Daily Archives: April 21, 2017

Global community marks International Day for Street Children – BusinessGhana

Posted: April 21, 2017 at 3:00 am

A street child is a term for homeless children who are poor and are living on the streets of cities and towns.

According to the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), the concept is used to refer to boys and girls aged 18 years and below whose permanent place of abode has become the street where they earn their livelihood and are constantly facing insecurities.

Estimated figures according to UN sources suggest there are about 150 million street children in the world. This worldwide phenomenon, among other conditions, is caused by socio-economic collapse as a result of violence, drug and alcohol abuse, the death of a parent, family breakdown, civil wars and natural disasters.

Plight

Yesterday, April 12 is the day set to highlight the plight of street children worldwide. It is the 7th International Day for Street Children which provides the platform for governments, civil society organisations, non-governmental organisations and international organisations working to protect the rights of street children.

To mark the event, Chance for Children, a non-governmental organisation (NGO), organised an outreach programme for some street children in Accra yesterday.

The organisation fed 120 street children and played out-door games with them after which they gave a pep-talk to the children, and advised them to take care of themselves to attain a prosperous future.

ISCD

In an interview with the Daily Graphic, the Manager of the organisations recreational centre, Drop in Centre, Mr Osman Adam Ibrahim, said the programme was organised to appreciate and recognise the children who were also human beings, but unfortunately ended up on the streets, due partly to lack of proper parental care.

Mr Ibrahim disclosed that the NGO had a centre that catered for 45 street children, and added that they were fed, clothed and taught by volunteer teachers. He said they had shelter homes where some of the children were taken to. Others, he said, had been also reunited with their respective families.

Law enforcement

He appealed to the government to enforce the law to punish parents and caretakers who left underage children to their fate, exposing them to dangers on the streets, which eventually affected them psychologically and forced them to engage in anti-social acts such as abuse of hard drugs to their detriment.

He called on the society not to have a negative perception about street children and stigmatise them, pointing out that negative perceptions about street children, such as tagging them as thieves and sometimes concluding that the girls were into prostitution, were very bad ways of treating children because it took their confidence away from them.

These children are not thieves, and even if they steal it is not their intention to do it; it is because of the situation they find themselves. I am not justifying what they do but society should accept them. I think most of the social vices they involve themselves in can be curbed, he stated.

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The five ‘infections’ of the social democratic ‘family’ in the Western Balkans – Open Democracy

Posted: at 2:59 am

Nikola Gruveski, Macedonian Prime Minister, with Angela Merkel. Markus Schreiber/DPA/PA Images. All rights reserved.

Looking at the current Western Balkans political landscape, in the first half of 2017, one notices that in all of the former Yugoslav states, nationalists dominate the scene and all governments are formed by parties that were involved in the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s on the pro-independence side.

From the Tudjman founded HDZ in Croatia to Serbias Progressive Party (born from the Party of Radicals), from Montenegros one party rule to Bosnias ethnic tri-partite Presidency, and from Kosovos former fighters to Gruevskis authoritarianism in Macedonia, the region oozes nationalism, identity politics, border disputes and rival historical claims.

All of these governing parties are on the right-wing side of the ideological spectrum (except Montenegro), they are socially conservative, openly neo-liberal in their economic policies and not particularly tolerant towards ethnic minorities. The parties of the centre-left, the so-called social democratic parties, are currently in opposition in the Western Balkans and have a limited impact. In an environment of increasing social inequalities, dodgy privatisations, de-industrialisation and the lowest GDP per capita in Europe, the centre left space is left without a voice.

This has not always been the case, as there are a large number of parties in the Western Balkans that call themselves social democratic or socialist, which have played a significant role in the post-communist transformation of these polities, in the context of a variety of cleavages of right versus left, authoritarianism versus democracy, nationalism versus cosmopolitanism and extremism versus moderation.

In this piece, I argue that the social democratic parties in the Western Balkans are in a state of ideological confusion and lacking political strategy. In their declarations, all of them affirm their allegiance to a progressive and moderate political agenda, they present themselves as solid pro-Europeans, conciliatory vis a vis ethnic minorities and socially sensitive.

In reality, however, they practice very little of all that, and most of them have compromised their ideas for the sake of power. They fail to propose any alternatives to the current dominant conservative paradigms and in that sense they are emulating the wider European centre-left story.

Today, social democracy in the Western Balkans is suffering from five infections. These are the communist, the neo-liberal, the ethnic, the fragmentation and the external.

What we call social democracy in the Western Balkans today is in historical terms a choice between continuity and rupture with the pre-1989 communist parties. The initial formative years of regime change and transition have left a clear imprint on party politics, in general, and social democratic politics, in particular. Back in the 1990s, the re-labelling social democracy was the passport to the new world of democratic politics, indicating the ideological transformation and decommunistisation of the former totalitarian parties.

As in other East European countries, the electoral success of these parties depended on their rebranding as social democratic. As it happened, following the collapse of the communist rule, the communist parties either reformed early (FYR Macedonia), or reformed later (Croatia, Albania), or turned nationalist (Serbia, Montenegro). Many of the reformed communist parties, played a pivotal role during the years of transition, as important power contenders, in government or opposition, giving birth gradually to new formations, a second generation of social democratic parties in the Western Balkans.

The real question, which remains until today, is to what extent they succeeded in ridding themselves from communism, by democratising their internal procedures, embracing new issues, attracting new members, especially from the younger generation. While all these parties adjusted to the new competitive environment of elections, in most cases, they retained much of their prior political culture of top down hierarchical structures, clientelist distribution of administrative jobs and resources, internal fights among personalities and resistance to new ideas.

Many of these parties are still struggling to attract new members, they are slow in introducing internal reforms and display an unconditional obedience to the party leader. Some of them like Djukanovics party in Montenegro or Dodiks party in Republika Srpska are criticised openly for authoritarian practices and anti-social democratic tendencies. But even in the case of Albania where the Socialist Party has been lately trying to modernise and embrace new members, there has been heavy criticism on the adopted party rule that the leader of the party cannot be challenged or removed if he or she loses the election. There is often a feeling in the region that social democratic parties are still guided by unreformed communists.

During the long transition years, the regional economics were dominated by the hegemonic discourse of neoliberalism. As all of the economic policies were designed from abroad, with no domestic input whatsoever, the practices of privatisation, de-industrialisation, and labour reforms were never challenged, despite the fact that they were generating all sorts of market deviations, oligopolies, corrupt practices and social inequalities.

For all the Western Balkan states, the post-communist economic model comprised infrastructural, tourist and construction opportunities, leading mostly to economies of services and consumption. Following the FDI boost, the consumption boom and the high rates of growth of the 2000s, the financial and the eurozone crises affected the small, open and vulnerable economies of the Western Balkans by hitting their banking sectors, decreasing investment, exacerbating growth rates, widening social inequalities, increasing unemployment and weakening welfare provisions. The rising numbers of outward migration and brain drain to advanced western Europe, during the last few years, testifies to the gloomy economic conditions and the lack of opportunities in all Western Balkan states.

Where has social democracy stood in this sequencing of transition, boom and bust? From the start, the social democratic parties distanced themselves from the disgraced communist dogmas by adopting ad hoc and less ideological positions and abiding to the new economic principles. Hostages to the end of ideology thesis, they refused to explore any regional deviations from the hegemonic liberal and neoliberal consensus while at the same time losing their traditional clientele, the working classes and trade unionism, all of which disappeared in the new space of deindustrialisation.

By espousing wholeheartedly, the European Union perspective, they attached themselves to the rhetoric of structural reforms, fiscal discipline and spending cuts, largely designed by the IMF, and resigned from any claims to social justice, equality, trade unionism and social protection for the sake of the TINA (There Is No Alternative) thesis. Today, some social democrats in the region justify their ideological obedience to neoliberalism by claiming that their countries may need more free market opportunities before they can improve on social policies and implement the true social democratic ideals!

Like all other political parties in the Western Balkans, social democratic parties have not been immune to the nationalist claims and ethnic divisions that have tormented the post-Yugoslav space.

While they adopted a pro-European liberal orientation and declared themselves more tolerant towards ethnic and minority rights, many of them were actively or passively responsive to nationalist ideas, if these helped them win elections and remain in power. Djukanovic flirting with Yugoslav nationalism at first, co-cooperating with Serbian nationalism later, before embracing full hearted Montenegrin nationalism, helped sustain himself and his party in power for the last three decades and becoming the longest serving post-communist leader in Central and Eastern Europe. In fact, his Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS) due to its chameleon-like changes managed to enjoy power uninterruptedly since 1991, making Montenegros polity a dominant party system.

Elsewhere, social democratic parties, like Dodiks Alliance of Independent Social Democrats (SNSD) in Bosnia abandoned their ideals for the sake of independence for Republika Srpska. The ethnicisation of Bosnian politics infected even the Social Democratic Party of Bosnia and Herzegovina (SDP BiH), the only influential multi-ethnic party and the only alternative to the dominant ethnic party system, which constantly faced serious dilemmas, whether to give in to nationalists in power-sharing arrangements or defend its multi-ethnic cause in opposition.

In Kosovo, what was originally a promising and fresh social democratic option, Vetevendosje turned into a purely nationalist movement, currently monopolising the patriotic agenda by disrupting the parliamentary process against any border deals with Montenegro and normalisation with Serbia. Most of the social democratic parties in the Western Balkans, for fear that they will be criticised by the nationalist parties as anti-patriotic, opt for ambiguity on issues of national interest, adopting unclear, non-credible approaches on the sensitive national questions.

This is the case of the social democratic parties in Serbia, most of which are not trusted to handle relations with Kosovo, leaving the space for formerly hard and currently reformed nationalists, such as Aleksandar Vucic and Ivica Dacic, to have their Nixon in China moment with Kosovo and claim their nationalist credentials.

It is well known that the biggest fights are usually within the family and that the biggest political enemies are always from within. This is certainly true for the social democratic political family, where political infights are often personal and for the sake of power grabbing and access to state resources.

All social democratic parties in the region have been infected by fragmentation and creation of new political formations, all of which have declared their true allegiance to social democracy and end up fighting each other, instead of the ideological enemies beyond.

This is very visible in Montenegro where even under the dominating shadow of Djukanonics Democratic Party of Socialists (DPS), the centre left space includes a number of smaller alternatives, such as currently the Social Democratic Party (SDP), the Social Democrats (SD) and the Democratic Montenegro, among others.

In Serbia, following Tadics electoral defeat in 2012, the centre-left space is inundated with social democratic parties all of which have been struggling to surpass the 5% parliamentary threshold; this includes the Democratic Party (DS), the Social Democratic Party of Serbia (SDPS), the Social Democratic Party (SDS), the League of Social Democrats of Vojvodina (LSV), Together for Serbia or the Party of United Pensioners for Serbia all of which are represented in the National Assembly of the 2016 elections totalling 40 MPs all together out of 250.

The fragmentation of the centre left space is further exacerbated by the existence of a number of socialist, green or other one issue parties. This has allowed the present strongman of Serbia, Aleksandar Vucic to use consecutive elections (three in the last three years) to benefit from the oppositions fragmentation and consolidate his own position.

In the April 2017 presidential elections, Vucic triumphed from the first round with 55% followed by the independent Sasa Jankovic who just got a 17%, raising fears among European democrats that Serbia is gradually turning into another Orbans land.

Much of what is happening in the Western Balkans is reminiscent of the state of European social democracy, and is a reflection of a wider social democratic malaise in the continent.

To be sure, the ideological problems with European social democracy have their roots in the 1980s and 1990s, which led the British political philosopher Ralf Dahrendorf famously predict the end of the social democratic century. Indeed, the start of the new century signalled the futility of the third way in its ideological closeness to market liberalism while, at the same time, some of the socially progressive ideas, traditionally espoused by social democrats were gradually embraced by the parties of the centre right too.

Consequently, the consecutive economic crises gave a big blow to the most influential social democratic parties in Europe including Britain, France, Spain, Italy, Germany, Sweden, the Netherlands and most prominently Greece, not only because they had no alternative to the dominant socio-economic model but also because they were largely seen to be responsible for the severe economic downturn.

One after the other the social democratic parties have been performing badly in national electoral results while the 2014 European Parliament elections confirmed this negative trend across Europes social democracy, with its lowest representation since 1979.

Similarly, social democracy is suffering electorally in central and eastern Europe with conservative parties currently prevailing almost everywhere from Bulgaria to Poland and Hungary, the latter shifting clearly towards authoritarianism. No wonder then that the impact of Europes social democracy on their Western Balkan counterparts is bound to be weak in terms of political guidance and ideological inspiration.

It should be added here that the European Party of Socialists (and the Socialist International) to whom most of the Western Balkan social democratic parties are attached, have no commonly agreed yardsticks or examples of best practice for democratic party development that could be transposed to social democratic parties in the region. The best they have been offering is their influence on keeping the accession process of the Western Balkans alive but with not much practical guidance along the way. If there is any leverage this comes mostly from the European Commission, in the context of the accession process and this relates more to inter-party relations, rather than intra-party developments, such as brokering in parliamentary boycotts in Albania, FYR Macedonia, Montenegro or Kosovo.

In fact, by focusing on executive politics and prioritising inter-party relations and consensus politics, the EU and its social democratic parties have underestimated the importance of democratisation and modernisation of the party machines, while the preference for technocrats and capacity building depoliticises the parties and strips them from their ideological dynamism.

Between the years 2012 to 2016, many Balkan states experienced citizens unrests, starting with Bulgaria and Romania and extending to Croatia, Bosnia, FYR Macedonia and Montenegro. Social democratic parties failed to cease the moment and capitalise on such mobilisation because in the eyes of the electorates they were seen as equally responsible for their dismay and discontent. This essay has shown that the reason why social democratic, centre left politics are failing to capture the imagination of the electorates is because they are suffering from multiple infections of internal and external nature.

Social democracy in the Western Balkans like with the rest of Europe lacks the full package - consistent ideology and credible political strategy. It suffers more when compared with the existing political alternatives which are clearer and even, dare one say, more authentic in their ideological proclamations: from the radical left which has embraced a critical anti-globalisation, anti-neoliberal discourse but totally lacks political strategy, to the conservative, centre right political alternatives which are openly embracing nationalism, neo-liberal policies as well as use a statist friendly discourse and dominate political praxis.

On the contrary, the centre left cannot convince that they have genuinely reformed from the communist times, that they can deal with the difficult national questions, that they can address the social and economic inequalities, nor that they can stay united as a credible alternative. One then would expect that Europes social democratic family should try to be the guide for genuine reform in the Western Balkan region, but in order to do this, it needs first to find its own orientation.

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The five 'infections' of the social democratic 'family' in the Western Balkans - Open Democracy

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Cornered govt slammed for ambush economic policies – New Zimbabwe.com

Posted: at 2:59 am

THE countrys opposition has slammed the Zanu PF led governments ad hoc measures to deal with a revolting economy which has further been weighed down by a crippling cash crisis.

In separate interviews with NewZimbabwe.com weekend, the MDC-T and PDP said no amount of ambush policies by the countrys current rulers can dig the economy out of its deepening abyss.

A shrinking economy has seen government introduce a raft of measures in attempts to draw revenue from a highly informalised economy.

This has been accompanied by measures by the central bank to deal with a recurrent liquidity crisis that has seen business and ordinary citizens now stashing cash in their bedrooms.

Faced with a shrinking economy which has seen only 10 percent of the national purse going towards developmental projects with the rest gobbled up by government wages, the finance ministry recently introduced a wave of taxes on informal businesses such as hair salons and commuter transport.

So scrupulously does the government intend to run the operation that even hair salons will be taxed $10 per chair every month.

The Zanu PF-led administration has also moved to increase fines on vehicular traffic related offences.

Through its tax collector, Zimra, the government also announced plans to start monitoring the activities of high spenders to see if they were honouring their tax obligations.

The central bank, on the other hand has introduced cash withdrawal limits, barred the carrying of amount exceeding US$1,000 out of the country and lately, the imposition of a $20 cap in the cash back facility by retailers and wholesalers.

This, according to PDP finance and economic affairs secretary Vince Musewe, was proof the current administration has reached its wits end and cannot be trusted to still invent any fresh ideas capable of saving the country from its economic hole.

They are in crisis, groping at anything that smells money, Musewe said.

We now have a rent seeking culture because of the decimation of the formal economy. That is typical of an economy that is fast running out of oxygen.

Until we deal with the fundamental structural issues including prudent developmental fiscal policy, nothing will change.

MDC-T spokesperson Obert Gutu said the only solution left for the country to restore its yesteryear economic prosperity was for the entire government to exit from power.

As long at Robert Mugabe and his Zanu PF remain in power, Zimbabweans can simply forget about any socio-economic development and turnaround, Gutu said.

This regime is utterly and completely clueless. Through decades of mismanagement and unprecedented corruption, the Zanu PF regime had trashed and vandalised the Zimbabwean economy and left it as a small, struggling and largely informalised entity.

The regime has introduced ruinous economic policies in the past such as the introduction of bond notes that have virtually led o the collapse of the formal banking sector as people can no longer access their hard-earned money.

The Zanu PF government has often blamed the rot on the effects of western imposed sanctions on President Mugabe, his inner circle and associated firms.

Last year, the government found cover behind a devastating drought period insisting they had no powers to change the weather patterns.

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Cisco Had a Hand in Chinese Oppression, Sect Says – Courthouse News Service

Posted: at 2:58 am

SAN FRANCISCO (CN) An argument before the Ninth Circuit on Tuesday hinged on whether Cisco Systems intentionally assisted the Chinese government in its persecution of practitioners of a religion called Falun Gong.

The appellants claim a federal judges decision in 2014 that a group of Chinese and U.S. citizens could not pursue their claims against Cisco due to jurisdictional issues was incorrect.

Instead, their attorney Paul Hoffman argued Cisco manufactured a surveillance software program with explicit knowledge the Chinese government would use it to identify, arrest and in some cases torture and kill members of a religious sect.

Ciscos attorney Kathleen Sullivan acknowledged the human-rights violations laid out in the complaint were odious, but said Cisco didnt bear any responsibility.

This lawsuit is inappropriate to bring against a company that lawfully exported internet infrastructure to China, Sullivan told the three-judge panel.

To punish U.S. companies for the actions of a foreign government amounts to an end-around of U.S. foreign policy and opens a Pandoras Box, she said.

But Hoffman said the case was akin to others where a company actively participated in a program they knew was being used to violate human rights.

The allegations go far beyond that, Hoffman said.

The Chinese Community Party has attempted to suppress Falun Gong since the 1990s.

The Falun Gong is a religion with both Buddhist and Taoist influences, combining meditation and spiritual exercises with a moral philosophy that emphasizes truthfulness, compassion and tolerance.

After its founding in 1992 by Li Hongzhi, the modern mind-body practice spread quickly throughout China, garnering as many as 70 million followers in 1999.

Around that time, the Chinese Communist Party began to view the religion as a threat, and enacted a crackdown and propaganda effort aimed at snuffing out the burgeoning practice.

This effort reportedly involved forced conversions, labor camps, extrajudicial killings, psychiatric abuse and other abusive forms of brainwashing perpetrated by the Chinese government.

Hoffmans clients, consisting of an assortment of U.S. and Chinese citizens, say they were subjected to the abuses and claim Cisco was at least partially responsible.

In their 2011 lawsuit, the members of Falun Gong say Cisco developed a surveillance software called Golden Shield and then customized it with the specific intent to help the Chinese government identify and track down members despite knowing about the human-rights violations.

They didnt just develop the software, they developed an entire system to designed to collect information and these peoples backgrounds, and that information was used for the advancement of this persecution Hoffman said at the hearing.

The lawsuit was initially dismissed by U.S. District Judge Edward Davila on technical grounds, agreeing with Cisco that the federal courts are not the appropriate venue for the case.

Circuit Judge Marsha Berzon attempted to delve into whether the softwares development in San Jose could trigger jurisdiction. But Sullivan said the religious groups claims about Ciscos actions in the Silicon Valley are vague and unspecific.

At one point, Circuit Judge Stephen Reinhardt asked whether Ciscos actions could be compared to a company that makes the nerve gas Syrian President Bashar Assad used on his own people last month, and whether that constituted aiding and abetting.

Yes, but that is not what happened in this case, Sullivan said, adding none of the Cisco executives named in the lawsuit knew or believed they were aiding and abetting Chinas human-rights violations.

The panel is expected to rule in the coming weeks.

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Were peasant farmers poisoned by the US war on drugs? – Stars and Stripes

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Stars and Stripes
Were peasant farmers poisoned by the US war on drugs?
Stars and Stripes
During a two-week trial in Washington that ended Tuesday, a lawsuit against McLean, Virginia-based DynCorp probed one of the bitter legacies of America's long war against Latin American cartels and its own insatiable drug appetite. The mostly peasant ...

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Watch Rachael Leigh Cook Remake ‘Brain on Drugs’ Ad for 4/20 … – RollingStone.com

Posted: at 2:58 am

Rachael Leigh Cook, who starred in the 1997 version of the "This Is Your Brain on Drugs" PSA, appears in a new video for 4/20 that spoofs the ad's frying pan and egg motif to highlight the devastating effects of the war on drugs, especially on minority communities.

In her original spot, Cook used a frying pan to bash an egg and destroy a kitchen to show what happens to a person's brain and life if they use heroin. The new clip from Green Point Creative opens with Cook holding a white egg and explaining that it represents one of the millions of Americans who uses drugs but never gets arrested. She then picks up a brown egg and says, "This American is several times more likely to be charged with a drug crime."

Cook goes on to narrate an animated sequence in which the brown egg is arrested and filtered through the criminal justice system, only to be continually whacked by a skillet on the outside. The narrative touches on the way felony drug convictions often hinder peoples' job prospects and preclude them from receiving financial aid to return to school.

"The war on drugs is ruining peoples' lives," Cook says, holding up a pan smeared with yolk. "It fuels mass incarceration, it targets people of color in greater numbers than their white counter parts. It cripples communities, it costs billions, and it doesn't work. Any questions?"

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Watch Rachael Leigh Cook Remake 'Brain on Drugs' Ad for 4/20 ... - RollingStone.com

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Happy 4/20! California Is Working To Protect Its Pot Smokers From Trump’s War On Drugs – Mother Jones

Posted: at 2:58 am

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There's a cloud hanging over today's 4/20 celebrationsand it's not just the happy kind.

Tokers are keeping a close eye on Washington for signals that the Trump administration will moveto crack down on states that allow recreational pot smoking. As Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in November, "Good people don't smoke marijuana."

But rather than waiting for the Justice Department to move first, this week the California Assembly's Public Safety Committee approved a bill that would prohibit state and local police from helping federal agents crack down on marijuana activity that the state has deemed legal. Drawing a page from immigration activists, supporters are promoting the bill as an effort to makeCalifornia a so-called sanctuary state for pot smokers and entrepreneurs.

"It is very difficult for the feds to do this without the help of local law enforcement," says Lynne Lyman, the California State Director of the Drug Policy Alliance, which crafted the bill. "So this will at least hamper their ability to interfere."

In 1996, California became the first state to legalize medical cannabis and in November joined seven others that have legalized the herb for recreational use. Yet despite the Golden State's permissive approach, state authorities have often cooperated with federal agents in carrying out raids on cannabis dispensarieseven when they comply with state laws, Lyman says. AB 1578 would prohibit such cooperation except in cases in which cannabis users, growers, or distributors violate state laws.

The law faces stiff opposition from the California Police Chiefs Association, which also opposed legalizing pot in the state, and from the League of California Cities, which worries that it "will serve to provoke federal enforcement action rather than offer meaningful protection." Passing the bill "will be a tough fight," Lyman concedes, but she sees a chance to use the 4/20 holiday to expand the bill's political coalition. She is traveling up and down the state today pitching it to city lawmakers.

The bill, AB 1578, is intended to compliment SB 54, a bill that would make California a sanctuary statefor undocumented immigrants.

Pot is closely tiedto many immigrant deportations. Marijuana possession is the fourth most common offense among immigrants removed from the country for criminal convictions, and Homeland Security Chief John Kelly on Tuesdayreaffirmedthat Immigration and Customs Enforcement will continue to use marijuana possession and distribution convictions as a basis for "targeted operations against illegal aliens living in the United States."

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The War on Drugs Is Racist, and Donald Trump Is Embracing It With Open Arms – AlterNet

Posted: at 2:58 am


AlterNet
The War on Drugs Is Racist, and Donald Trump Is Embracing It With Open Arms
AlterNet
But the framing of an impetus to bring back the drug war is the same as Donald Trump's fantasy of making America great again and must be understood for exactly what it is: a white power grab to control black and brown people couched in the ...
The war on drugs is racist. Donald Trump is embracing it with open armsThe Guardian
Donald Trump and Jeff Sessions all for a racist war on drugsBlasting News
Law Enforcement Suspects Return Of Drug WarAmerica Now
Washington Post -USA TODAY
all 191 news articles »

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Gambling amendment gets court approval as legislators cancel conference – Sun Sentinel (blog)

Posted: at 2:58 am

Following a Florida Supreme Court decision Thursday morning that gave the green light to a proposed constitutional amendment on gambling, negotiations between the Florida House and Senate over gambling legislation were called off.

The court ruled 4-2 that the amendments wording was not misleading and sticks to one subject. The amendment gives Florida voters the exclusive right to decide whether to authorize casino gambling.

Backers of the amendment will still need to gather more than 700,000 signatures to make the 2018 ballot. They had submitted 74,626 signatures as of Thursday, according to the state Division of Elections.

Two Supreme Court justices argued that the amendment was misleading because it is unclear how it would affect counties, including Miami-Dade and Broward, where voters have approved slot machines at dog and horse tracks.

Both the House and Senate have passed gambling bills this session, which ends May 5. The two bills are vastly different, forcing the two chambers to go into a conference to iron out the details.

That conference had been tentatively set for 4 p.m. Thursday, but the courts decision to allow the constitutional amendment to go forward indefinitely postponed it, according to sources familiar with the negotiations.

"The Supreme Court ruled today on voter control of gaming. I want to digest the decision before moving forward," said conference chairman Sen. Bill Galvano, R-Bradenton.

At stake are elements in the Senate version of the bill that would give craps and roulette to the Seminole Tribe, blackjack to pari-mutuels in Broward and Miami-Dade counties and slot machines to counties in which voters have approved them. None of those changes are included in the House gambling bill.

Eight counties other than Broward and Miami-Dade, where they are already legal, have approved slot machines. Palm Beach County voters approved allowing slot machines at the Palm Beach Kennel Club, but the state constitution specifically mentions only Broward and Miami-Dade counties as being able to have slots.

The constitution doesnt say whether other counties can, and whether the Broward and Miami-Dade language means that only those counties can have slot machines is the subject of another state Supreme Court case, a decision in which could come at any time.

The Seminole Tribe would have to sign off on a final gambling bill, but theyve come out against both the House and Senate versions.

Its unclear whether a law passed by the Legislature before the November election would remain in place. That ambiguity over whether the amendment could be applied retroactively was the chief issue cited by the two justices who dissented from the state Supreme Court decision.

State Rep. Joe Geller, D-Aventura, said he and other gambling conference members need time to read the Supreme Court decision for themselves.

A gambling conference likely will be held Monday or Tuesday, Geller said.

Galvano had initially hoped to wrap up gambling negotiations ahead of House and Senate wrangling over the budget, so that the money the state would generate from revenue-sharing agreements with the Seminole Tribe could be added into the budget. According to Geller, the postponing might not affect that outcome.

My understanding is theyre not beginning the budget conference until Wednesday, he said, so it depends how quickly we move.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

dsweeney@SunSentinel.com, 954-356-4605 or Twitter @Daniel_Sweeney

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Gambling amendment gets court approval as legislators cancel conference - Sun Sentinel (blog)

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As it embraces Las Vegas, NFL is awash in gambling contradictions – MyAJC

Posted: at 2:58 am

When NFL owners voted overwhelmingly last month to move the Raiders to Las Vegas, some of them went out of their way to say the city was no longer the corrupting influence they believed it once was and now very capable of supporting a franchise.

The Dallas Cowboys owner, Jerry Jones, a prime backer of the move, said the city most closely associated with gambling is not your fathers Las Vegas. Even the NFLs commissioner, Roger Goodell, who continues to oppose legalized sports gambling, admitted that Las Vegas was not the same city it was 10 or 20 years ago.

Las Vegas has evolved enough for us to bless it with our presence, the league seemed to be saying.

But the decision to leave Oakland and embrace Las Vegas presents conflicts for a league that has long stood vehemently against gambling. A franchise will live in Sin City a notion considered a nonstarter just five years ago as a neighbor of the casinos and sports books that for so long were the enemy.

Goodell has said that the leagues policies are all about protecting the integrity of the game, but they amount to a hodgepodge of contradictions.

The league continues to fight legal efforts that would effectively let states other than Nevada and Delaware introduce sports gambling even as leagues like the NBA and the NHL, which have stood with the NFL in court, have softened their stance on the issue. The NFL also continues to penalize players and other league personnel who are paid to appear at casinos even as team owners collect millions of dollars from sponsorships with casinos, state lotteries and fantasy football providers, and play games in England, where sports betting is legal.

Just this month, for example, several players participated in an arm wrestling event at the MGM Hotel and Casino on the Vegas Strip, and the league is considering whether to fine them for those appearances.

How can you have a franchise there and not allow players to participate in arm wrestling contests? said Scott Rosner, who teaches sports law and business at the University of Pennsylvania. When you get into the weeds, the policies may not be as inconsistent as they seem, but the optics are that the league is very inconsistent on this.

The NFL, though, will remedy these contradictions, Rosner said. The Raiders will play in Oakland for at least two more seasons, giving the owners time to revisit their rules and bring them more in line with the reality that gambling has become far more ubiquitous than the days when gamblers had to place bets through a bookie or at a racetrack.

The NFL is often criticized for having a double standard on gambling, in part because the public seems to be more accepting of betting on games. A recent poll by researchers at Seton Hall University found that just 21 percent of respondents thought the NFL was tarnishing its reputation by putting a team in Las Vegas. While it is hard to imagine another American city prompting such a negative reaction, it is also a far smaller percentage than might have been the case even a decade ago.

In the immediate future, the league will tread more slowly because a lawsuit brought by Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey to allow casinos in his and other states to open sports books is still pending. The NFL and other leagues have argued for years that permitting sports gambling beyond Nevada and Delaware would harm them. When that case concludes, the NFL will be able to revisit its stance on gambling, said Daniel Wallach, a sports gambling lawyer at Becker & Poliakoff in Florida.

The league is not averse to sports gambling and recognizes that there is a lot of money to be made, he added. The key, he said, is for the league to manage the process by, for instance, lobbying Congress to introduce a national policy on sports wagering instead of facing variations in each state.

Theyre not fighting to stop sports betting, theyre fighting allowing states to come up with their own apparatus in their own ways, Wallach said.

If anything, this is good business, and if there is anything the NFL has shown, it is good at making money. The league certainly recognizes that the growth of DirecTVs NFL Sunday Ticket, which lets fans watch every game, and Verizons NFL RedZone, which shows every scoring play, has been driven by people who gamble on football. Fans who bet on NFL games watched more than twice as many games as nonbetting ones during the 2015 regular season, according to a study by Nielsen Sports financed by the American Gaming Association.

The question, then, is how the league continues to prevent the perception, real or otherwise, that games might be influenced by gamblers, while also adapting to a changing world in which casinos and gambling in general are becoming more pervasive.

We have to make sure that we continue to stay focused on making sure that everyone has full confidence that what you see on the field is not influenced by any outside factors, Goodell said last month. We will not relent on that.

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As it embraces Las Vegas, NFL is awash in gambling contradictions - MyAJC

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