Daily Archives: May 14, 2017

EYBL: 2018 Seattle center Nic Lynch showing progress, adding offers – Scout

Posted: May 14, 2017 at 5:40 pm

EMERSON, Ga. - Nic Lynch has shown off his improved game at the Nike EYBL this weekend. He has a couple Pac-12 schools vying for his commitment.

One of the more improved centers on the west in 2018 has been Seattle Preps Nic Lynch.

The 6-foot-10, 255-pound center made the move to Seattle Rotary this spring and has shown progress with his skill set and mobility. Hes getting up and down the court better, rebounding his area and scoring inside with his size and hook shot.

I feel like my game is coming along really well, Lynch said. I just switched to the EYBL this year, which has helped me a lot.

Im shooting the ball well from 15 to 17 feet. Im rebounding well against more athletic guys. I want to keep expanding my range, footwork and athleticism.

Lynch holds offers from Washington, Washington State, Columbia and Toledo, with the Huskies offer recently being reaffirmed by the new staff.

http://www.scout.com/player/201829-nic-lynch

I had one from (Lorenzo) Romar but I hadnt heard from the new staff yet, Lynch said. It felt good. They wanted coach (Mike) Hopkins to see me play first.

Its my hometown school, I watch them a lot and go to almost every game; I have season tickets. I live five minutes away from the arena and know almost everything about them.

The rising senior also knows a lot about his other local Pac-12 offer in Washington State.

Theyre in-state, Pac-12, I see them a lot on TV and theyre getting better, said Lynch.

Lynch has no favorites at this point but has an idea of when he wants to make a decision.

My options are still pretty open so well see what happens, he said. Im going to let AAU play out and then Ill take visits late August, early September at the start of the school year. Ill make a decision around that time.

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Dansby Swanson making slow but steady progress lately – Atlanta Journal Constitution

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MIAMI He still has a good ways to go just to raise his average to the Mendoza Line (.200), but Dansby Swanson has shown some encouraging signs recently since the Braves high-profile rookie adjusted his batting stance and worked on a more consistent approach.

Swanson had a two-out, two-strike RBI single Saturday that drove in the Braves second run in a 3-1 win against the Marlins, after collecting a single and walk in each of the previous three games.

It was a big two-strike at-bat for an RBI, a tough pitch on a hit-and-run, Braves manager Brian Snitker said. It was a great at-bat by him. Hes getting there. I mean, hes doing some things and hes fine.

Swanson entered Sundays series finale with a .169 average that still was the seventh-lowest among major league qualifiers and a .479 OPS that was the fifth-lowest. But he had raised both numbers significantly in the past few weeks, since his numbers cratered to a season-low .125 average and .341 OPS on April 21.

He reached base in 15 of 16 games since then before Sunday, totaling 12 hits and 11 walks for a .348 on-base percentage in that span.

I think the biggest thing is just consistently good at-bats now, Swanson said. I feel real clear on what Im trying to do at the plate and trying to execute as best as I can. You cant control it after you hit it. You hit it and you cant control what happens after that.

In the first weeks of the season he had one of the highest line-drive rates on the team and a paltry batting average on balls in play two signs of a player not getting many breaks to go his way.

Definitely nice to see Dansby do that, Braves catcher Tyler Flowers said of the rookie shortstops two-out RBI single Saturday. Hes done an amazing job just with his confidence throughout this season (thats been) full of remarkable bad luck. Its impressive, just the professionalism and the maturity hes shown throughout this season. So its nice to see him rewarded with something in the big situation.

Swanson had another tough-luck at-bat in his first time up Sunday a line-drive to left field in the second inning that Marlins outfielder Marcell Ozuna robbed of a hit with a running, shoe-string catch.

In his past eight games before Sunday, Swanson was 6-for-25 (.240) with four RBIs, seven walks and a .394 OBP. Not scintillating, but certainly a lot better than the first 15 games of the season.

Hes going to hang in there and keep grinding and keep playing, Snitker said. Hes going to get better for everything hes been going through its going to do nothing but make him better.

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Nutritionist Worries New Flexible School Lunch Standards Would Roll Back Progress – Wisconsin Public Radio News

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Wisconsin Public Radio News
Nutritionist Worries New Flexible School Lunch Standards Would Roll Back Progress
Wisconsin Public Radio News
Former First Lady Michelle Obama's 2010 school lunch reforms required that kind of change with sweeping new standards. Schools were required to serve more fruits and vegetables, whole grains instead of refined grains, and cut back on sodium content.

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Alonso & McLaren’s troubled F1 car finally shows progress – FOXSports.com

Posted: at 5:40 pm

MONTMELO, Spain (AP) Its only seventh place in qualifying, and Fernando Alonso will take it.

Take it, and cling to it, in hope that his season has hit bottom and is looking up.

Alonso had his best day behind the wheel of his trouble-prone McLaren on Saturday in qualifying for the Spanish Grand Prix, finally giving his Formula One team some relief and his home Spanish fans a reason to cheer.

Alonso finished 1.9 seconds slower than pole winner Lewis Hamilton, but he defied expectations by beating out all the other teams that cant compete with Hamiltons Mercedes and challengers Ferrari and Red Bull.

Alonso called seventh place a gift, considering his previous best qualification was 12th place in Australia.

We knew we needed to put the perfect lap together, he said. Today was the one of those days when everything went well.

The two-time world champion is having the most frustrating season of his long career. Problems with the McLarens Honda engine kept him from finishing the first three races, and that only got more embarrassing when his car broke down in the formation lap of the last grand prix in Russia.

Things didnt appear close to improving back home.

Despite McLaren and Honda having two weeks to find some desperately needed fixes, Alonsos car spouted smoke and gushed fluid in a breakdown on the very first lap of practice on Friday.

That debacle came a day after Alonso gave McLaren an ultimatum of six months to give him a car with a chance of winning a championship.

So forecasts were high that the Spaniard would endure more torment come qualifying.

Instead, Alonso went from surprise to surprise, making the cut from the first session that eliminated the slowest five drivers, then surviving the second cut to reach the remaining 10 drivers for the first time this season. He topped it off by clocking a better lap than Force India pair Sergio Perez and Esteban Icon and Williams Felipe Massa.

Hamilton took note of Alonsos improvement, saying Its fantastic for McLaren and Honda to get into the top 10. It shows progress.

Alonso marked a cautiously optimistic tone about the race on Sunday, when his car will have a much tougher test of its more than questionable reliability.

Obviously, I dont have 100 percent confidence. But I am pretty sure we keep learning from the things that are happening to the car, Alonso said. I have a good feeling for tomorrow.

He spoke alongside team director Eric Boullier and Honda F1 boss Yusuke Hasegawa, both looking relieved to not have to again explain why their cars have taken a step back. The seasons start is in risk of damaging the reputation of the once proud McLaren, which has 12 driver titles and eight constructor titles to its name.

Alonsos last race win, his 32nd, came here at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya in 2013 while driving for Ferrari. With its rougher surface and tricky curves, the track gives slower cars like his McLaren a fighting chance.

If his car holds up, Alonso said he will need to use every bit of his veteran wiles to keep McLaren in the points. He marked the importance of a good start in order to protect his position.

The points is the main target, he said. Seventh place maybe seems too good.

Regardless of the outcome on Sunday, Alonso will then take a break from F1 to try his luck at the Indianapolis 500.

The decision to switch competitions will mean he misses F1s Monaco GP this month, but Alonso said he had zero regrets since Mercedes, Ferrari, and Red Bull are still out of reach.

I will race the Indy 500, one of the biggest races in the world, Alonso said. There will be six cars (in F1) that will be unbeatable for the next few races. To fight for seventh place in Monaco? No thanks.

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BYU MOA displays ‘Work in Progress,’ helmed by ‘Sgt. Pepper’s’ artist – Daily Herald

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Jann Haworth first expected Work in Progress, a traveling exhibit currently at Brigham Young Universitys Museum of Art, to be a celebration of a woman in the White House and in turn, a changed paradigm for many women in the workplace.

The exhibit, a stencil collage of influential women throughout history, grows with each place it visits. Haworth and her daughter, fellow artist Liberty Blake, host stencil workshops at each location, where participants stencil their female heroes. Those stencils are added to successive panels, and the collage grows, theoretically in perpetuity.

Yes, the exhibit is still a celebration. But the presidential election didnt quite go as Haworth planned.

And it suddenly became a kind of, I dont know, a barricade, Haworth said of the growing collage.

Haworth, who splits her time between Sundance and Salt Lake City, is most known for the iconic cover art of The Beatles Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band, on which she was a principal collaborator. She also helmed the SLC Pepper mural in Salt Lake City. The Work in Progress mural was first shown in Salt Lake City, and its had quite the life so far. Smaller copies are currently displayed in Vienna and Paris. Its been to Washington, D.C. twice once for the Womens March, another for a recent congressional commission about a possible womens history museum at the Smithsonian. Its also been to the TEDWomen 2016 conference in San Francisco, and will possibly be heading to London this summer.

Im completely shocked, Haworth said. Its been so active so quickly.

...

Blake, who specializes in collage work and arranges most of the submitted stencils, said its been hard to keep up with the pieces unexpected success. Between balancing her full-time job at Salt Lake Citys Leonardo Museum, her own personal art, her motherhood and her hobbies and the increasing attention the Work in Progress exhibit requires Blake said she cant really revel in its increasing notoriety.

What sustains her interest, she said, are the accompanying workshops. Participants come to the workshops with varying levels of expertise. Some consider themselves artists, others are noticeably uncomfortable with that label. Excusing a few ground rules, participants are free to stencil whichever notable woman they want to honor. Blake and Haworth find workable high-resolution images to stencil, and the groups get to work under their direction.

The ones that I am amazed by, and just awed by, are usually ones that are done by people who would not consider themselves artists, Blake said.

Her absolute favorite stencil was contributed by such a woman. Blake speaks in almost reverent tones when discussing it. She could hardly believe someone so untrained could have made something so striking.

And I dont know whether she realizes how amazing it is, either, Blake said. Was she really impressed and pleased, or did she think, Oh, thats doesnt look as realistic as I would have liked it to?

These workshops also create some social and artistic phenomena. Haworth mentioned the TEDWomen conference in particular.

And these crazy TED women, everything turned out red. I mean, they did all these stencils of wild colors, Haworth recalled. And its totally a different mood, that panel, than the first seven. So its really quite interesting how people watch what other people do and modify it, change it, build on it. And a group working on something together, its like a sewing circle they transfer information visually, not verbally, and they also build on what theyve seen before. So as it proceeded, people got more and more sophisticated, the way they cut the stencil, even though their skillset was no different than the people that had gone before.

...

Janalee Emmer, head of education at BYUs Museum of Art, helped coordinate the exhibits visit to BYU.

Im really fascinated to see the life that it continues to have after its here, as more venues make more panels, Emmer said. I mean, it really is such a dynamic idea. And I think the contagion for working on it is just kind of infectious. You kind of become an artist for a moment, and also a spokesperson for this woman that youre cutting out.

So, what is the exhibits future? According to Haworth, Work in Progress is only limited by its possible funding.

We dont see an end point, really, because its called Work in Progress deliberately, she said.

If the exhibit continues growing, Haworth said the panels could become a vast cyclorama. She envisions the panels becoming walls in the cyclorama, with layers of different-sized circles, and hallways displaying different womens films/animations/paintings/etc.

If Work in Progress ever reaches that pinnacle, it would probably be outside of Utah. Haworth said shed like to the piece stay in Utah, even though the exhibits initial criteria/rules embargoed portrayals of Utah women.

And the generalized womens story is very different from the Utah womens story, Haworth explained, adding that shed love for future murals to be state-specific. And wouldnt it be wonderful to have this kind of oracle in every state? I mean, I cant imagine itll happen. But I didnt think the mural would happen either.

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These Minnesota doomsday preppers are ready for disaster to strike … – Grand Forks Herald

Posted: at 5:38 pm

There'll be a shower with an on-demand water heater, a microwave oven, stove, composting toilet, satellite dish and power provided by solar panels. It's being built on a trailer, so it can be towed anywhere.

Korbel's self-sufficient micro-cottage isn't being built out of a Thoreau-esque desire to simplify, simplify, or to achieve a chic Dwell magazine minimalist aesthetic.

He's building it for the end of the world.

When all hell breaks loose war, natural disaster, a breakdown in civil society Korbel will hitch his house on wheels to a 1972 Ford F100 pickup. (That's before the advent of computerized car systems, which Korbel says will be fried by the electromagnetic pulse created by a nuclear blast.)

He'll haul the structure and his family to a patch of land he has north of Hinckley, Minn., stopping to get supplies he's cached along the way in PVC tubes buried underground. He's prepared, he believes, to ride out anything that man or nature might throw at him.

Korbel, 53, is a prepper, of course, that breed of person who stockpiles food, toilet paper and ammunition to last not days, but months just in case.

Preppers see themselves as prudent, sensible ants in a world of feckless grasshoppers, even while they recognize that others consider them paranoid conspiracy theorists and doomsday prophets.

"My wife gave me the nickname Mad Max," Korbel said. "My brother, he thinks it's nuts. He's lazy. I already know he's going to be knocking on my door."

Predictions that the end is near are as old as Noah. More modern manifestations have included people who felt the need to build home fallout shelters during the Cold War and pessimists who feared the worst from a Y2K collapse. Events such as 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina have continued to fuel fears.

The latest bad news: This year, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists decided to reset its famous Doomsday Clock _ "a universally recognized indicator of the world's vulnerability to catastrophe " from three minutes to only 2 minutes before midnight.

The scientific worrywarts cited tensions between the U.S. and Russia, North Korean nuclear tests, climate change, a rise in "strident nationalism" and "intemperate statements" from President Donald Trump and even "lethal autonomous weapons systems" yeah, killer robots among the looming existential threats to humanity.

According to the Bulletin scientists, in the 70-year history of the Doomsday Clock, the last time things have been this bad for the planet was 1953, just after the U.S. and the Soviet Union developed the first hydrogen bombs. At that time, the scientists deemed we were only two minutes to apocalypse.

Selling peace of mind

No wonder Costco is selling $3,399.99 packages of freeze-dried and dehydrated emergency foods that promise 31,500 total servings, enough to feed four people for a year, with a shelf life of up to 25 years. The food shipment arrives on a pallet that is "black-wrapped for security and privacy."

Or you could buy end-of-the-world supplies from a specialty retailer such as Safecastle.com.

Safecastle was started by Prior Lake resident Vic Rantala after 9/11 because he saw a niche for an online source of affordable, quality, long-term stored food.

The company has since branched out to sell surveillance robots, radiation detectors, folding "bug-out" bicycles intended for paratroopers and a 35-piece pet survival kit designed for a "CATastrophe."

"We sell stuff nobody else sells," Rantala said.

You can even buy an underground fallout shelter that costs more than $100,000.

"We early on developed a relationship with a steel plate shelter builder in Louisiana," Rantala said. "Our builder has done seven-figure bunkers for people."

He said his best-seller is something homier: canned, cooked bacon with a shelf life of more than 10 years.

Rantala, 59, said his background has included service in the Army, intelligence work for the government and communications and consulting for corporations. But selling prepping gear has become "kind of like a life's mission."

The shelters he's sold have saved lives in tornadoes, he said. Some of the food he's sold to preppers ended up being eaten when the disaster turned out to be a job loss.

"We sell peace of mind to people," Rantala said.

Even though he sold the company a couple of years ago, he continues to work for it. He said sales are close to $50 million a year.

He estimates that as many as "10 percent of the population are into prepping these days," although he admits figures can be fuzzy because preppers are notoriously secretive about their preparations.

"Sometimes you don't even tell your family members," he said. "It can be a little bit of an obsession, I have to admit."

Nuts or narrative

"It's good to have something stored away," said Peter Behrens, a psychologist who recently retired as a professor at Penn State University in Lehigh Valley, Pa. "Some 72 hours' worth of food is great."

But he said prepping can turn into a "non-substance pathology," similar to hoarding and excessive gambling, when taken to the extreme.

"A lot of people get into this as a pastime," he said. But he said, "It's a slippery slope to becoming irrational and aggressive."

Behrens said prepping is cause for concern if a person starts hoarding firearms and ammunition and if more than 10 percent of a person's income is devoted to prepping. And he warns that prepping can be similar to being in a cult if a person gives up long-standing relationships with friends and family members to associate only with other preppers.

"This is a situation that revolves around anxiety," he said. "It doesn't match with rational behavior."

But Richard G. Mitchell, who studied survivalists as a sociology professor at Oregon State University, said preppers are people who may just want to resist a humdrum life of comfort and consumption. They want to create a personal narrative of themselves as the rugged individual who's going to survive disaster.

"They want a place where they feel meaningful," he said. "Survivalism is a storytelling process. There's a certain satisfaction to that."

He added, "These are people who are hobbyists. They're amused by the process. They're entertained by it. They're proud of it. They're nuts in the sense that they've not accepted the status quo."

Knowing hell survive

Korbel has stored enough beans, lentils, rice, pasta and soup to feed his wife and their two sons still living at home for a year and a half. He's prepared to grow his own vegetables, mill his own grain and vacuum-seal the foods he's preserving.

"These are good for 50 years," Korbel said, showing off the homemade pemmican balls he's made of beef, peanut butter and nuts.

He stores a couple hundred gallons of water and enough gasoline to fill his truck tank three times. He's got gas masks that he bought at Fleet Farm, and suits to protect against a chemical attack that he bought online. There are weather radios, two-way radios and first aid kits on every level of his house. The upper floor has escape ladders.

He lives about 4 miles from the center of Minneapolis, a little too close in case a nuclear bomb goes off in the city center. Ten miles would be better, he said. But his wife is happy living in Columbia Heights, and the mortgage is almost paid off.

"Yeah, there'd be severe burns, structures coming down. But still survivable," he said.

Among the things that worry him are tornadoes, civil unrest, racial tensions, terrorists, conflict with Russia, a government that "goes rogue."

"I wouldn't consider myself a conspiracy theorist. But I do think about it a lot," he said. "If a comet lands on me, I'm not going to worry about it.

"My worst fear would be a financial breakdown" and a collapse of the monetary system, he said. "You've got people bartering in gold, silver, jewels." Or ammunition.

Korbel has set aside some of that as well, along with handguns, rifles and shotguns.

"I also have compound bows. My boys, they've trained in compound bows. My wife is trained in that," he said.

"You need to defend your property and yourself," he said. But he said, "I'm not prepping for a war. I'm not trying to hide anything. I'm not trying to overthrow the government. I don't want to get shot. I don't want to shoot anyone."

Korbel is a Metro Transit driver and an Army veteran who used to work as a carpenter, a contractor and a semitrailer truck driver. He's been married 25 years, and his wife is a nurse.

"He likes to be our protector," Betsy Korbel said. "There's a lot worse things to be doing."

Korbel said he's been a prepper about 12 years. Last year, he estimates, he spent about $7,000 on the activity.

"When I turn 80, I might turn around and look at this stuff and I might say, 'OK, maybe I bought too much,'" he said.

But he said he pays for prepping with side income he gets from recycling metals from old laptops and wires and driving for a food delivery service.

"I love it," Korbel said of his preoccupation with preparing. "It's something I enjoy."

"I know I'm going to be able to survive," he said.

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When food was used as a weapon of social revolution – The Hindu

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When food was used as a weapon of social revolution
The Hindu
A painting exhibition and release of books on rationalism will be the highlights of the day. Free thinkers C. Ravichandran and C. Viswanathan will present papers on May 28. Muktha Dabholkar, daughter of slain rationalist Narendra Dabholkar, will ...

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Free Speech Is Not, Repeat Not a Hate Crime – Newsweek

Posted: at 5:34 pm

This article first appeared on the Verdict site.

In 1963, George Wallace was elected governor of Alabama on a segregationist platform.

At his gubernatorial inaugural address, he famously said that he supported segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.

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He went on to serve two non-consecutive terms (1963-1967, 1983-1987) and two consecutive terms (1971-79). In all, he was governor a little over 16 years in total, becoming the third longest serving governor in post-Constitutional U.S. history.

In 1963, the Harvard-Radcliffe Democratic Club invited Wallace to speak at the University. Harvard students then as now rejected George Wallaces views, but allowed him to speakno protests, no threats of violence.

Some people argued that he should not be invited, while others said, in the words of one member of the Harvard-Radcliffe Democratic Club, We should have a chance to see for ourselves the dancing bear. Those who did not want to attend the speech did not do so, but they did not block the entrance of those who wanted to see for themselves.

Wallace spoke in Memorial Hall, the very building that Harvard, nearly a century earlier, had dedicated to honor its alums who fought and died for the Union during the Civil War. On October 6, 1870, at the laying of the cornerstone, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. composed a hymn for the occasion, which concluded with:

Emblem and legend may fade from the portal,

Keystone may crumble and portal may fall;

They were the builders whose work is immortal,

Crowned with the dome that is over us all.

Memorial Hall was one of the largest halls at Harvard at the time and the place was packed with studentshundreds and hundreds of students. Wallace took questions from the audience. He called on a black student, who spoke in a crisp British accent.

What country are you from, asked Wallace.

Ethiopia, the student said.

Why, you people have slavery there, he claimed.

The student, I recall, shot back, Slavery is punishable by death in Ethiopia, and the audience cheered.

The event ended and we all went home. No one claimed that the Wallaces speech was a microaggression. No one asserted that inviting Wallace created a hostile educational environment, nor that the university was not a safe place. We were all exposed to a different viewpoint, and no one listening risked the fear that they would be so enthralled as to become racists. Later in life, Wallace said he recanted his racist views and asked black Americans to forgive him.

An American Nazi party member salutes during a rally at Valley Forge National Park September 25, 2004 in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. Ronald Rotunda writes that the American Nazis had the right to march in Skokie, Illinois, for the same reason that Martin Luther King Jr. had the right to march in Selma, Alabama. William Thomas Cain/Getty

In 1977, members of the American Nazi Party, dressed in military garb and wearing swastikas, wanted to march in Skokie, Illinois. The Nazis did not pick that city by accident. It was home to a large number of survivors of the Nazi death camps, and four out of every seven residents were Jewish. Nonetheless, the federal courts invalidated laws that prevented the Nazis march in the case ofCollin & National Socialist Party v. Smith.

The Skokie ordinance prohibiting dissemination of materials that would promote hatred toward persons on basis of their heritage was unconstitutional. Similarly, the ordinance prohibiting members of a political party from assembling while wearing military-style uniforms was unconstitutional.

Finally, an ordinance requiring those seeking to parade or assemble in the village to obtain liability insurance of at least $300,000 and property damage insurance of at least $50,000 could not constitutionally be applied to prohibit the proposed demonstration.

The Nazis had the right to march in Skokie for the same reason that Martin Luther King Jr. had the right to march in Selma, Alabama. The Nazis marched without incident.

That is not the world we live in today. Now, college students often claim that the slogan Make America Great Again is a microaggression and that it is the job of universities to protect them from that attack.

North Carolina State University is one of many universities that advises faculty to avoid expressions such as America is the land of opportunity because that is yet another microaggression. It becomes harder to attack students for silliness when the grownups, the college administration, support their eccentricities by policing everyday language.

The aggression and bullying behavior of those who oppose microaggressions goes behind the ivy halls of higher education. Portland, Oregon, for the last decade has hosted an annual Rose Festival and 82nd Avenue of the Roses Parade and Carnival. It bills the parade as a family-friendly parade meant to attract crowds to its diverse neighborhood. Apparently, it should not be too diverse.

This year, the city cancelled the parade because the parades 67th spot would be occupied by the Multnomah County Republican Party. Yes, the Republican Party! That outraged two self-described anti-fascist groups who threatened physical violence.

One anonymous email made clear that the threat was not to boycott; it was not to protest peacefully; it was to cause violence. This email recalled fondly the 2016 violent riots that Portland hosted after the November election. The Avenue of Roses cancelled the event, following threats of violence during the Parade by multiple groups planning to disrupt the event.

On April 26, Tucker Carlson on Fox News interviewed Professor Aaron Hanlon of Colby College who said that Ann Coulter, who was asked to speak at UC Berkeley, does not meet the standards for speakers that should be invited to campus.

That argument, however, only says that Professor Hanlon would not invite Coulter. That was not the issue. Legitimate university-recognized student groups at Berkeley did invite Coulter. The issue was whether other students or outsiders should be able to threaten violence to prevent her from speaking to those who wanted to hear her.

Carlson asked the professor if he would support expulsion of those students who violently prevent other students from listening to Ann Coulter. Professor Hanlon claimed he was very speech-permissive, but he refused to answer that simple question.

The American Civil Liberties Union, in contrast, supported the free speech rights of the American Nazi Party back in 1977 and bemoaned Berkeleys cancellation of Ann Coulters speech now. It tweeted, The hecklers veto of Coulters Berkeley speech is a loss for the 1st Amendment. We must protect speech on campus, even when hateful.

Every generation must relearn the lessons of free speech. It is no accident that Eastern European Communists suppressed speech and art as well as politics and religion. And when the people overturned the Communist dictators of Eastern Europe, they regarded freedom of expression as a premier right. The Czech revolution began in the theatres, and that countrys first freely elected president since World War II was a playwright.

Salmon Rushdie told us in his Herbert Read Memorial Lecture, of February 6, 1990, Peoples spiritual needs, more than their material needs, have driven the commissars from power.

Young people today may not know of Salman Rushdie, author of The Satanic Verses. After its 1989 publication, the spiritual head of Iran announced to the world that Mr. Rushdie must die because his book was, in his view, offensive to Muslim beliefs. It was hate speech.

Mr. Rushdie, a British subject, went into hiding, protected by the British government that he often criticized. Iran has never lifted its death sentence on Rushdie. That is how they react to microaggressions.

In this country, there are those who argue that microaggressions should be crimes, like hate crimes. These people often forget that hate crimes are not mere words, but crimes of action (e.g., assault or vandalism) accompanied by words. For example, vandalism of a synagogue with anti-Semitic words is a hate crime. Mouthing an anti-Semitic epithet, while crude, tasteless and offensive, is not a crime if divorced from action.

There are Westerners who defended Irans death fatwah on Rushdie. He had it coming, they said; he knew he was insulting Muslims. Writers like John le Carr wrote in The Guardian, that no one has a God-given right to insult a great religion and be published with impunity. Rushdie recalled

On TV shows, studio audiences were asked for a show of hands on the question of whether I should live or die. [A] point of view grew up [that] held that I knew exactly what I was doing. I must have known what would happen . . .

I find myself wanting to ask questions: when Osip Mandelstam [the Russian poet] wrote his poem against Stalin, did he know what he was doing and so deserve his death? When the students filled Tiananmen Square to ask for freedom, were they not also, and knowingly, asking for the murderous repression that resulted?

Even if I were to concede (and I do not concede it) that what I did in The Satanic Verses was the literary equivalent of flaunting oneself shamelessly before the eyes of aroused men, is that really a justification for being, so to speak, gang-banged? Is any provocation a justification for rape?

Over a quarter of a century after the Salman Rushdie death sentence, he is still in hiding, his Norwegian publisher was shot, his Japanese editor was murdered and his Italian translator stabbed.

Meanwhile, Western European countries are now prosecuting their citizens for insulting Islam.

Ronald D. Rotunda is the Doy & Dee Henley chair and distinguished professor of jurisprudence at Chapman University, the Dale E. Fowler School of Law. He is co-author of the six-volume Treatise on Constitutional Law: Substance and Procedure and Legal Ethics: The Lawyer's Deskbook on Professional Responsibility.

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Free Speech Is Not, Repeat Not a Hate Crime - Newsweek

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A free speech clash on the Common – The Boston Globe – The Boston Globe

Posted: at 5:34 pm

A conservative groups free speech rally on Boston Common Saturday triggered a counter-protest by a progressive anti-fascist group, with hundreds of screaming supporters separated by a line of police officers.

Boston Free Speech supporters promoted the afternoon rally as a gathering where Libertarians, conservatives, traditionalists, classical liberals, or anyone else who supports Trump or just hates leftists are encouraged to attend, according to an online posting.

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Boston Antifa a local chapter of the liberal anti-fascist group launched the counter-protest, calling on supporters to fight hatred in Boston, according to the announcement on Facebook.

Many attendees on the Antifa side, and some on the Boston Free Speech side, hid their faces with scarfs and masks. Both sides cited concern about harassment and doxxing, slang for posting personal information online.

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Some got into heated personal exchanges.

I suggest you get a job and then you move out to whatever country you want, since you dont like it [here] so much, said a man wearing a military uniform to a counter-protester who wore a black scarf over his face.

One person from each side was arrested after they got into a physical altercation, according to Officer Rachel McGuire, a police spokeswoman. They were identified only as a 19-year-old California woman and a 28-year-old New York man.

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A Boston Free Speech protester, who stood quietly with a free speech is how you stay free sign, said he was concerned about a slippery slope of opposing political views being labeled as hate speech.

Its a new definition of free speech where if you dont agree with that opinion, you start labeling it as hate speech, said the 29-year-old man, who would identify himself only as Mike of Boston. Thats not real free speech.

Morgan Coe, 42, of Allston said he does not believe conservative ideology is under attack.

Obviously, they will deny that, said Coe, who attended with friends.

A 50-year-old veteran, who identified himself only by his first name of Paul, commended Boston police for keeping the peace.

There are definitely clowns on both sides, he said.

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A free speech clash on the Common - The Boston Globe - The Boston Globe

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Deputy AG to Regev: Your threatening cultural institutions harms free speech – Jerusalem Post Israel News

Posted: at 5:34 pm


Jerusalem Post Israel News
Deputy AG to Regev: Your threatening cultural institutions harms free speech
Jerusalem Post Israel News
The accumulation of threats by Culture and Sport Minister Miri Regev against cultural institutions that present themes she ideologically opposes harms free speech, Deputy Attorney-General for Legislative Affairs Dena Zilber recently told the minister.

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Deputy AG to Regev: Your threatening cultural institutions harms free speech - Jerusalem Post Israel News

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