Evanger’s dog food recalled after euthanasia drug found in one batch – WHIO

Published: Monday, February 06, 2017 @ 12:20 PM Updated: Tuesday, February 07, 2017 @ 8:37 AM By: Debbie Lord - Cox Media Group National Content Desk

Claiming President Donald Trumps ban on travel would unleash chaos again, lawyers for Washington state and Minnesota asked a federal appellate court to keep in place a restraining order that halts the ban and allows immigrants into the country.

The filings with the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco came early Monday after the White House said it expected the federal courts to reinstate the ban.

According to The Associated Press, the filings claim that both Washington and Minnesota said their underlying lawsuit was strong and a nationwide temporary restraining order was appropriate. If the appellate court reinstated Trump's ban the states said the "ruling would reinstitute those harms, separating families, stranding our university students and faculty, and barring travel."

>>Watch the hearing from the 9th Circuit Court live here.

How did we get to this point with the executive order banning immigration? Heres a look at the ban, the court challenge and whats next.

First, what does the ban do?

The ban originally:

Suspended the U.S. refugee admissions program for 120 days

Indefinitely suspended Syrian refugees from entering the country

Banned entry for refugees from seven majority-Muslim countries Iran, Iraq, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen for 90 days

Banned entry for 90 days of dual-nationals who are from those seven countries, but have an additional passport

Prioritized refugee claims on the basis of religious persecution, as long as the applicant is a member of a religion that is a minority in their country of origin

Lowered the total number of refugees to be accepted from any country in 2017 to 50,000

What happened Friday?

U.S. District Court Judge James Robart of Seattle issued a ruling Friday on a request for a restraining order brought by the state of Washington that would suspend sections of the travel ban signed by Trump on Jan. 27.

The state of Washington contended that certain parts of the travel ban are contrary to the Constitution and the laws of the United States. The state asked for a nationwide ban on the order.

Roberts decision did three things first, it recognized that Washington and a second state that joined in on the request, Minnesota, had standing to ask for a restraining order. In other words, they were being harmed by the ban, so they could ask a court for help.

Second, the ruling required that the section of the travel ban that called for a 90-day halt to immigration from the seven countries, and the section that called for an indefinite suspension of immigration from Syria be lifted.

Third, the order put a halt to prioritizing refugee claims of certain religious minorities.

The administration appealed to the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals to have the restraining order lifted, allowing the travel ban to continue. The court ruled against the administration on Sunday.

So its a done deal, the travel ban is lifted?

No, far from it. What happened on Friday was that a judge issued a temporary restraining order. That means the travel ban stops temporarily until a full hearing is held.

What happened on Sunday was that the Trump administration asked to have the restraining order lifted. The court did not lift the order, leading to the full court hearing which is taking place Tuesday in San Francisco in the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

What did the Trump administration do after the order was issued in Washington?

The administration did what the court ordered, and suspended the ban.

"In accordance with the judge's ruling, DHS has suspended any and all actions implementing the affected sections of the Executive Order entitled, "Protecting the Nation from Foreign Terrorist Entry into the United States," DHS said in a statement.

When could the ruling come?

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has asked for both sides to file legal briefs before the court makes its final decision. Washington and Minnesota filed theirs Monday morning. The government has until 6 p.m. ET Monday evening to submit its briefs.

What happens if the court upholds the restraining order?

That means the travel ban is on hold unless or until the administration appeals the decision, which seems likely.

If the judges rule in favor of the administration, the restraining order on the travel ban is lifted and it goes back in force.

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Evanger's dog food recalled after euthanasia drug found in one batch - WHIO

Bitcoin, Stop Apologizing for Victimless Crime – Nigeria Today

Bitcoin is a freedom currency in a manner that isnt obvious and which is virtually undiscussed. Bitcoin is commonly linked to victimless crime, but the dynamic reaches far deeper than merely freeing individuals to buy goods and services, unsavory or not. Victimless crime is the lifeblood of the surveillance state without which big government could not function. Victimless crime creates the surveillance state.

Also read:Surbitcoin On Hiatus Amid Venezuela Bitcoin Crackdown

The arch enemy of total scrutiny is the privacy and economic anonymity of cash or digital currencies. This means something as tiny as the pseudonymous transfer of one bitcoin is a threat to the states very existence.

Daniel Krawisz of the Satoshi Nakamoto Institute was nothing more than deadpan accurate in a 2014 presentation in which he stated, Someone who promotes bitcoin who is not an anarchist is a crypto-anarchist because bitcoin is inherently anarchistic.

A victimless crime is an illegal act that violates no rights and harms only the people who voluntarily commit it. And, then, the harm is only in some cases like drug use. And, then, only in the opinion of some people who are not necessarily involved. Politically speaking, victimless crimes are also the engine that drives the total surveillance state.

Why is this true? When a crime has flesh-and-blood victims, they almost always contact law enforcement because they want restitution, justice or protection. A mugged man files a police report on the chance of getting his wallet back; a raped woman views a police lineup in the hope of finding justice; a shop owner turns in the video of a theft so that a neighborhood thug wont steal from him again. Law enforcement doesnt need to ferret out such crimes. The police can sit in one place, have victims come to them and only then investigate. If the victims prefer to remain silent, then the police have little incentive to investigate a crime with no report.

Victimless crimes are the antithesis. The criminal acts are either consensual, like prostitution, or they are committed in isolation, like drug use. In either case, the police are neither contacted nor welcomed. No one turns himself in for buying a blow job; no one files a complaint on himself for snorting cocaine. These crimes do not come and knock on the police station door.

To enforce victimless laws, therefore, the authorities must hunt down the hidden scofflaws by monitoring the general population for suspicious behavior. They track the movement of money, create massive databases, eavesdrop on all communications, employ snitches and use a multitude of other intrusive tools of surveillance.

The incredible violation of privacy and personal rights is justified by the politically useful issues of illegal drugs, prostitution, and other moral hot buttons. Actual acts of violence such as child pornography and the funding of terrorism are thrown into the mix. The argument is this: because of a small number of hidden bad actors, everyone everywhere must relinquish their freedom and wealth to the state.

In more basic terms: the further law enforcement moves away from real victims and toward victimless crimes, the more it becomes a police state that relies on total surveillance. The state knows this. And, so, anything that blocks surveillance runs the risk of also becoming a victimless crime. For example, the refusal to fill out a census form is criminalized. Many people are puzzled by why the state penalizes such an innocuous act. They shouldnt be.

In his book Seeing Like a State, James C. Scott commented, If we imagine a state that has no reliable means of enumerating and locating its population, gauging its wealth, and mapping its land, resources, and settlements, we are imagining a state whose interventions in that society are necessarily crude. Imagine a state that could not find your children to draft or your bank account to freeze. That state could not regulate your business or arrest you for peaceful but deviant practices. Acquiring data allowed the modern state to grow. The more data, the more powerful and effective its authority.

It is no coincidence that prison populations within America have risen by close to five times the level of 1980 when the war on drugs heated up. At this point, nearly 86% of federal prisoners are victimless criminals. The surveillance state has grown in pace. Appeals to compassion or common sense regarding prisoners have fallen on deaf ears because victimless crime laws serve their purpose: power and social control, which verge on being synonyms.

The term is no longer fashionable, perhaps because it highlights that people who commit no harm are being punished. The preferred term is now crimes against society. The shift in language casts society in the role of an individual who can be robbed, raped or assaulted and so must be protected by the state. This is why criminal proceedings list the state as the plaintiff even when the real victim is known. The victimization of society occurs whenever an individual peacefully transfers his own money in an unapproved manner because 1) who knows where that money came from or goes, and 2) it is not taxed or otherwise skimmed by the state and banks.

In reality, of course, victimless crimes are not committed against society but against the state. They are a modern version of crimes against the crown that is, a form of treason. The faux crimes are used to justify an ever-expanding surveillance system which forms the core of totalitarianism. They are so essential to state power that actual crimes, such as assault or theft, are often punished lightly compared to the crimes of disloyalty to the state.

Then, into the scene, bitcoin blunders like the proverbial bull in a china shop. Or so it must seem to central planners. To paraphrase John Lennon, bitcoin is what happens when the state is making other plans. The states response is a campaign of slander; bitcoin is child porn, money laundering, human traffickingfill a despicable word into the blank. What is the best response?

Stop apologizing. There are people who use bitcoin to buy immoral goods (whatever that means) just as there are people who use cash to do so. As long as the participants are consenting adults, thats their business. Not yours, not mine. The state is the one who interjects violence and harm when it points a gun at peaceful adults. Stop apologizing.

The attack on bitcoin will be framed in moral terms. It will be cast as a way to protect vulnerable and misguided individuals who use their own bodies in unacceptable ways. Or it will unfold as a campaign of resentment against those individuals who do not pay their so-called fair share toward maintaining the surveillance state.

A moral attack must be met with moral indignation, not an apology. For one thing, an apology is an admission of guilt. The banner of bitcoin should read: No victim. No crime. No apology. If an individual is victimized by fraud or violence connected to bitcoin, then law enforcement should do their job and solve an actual crime.

What do you think about Bitcoins role in victimless crimes? Let us know in the comments below.

Images courtesy of Shutterstock, Bitcoin.com, and Pixabay.

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The post Bitcoin, Stop Apologizing for Victimless Crime appeared first on Bitcoin News.

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Bitcoin, Stop Apologizing for Victimless Crime - Nigeria Today

7 arrested for auto insurance fraud scheme – KESQ

COACHELLA, Calif. - The Riverside County District Attorney's Office has released information about a large automotive insurance fraud scheme that reportedly led to a loss of more than a half million dollars.

Seven people were arrested for the alleged violations on Tuesday but arrest warrants have been issued for 40 defendants, according to DA Mike Hestrin's release.

The 36 criminal complaints include more than 200 felony counts for crimes committed at seven auto body shops across the Coachella Valley, authorities said. The scheme involved staging up to 40 false insurance claims from which payouts totaled $560,492 from 10 different insurance companies.

Along with the seven people arrested on Tuesday, authorities said about 20 more defendants are in the process of being contacted by law enforcement.

Arrested Tuesday: Isaac Espinoza Villa, DOB: 7-23-84; Luz Virgin, DOB: 12-13-74; Samuel Salvador Gomez, 11-21-74; Moises Saldana Paredes, DOB: 7-30-89; Mauricio Lopez-Castro, DOB: 9-15-87; Jose Manuel Luna, DOB: 5-23-66; and Erika Feliz, DOB: 12-28-80. Authorities released three of the booking photos Tuesday afternoon.

All of them live in the Coachella Valley.

Investigators from the Department of Insurance initially received information about this crime ring in 2014, as part of a previous investigation in which individuals were charged with running a similar scheme.

"Insurance fraud schemes like this one steal from our local communities in the form of higher premiums," Riverside County District Attorney Mike Hestrin said. "The insurance fraud perpetrated by these defendants is alleged to have caused a loss of more than $500,000; a cost that ultimately is passed on to consumers. We have to do everything that can be done to stop these criminals from defrauding the public."

The arrests were made by California Department of Insurance detectives and investigators with the Urban Auto Insurance Fraud Task Force, which includes a Riverside County DA's investigator.

"This was an elaborate conspiracy to rip off insurers to the tune of near a half a million dollars," state Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones said. "Insurance fraud is not a victimless crime. The cost of fraud is shouldered by consumers who pay higher premiums when insurers pass along their losses. The task force is a critical tool in combating the multi-billion-dollar problem of insurance fraud."

The case is being prosecuted by Deputy District Attorney Mark Zubiate of the DA's Insurance Fraud Team. KESQ News Channel 3 and CBS Local 2 will keep you updated as investigators continue to move forward with the case.

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7 arrested for auto insurance fraud scheme - KESQ

Apply Today for Maryland Taxpayers Scholarship – Bay Net

Apply Today for Maryland Taxpayers Scholarship

Annapolis, MD On Feb. 4, Delegate Deborah C. Rey announced that her office is accepting applications for the Maryland Taxpayers Scholarship the 2017-2018 school year for residents of District 29B. The other delegates representing the other Districts will offer this same opportunity for their residents.

Applicants for the Maryland Taxpayers Scholarship must attend a Maryland college, university or approved career school. The applicant must be enrolled for full-time or part-time attendance.

In addition to completing an application, an official transcript is required, a resume, two letters of recommendation, an essay comparing one of the following Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged characters to a public individual: John Gualt, Hank Rearden, Dagny Taggart, Wesley Mouch or James Tagart.

All Maryland Taxpayers Scholarship applications are due by April 15, 2017, so dont delay. Applications are filed electronically and email instructions can be found on the last page.

Del. Rey can be reached at: Deborah C. Rey, Delegate, District 29B, St. Marys County, Maryland House of Delegates, 6 Bladen Street, Rm 323, Annapolis, MD 21401, phone: 301-858-3227.

If you know someone wanting to continue their education, please encourage them to apply. You can find the complete application form here.

Contact Shertina Mack at s.mack@TheBayNet.com.

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Apply Today for Maryland Taxpayers Scholarship - Bay Net

‘9th Circus’? Scholars Say Court’s Liberal Rep Is Overblown – ABC News

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which is weighing the appeal of President Donald Trump's executive order on immigration, is the federal appeals court conservatives have long ridiculed as the "nutty 9th" or the "9th Circus."

Covering a huge swath of territory nine western states plus Guam the San Francisco-based court handles far more cases than any other federal appeals court, including some rulings that have invoked furor from conservatives over the years.

Among them: finding that the phrase "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance is unconstitutional, that the "don't ask, don't tell" policy on gays in the military was problematic long before President Barack Obama's administration ended it, and that states can force pharmacies to dispense emergency contraceptives.

But some legal scholars say the 9th Circuit's liberal reputation is overblown and that the court has moved to the middle as some of President Jimmy Carter's appointees who were considered extremely liberal have taken semi-retired "senior" status or passed away.

A Democratic Congress nearly doubled the number of judges on the court during Carter's tenure, and his appointees faced easy confirmation in the Senate.

The three judges weighing Trump's travel ban are on the case by virtue of random assignment to this month's circuit court motions panel. Senior Circuit Judge William C. Canby Jr. was appointed by Carter in 1980; Senior Circuit Judge Richard R. Clifton was appointed by Bush in 2002; and Circuit Judge Michelle T. Friedland was appointed by Obama in 2014.

Canby, based in Phoenix, was a first lieutenant in the Air Force in the 1950s before becoming a Peace Corps administrator in Ethiopia and Uganda in the 1960s. Clifton, who keeps his chambers in Honolulu, came to the bench from private practice. So did Friedland, who is based in San Francisco.

They were scheduled to hear arguments by phone Tuesday on whether to maintain the temporary restraining order issued by Seattle U.S. District Judge James L. Robart that blocked enforcement of the travel ban from seven majority-Muslim nations.

President George W. Bush appointed six of the court's 25 active judges, but 18 have been appointed by Democrats. The seven appointed by President Barack Obama are generally considered moderate, said University of Richmond Law School Professor Carl Tobias.

Tobias called the notion that the 9th Circuit is liberal "dated." Arthur Hellman, a federal courts scholar at University of Pittsburgh Law School, said the picture of where the court stands in relation to other circuits has become muddier.

"The reputation is certainly deserved based on the history of the last 40 years or so," Hellman said Monday. "It's been more liberal, by which we mean more sympathetic to habeas petitioners, civil rights plaintiffs, anti-trust cases, immigration cases. But it's less of an outlier now than it was."

That history has prompted repeated, unsuccessful efforts to split the 9th Circuit most recently in proposals filed this year by Arizona's congressional delegation.

A bill introduced last week by Sens. John McCain and Jeff Flake would put Arizona in a new 12th Circuit with Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Nevada and Washington while leaving California, Hawaii and Oregon plus Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands in the 9th Circuit.

A House version previously introduced by Reps. Andy Biggs and four other Arizona Republican representatives would leave Washington in the 9th Circuit.

Biggs in a statement said his aim was "to free Arizona from the burdensome and undue influence of the 9th Circuit Court."

"As a promise to my constituents last year, I introduced this bill to protect Arizona from a federal circuit court that does not reflect the values nor laws of our state," he said. "The Ninth Circuit cannot handle the number of states currently entrapped within its jurisdiction, causing access to justice to be delayed."

Tobias said that while the 9th Circuit could use more judges, it makes little sense to split the circuit. California generates so many cases that the 9th is always going to have a heavy workload it handled 11,888 of the 56,244 cases handled by all federal appeals courts in the 12 months ending last June. And Tobias said he doesn't consider the sort of judicial gerrymandering Biggs seeks as a valid reason to split the court.

Judge Alex Kozinski, the circuit's former chief judge, once joked in a New York Times interview that far from splitting the 9th, he was hoping to acquire more territory. He said he had his sights on Utah, for its good skiing.

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'9th Circus'? Scholars Say Court's Liberal Rep Is Overblown - ABC News

All liberals are hypocrites. I know because I am one – Quartz

Demagogues like Donald Trump thrive on simplicity. One of the keys to his ascendancy has been the lumping together of his many enemies into a single entity, a group to blame for all the economic anxiety and cultural dispossession felt by a vocal subset of his constituency. And so, various strains of right-wing anger have for some time now been congealing around a single vague word: liberal.

As a political philosophy, liberalism is an untidy confection. But Im pretty sure I am one, at least in part because I subscribe to liberalisms first principlethat everyone has a right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. And, like all self-identifying liberals in the age of Trump, recent events have plunged me into a sea of doubt. Which is why I think its important to say this: As well as being a liberal, I am also a xenophobe.

That statement requires some immediate qualification. I am not your garden-variety racist. I do not cultivate hatreds based on skin color or nationality. I do not have an Aryan Viking or a colored egg as my Twitter avatar. A child of the 1980s, and an urbanite, pluralism is part of my cultural inheritance. But the truth is that, for someone who has spent the last decade as a travel writer and literary cheerleader for foreign people and places, I often have a hard time transcending stark cultural differences.

I think its important to say this: As well as being a liberal, I am also a xenophobe.Some examples from my rap-sheet include a month in China, during which my girlfriends red hair invited the kind of swivel-eyed scrutiny you might expect if shed had two heads, was enough to turn me against the entire country. The disdain for punctuality common to Latin America and Africa drives me to distraction. In abject fulfillment of the British stereotype, the worlds widespread inability to queue drives me to silent, haughty outrage. Whilst I am adept at reciting the worlds capital cities, Im also an authority on being judgmental.

Such observations dont generally make the final copy of daily opinion columns, but theres nothing especially novel or incendiary about them. (I suspect few members of the liberal chattering classes can watch the Broadway classic Avenue Q without a wry, self-conscious chuckle at the musicals most famous number, Everybodys a little bit racist.) However, at a time when liberalism as a concept is under attackwhen half of America is blaming it for all the worlds problems, and the other half are catastrophizing about the implications of its demisethis mea culpa may help formulate a better understanding of what liberalism is, and why it is in crisis today.

Crucially, the idea that a liberal can also be a bigot presupposes that a persons politics do not depend on the purity of their soul. Or, to put it more simply, being liberal does not necessarily make you a better person. It just means you believe base humanity is flawed and needs to be contained within a framework of social mores and ethical absolutes.

Liberalism, wrote the controversial philosopher Slavoj Zizek, is sustained by a profound pessimism about human nature. Where the nostalgic conservative sees a past of white picket fences and peaceful cultural homogeneity, the liberal sees centuries of genocide, sectarian war, colonization and enslavement. A right-winger might call it hysteria. A liberal would call it a rational reading of human fallibility. Viewed through this pessimists lens, political correctness is a safeguard, a levee against the dark rivers of our intolerant tribalism.To put it more simply, being liberal does not necessarily make you a better person.

Against this backdrop, a person opposed to liberal ideals comes across as either willfully foolish or worse. Liberals dont brand such people as racist because we think they are. We brand them as racist because we know they are. Because deep down, we know we are too.

And thats the problem. The central weakness of modern liberalism is that the self-criticism required in order to disown this instinctive bias has become a form of blindnessof our own moral imperfection, and of our tendency to offer a prescription for society to which we ourselves struggle to adhere. Three months on from Trumps election victory, and with the anti-liberal backlash continuing to shape politics across western democracies, the vulnerabilities in this picture grow starker by the day.

In On Liberty, John Stuart Mill, among the founding fathers of modern liberalism, wrote that Whatever crushes individuality is despotism. But it seems unlikely that he could ever have imagined how future generations would see, in the ideology he championed, a haunting echo of that same oppression. What emerged as a philosophy of opposition to structural prejudice started to grow sclerotic the moment it assumed the mantle of orthodoxy. The resultan inflexible dogma rooted in secularism and identity politicshas ended up provoking the vengeance of those who feel marginalized by it.

While many liberals complain about the implications of anthropogenic climate change, how many of us refuse to fly?Often, the accusations of hypocrisy marshaled in opposition to liberal points of view are more absurd than effectivewitness, to name one recent example, the thousands of Trump apologists disparaging womens marchers on the premise that those same people hadnt been holding weekly sit-ins to protest the treatment of women in Saudi Arabia. Yet the overarching criticism is valid, for how many liberals can say with sincerity that they are immune to instinctive bias? Can any of us truly claim that we feel as much sympathy for thousands of innocent Syrians immolated by Assads barrel-bombs as we do for European terror victims? While many liberals complain about the implications of anthropogenic climate change, how many of us refuse to fly?

Indeed, the words do as I say, not as I do could be the catchphrase for the entire liberal orderfrom the everyday leftie who decries gentrification while secretly celebrating the increased value of their house to figureheads we eulogize. As people around the world lamented the end of Barack Obamas administration, many pointed out that the man elected US president on a tide of hope and optimism, awarded the Nobel Peace Prize within months of taking office, vacated the White House as the first American president in history to have been at war for every day of his tenure. It doesnt require a huge leap of empathy to understand how someone anathematized to his politics might have seen, in the deluge of liberal tears that accompanied his departure, evidence of an intractable contradiction.

None of this is to say that social liberalism needs to be disavowed. The Trump era, if anything, looks set to demonstrate its importance anew. And while populists would have us believe that 2016 heralded the start of liberalisms downfall, we must keep faith that most people, if pushed, would choose a more self-aware liberal future to Steve Bannons nihilistic vision of religious war.None of this is to say that social liberalism needs to be disavowed.

But as todays progressives confront a newly energized right-wing populism, we must recognize the shortcomings in liberalism that have led us to this juncture. We should be able to acknowledge that, in seeking absolution for our worst instincts, we may have overcompensated by acquiescing to a status quo that has overseen rampant inequality and catastrophic foreign wars. And we should admit that the reactionary ideas fueling the right-wing surgenativism, nationalism, and American exceptionalism among themare understandable, albeit execrable, responses to our transparent balancing act. Trump is sticking a middle finger up to a liberal consensus teetering on feet of clay.

Everyone carries a shadow, wrote the psychoanalyst Carl Jung, and the less it is embodied in the individuals conscious life, the blacker and denser it is. It seems likely, were he alive today, that Jung might suspect liberals of possessing the biggest shadows of all. Perhaps we need to embrace our shadows before we can properly push them away.

Follow Henry on Twitter at @henrywismayer. Learn how to write for Quartz Ideas. We welcome your comments at ideas@qz.com.

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All liberals are hypocrites. I know because I am one - Quartz

Why Are Liberals Surprised by the Senate Confirmation of DeVos? – National Review

Have you talked to your liberal friends who dont follow politics today? Whats surprising are the number of liberals who seem genuinely surprised and shocked and horrified and enraged and all kinds of other emotions about the fact that 50 out of 52 Senate Republicans voted to confirm Betsy DeVos as education secretary.

Start with the fact that Republican senators are going to be naturally inclined to confirm a Republican presidents nominees. Move on to the fact that DeVos has spent her career working for school choice, and most Republican senators strongly support school choice.

I know this may shock you, my friends on the left, but most Senate Republicans dont particularly care how much teachers unions furiously denounce DeVos. The teachers unions are among the biggest financial supporters of Democrats. Opposition from teachers unions is a given for just about every Senate Republicans; theres no point in trying to reach out, build bridges, or reach compromise with someone who is determined to defeat you when your term is up.

Republican senators didnt find DeVoss belief that states and localities should set laws for guns in and around schools inherently disqualifying, and didnt find her comment about grizzly bears around schools in Wyoming so laughably absurd.

Senate Republicans dont particularly care if Kate McKinnon imitated DeVos on Saturday Night Live and it was glorious. They dont care that she was ridiculed by Jimmy Kimmel and Trevor Noah. Any Republican secretary of education nominee is going to be ridiculed by Jimmy Kimmel and Trevor Noah. Oh, there was a Facebook meme about Betsy DeVos that was shared a lot? Thats not the sort of thing that persuades a senator. (I see one of the disqualifying criticisms is DeVos never put her children in a public school. Neither did President Obama.)

What, the likes of Pat Toomey and Rob Portman, having just won reelection to a six-year term, should begin by alienating everyone who worked so hard to help them win reelection, and hand a victory to everybody who just spent the past two years trying to defeat them? Have you guys ever watched anything in politics ever before?

If a lot of Republicans in Virginia or New York or California had called up their senators offices urging a vote in favor of DeVos, do you think that Tim Kaine, Mark Warner, Chuck Schumer, Kirsten Gillibrand, Dianne Feinstein, or Kamala Harris would have changed their minds?

Eight years ago, most Republican senators voted for most of President Obamas nominees. The only nominees who faced significant opposition were Tim Geithner (34 votes), Kathleen Sebelius (31 votes), and Eric Holder (21 votes). Only six of Obamas picks required more than a voice vote. (There were 41 Republican senators at that time.)

Did that bipartisan outreach and conciliatory approach pay off for Republican senators? Did any liberal or progressive organization or voice salute those senators for their willingness to confirm President Obamas choices and get them on the job as quickly as possible? No, of course not. Ask a liberal today and theyll insist the Senate Republicans were the most obstructionist opposition party of all time.

In an environment where no outreach across the aisle is rewarded by the opposition, why are you surprised that theres so little of it?

In a highly charged partisan political environment, it takes a lot to get a senator to vote against their own party. Liberals want Republican senators to defy the Trump administration, but theres no particular upside for that senator. Its not like the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committees going to give them a pass, its not like grassroots progressives wont try to knock them out of office, its not like any praise from the news or entertainment wings of the media will be lasting or consequential. (Ask Jim Jeffords, Arlen Specter, or Charlie Crist.)

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Why Are Liberals Surprised by the Senate Confirmation of DeVos? - National Review

Liberal Hashtag #NotMySuperBowlChamps Protests Patriots’ Support of Trump – Fox News Insider

It's been a recurring theme the past few months:

Liberals simply cannot accept the fact that Donald Trump is president and are doing everything in their power to depose him.

And now, the non-acceptance has turned to sports.

Following the New England Patriots' victory in Sunday's Super Bowl, the hashtag#NotMySuperBowlChampsshot to the top of Twitter's trending section.

MN Police Dept. Tweets Unique Punishment for Super Bowl Drunk Drivers

Google Home Super Bowl Commercial Sets Off Existing Customers' Devices

It Looks Like Tom Brady's Super Bowl Game Jersey Was STOLEN!

A play on #NotMyPresident, the hashtagwas used to slam the Patriots -- especiallyquarterback Tom Brady, head coach Bill Belichick and owner Robert Kraft -- for their friendships with Trump.

Not all Patriots are on the Trump train though. Tight end Martellus Bennett said last weekhe might skip the team's customary visit to the White House.

Thehashtag has since evolved into more of a joke targeting the refusal of liberals to accept the election results.

Breaking: Jill Stein announces demand for a re-match because Russia hacked the football. Send her lots of money. #NotMySuperBowlChamps

Paul Joseph Watson (@PrisonPlanet) February 6, 2017

#NotMySuperBowlChamps I just heard that Starbucks is hiring 10,000 Falcon fans. #safespace

Hillary Hates Me GWM (@pinepilot) February 6, 2017

Since the Falcons led for the most time, shouldn't they be the winners? #HIllaryLogic #NotMySuperBowlChamps

Joe Kelly (@JoeKelly1073) February 6, 2017

Where are all the protesters at for the Pats Super Bowl Parade?!? #NotMySuperBowlChamps

RP Walsh (@rp_walsh) February 7, 2017

I'm not gonna say Putin hacked the Superbowl, but I had never seen this ref before until last night. #NotMySuperBowlChamps pic.twitter.com/ZTypGrjXag

sqx (@nonsequitur20) February 6, 2017

"So, i'm going with your strategy to make it look like I have no chance, then win." #SuperBowl #SB51 #TomBrady #NotMySuperBowlChamps pic.twitter.com/oK7k7Z3i2v

Tea Party News (@tpartynews) February 6, 2017

#NotMySuperBowlChamps Not your President, Not your Country, Not your Constitution, Not your flag. Not your way, Why are you here?

Bill Periman (@BillPeriman) February 6, 2017

I hope liberals never, ever stop tweeting lol #NotMySuperBowlChamps "Election Night All Over Again"#SuperBowl Tom Brady pic.twitter.com/Q7fNVBdXqR

Tracy (@GigiTracyXO) February 6, 2017

Cry baby leftists are tweeting #NotMySuperBowlChamps & blaming "white supremacy" for the Patriots' Super Bowl win. Liberals are insane

Makada (@_Makada_) February 6, 2017

Winning against all odds is now a conservative thing, while Whining after losing is officially a liberal thing, #NotMySuperBowlChamps

Elijah Okon (@ElijahDbliss) February 6, 2017

Maybe an Atlanta federal judge will reverse the score. #NotMySuperBowlChamps

Ron Waltman (@avnsgm) February 6, 2017

VP Pence Takes Wounded Warriors to Super Bowl

President Trump Tweets Congratulations to Super Bowl Champion Patriots

O'Reilly Presses Trump on Travel Ban, Views on Putin in Super Bowl Interview

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Liberal Hashtag #NotMySuperBowlChamps Protests Patriots' Support of Trump - Fox News Insider

HuffPo’s New Editor In Chief Is Already Undoing Arianna’s Liberal Legacy – Daily Caller

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The Huffington Post is looking to President Donald Trumps base for new readership, an odd reversal considering the tidal wave of anti-Trump coverage that plastered the site over the last 18 months.

The site ran front-page headlinescalling Trump a Racist, Sexist, Xenophobic Demagogue with the hashtag #wtfgop.

New editor in chief Lydia Polgreen, 41, is already taking steps to push the left-leaning outlet back toward the political center.

Founder Arianna Huffington announced she was leaving the outlet Aug. 11. She started it in 2005 as a liberal alternative to Matt Drudges The Drudge Report, according to CNNMoney.

When Arianna Huffington founded HuffPost in 2005, it was an answer to the Drudge Report and a bulwark against an ascendant Republican president beginning his second term, Polgreen told HuffPo staff in January. Today, we live in very different times. The old ideological dividing lines seem irrelevant and inimical to our journalistic mission. The question we must ask ourselves is this: Who are we for?

Polgreen is going to have a tough time getting Trump voters to look HuffPos way. The site which Polgreen said she wanted a lot of people who voted for Donald Trump to read consistently attacked him throughout the primaries, general election and after the inauguration.

When Trump was still fighting in the Republican presidential primary, Huffington published a piece explaining why her website was going to cover Trump in its entertainment section.

The site covered news of Trump supporters attacking people, but rarely reported on the times Trumps base was attacked. If HuffPo did report on it, it would be hedged bypointing the blame at the very Trump voters who were attacked.

It promoted liberal advocacy in its news articles by including petitions readers could sign. HuffPos Washington bureau chief, Ryan Grim, told The Daily Callers Alex Pfeiffer in December they are straightforward about what our values are.(RELATED:Huffington Post Defends Advocacy In News Stories)

A HuffPo contributor published a Trump conspiracy piece the site later deleted alleging former Secretary of State Colin Powell could become president.

Polgreen pushed her reporters to be more open and welcoming of potential new reads in her January staff message: We must listen with empathy and openness to our audience, and invite those who are not in our audience to engage with us, to guide our journalism. That is how we can build a deep relationship based on mutual trust and understanding. It is how we get beyond our filter bubbles and serve everyone.

HuffPos ad revenue dropped significantly in 2015, from 46 percent year-over-year growth down to 15 percent. Its mobile website and desktop traffic have both fallen. From May 2015 to April 2016, according to Business Insider, online traffic fell a massive 71 percent.

A Huffington Post spokeswoman disputed the drop in traffic as outdated and incorrect to The Daily Caller News Foundation, saying online traffic is up. Our traffic is actually up 2.4% YoY [year-over-year]. In November 2015, we had 190M global multi-platform UVs [unique visitors] according to comScore and in November 2016, we had 195M.

ComScore is a cross-platform measurement company that provides data analytics and other metric information. Business Insider received its data from SimilarWeb, a digital marketing company that provides website traffic and data analytics.

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HuffPo's New Editor In Chief Is Already Undoing Arianna's Liberal Legacy - Daily Caller

Cory Bernardi says he resents being used in Liberal party ‘proxy war’ – The Guardian

Cory Bernardi says he did not support the decision to change prime minister from Tony Abbott to Malcolm Turnbull, and he does not agree with the idea of changing again. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

Cory Bernardi has fired a parting shot at his former conservative colleagues, including Tony Abbott, declaring he was being used in a proxy war against Malcolm Turnbull in the build-up to his departure from the Liberal party.

In an interview with Guardian Australias Politics Live podcast, Bernardi said he did not want his split from the Liberal party to be any sort of trigger point for the destabilisation of Turnbulls prime ministership by his conservative opponents.

Bernardi said he had opposed moves to remove Abbott as prime minister in 2015, and despite his significant philosophical differences with Malcolm Turnbull, any move against him would be wrong too.

Acknowledging that some conservatives were intent on using his departure as fresh material to weaken Turnbull, Bernardi said categorically he did not want his defection to be used for political purposes.

Its the principle, Bernardi said on Tuesday night. You have an elected prime minister, and they are getting rolled because of the polls, or because of poor decisions. They are collective decisions of the cabinet. They are collective decisions of the party room, and they are hurt and they are terrible, but youve got to be prepared to fight.

It is the principle for me in that entire thing.

And where I resented some of the things you have suggested [about positioning by conservatives] is I was being used in a proxy war, and in my dealings with the [press] gallery over the last 12 months, I have made it abundantly clear, I am not involved in this I am not doing anyone elses bidding.

If I am the rebel Senator ... it is not because I am carrying a torch for anyone else. I dont want to see a change of leadership, its always been about the policy.

Abbotts office has been contacted for comment.

Bernardis comments about the Coalitions corrosive internals come after his statement to the Senate on Tuesday confirming his attention to resign from the Liberal party and start a new conservative political movement.

Former colleagues rounded on the South Australian over the course of Tuesday, arguing it was a complete betrayal of the voters of South Australia to stand for election as a Liberal Senator for a six year term, only to quit the party just over six months in.

Bernardi told Guardian Australia on Tuesday evening he had been inspired to launch his own insurgency after watching Donald Trumps successful grassroots campaign in the United States, but he said he had no interest in importing Trumps political tactics into the Australian landscape, such as decrying coverage he didnt approve of as fake news, or trying to muddy up facts.

He also suggested he could compete with One Nation successfully for the conservative vote, and many conservative leaning people looking for a political alternative would be reassured by his long history within the Liberal party.

In the interview, Bernardi shrugged off an apparent lack of interest from his close friend, the mining magnate Gina Rinehart, in bankrolling his new political movement.

Bernardi said he was looking to fund his organisation through many small donations from activists prepared to sign on to Australian Conservatives, which he was prepared to disclose in real time.

He said the sustainability of a political organisation is driven by memberships and the grass roots.

If I can get thousands upon thousands of people contributing modest amounts of money historically thats been the strength for my political fundraising, Bernardi said.

Ive tried to build relationships with people over a very long period of time. I have a weekly blog that goes out. Some of those people will be disappointed [about what Ive done] but there will be tens of thousands of people who will celebrate this decision and they are very supportive of me because Ive become their voice in the parliament.

I know who they are, Ive established a relationship. I can take the temperature of a great many conservatives in the nation very, very quickly.

He also signalled his donations above the disclosure threshold would be revealed publicly continuously, within 24 hours, rather than waiting 12 months for the legal requirement.

I dont know why people want to hide this.

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Cory Bernardi says he resents being used in Liberal party 'proxy war' - The Guardian

Guest Article: Capitulation before the First Shots Are Fired – Somewhat Reasonable – Heartland Institute (blog)

Billy Aouste Billy Aouste is the new media specialist for The Heartland Institute. He is responsible for many projects at Heartland, including producing and managing social media outreach; pitching op-eds to print and digital publications; producing Heartland's weekly email; editing Heartlands blog, the Freedom Pub; and tracking Heartland experts media hits.

Aouste is a graduate from DePaul University with a BA in Political Science. While studying he participated in the Fund for American Studies program in Washington D.C. Prior to joining Heartland in 2015, he was a staff intern on Bruce Rauners successful Illinois gubernatorial campaign. Aouste resides in Hainseville, Illinois.

By: Barry Poulson

For a half-century, conservatives have watched Congress incur deficits and accumulate debt, making ours one of the most indebted countries in the world. There is little doubt this debt is unsustainable or that the federal government must enact reforms to constrain spending, especially entitlement spending, which is one of the major sources of U.S. debt today.

Republicans in Congress promised to address our fiscal crisis with fundamental reform of entitlements and other programs. They promised to constrain spending, balance the budget, and reduce debt over the next decade. So far, they have not been able to do this, at first because of gridlock with Democrats in the Senate and then because of President Barack Obamas promise to veto any legislation introducing real reform. But with the election of Donald Trump and control of both houses of Congress, Republicans can finally break through the budget gridlock.

The most recent salvo in this budget battle is a continuing resolution for fiscal year 2017. This resolution proposes to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act (ACA) with no change in other parts of the budget. The resolution exempts future health care legislation replacing the ACA from certain budget rules meant to impose fiscal discipline.

It also requires committees with jurisdiction over spending and revenue in the ACA to craft new legislation achieving $1 billion in deficit reduction over the next 10 years and to report that to Congress. The expectation is these committees will repeal parts of the ACA with budgetary effects, which will allow the repeal legislation to be considered under special reconciliation procedures in Congress. This tactic will allow Republicans to enact the legislation with a majority vote, rather than the 60 votes required to prevent a filibuster.

The resolution also provides for two reserve funds to accommodate new legislation repealing ACA. Replacement legislation could use all but $2 billion of the net savings from ACA repeal for new spending or tax breaks for health care coverage. This is quite a shift from previous Republican proposals promising more than $2 trillion in savings, which was promised to go toward deficit reduction, from an ACA repeal. An analysis by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) identifies a number of reforms in health care that could be enacted with significant cost savings. The savings proposed in this resolution to repeal ACA are a drop in the bucket compared to CBOs analysis of potential savings.

Replacement legislation that costs no more than the savings from ACA repeal, minus $2 billion, would be exempt from the Senate PAYGO rules and also from Senate point-of-order rules. The inclusion of these exemptions suggests the replacement legislation could exceed the savings from repeal by more than $10 billion in some years over the next decade and beyond.

With government expenditures for health care absorbing a larger share of the federal budget, this carve-out means less spending will be constrained by the statutory rules in place. Setting aside reserve funds to finance new health care legislation means more federal money will be off-budget and earmarked for specific spending programs. We should expect less congressional oversight for these funds, and if the new health care legislation is given special funding status, this will erode the opportunities for priority budgeting.

We will not know the full impact of policies to reform and replace ACA until Congress passes a resolution bill repealing ACA and additional legislation implementing replacement policies. But the first salvo in this budget battle is not promising, Republicans seem to have capitulated before the battle has begun. If there is any savings in an ACA repeal, most of those savings would be set aside in reserve funds to finance new spending or tax breaks for health care. The proposed budget reserves just $2 billion of the savings from an ACA repeal for deficit reduction.

Further, in the resolution, discretionary spending for fiscal year 2017 is set at the spending cap level for that year. All other spending and revenue is at baseline levels. Using baseline projections, total spending would increase from $3.2 trillion to $4.9 trillion over the next decade. This increase in spending would be accompanied by a doubling (roughly) of annual deficits to more than $1 trillion by the end of the decade.

Republicans can claim victory in this first budget battle in fiscal year 2017, without the Democrats firing a shot, but what a pyrrhic victory. Not only will this legislation fail to significantly reduce the growth in health care spending, it could lead to a higher trajectory of spending over the next decade and beyond. This legislation reveals Congress has no desire to fundamentally reform health care or other entitlements that would significantly reduce spending or debt linked to these programs.

Capitulation by Republicans in this budget battle reflects a more fundamental flaw in federal fiscal policies. Congress continues to pursue expansionary fiscal policies to stimulate output and employment in the short run, allowing deficits and debt to accumulate in the long run. For a half-century Congress has pursued Keynesian fiscal policies and abandoned the unwritten balanced budget rule that governed fiscal policy for two centuries.

With this most recent failure, conservatives must look to alternative solutions to the federal fiscal crisis. The most promising approach is to enact new fiscal rules, like those enacted in some other OECD countries, combining a balanced budget rule with expenditure limits.

We certainly cant sit back and watch the debt increase from $20 trillion to $29 trillion over the next decade the debt projected under this continuing resolution.

Barry W. Poulson (think@heartland.org) is a professor emeritus of economics at the University of Colorado-Boulder.

[Originally Published at American Thinker]

Guest Article: Capitulation before the First Shots Are Fired was last modified: February 6th, 2017 by Billy Aouste

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Making A FOIA Request Is About To Get Tougher At FBI – Daily Caller

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FBI officials are making it harder for Americans to request public records under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).

Beginning March 1, the FBI will no longer accept FOIA requests via email, according to FBI notifications to requesters, forcing the public to use more archaic methods like snail mail and fax. The change copies other agencies, like the IRS and CIA.

Its hard to see this move by the FBI as anything other than an attempt to make it more difficult for the public to access information about the agency, as is our legal right under the Freedom of Information Act, Elizabeth Hempowicz, policy counsel for the Project on Government Oversight (POGO), told The Daily Caller News Foundation.

The FBI will continue accepting requests through its online portal, but that method only allows users to submit one request per day, a limitation found nowhere in the text of the FOIA. Hempowicz said the change is curious because the FBI launched its web-based FOIA system in 2015 in the name of openness.

The agency points to it (the FOIA portal) as proof it cares about transparency and efficiency, but if the FBI were truly committed to improving public access to information, the last thing it would do is shut down email requests, Hempowicz added.

The FBI said the move will streamline its FOIA process. The FBI had 2,614 backlogged FOIA requests at the end of fiscal year 2015, according to the Department of Justices (DOJ) most recent annual report on agency FOIAs.

The FBIs eFOIA portal was designed and developed to be the FBIs primary means for receiving FOIA and Privacy Act requests, FBI spokeswoman Jillian Stickels told TheDCNF.

The portal provides the FBI with an automated process for the receipt and opening of requests, replacing the current manual process and substantially reducing the time it takes to receive and open each electronic request received. Given the FBIs high volume of requests, this will significantly increase efficiency.

Former President Barack Obama promised to have the most transparent administration in history, but his White House intercepted and vetted agency FOIA requestsand prompted a record number of FOIA lawsuits against a presidential administration.(RELATED: Agency Takes 5 Years To Respond To FOIA Request)

President Donald Trump has spoken little of government transparency and public access to records.

Congress passed, and then-President Lyndon Johnson signed, FOIA into law in 1966, making all government documents subject to public access except those covered by one or more of nine specific exemptions for considerations such as privacy, law enforcement and commercial secrets.

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Making A FOIA Request Is About To Get Tougher At FBI - Daily Caller

Getting To Know You Tuesday: Elliot Dole – Forbes


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Getting To Know You Tuesday: Elliot Dole
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The advice I received is that financial independence comes first. Tax management is part of that, but it is critical for people to understand the risks involved and make informed and, ideally, unemotional decisions. Ask for and pay for (GASP) help. The ...

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Getting To Know You Tuesday: Elliot Dole - Forbes

My Turn: Program provides a path out of homelessness – AZCentral.com

Deborah Arteaga, AZ I See It 2:43 p.m. MT Feb. 7, 2017

Many I-HELP clients find themselves homeless after an unexpected financial or health crisis.(Photo: J2R, Getty Images/iStockphoto)

On any given day, an estimated 300 to 500 Tempe residents call the streets of our city their home. Some sleep in their cars if they are lucky enough to own one.

Tempe Community Action Agency (TCAA) operates the only homeless shelter resource in Tempe. In partnership with 10 local faith organizations and more than 800 volunteers, its Interfaith Homeless Emergency Lodging Program (I-HELP) provides 560 men and women annually a warm meal, a safe place to sleep each night and a pathway out of homelessness to financial independence.

The program shelters 40 people in Tempe each night, seven nights per week, 365 days per year. Sixty-eight percent of those entering I-HELP became homeless in the past 90 days; 20 percent report they are a victim of domestic violence; and 29 percent have some type of disability.

Deborah Arteaga(Photo: Deborah Arteaga)

The goal of I-HELP is not only to provide for the immediate needs of homeless individuals, but also to offer these members of our community the resources they need to find employment, secure permanent housing and regain self-sufficiency.

Each person who comes to I-HELP has a unique story, but many find themselves homeless after an unexpected financial or health crisis. Antonios story includes both. After a successful battle with cancer left him penniless and homeless, he landed a full-time job in Tempe. But, with no financial resources left, he found himself sleeping in his car.

I finally Googled shelters and arrived at I-HELP feeling ashamed and defeated, Antonio says. I-HELP (which helped Antonio with shelter, food, showers and developing a saving/budgeting plan) allowed me to maintain my full-time employment and obtain a place I call home with restored dignity.

Other I-HELP clients, like Gilbert, a veteran in his 50s, have ongoing health issues that make it difficult for them to access the services for which they otherwise qualify. Gilbert had been homeless for long periods of time prior to being referred to TCAA. He had been on a long wait list for veteran housing and suffers from mental-health challenges that make it difficult for him to follow through on appointments with Veteran Services, including needed health care.

Gilbert entered the I-HELP shelter program where he could access safe overnight lodging, a regular nutritious mealand the help of case management to assess his needs and address the issues that prevented self-sufficiency.

Gilbert remained in I-HELP for a period of six months. His I-HELP case manager met weekly with him to help develop a schedule and plan for one week at a time, outlining the places he needed to go and appointments he needed to attend. With guidance, he followed through with these appointments, and as a result, his veteran housing benefits were approved.

Selecting a place to live proved a challenge for Gilbert, who found his options confusing and overwhelming, complicated by the fact that he had no transportation.

His VA case manager helped by driving him to look at apartments. Once housing was selected, his I-HELP case manager worked with him to prepare for employment so that he could sustain his housing. Today, Gilbert is enjoying his new job, home and improved quality of life.

Although I-HELP relies heavily on volunteers and the donated facilities of partnering faith organizations, 93 percent of its tangible expenses are funded through the generosity of private supporters.

The annual I-HELP Walk/Run, scheduled 7:30-9:30 a.m. Saturday, March 25, at Kiwanis Park (North Soccer Fields), is a vital way that TCAA raises funds to pay for things such as access to warm showers, nutritious meals, sleeping mats, employment and transportation assistance, and case managers.

A unique aspect of this walk/run is that it is set up also to raise awareness of the issue of homelessness, taking participants through the experience a typical client goes through with I-HELP, from homelessness to regaining self-sufficiency. Its an impactful service and educational experience for families, school groups and coworker teams.

If you would like to make a positive impact on homelessness in Tempe, please consider participating in this 5K event as an individual or team. To learn more or to inquire about sponsorship opportunities, call Lexie Krechel at 480-350-5884.

Deborah Arteaga is executive director of Tempe Community Action Agency.

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Find out if you qualify for free tax preparation and financial advice – wtvr.com


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Find out if you qualify for free tax preparation and financial advice
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The program promotes financial independence and utilizes the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), a benefit for working people with low- and moderate-incomes. Research shows that the EITC is one of the best ways to lift people out of poverty, said United ...

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Revolution: Russian Art review from utopia to the gulag, via teacups – The Guardian

Marginalised Peasants, circa 1930, by Kazimir Malevich. Photograph: State Russian Museum

Lenin stands before a crimson curtain, his hand resting on some papers. It is 1919. A gap in the curtain reveals a demonstration in the street behind, banners aloft. Here he is again, in Petrograd, seated at a table, pencil poised, paper on his knee and more strewn over the table. And there is Stalin, yet more papers piled beside him. What is this thing about leaders posing with documents and pretending to write? Remind you of anybody?

And what do they write? Love letters? shopping lists? To what, in Isaak Brodskys paintings, must they put their names? Theyre writing the future, one supposes, their speeches and five-year plans, their goodbye signatures for the condemned, dead letters all.

Elsewhere in Revolution: Russian Art 1917-1932, at the Royal Academy in London, we see Stalin resting in a wicker armchair, a dog outstretched at his feet. The mutt, in Georgy Rublevs informal 1936 portrait, looks much like a sturgeon. Maybe the leader is thinking of dinner as he glances up from Pravda. Nearby, scenes from Dziga Vertovs 1920s work Film Truth show footage of Lenins state funeral, while Sergei Eisensteins October recreates the revolution.

Photograph: State Historical Museum

It is all happening. Salute the Leader! is stencilled on the gallery wall, in this first section of an episodic, dense and sometimes bewildering show. This is not an exhibition about great art so much as a clamour of ideals and conflict, suppression, subjugation and totalitarianism. It takes us from the October Revolution in 1917 to the gulag, by way of food coupons and propaganda posters, architectural models, film footage, suprematist crockery (one teacup is decorated with cogs and pylons) and thunderingly bad sculpture. There are so many fascinating things here, largely drawn from Russian state collections, that the show might be seen as a corrective to the more narrow focus we often have on avant-garde art in revolutionary Russia.

In a wonderful series of photographs in the next section, Man and Machine, a muscular youth turns a great wheel of industry. Bolts are tightened, cables stretched. Photographs of oily crankshafts and vast generators turn up the tempo. In another of Brodskys paintings, sun catches the muscular back of a superhero worker on a hydroelectric dam. We visit tractor plants and textile factories. Women work at the new machines. Outside, a shirtless boy leads sheep along the street. Modernity and the old world are in conflict. Questions about arts purpose its freedoms and imposed responsibilities vie with one another throughout.

Among the photographs, the social realist and suprematist paintings, the folkloric scenes of Mother Russia and the death of a commissar, the exhibition embraces the contradictions of culture after the revolution, and before socialist realism was announced as the new and only true method in 1934. There is much to surprise, but less as visual pleasure than as a way of conveying the clamour, aspirations and contradictions of the times.

That said, this is a fun show, in spite of the density of the arguments that were waged in the new Russia. For every painting of a flag-bearing bearded Bolshevik, striding over onion-domed churches and crowded streets, there are Kandinskys abstract explosions and Pavel Filonovs crazed, teeming cityscapes, a wonderfully frightening world of boggle-eyed heads and tessellated skylines. One, from 1920-21, is called Formula for the Petrograd Proletariat. Whats the formula? The people look scared. Meanwhile, the thrusting, canted colour stripes of Mikhail Matiushins 1921 Movement in Space depict pure energy and urgency, irrevocable change. These artists, both the better and lesser known avatars of the Russian avant garde, were really going for it.

At one point, we come to a full-size mock-up of an apartment designed by El Lissitzky in 1932. Its clean, bare, multilevel spaces are a diagram for living. To encourage workers to go out and eat communally, the apartment has no kitchen, just a geometry of planes and steel handrails a hygienic machine for bare, uncluttered living. Later, I come to a painting of a man reading at his rustic table, a fish on a plate before him, a bottle and pipe at his side, somewhat different bare necessities to those proposed by Lissitzky.

Painting and film extolled collective farm labour and captured the astonishment that greeted the arrival of the first tractor. But modernity would not be bought so easily: there is nostalgia for disappearing ways of life, sentimental paintings of spring in the birch woods, troika rides in the snow, village carnivals and homely pleasures all contrasted with ration cards, food tax posters, the redolent ephemera of lean times.

Among the technological feats and heroic workers, the shock troopers of industry, the old peasant women and athletes, you find yourself looking for familiar faces in the crowd. They come at you as ghosts: Moisey Nappelbaums black and white portraits of the wonderful poet Anna Akhmatova; theatre director Vsevolod Meyerhold in his leather coat in 1929, giving the camera a reproachful eye. Maybe he was hamming it up. In 1940, Meyerhold was arrested, tortured and killed. Akhmatovas first husband was also killed, while her second Nikolay Punin, the art critic and champion of the avant garde was sent to the gulag in 1949 after he described portraits of state leaders as tasteless. He died there, not long after Stalins death.

In 1932, Punin was one of the organisers of a huge exhibition, Fifteen Years of Artists of the Russian Soviet Republic, filling 33 rooms of the State Museum in Leningrad, as it was then. The exhibition was marked not only by its plurality but by the way the trajectory of art in Soviet Russia was skewed in favour of aesthetic and ideological conservatism. Vladimir Tatlin was excluded, while Kazimir Malevich was marginalised. Even so, the latter mounted an astonishing display of his own work, which has been largely duplicated in one of the high points of the exhibition.

Malevichs last version of the Black Square (the first was painted in 1915, this one dates from 1932) hangs high above our heads. Beside it is his Red Square (Painterly Realism of a Peasant Woman in Two Dimensions, dating from 1915), above a symmetrical array of suprematist and figurative paintings. Even an early cubist work is here. Geometric painting jostles with faceless peasants, reapers and sportsmen clad in clothing designed by the artist. Malevich saw no distinctions between these different styles, his architectural ideas and his work in porcelain. He snuck his imagery in as and where he could, regarding his art as in service to his ideals. This display is a great counterpoint to Tate Moderns 2014 Malevich exhibition.

The plurality of Russian art was, by 1932, on the wane. Rather than suprematism, anodyne paintings of runners, soccer matches, a female shot putter, a girl in a football jersey became the acceptable face of Stalins utopia. Photographs celebrate parades and stadiums. Instead of a clean modernism, a heavy, overblown architecture was on the rise, with a gigantic Lenin towering over a Palace of the Soviets, which was planned to be the tallest building in the world.

At the very end of the show we come to a black box, a tiny cinema called Room of Memory. Inside is a slideshow projecting official mugshots of the exiled, the starved, the murdered in Stalins purges: housewife Olga Pilipenko, a Latvian language teacher, the former chair of the hydrometeorological committee, peasants, short-story writers, poet Osip Mandelstam, Punin the art critic.

It goes on. Beyond, in the gallerys rotunda, hangs a recreation of one of Vladimir Tatlins constructivist gliders, a prototype flying machine he worked on for several years. It circles the white space, part dragonfly, part bat. Tatlin saw it as a flying bicycle for workers, made from steamed, bent ash and fabric. It looks as light as air. It never flew or went anywhere, but turns in a room, endlessly.

Revolution: Russian Art 1917-1932 is at Royal Academy of Arts, London, from 11 February until 17 April.

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Revolution: Russian Art review from utopia to the gulag, via teacups - The Guardian

Asia Oceania Geosciences Society names Zank its sixth honorary member – UAH News (press release)

Dr. Gary Zank is the sixth honorary member selected by the Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS).

Michael Mercier | UAH

Dr. Gary Zank, chair of the Department of Space Science at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH) and director of its Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research, has been named as the sixth-ever honorary member of the Asia Oceania Geosciences Society (AOGS).

Honorary members are referred to in the AOGS constitution as "persons whose international standing in geosciences or whose services to the Society are recognized by the Society and elected by the General Meeting."

Dr. Zank is the holder of an AOGS Axford Medal, the highest honor given by the society, an organization equivalent to the American Geophysical Union (AGU). That medal acknowledged his outstanding achievements in geosciences, including planetary and solar system science, as well as unselfish cooperation and leadership in Asia and Oceania. Oceania refers to the broader Pacific Ocean region excluding the Asian region. His receipt of the Axford Medal made him eligible for the honorary membership, which was unopposed.

His Honorary Member Certificate will be presented during the General Assembly at AOGS2017, taking place Aug. 6-11in Singapore.

"I had not been expecting this," Dr. Zank says. "It is quite an honor to be recognized like this, as one of just six honorary members of the Asia Oceania Geosciences Society. I think it is a reflection of my being fortunate to have collaborated with a great many gifted scientists, young and old, from Asia China, India, Taiwan and Japan especially and Australia. In this I have been very lucky, and so the elevation to an honorary member is a reflection of all of my wonderful colleagues."

A driving force behind the creation of the universitys Department of Space Science, the South Africa-born Dr. Zanks research at UAH has included study of the heliosphere, the area of space influenced by the solar wind, and solar weather and plasmas. He has also applied his computational modeling expertise to biologically invasive species and homeland security inquiries.

His scientific and computational interests have encompassed design of space architectures and the missions needed to provide the raw data for such research, as well, including UAHs role in NASAs Solar Probe Plus mission, slated for launch in 2018.

"The recognition that Dr. Zank has received in becoming the sixth honorary member of the Asia Oceania Geosciences Society is well-deserved," says Dr. Christine Curtis, UAH provost and executive vice president for academic affairs. "Dr. Zank is a highly accomplished researcher, an exceptional research leader in the field of space science and an outstanding educator who is leading the UAH Space Science Department and highly competitive masters and Ph.D. programs in Space Science.His work in space science provides tremendous opportunity for current and future students at UAH to work with a leading scientist and be at the forefront of scientific discoveries in space science. We at UAH are very proud to have Dr. Gary Zank as a member of our faculty."

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Asia Oceania Geosciences Society names Zank its sixth honorary member - UAH News (press release)

Oceania to Offer 14 Alaska Cruise Departures in 2017 – Travel Agent

Oceania Cruises has announced a series of 14 Alaska cruise departures setting sail from San Francisco, Seattle, and Vancouver between May and September 2017.

Here are some highlights:

In Astoria, the Ale Trail will delight beer lovers as they discover a variety of local, hand-crafted brews. Not only will there be opportunities for tastings, travelers will gain personal insights into the brewing process with personalized tours of local breweries and interactions with the owners and brew masters.

In Ketchikan, guests can join the Captain and crew for a trip on the Aleutian Ballad, the crab boat from Discovery Networks Deadliest Catch. Or, guests can partake in a personalized fishing expedition where their catch is prepared by a personal chef as the main course of a gourmet lunch, served around a crackling campfire amidst the centuries-old Alaskan rainforest.

In Victoria, a food and cultural walking tour will guide guests to such establishments as Sticky Wicket, Hankss BBQ, 10 Acres bistro and Bon Macaron Patisserie.

In Juneau, thrill-seekers can go dog-sledding, glacier-trekking on Mendenhall Glacier, or even sea-kayaking through the coastal waterways traveled for centuries by the Aleut Indians. Foodies can enjoy the Flavors of Juneau with a visit to the Alaskan Brewing Company and Chez Alaska Cooking School.

Travelers can search for bears, deer, and bald eagles in their natural habitat in the remote Spasski River Valley outside of Hoonah, get immersed in Tlingit culture, song, and storytelling at the Heritage Center or embark on a ZipRider experience on the worlds largest zip-line.

In Sitka, guests can go deep-sea sport fishing for salmon, visit the Alaska Raptor Center, one of the largest rehabilitation centers for injured eagles, hawks, falcons, and owls, and spot sea otters, whales, sea lions, porpoises and brown bears on a Sea Otter and Wildlife Quest.

Sailing Alaska between May and September is Oceania Cruises Regatta, the flagship of the fleet.

The Great Northwest 11 days from San Francisco to Vancouver visiting Astoria, Ketchikan, Juneau, Hubbard Glacier, Icy Straight Point, Sitka, and Prince Rupert. Departs May 10th.

Pristine Passages seven days from Vancouver to Seattle visiting Wrangell, Juneau, Sitka, and Ketchikan. Departs May 24th.

Peaks, Parks & Preserves 10 days roundtrip from Vancouver visiting Ketchikan, Sitka, Hubbard Glacier, Skagway, Juneau, Wrangell, and Victoria. Departs May 31st and August 31st.

Glistening Glaciers 10 days from Vancouver to Seattle visiting Ketchikan, Juneau, Icy Strait Point, Skagway, Sitka, and Victoria Departs June 10th.

Awe of Alaska seven days roundtrip from Seattle visiting Ketchikan, Tracy Arm Fjord, Sawyer Glacier, Sitka, and Prince Rupert. Departs June 30th, July 7th and 14th, August 7th and 14th.

Alaska Charms seven days roundtrip from Seattle visiting Wrangell, Tracy Arm Fjord, Sawyer Glacier, Sitka, and Prince Rupert. Departs July 21st.

Glacial Adventures 10 days roundtrip from Seattle visiting Ketchikan, Juneau, Hubbard Glacier, Icy Strait Point, Skagway, Sitka, and Victoria. Departs July 28th.

Glaciers & Gardens 10 days Seattle to Vancouver visiting Ketchikan, Sitka, Hubbard Glacier, Juneau, Skagway, Wrangell, and Victoria. Departs August 21st.

Alaskan Grandeur 10 days Vancouver to San Francisco visiting Ketchikan, Juneau, Hubbard Glacier, Sitka, Victoria, and Astoria. Departs September 10th.

Visit http://www.oceaniacruises.com

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Oceania to Offer 14 Alaska Cruise Departures in 2017 - Travel Agent

Seychelles Tourism reaches out to Belgium visitors – eTurboNews

The Seychelles Tourism Board (STB) and its partners took part in another holiday fair that was held from February 2-5, 2017 at the Brussels Expo fair ground in Belgium.

The four days were the most crowded and busiest days with the Belgians coming out in full force looking for their next holiday destination.

Among those visiting Seychelles stand were the Seychelles Ambassador in Belgium Selby Pillay and his wife.

STB was represented at the fair by senior marketing executive Christine Vel based in Paris along with two representatives of the trade Eddie dOffay from LArchipel Hotel and Carl Lacoste from Air Seychelles.

In general there was a good turn out and we had a lot of clients stopping by who had already gone through the first steps of booking their flights and accommodation and were needing some advice on learning more about the destination, getting around, sight-seeing, excursions etc, said Miss Vel.

Most of the people who came around were mostly looking for small family friendly hotels, guesthouses and self-catering and were happy to learn that these are available in Seychelles, she added.

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Seychelles Tourism reaches out to Belgium visitors - eTurboNews

Obama kiteboards in Caribbean with billionaire Richard Branson – Reuters

Former U.S. president Barack Obama is trying some new and dangerous water sports that the Hawaii native had to miss out on for safety reasons while serving in the White House.

Obama, whose eight years as president ended last month when he was succeeded by Donald Trump, learned to kiteboard while vacationing last week on a Caribbean island owned by British billionaire and adventurer Sir Richard Branson, who published an accountof their trip on Tuesday.

Photographs and video on the website of Branson's Virgin Group show the former president, a life-long surfer, figuring out the increasingly popular sport in which people ride a board while being pulled behind a kite.

"Being the former president of America, there was lots of security around, but Barack was able to really relax and get into it," Branson wrote.

Obama and his wife, Michelle, were spotted last week in the British Virgin Islands, and people posted photos of them on social media. Branson owns 120-acre (48-hectare) Moskito Island, which is part of the archipelago.

Kiteboarding was chosen in 2012 as a sport for the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, replacing windsurfing. The decision was criticized at the time because the sport can be lethal, and it was reversed within months.

According to Branson, Obama studied the pastime for two days and flew a kite from the beach, "as if going back to being a child again," before heading out into the waves.

Branson was trying to learn a similar sport, foilboarding, which uses a modified board that rises a few feet above the water. He wrote that he challenged the ex-president over which of them would succeed first.

Obama triumphed, he said, by kiteboarding for 100 meters (328 feet).

"After all he has done for the world, I couldn't begrudge him his well-deserved win," Branson wrote.

(Reporting by David Ingram in New York; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Frances Kerry)

WASHINGTON Two Republican senators proposed steps to slash the number of legal immigrants admitted into the United States by half on Tuesday, but the legislation, developed with the Trump administration, faces an uphill climb to get through Congress.

WASHINGTON/HOUSTON The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will grant the final permit needed to finish the Dakota Access Pipeline, a controversial project to move oil quickly to the U.S. Gulf Coast that sparked protests by Native American tribes and climate activists.

BATON ROUGE, La. At least six tornadoes tore through New Orleans and other parts of Louisiana on Tuesday, injuring 13 people as the storm roared across highways and streets, tearing down trees, power lines and homes, officials said.

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Obama kiteboards in Caribbean with billionaire Richard Branson - Reuters