient probably had just a urinary infection.

But none of this seemed to raise any questions for the College or, I assume, Robert, about whether legalising euthanasia had been a good idea.

Heres what has done so for him. There are now calls to have death on demand declared a constitutional right.

The argument is that if I want to be dead thats my right and having to fulfil certain conditions to access euthanasia breaches my right and is legally actionable discrimination.

Considering this example, does the latest Gold Coast suicide represent a step towards Death a la carte; that is, theres a menu of options for choosing how to die?

Dr Nitschke rejects this latest case was one of death on demand, but rather, acknowledged the womens wisdom in researching the issue so that they could achieved their desired outcome a peaceful, reliable death.

I strongly endorse the words of philosopher Thomas Szasz who said: Suicide is a fundamental human right. That does not mean that it is morally desirable. It only means that society does not have the moral right to interfere, Dr Nitschke said.

Fr McGovern warned against Dr Nitschkes defence of suicide.

Was this choice reasonable? Certainly not, he said.

There are big steps and there are little steps. The big step is to say that its acceptable to help someone to kill themselves.

If we take this big step, there will be many little steps which will extend this assistance to more and more people.

The only way to avoid this is not to take the big step in the first place.

Euthanasia must not be legalised for any circumstance lest it eventually become legal in just about every circumstance.

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Triple suicide on Gold Coast prompts euthanasia concerns - Catholic Leader

PHOTOS: Help Surrey RCMP ID suspect in attempted bank robbery … – Surrey Now-Leader

A photo of the suspect. (Photo: Surrey RCMP)

GUILDFORD Surrey RCMP hope the public can help them identify a suspect in an attempted bank robbery.

Police say on May 5 shortly after 11 a.m., a man entered a bank in Guildford, in the 10400-block of 152nd Street.

According to police, the man handed a teller a note demanding cash but for some unknown reason quickly left the bank empty handed.

The suspect is described as a Caucasian man in his late 20s, 160 pounds, five feet four inches tall, with blond hair.

At the time, the suspect was wearing black pants, clog-style plastic shoes, a reflective vest, a zip up fleece jacket, and a white and black Nike baseball cap.

Police say the suspect also has a tattoo on the left side of his neck, and on his wrists and fingers.

Surrey RCMPs Robbery Unit is leading this investigation.

If you recognize this man, call your local police right away, said Corporal Scotty Schumann. Bank robberies are not victimless crimes, as, staff can be traumatized by these events.

Anyone with more information is asked to contact the Surrey RCMP at 604-599-0502.

If they wish to remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS or solvecrime.ca.

A photo of the suspect. (Photo: Surrey RCMP)

A photo shows the suspects tattoo. (Photo: Surrey RCMP)

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PHOTOS: Help Surrey RCMP ID suspect in attempted bank robbery ... - Surrey Now-Leader

Murder, rape, assault, vehicle theft rates up in Colorado | FOX31 … – FOX31 Denver

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DENVER -- Colorado's crime rate went up 5.5 percent in one year, according to a report released Tuesday by the Colorado Bureau of Investigation.

The 2016 Crime in Colorado Reportshows the number of major crimes that were reported, includinghomicide, rape, robbery, aggravated assault, other (simple) assault, burglary, larceny and motor vehicle theft.

There were increases in every category, with notable upticks in the number of homicides, rapes and aggravated assaults.

The category that saw the biggest increase wasmotor vehicle theft, which went up 22 percent in one year.

(Colorado Bureau of Investigation)

As the overall crime rate went up 5.5 percent, the number of arrests went up 0.4 percent. With 203,765 major crimes reported, there were56,430 arrests.

There were 155 arrests made for homicides compared to 189 reports.

For rape, assault and auto theft, the number of arrests is significantly lower than the number of incidents reported, according to the report.

In 2016, there were 480 rape arrests compared to 3,512 reports; there were23,504 assault arrests compared to 46,833 reports; and there were 2,705 auto theft arrests compared to 19,430 reports.

Police say an increase in vehicle thefts helps fuel other crimes. Most of the vehicle thefts -- 4,784 -- happened in Denver, followed by Colorado Springs (2,062), Aurora (1,538), Pueblo (1,169) and Lakewood (1,010).

"So often we think of auto theft as kids out joyriding, a victimless crime. We are seeing all these serious violent crimes involved with auto theft," said Carole Walker with Coloradans Against Auto Theft.

"So as we are seeing an increase in drug trafficking, opioid use, gun involvement."

She said eventually motor vehicle theft drives up costs for everyone.

"It's contributing to what we pay for car insurance. It really is something we want to engage the public on," Walker said. "We want them to see these numbers and do everything they can to not make selves an easy target."

On Nov. 19, Kole Silz said surveillance video captured a thief stealing his customized F-250 from underneath his nose at work in Wheat Ridge.

"I couldn't really believe it, until I looked at the cameras," he said.

Silz, who ended up finding his truck on his own a month later, now has it alarmed to the hilt.

"Once the truck is armed, if you touch it, it sets the alarm off," he said.

The thief had spray-painted over a blue stripe on the truck to disguise it and put about 1,000 miles on it in one month.

"They could have been running drugs or maybe using my truck to steal another truck with a trailer. I definitely think it was not for driving around," he said.

Walker said people can avoid being a victim by doing common sense things, including locking vehicles, not letting it run when it's vacant not leaving a spare key in it and parking it in well-lit, well-traveled areas.

The 2016 Crime in Colorado report includes statewide crime statistics reported by 244 law enforcement agencies across the state.

The report provides statistics on major crime trends, but the CBI does notoffer analysis as to the reasons for changes in the crime rates.

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Murder, rape, assault, vehicle theft rates up in Colorado | FOX31 ... - FOX31 Denver

NB man charged in sex trafficking sting – ECM Post Review

Chad James Eckel

A North Branch man was among a group of people charged as a result of two-day sex trafficking sting conducted by the Anoka County Sheriffs Office last month. Chad James Eckel, 31, made his first court appearance on the charge June 30. His bail was set at $5,000 with conditions or $50,000 with no conditions. According to the Anoka County Sheriffs Office website, Eckel was released July 1 after posting bail. Chisago County Attorney Janet Reiter said one of the conditions of his release was that he have no contact with anyone under 18 years of age. His next court appearance is July 24. According to a press release from the Anoka County Attorneys Office, a total of 19 people were arrested in the sting, and the office has levied charges against 11 of them. Six more cases are under review by the office, and charges are likely. The defendants were arrested after soliciting sex acts from undercover officers who were posing as children. Each defendant is charged with one felony count of electronic solicitation of a child (engage in sexual communication). Earlier this week, law enforcement from multiple agencies executed a well-organized initiative targeting those with desires to prey upon the youth of our community, said Paul Young, chief of the Anoka County Attorneys Office Criminal Division. Simply stated, this will not be tolerated. Kudos to all of the law enforcement experience and labor channeled for this investigation. While this investigation and these crimes did not involve any real children, we know these are not victimless crimes. This type of crime predatory conduct in search of exploiting children has no geographic boundary and impacts our whole community.

Criminal sexual conduct charge Eckel was charged in Chisago and Hennepin counties with first-degree criminal sexual conduct, a felony, in October 2015 related to an incident where he allegedly touched a girl under the age of 13 an act that included sexual penetration. However, prosecution has not moved forward on those charges. In December 2016, counsel for the defendant made a motion in the Chisago County matter to examine the defendants competency to stand trial, Reiter said. The defendant was found incompetent to stand trial in both the Hennepin County and Chisago County matters earlier this year. By rule, the prosecution of these matters is suspended. Prosecution may be reinitiated with a new evaluation of his competency. The Anoka County charge could lead to a reassessment of Eckels competency to stand trial. With the new charges in Anoka County, there will likely be additional reviews of the Mr. Eckels mental and cognitive status, Reiter said.

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NB man charged in sex trafficking sting - ECM Post Review

Takers and Fakers – New York Times (blog)

While we wait to see exactly whats in the latest version of the Senate health bill, a reminder: throughout the whole campaign against Obamacare, Republicans have been lying about their intentions.

Believe it or not, conservatives actually do have a more or less coherent vision of health care. Its basically pure Ayn Rand: if youre sick or poor, youre on your own, and those who are more fortunate have no obligation to help. In fact, its immoral to demand that they help.

Specifically:

1.Health care, even the most essential care, is a privilege, not a right. If you cant get insurance because you have a preexisting condition, because your income isnt high enough, or both, too bad.

2.People who manage to get insurance through government aid, whether Medicaid, subsidies, or regulation and mandates that force healthy people to buy into a common risk pool, are takers exploiting the wealth creators, aka the rich.

3.Even for those who have insurance, it covers too much. Deductibles and copays should be much higher, to give people skin in the game and make them cost-conscious (even if theyre, um, unconscious.)

4.All of this applies to seniors as well as younger people. Medicare as we know it should be abolished, replaced with a voucher system that can be used to help pay for private policies and funding will be steadily cut below currently projected levels, pushing people into high-deductible-and-copay private policies.

This is a coherent doctrine; its what conservative health care experts say when they arent running for public office, or closely connected to anyone who is. I think its a terrible doctrine both cruel and wrong in practice, because buying health care isnt and cant be like buying furniture. Still, if Republicans had run on this platform and won, wed have to admit that the public agrees.

But think of how Republicans have actually run against Obamacare. Theyve lambasted the law for not covering everyone, even though their fundamental philosophy is NOT to cover everyone, or accept any responsibility for the uninsured. Theyve denied that their massive cuts to Medicaid are actually cuts, pretending to care about the people they not-so-privately consider moochers. Theyve denounced Obamacare policies for having excessively high deductibles, when higher deductibles are at the core of their ideas about cost control. And theyve accused Obamacare of raiding Medicare, a program theyve been trying to kill since 1995.

In other words, their whole political strategy has been based on lies not shading the truth, not spinning, but pretending to want exactly the opposite of what they actually want.

And this strategy was wildly successful, right up to the moment when Republicans finally got a chance to put their money or actually your money where their mouths were. The trouble theyre having therefore has nothing to do with tactics, or for that matter with Trump. Its what happens when many years of complete fraudulence come up against reality.

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Takers and Fakers - New York Times (blog)

As a Guru, Ayn Rand May Have Limits. Ask Travis Kalanick. – New York Times

But lately, many Rand devotees have been running into trouble. Travis Kalanicks abrupt departure as chief executive of Uber, the Internet-based ride-hailing service he built into a private corporation worth $50 billion or more, is the latest Icarus-like plunge of a prominent executive identified with Rand.

The hedge fund manager Edward S. Lampert, who some say has applied Rands Objectivist principles to the management of Sears and Kmart, has driven those venerable retailers close to bankruptcy.

Andrew F. Puzder, Mr. Trumps first nominee for secretary of labor, is described by friends as an avid Ayn Rand reader. Hes also chief executive of CKE Restaurants, which runs the Hardees and Carls Jr. fast-food chains and whose private equity owner, Roark Capital Group, is named for the architect-hero of The Fountainhead. Mr. Puzder had to withdraw his nomination after allegations that his restaurant companies mistreated workers and promulgated sexist advertising.

The Whole Foods founder and chief executive John Mackey, an ardent libertarian and admirer of Rand, last month had to cede control of the troubled upscale grocery company to Amazon and Jeff Bezos (who, while often likened to a fictional Rand hero, has not mentioned her books when asked about his favorites).

And then theres the scandal-engulfed Trump administration, where devotion to Rands teaching has done little to advance the presidents legislative agenda.

Though people close to Mr. Kalanick told me this week that he has distanced himself from many of Rands precepts while undergoing an intense period of personal reassessment, they all acknowledged that shed had a profound influence on his development. Few companies have been as closely identified with Rands philosophy as Uber.

Uber disrupted a complacent, highly regulated and often corrupt taxi industry on a global scale, an achievement Rands heroes Howard Roark and Dagny Taggart would surely have admired. Many of her ideas were embedded in Ubers code of values. Mr. Kalanick used the original cover art for The Fountainhead as his Twitter avatar until 2013 (when he exchanged it for an image of Alexander Hamilton, and then, in May, for one of himself).

But Mr. Kalanick was urged to step down as chief executive by the Uber board and Ubers major investors over less heroic issues: that Uber fostered a workplace culture that tolerated sexual harassment and discrimination; that it ignored legal constraints, poaching intellectual property from Googles self-driving car endeavor and using technology to evade law enforcement; and that it failed to hire a chief operating officer or build an effective management team. (Mr. Kalanick remains on the board.)

Rands entrepreneur is the Promethean hero of capitalism, said Lawrence E. Cahoone, professor of philosophy at the College of the Holy Cross, whose lecture on Rand is part of his Great Courses series, The Modern Political Tradition. But she never really explores how a dynamic entrepreneur actually runs a business.

She was a script and fiction writer, he continued. She was motivated by an intense hatred of communism, and she put those things together very effectively. She can be very inspirational, especially to entrepreneurs. But she was by no means an economist. I dont think her work can be used as a business manual.

Representatives of Uber and Mr. Kalanick declined to comment.

Rands defenders insist that the problems for Mr. Kalanick and others influenced by Rand arent that they embraced her philosophy, but rather that they didnt go far enough.

Yaron Brook, executive chairman of the Ayn Rand Institute and a former finance professor at Santa Clara University, who teaches seminars on business leadership and ethics from an Objectivist perspective, said, Few business people have actually read her essays and philosophy and studied her in depth. Mr. Brook said that while Mr. Kalanick was obviously talented and energetic and a visionary, he took superficial inspiration from her ideas and used her philosophy to justify his obnoxiousness.

He emphasized that Rand would never have tolerated sexual harassment or any kind of mistreatment of employees. Rand had enormous respect for people who worked hard and did a good job, whether a secretary or a railroad worker, he said. Her heroes ran businesses with employees who were very loyal because they were treated fairly. Of course, some people had to be fired. But she makes a big deal out of the virtue of justice, which applies in business as well as politics.

And even though shed celebrate what Travis did with the taxi industry, showing the world how all those regulations made no sense, she also believed there are rules of justice that do make sense and she supported, he said. You cant just run over all the regulations you dont happen to like.

Mr. Brook complained that Rands critics are quick to point to her followers failures, but rarely mention their successes. He cited the example of John A. Allison IV, the much-admired former head of BB&T Corporation, a regional bank in the Southeast that he built into one of the nations largest before he stepped down in 2008. Mr. Allison handed out copies of Atlas Shrugged to senior executives and is a major donor to the Ayn Rand Institute. He incorporated many of Rands teachings into his 2014 book, The Leadership Crisis and the Free Market Cure.

John is a gentleman and he actually studied Rands works in depth, Mr. Brook said. He couldnt be more different from Travis.

Mr. Allison has called for abolishing the Federal Reserve, while acknowledging that so drastic a step is unlikely. He has met with Mr. Trump at the White House and has been widely mentioned as a potential successor to Janet L. Yellen as Fed chief.

Despite Rands pervasive influence and continuing popularity on college campuses, relatively few people embrace her version of extreme libertarianism. Former President Barack Obama, in a 2012 Rolling Stone interview, criticized her narrow vision and described her work as one of those things that a lot of us, when we were 17 or 18 and feeling misunderstood, wed pick up.

Shes also dismissed by most serious academics. Mention Ayn Rand to a group of academic philosophers and youll get laughed out of the room, Mr. Cahoone said. But I think theres something to be said for Rand. She takes Nietzschean individualism to an extreme, but shes undeniably inspirational.

As the mysterious character John Galt proclaims near the end of Atlas Shrugged: Do not let your fire go out, spark by irreplaceable spark, in the hopeless swamps of the approximate, the not-quite, the not-yet, the not-at-all. Do not let the hero in your soul perish, in lonely frustration for the life you deserved, but have never been able to reach. Check your road and the nature of your battle. The world you desired can be won, it exists, it is real, it is possible, its yours.

But Rand has little to say about making the transition from this kind of heroic entrepreneurial vision to a mature corporation with many stakeholders, a problem many company founders have confronted and struggled with, whether or not theyve read or been influenced by her. She never really had to manage anything, Mr. Cahoone said. She was surrounded by people who saw her as a cult figure. She didnt have employees, she had worshipers.

For his part, Mr. Kalanick is said to have turned this summer from Rand to what is considered one of the greatest dramatic works in the English language, Shakespeares Henry V a play in which the young, reckless and wayward Prince Hal matures into one of Englands most revered and beloved monarchs.

A version of this article appears in print on July 14, 2017, on Page B1 of the New York edition with the headline: Tough Times For Disciples Of Ayn Rand.

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As a Guru, Ayn Rand May Have Limits. Ask Travis Kalanick. - New York Times

The net neutrality Day of Action counter-protest is a complete joke – Mashable


New York Times
The net neutrality Day of Action counter-protest is a complete joke
Mashable
Carter also happened to be the associate producer on the failed Atlas Shrugged movie adaptation. Not ringing any bells? Well, regardless, you get the idea: These are serious people with serious ideas, and you should definitely take their arguments in ...
Join the Day of Action for Net Neutrality on July 12th - Battle for the NetBattle for the Net
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The net neutrality Day of Action counter-protest is a complete joke - Mashable

Reflection from Aspen Ideas Fest: Collective Action in the Land of Rugged Individualism – Skoll Foundation

Like many on the coasts, Ive been guilty of engaging in armchair anthropology these past months, and my recent trip to the Aspen Ideas Festival allowed me the opportunity to binge on this newfound interest. In the days since, Ive been stuck on one particular notion that seems to inform our divisivecurrent statethe paradox of cooperative living versus rugged individualism.

In classrooms all over America (at least in the 70s and 80s when I was in school), we learned about the individuals who helped tame the rough, romantic frontier as we pushed westward. In textbooks, we admired those charismatic individuals (think: Davy Crockett, Buffalo Bill, Annie Oakley) who blasted through boundaries. For better or worse, this grand American ideal is now ingrained in our collective mindset.

Cooperative living used to mean you met once a year with your neighbor to fix the fence line that separated your properties. In todays context, we still admire the tough business leader who makes a company successful despite all challengeswithout acknowledging the hard working team around them. Lets face it- its easy to get caught up in that sexy, Atlas-Shrugged-Ayn Rand ideal. Moderation, cooperation, mediation, prudence, and collective identity are just not as attractive as admiring a single, striving person.

But now Im a grown up. Sort of. And this vision does not square with how Ive found success and actually, joy in life. Being part of a community, with common expectations, rules, goals and successes, has been where I have found greatest satisfaction. Supporting one another in good times and bad seems, well, right. Self-interest as a guiding principle seems, well, wrong. And its not how I see people raising children now either.

While listening to so many smart people in Aspen, I was struck by how America is stuck in this duality, especially with regard to foreign affairsgo it alone or join the global community. One session I attended, Has American Grand Strategy Gone Missing?, clearly described this current struggle with scholars and policy experts across the spectrum. If I favored a collective approach to global priorities prior to that discussion, Im now a confirmed believer in a global community. I know Earth is our collective home, and what we do here affects a whole lot of other communities around the world. The same is true in China, Africa, South America, you name it.

Pandemics know nothing of borders. Rising sea levels will affect all coastal cities. It is not a zero sum game, and if we do not work together, well all lose in this new America-First paradigm. We must navigate these massive issues with this collective, global context in mind, not retreat to our little safe corner of the world. Many who gathered in Aspen last week, have direct lines to those in power and are crafting arguments that persuade decision makers to see beyond a limited horizon. I am hopeful these rational, moderatedare I say prudentvoices will become the new heroes of todays classrooms.

image (cc) Todd Petrie

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Reflection from Aspen Ideas Fest: Collective Action in the Land of Rugged Individualism - Skoll Foundation

Golden Age Design Pops up at the Golden Rule in Excelsior – Midwest Home Magazine (registration) (blog)

Golden Age Design owners Bill and Kara Kurth at their Robbinsdale storefront

by Jahna Peloquin (Photo by TJ Turner)

In the spring of 2015, two different stores with very similar names opened within one month of each other in the western suburbs of Minneapolis: the Golden Rule, which sells handmade goods from a collective of modern makers in Excelsior, and Golden Age Design, which specializes in meticulously restored, mid-century and Danish modern furniture in Robbinsdale.

Now, the two like-minded retailers are joining forces for a month-long Golden Age Design pop-up at the Golden Rule. A selection of Golden Ages stylish furniture has taken up residency of the Excelsior boutiques second floor, where the stores owner Erin Kate Duininck and her team styled it alongside goods by Golden Rules makers, including artwork by Minneapolis artist Ashley Mary.

I believe it was just the alignment of the stars, explains Golden Age Designs Bill Kurth. Similar names, similar personalities, just all around good stuff. We absolutely love what Erin and company are doing at Golden Rule.

Five years after setting up shop in a home garage, Golden Age Design opened its own storefront in April of 2015 inside a 125-year-old building located across the street from Travail Kitchen & Amusements in Robbinsdale. Founded by Kurth and his wife, Kara, the company began as something of a happy accidentthe pair ended up with a garage full of furniture that didnt work in their new home, so they decided to put it on Craigslist. The company quickly developed a cult following for its curated selection of mid-century and Danish-modern furnishings, all restored to mint condition by Bill and a small team of craftsmen.

There are many similarities between us and the Golden Rule, but one that stands out the most is that both shops just have a strong desire for good clean design, says Bill. We love the thought of our pieces being surrounded by the amazing art and home goods at the Golden Rule. It all blends together beautifully.

The Kurths carefully selected some statement-making pieces for the Golden Rule space, including a restored set of four Danish teak dining room chairs, a pair of 60s-era Danish lounge chairs by Sren Ladefoged for SL Mobler reupholstered in a light gray Scandinavian wool covering, and a teak chest of drawers that the couple just brought back from Denmark.

We wanted it to feel very minimal but not too thin, he says. The space was already so peaceful and serene so we just wanted to add what we could to help with that vibe. After staging and styling it, it felt like a little apartment in Denmark. Golden Age will continually be adding pieces though through the month of July, so check back frequently for a fresh selection.

On view through July 31 @ the Golden Rule, 350 Water St., Excelsior, 612-598-2098, goldenrulecollective.com.Visit the Golden Age Design's storefront at 4157 W. Broadway Ave., Robbinsdale, 612-408-6896, facebook.com/goldenagedesign.

Here's a preview of the pop-up and some of the pieces available:

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Golden Age Design Pops up at the Golden Rule in Excelsior - Midwest Home Magazine (registration) (blog)

Golden Rule boat sails to Sacramento promoting nuclear ban | The … – Sacramento Bee


Sacramento Bee
Golden Rule boat sails to Sacramento promoting nuclear ban | The ...
Sacramento Bee
The Golden Rule, a boat known for efforts to ban nuclear weapons, will be in Old Sacramento on Sunday, July 9, 2017.
Peace ship crews reunite in the Delta - Lodinews.com: NewsLodi News-Sentinel

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Golden Rule boat sails to Sacramento promoting nuclear ban | The ... - Sacramento Bee