Daily Archives: June 11, 2017

Pet euthanasia: Finding peace putting animals down – CBC.ca

Posted: June 11, 2017 at 5:37 pm

As much as their owners would like them to, pets don't live forever at some point, many people are forced tohavea difficult conversation with their veterinarian about euthanasia.

Dr. Ted Morris spoke with Daybreak Alberta this week about when it's time to consider putting your pet down.

Here is an edited version of their conversation.

Q. How often do you see pet owners struggle with this?

A.All the time. It's a really difficult decision for people to make and it's a really personal one.

Some people don't want to watch their pets go downhill at all. They want their memories of their pet to be when they were happy and healthy.

There's the flip side of that, some people won't let go until they know they've exhausted every possible avenue of treatment.

Veterinary students examine a cat at the CUPS pet health clinic. Dr. Ted Morris says quality of life is the most important thing to consider when it may be time to put your pet down. (CBC)

Q. How symbolic is putting a dog down?

A.It's a feeling of giving up. There's so much emotion wrapped up in it.Even with my own dog, I probably waited a week too long before bringing her in.

Q. What are some warning signs to watch for?

A.Look for symptoms like around the clock pain,daily vomiting and diarrhea, loss of appetite not eating for 2 days or more andnot being able to still do things that make them happy.

Q. When do you performeuthanasia with the pet owner present?

A.It's a mix. Many do stay. I would allow for owners to make decisions about the process. Whether it's bringing in a group of friends, lighting candles, saying prayers or playing music.

I'm notorious for turning euthanasias into wakes, if I can. We will do whatever you need.

Q. What do you say to those who refuse the process of euthanasia?

A.Whether a moral or religious issue, the focus then becomes palliative and longevity care. I'd recommend using a lot of painkillers.

If you have the time or dedication to do it, there's absolutely nothing wrong with hospice care.The only thing that's unacceptable is to do nothing.

We owe it to [animals], as compassionate pet owners, to do something to ease their end of life.

Q. When have you declined putting a pet down?

A.First, I'll find out what's going on, and see if there's an issue to be worked on.

The time I really won't do it is if it's for what vets call a "convenience-euthanasia," which is basically someone saying,"I don't want this perfectly healthy animal anymore. There's nothing wrong with them, but I just don't want them."

Euthanasiatakes a bit of an emotional toll.

Q. Does it take a toll on you?

A.It's sad every time. I've known a lot of animalsfor their whole lives.I reserve it for pets who need it.

With files from Daybreak Alberta

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The Panel: Liam Hehir and Tim Batt on euthanasia – Newstalk ZB

Posted: at 5:37 pm

Parliament will debate legalising voluntary euthanasia after Act Party leader David Seymour's private member's bill was drawn from the ballot on Thursday.

The controversial bill represents the best chance for voluntary euthanasia to be legalised in New Zealand, although the issue is deeply polarising. Many MPs, including Prime Minister Bill English, are firmly opposed.

The End of Life Choice Bill would allow mentally competent New Zealand adults who have a terminal illness likely to end their life within six months, or have a grievous and irremediable medical condition, the choice to ask a doctor to help end their life at the time of their choosing.

Columnist fortheManawatu Standardand comedian Tim Batt discuss their views on the billand the timing of the debate.

LISTEN ABOVE: Liam Hehir and Tim Batt speak to Andrew Dickens

READ MORE:David Seymour's euthanasia bill drawn from ballot

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Accused hacker will remain in custody after appeal of bail decision … – CP24 Toronto’s Breaking News

Posted: at 5:37 pm

Paola Loriggio, The Canadian Press Published Friday, June 9, 2017 1:57PM EDT Last Updated Friday, June 9, 2017 5:15PM EDT

TORONTO -- A Canadian accused in a massive hack of Yahoo emails will have to stay in custody as he prepares to fight extradition to the United States.

Ontario's appeal court has dismissed Karim Baratov's effort to fight a judge's decision to deny him bail, saying that while the judge made some mistakes, they were not serious enough to affect the outcome.

"At the end of the day, Mr. Baratov remains a significant flight risk, and is alleged to have committed a serious offence," Justice Bradley Miller said in upholding the judge's ruling.

In a decision released Friday, Miller acknowledged the judge erred in finding that Baratov had breached the secure computers at Yahoo, Google and other companies, when in fact he is accused of "spear-phishing," a type of scam used to dupe users into giving away confidential information.

But Miller rejected the defence's allegations that the judge was wrong to describe Baratov as a highly skilled hacker or to find that the 22-year-old made a substantial income from his alleged activities.

"The fact is, Mr. Baratov gave evidence and was not able to persuade the application judge that he had any sources of legitimate income that could account for him acquiring, by age 22, a house, a string of luxury automobiles, and $31,000 in cash," Miller said.

"What is relevant, for the purposes of the application judge's analysis, is that there is evidence that Mr. Baratov is capable of generating significant earnings, not tied to any geographic location, and that this fuels his flight risk. These findings were open to the application judge on the record before him."

Baratov was arrested in March under the Extradition Act after U.S. authorities indicted him and three others -- two of them allegedly officers of Russia's Federal Security Service -- for computer hacking, economic espionage and other crimes.

The judge who denied Baratov bail in April found the young man was too much of a flight risk to be released under the plan proposed by his legal team.

Ontario Superior Court Justice Alan Whitten also said Baratov's parents -- who offered close to $1 million in cash and assets as collateral -- would not make suitable supervisors because they had not questioned his growing wealth or his business activities while he was living with them.

Whitten further said he believed Baratov would be motivated to flee, given that he could face up to 20 years in prison if convicted in the U.S.

Baratov's lawyers had argued that Whitten made several errors, including amplifying the Hamilton man's alleged connection to the Yahoo hack and the Russian intelligence agent who allegedly hired him.

His legal team said in court that there's no evidence to suggest Baratov was involved in the large-scale breach of Yahoo security systems.

Miller took issue Friday with the defence's position that Baratov is accused of a "comparatively minor and victimless crime."

"Whether the applicant was paid nothing or was paid millions; whether the skill and energy expended were advanced or basic; whether he thought he was dealing with (Russian intelligence agents) or with a high school principal, the alleged conduct remains a destabilizing attack on the integrity of systems that are vital to all of our well-being," he said.

"Even unsuccessful attacks imperil public confidence and require the commitment of substantial resources for defence. The public cost, monetary and psychological, is broad and deep."

Baratov's lawyer,Amedeo DiCarlo, said they will now focus their efforts on challenging the extradition order.

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Rockland’s chief detective retiring after 45 years investigating murders, corruption – The Journal News / Lohud.com

Posted: at 5:37 pm

Rockland County District Attorney Chief of Detectives Peter Modafferi recounts 45-year career as he prepares to retire. John Meore/Lohud

Peter Modafferi, Rockland County District Attorney's Chief of Detectives, recounts his 45-year career. Photographed at the Rockland County District Attorney's Office in New City on Monday, June 5, 2017.(Photo: John Meore/The Journal News)Buy Photo

Murders. Political corruption. Mobsters. Gambling. Police abuse.

Peter Modafferi, who is retiring June 14, helped investigatethose and many other crimes during his 44 years with the Rockland District Attorney's Office30 of those years as chief of detectives. His 45-year career started in June 1972 as an investigator with the Rockland Public Defender's Office.

Modafferi, 67, raised in Rockland County and married for 31 years to retired teacher Mary Beth Modafferi, also has been a major force behind the maturation of law enforcement in Rockland, such as helping create the Rockland Drug Task Force by obtaining a $125,000 grant in 1973 to rent a building and buy four unmarked cars.

His contacts in federal law enforcementprovided Rockland with millions of dollars in modernized surveillance, connections and credibility. He's testified before Congress on law enforcement issues, including surveillance and homeland security issues.

"If you look at Peter Modafferi, you see someone known nationally in law enforcement who's not always recognized as an influential figure in his local community," Rockland District Attorney Thomas Zugibe said. "Here's a guy who's been involved in every majorinvestigation in the county over four decades. The guy's a visionary. He has been well ahead of his time when it comes to law enforcement changes.

"He's had a lot to say on a national level such as the president's drug policy on law enforcement advancements in the 21st century," Zugibe said.

Modaferri's seen Rockland change from thebucolic community of his youth and younger days as an investigator to a more urban suburbia, but insists the county always had its share of violence and drugs. He's seen law enforcement officers grow in numberand become better equipped and trained,spurred by the murder of two Nyack police officers and a Brinks armored car guard on Oct. 20, 1981.

Peter Modafferi, Rockland County District Attorney's Chief of Detectives, recounts his 45-year career. Photographed at the Rockland County District Attorney's Office in New City on Monday, June 5, 2017.(Photo: John Meore/The Journal News)

"It's been a thrill of a lifetime," Modafferi said recently,sitting behind his desk at the DA's Office in New City.His desk is modestly clear of clutter, but police patches,hats andawards are scattered on furniture andwalls.

"It was always what I wanted to do," he said of law enforcement. "It was exciting. Every decade brought something new. "

All cops and prosecutors have horrific memories of violence, as well as dealing with families facing emotional distress, shock and anger.

(Photo: Courtesy of her family )

Two horrific murders of young girls are among the major investigations recalled by Modafferi cases he won't forget:

(Photo: Submitted)

File photo /The Journal News The Clarkstown police Honor Guard presents the colors during the 34th annual Brinks Memorial Service in Nyack on Oct. 20. The Clarkstown police Honor Guard presents the colors during the 34th annual Brinks Memorial Service in Nyack on Oct. 20. The event remembered South Nyack police Sgt. Edward O'Grady and Officer Waverly Brown, and Brinks guard Peter Paige, who were killed in an armored-car robbery in 1981.(Photo: File photo by Peter Carr/The Jou)

Despite Rockland's reputation as a bedroom community, Modaferri said Rockland has long been home to violence, murders, illegal gambling and organized crime figures. He's been involved in establishing units to investigate the mob, gambling, drugs, and political corruption, working closely with the FBI, Drug Enforcement Agency, Department of Homeland Security and the U.S. Attorney's Office.

"Since I started, the population of Rockland County has grown 40 percent," he said of the changing nature of the state's smallest county geographically. Law enforcement has changed with the times, he said.

He recalledthe 1970s and 1980s when Rockland saw 15 to 25 murders annuallymany that went unresolved as "we couldn't prove beyond a reasonable doubt."

Nyack Police Officer Waverly "Chipper" Brown, left, and Sgt. Edward O'Grady were murdered Oct. 20, 1981, at a Nyack roadblock during robbery of a Brinks truck.(Photo: The Journal News/File photo)

"There wasn't DNA back then," Modafferi said. "They did tests on blood to determine the range of possibilities. DNA made it a different world as technology has enhanced law enforcement and investigations today. The technology can help convict or exonerate a suspect."

Organized crime also has a foothold in Rockland. Several major mob figures such as Genovese family captain Daniel Pagano and organized crime-linked gamblers and loan sharks have been arrested and sent to prison over the years. Pagano's father, Joseph Pagano, reputedly ran the region's garbage industry and gambling.

"They are very active in Rockland," Modafferi said, adding recently retired detective William Michella headed investigations into the mob. "I've met them. They are wiseguys. That's what they do for a living. They know we know it. It's a chess game. "

He recalls a lawyer who stole from senior citizens to pay his gambling debts to the mob, saying that alone is proof gambling is not a victimless crime, as many in the public claim.

"Loansharking comes with a price," he said. "It's a vicious cycle."

Aside from helping solve crimes and conducting investigations,Modafferi takes pride that he represented the Rockland District Attorney's Office on national panels and with groups studying crime and modernizing investigative approaches.

He's spent 27 years working with the International Association of Chiefs of Police, chairing its investigative operations committee for years. He's been published in law enforcement magazines and periodicals numerous times. He also chaired the executive advisory board of the National Domestic Communications Assistance Center.

Hetestifiedin 2013 before theHouse Investigations Subcommittee on the use of warrants and probablecause to get personal information on citizens as part of an investigation. He's been quoted on law enforcement issues by newspapers and periodicals nationwide, such as the Washington Post.

His connections with the federal drug councils provided the county Drug Task Force with$2 million worth of surveillance equipment. Rockland got the equipment free and became a test site forfederal drug agencies to determine the effectivenessof the equipment, he said. The Sheriff's Office also got a $400,000 ballistics identification system through his efforts.

"When you get involved in these organizations, the benefits to the county are huge." Modafferi said.

Modafferi's been ahead of the curve on law enforcement needs for decades and his work with the chiefs association has won him respect across the nation, said Col. Steve McCraw of the Texas Department of Public Safety, which includes the Texas Rangers, patrol officers and intelligence-gathering.

"He's clearlyan icon," said McCraw, who met Modafferi decades ago as an FBI agent. "I don't use that word lightly."

McCraw said Modafferi has been a leader on advocating intelligence-based investigations, the use of data, computers, cooperative witnesses, and law enforcement combining resources.

"He hadseen the need for intelligence-gathering before 9-11 and he's seen the impacts of commercial sex trafficking and exploited children," McCraw said, noting the work done by the Rockland District Attorney's Office and other agencies to curb sex trafficking at the recent Super Bowl in New Jersey.

"For some children, theironly chance of being free is an informed patrol officer on human trafficking, and that's something Pete has long advocated," McCraw said.

Modafferi has worked for four district attorneys over his career hired by Robert Meehan and followed by Gribetz, Michael Bongiorno and Zugibe, with whom he has worked since 1981 when Zugibe was an assistant district attorney. Modafferi worked closely with Zugibe's father, the later Dr. Fred Zugibe, a world-renowned forensic pathologist who created the Rockland Medical Examiner's Office.

Retired FBI AgentHilda Kogut also praised Modafferias an advocate forcooperative investigations building bridges to solve crimes.

"Peter is a detailed oriented guy and a really good investigator," she said. "I've always found him to be educated, a real classy guy, very professional and always there to help you."

She said she and the FBI worked with Modafferi and the District Attorney's Office on many cases, including a robbery of a millionaire businessman in Piermont, the murder of a scientist in Pearl River by his wife and her cousin, and the Judaic Studies case, during which millions of dollars in education funds and other social welfare programs were stolen by residents of New Square.

Rockland District Attorney Thomas Zugibe in his New City office April 27, 2017.(Photo: Peter Carr/The Journal News)

Zugibe, who has worked with Modafferi since 1981,described Modafferi's investigative style like Peter Falk's character in "Colombo" intellectual and meticulous.

"He can dig into the most complex cases and come up with a strategy," Zugibe said. "I am talking about white collar cases, not just street crime. Peter has a natural knack. He's going to be missed by my office and the county."

Modafferi graduated from the FBI Academy in June 1983 and always tried to send his office's investigators to the program, where they got training and could make connections that last a lifetime, Kogut said.

"Networking is critical to being a good investigator," Kogut said. "We're a small county. You want people like Pete out there who is a point person to meet the right people so we can get the equipment and financing we really need."

Modafferi said the District Attorney's Office's working relationship with the FBI and U.S. Attorney's Office led to the formation of an anti-corruption task force.He noted that District Attorney's Office detectives provided the FBI with a key undercover operative, Moses Stern of Monsey, whichled to the convictions of officials from Spring Valley and New York City.

He helped spearheadthe office's community prosecution concept and the special victims unit with Lt. Mary Murphy to establish the Spirit of Rockland Special Victims Unit for interviewing and helping sexual abuse survivors on the grounds of Good Samaritan Hospital in Suffern.

His future plans involve working for a national program that delves into human trafficking, a worldwide crime problem.

"Something has to be done about the sexual and laborhuman trafficking of children, women," he said. "Crime doesn't stop. It's just being done differently."

Twitter: @lohudlegal

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Letter: Deregulation is not always best – Aiken Standard

Posted: at 5:36 pm

Once again we have a letter from someone who is convinced that government regulations are what caused the Great Recession.

To make things right we have to give people more freedom in the marketplace. Mr. Stubblefield cites John A. Allisons book as a source for the real truth. Mr. Allison is a member of the Cato Institute a libertarian think tank and a big fan of Ayn Rand.

So, it is no surprise that Mr. Allison would lay the blame for the economic crisis of 2008 and its aftermath on the government.

I, too, have read several books about this economic calamity and all of them have given substantial evidence that the deregulation of the financial sector is the primary cause of that horrific mess. And the basis for the push to deregulate is the world view that is espoused by Mr. Allison, Mr. Stubblefield and far too many others.

The essence of their world view is that people, be they consumers or producers, are protected from bad deals by their own self-interest. So, people should have the freedom to buy what they want and companies should have the freedom to sell what they want.

When the government intrudes into this natural relationship with regulations, it simply mucks things up.

When this world view was applied to the financial sector, industry lobbyists put constant pressure on Congress to allow the financial institutions to modernize. So, the regulations that had protected the financial sector from major catastrophes for 50 years, should be eliminated.

In 1982 the Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act was enacted which allowed banks to offer a wide variety of mortgages, e.g., ones with adjustable rates, interest-only payments or even negative amortization. Also in the 1980s financial institutions developed derivatives. Credit Default Swap derivatives are bets that some company will or will not default on its loan.

In 1994, Congress passed the Secondary Mortgage Market Enhancement Act which allowed investment banks to securitize mortgage loans, i.e., package them into bond like products called MBSs (mortgage backed securities). They then sold them to hedge funds, pension funds, etc.

Finally, in 1999 Congress overturned the Glass-Stegall Act and approved the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which allowed investment banks, commercial banks and insurance companies to combine into a single firm.

Each of these acts enabled more freedom in the market by allowing consumers a wider choice of products and investment banks to create new markets for risk. There was nothing to fear because Alan Greenspan another devoted advocate of Ayn Rand proclaimed that the sophisticated players in these markets could police themselves. Of course we all know they didnt and what dismal consequences followed thereafter.

The folks who adhere to the simplistic world view outlined above never learn from history. They are so devoted to their theory, that no amount of evidence will ever convince them that it is incorrect. Unfortunately, too many of those with the power to steer us on a more correct course are also beguiled by these ideas.

Tom Tillery

Aiken

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Climate Characters: Skeptical engineer questions government motives – The Daily Climate

Posted: at 5:35 pm

June 7, 2017

By Zara Abrams The Daily Climate

Editors note: Climate Characters follows five people with varied views on climate change with the goal of bringing a greater degree of compassion and understanding to the highly polarized conversation.

As an engineer working in the defense industry, John Albright has designed everything from body armor for the U.S. Marines to solar energy plants in Southern Californias Mojave Desert.

Like Michael Casey, a martial arts instructor we profiled Monday, both Albrights career and his upbringing led him to doubt the authority and motives of experts. Specifically, he thinks leading climate researchers and government officials exaggerate the human contribution to global warming in a grab for more money and power.

Albright, whose name has been changed because he worked on classified projects, expected his work as an engineer to be straightforward, honest, cut and dried. To his astonishment, that was not the case.

"People say I'm unscientific. They say I don't believe in science, but that's not true." -John Albright

In the defense industry, he explained in an interview, contractors set unrealistically high goals. For example, a company will promise to provide 150,000 units of body armor in six months, fully aware that the project will take at least a year to complete. Then they request an extensionand more moneyto complete the half-finished work.

The trick in the defense industry is to never complete your project, Albright says. If you just finished your project, youd be out of your job.

Albright sees the government as disingenuous, a suspicion that had roots in his childhood. At his fathers prompting, Albright read Ayn Rands 1957 cult novel, Atlas Shrugged, during junior high. The novel depicts a dystopian society where a petty bureaucratic government over-regulates, making it impossible for brilliant entrepreneurs to prosper and stimulate the economy by creating jobs. He says the books individualistic message, which champions free will, reinforced his beliefs and has shaped his views of the U.S. government ever since.

Recently, he was particularly bothered by internal contradictions he saw firsthand in the environmental movement. During his work on a solar plant in the Mojave Desert, the same environmental lobby that advocated for clean power also fought against the plants construction because it overlapped with the habitat of the desert tortoise, a threatened species.

In Albrights experience, authorities are often inconsistent and even dishonest, especially when the goals they wish to achieve conflict. Sometimes, governments will go so far as to deny the truth when it conflicts with their ideology. In cases where scientific research has unpopular policy implications, authorities may strategically exploit the doubt inherent to the scientific process to make the evidence appear shaky.

Doubt is crucial to sciencebut it also makes science vulnerable to misrepresentation, writes Naomi Oreskes and Eric Conway in Merchants of Doubt, a groundbreaking 2010 book that analyzed the history of science denial in the U.S. government.

Anti-science campaigns entered the public sphere when research linking cigarette smoke to lung cancer and other respiratory diseases started piling up. For decades, tobacco industry executives funded misleading marketing campaigns to convince the public that the science of tobacco smoke was as yet unresolved. Of course, science can never provide a definite yes or no on any subject, but even that innate uncertainty doesnt stop most people from acknowledging that gravity is real.

In America, the denial that plagues the modern environmental movement was historically linked to a fear of communism, and an impassioned defense of free enterprise. In 1962, when marine biologist Rachel Carson published Silent Spring, which spelled out the destructive power of the pesticide DDT, traditionalists were instantly suspicious. If what she said was true, it would mean increased federal regulation could hurt the profits of major corporations such as the agriculture giant Monsanto.

After Silent Spring was published, critics fired back both publicly and privately. A review of the book in Time magazine called Carsons writing emotion-fanning and her argument hysterically overemphatic. In a private letter to President Eisenhower, the Secretary of Agriculture, Ezra Taft Benson, said Carson was probably a communist. Monsanto even released a satirical response, a story called The Desolate Year in its monthly magazine, which claimed incorrectly that Carsons DDT-free world would be riddled with malaria. Others riffed on the idea that women were far too emotional to be scientifically accurate, personally vilifying Carson until her untimely death from breast cancer two years later.

As a female scientist, Carson faced difficulty even before she sounded the alarm. Though she had penned several best-sellers, including The Sea Around Us and Under the Sea Wind, it took her years to find a publisher willing to release Silent Spring.

The attacks Carson endured were only the beginning of anti-environmental sentiment in America. On the first annual Earth Day in 1970, the FBI conducted widespread surveillance of antipollution rallies, according to a report published the following year in the New York Times. Leaders of the intelligence community feared that Earth Day, which happened to fall on Lenins birthday, was a Soviet plot to undermine the U.S. government.

Fred Singer and Robert Jastrow, right-wing physicists who respectively held leadership positions in the EPA and NASA, called proponents of regulating air and water pollution communist sympathizers. They even nicknamed environmentalists watermelons green on the outside, red on the insideas chronicled in Merchants of Doubt.

Protecting the environment is still seen by some as anti-American, the enemy of free-market enterprise. The modern anti-science campaign relies on conservative think tanks such as the Heartland Institute, which releases misleading documents that mimic scientific reports but do not contain peer-reviewed data, and on media voices such as right-wing radio host Glenn Beck, who has called former President Obama a socialist for his efforts to regulate carbon.

Its not just the radical right thats uncertain. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), an international task force created by the United Nations, has proclaimed that human action is the dominant cause of global warming in the past century. But a fall 2016 Pew poll revealed that more than half the country, including the current occupant of the Oval Office, still believes that global warming is either caused by natural cycles or not occurring at all.

The deception works because the public doesnt want to change. Just as Americans believed the ploys of the tobacco industry because they didnt want to quit smoking, people believe the Heartland Institute and Glenn Beck because they dont want to give up their SUVs or their houses in the suburbs.

Many conservatives see action on climate change as really an attack on a way of life, says Republican former Congressman Bob Inglis in the Merchants of Doubt film. Along come some people sowing some doubt and its pretty effective, because Im looking for that answer. I want it to be that the science is not real.

Albright, the defense contractor, insists that in his case, hes not falling for a misinformation campaign. People say Im unscientific. They say I dont believe in science, but thats not true.

Hes read the most recent IPCC report on climate change, he says, and researches topics he cares aboutincluding climate changeon a daily basis from sources across the political spectrum. He resents people assuming hes ill-informed, just because his beliefs are unpopular.

And like anyone deeply immersed in an issue they deem significant, Albright genuinely appreciates anyone who listens to him and takes him seriously.

Zara Abrams is a freelance journalist and masters student in USCs Specialized Journalism program. Climate characters was her thesis project. Follow her at @ZaraAbrams.

The Daily Climate is an independent, foundation-funded news service covering energy, the environment and climate change. Find us on Twitter @TheDailyClimate or email editor Brian Bienkowski at bbienkowski [at] EHN.org

Top Photo: eflon/flickr; Second photo: NYCandre/flickr

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Lawmakers should practice the Golden Rule – Times Daily

Posted: at 5:34 pm

During my college years, I took courses in personality theory, group dynamics, organizational behavior, and counseling techniques, which were designed to help students understand and appreciate the differences of people in the workplaces. These courses were presented in the context of sensitivity focus where students need awareness about their own biases and prejudices in confronting other people with similar behavioral references.

The Alabama House is embarked upon sensitivity training after the appearance of an email from Rep. Lynn Greer, R-Rogerville, where he was comparing black lawmakers to a monkey in a cage reaching for a banana in a social experiment. The black lawmakers were rendering their opposition to the new proposed redistricting plan.

Greer later apologized for the offensive analogy; he stated that there was no racist intent.

Whatever sensitivity training the legislators received, the bottom line is knowing, above all, how to practice the Golden Rule Do to others as you want others to do to you in any circumstances.

Words, whether spoken or written, have positive and negative effects. Even the well-intention words may prove offensive to some people. In choosing my words, I consider three questions: Are the words true in content? Are the words honest to believe? Are the words appropriate for situation?

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The Problem With Liberal Opposition to Islamophobia – Truth-Out

Posted: at 5:34 pm

Afaf Nasher, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in New York, bows while speaking on the murder of Imam Alauddin Akonjee outside City Hall in Manhattan, August 18, 2016. Activists and members of the city's Muslim community condemned the attack and continued calls for the authorities to classify the killings as a hate crime. (Photo: Bryan R. Smith / The New York Times)

Between Donald Trump's Muslim ban and the murder of six Muslim men in a mosque in Qubec City, the debate around Islamophobia has again taken center stage in North American politics. On the other side of the Atlantic, anti-Islam groups like Pegida, the Front National and Wilders' Freedom Party are gaining growing public support. Central to all of this is the rise of a militant xenophobia, with hatred of Muslims as one of its cardinal principles. At the same time, anti-racist organizers are also coming together -- building our analysis, fortifying our ability to defend ourselves in the face of increasing and rampant bigotry, and mobilizing to turn the tide.

Unfortunately, however, many of the arguments against Islamophobia in anti-racist circles turn out to replicate rather than subvert the underlying logics that attack, demonize and dehumanize Muslims. Challenging the Islamophobic far-right cannot simply be about upholding the same capitalist and imperialist -- even if slightly less racist -- stances that have destabilized much of the Global South in recent decades, furthering war and displacing Muslims who have travelled to Europe's shores only to be met with an explosion of nativist hatred.

With the departure of Barack Obama from the White House, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has become a global icon of this supposedly progressive anti-racist politics. A self-professed feminist who flew in 25,000 Syrian refugees and greeted them with hugs and winter coats at the airport, Trudeau is often perceived as being emblematic of everything that fascists are not. Yet even under his government, many of the same anti-social policies that brought Donald Trump to power in the United States are now being intensified, while anti-immigrant measures remain on the books.

For this reason, it is crucial to critically assess some of the liberal arguments against Islamophobia that are often put forward by people like Trudeau, as well as by many activists who would situate themselves to the left of him. Many of these arguments, while appearing to be anti-Islamophobic, actually uphold the national security state's framing of issues. In doing so, the dominant economic and social framework that underlies Islamophobic laws and policies, and the racist ideas incorporated within it, remains in place -- thereby impeding our ability to move beyond it.

Argument 1: "Counter-Radicalization Is More Effective Than Harsh Counter-Terrorism"

When the previous Conservative government in Canada introduced a wide-ranging surveillance and policing bill -- Bill C-51, theAnti-Terrorism Act, 2015 the public outcry was swift. Bill C-51 was dubbed the Secret Police Act, and hundreds of thousands of people signed multiple petitions against it. Central to the outcry was the argument that the bill was "ineffective." The "more effective" strategy being proposed in Canada, and across Western Europe and the United States, would involve "counter-radicalization" or "counter-extremist" programs. Such supposedly pragmatic calls for counter-radicalization have gained increasing support -- including by the Canadian Liberals under Trudeau -- without any critical reflection on the deeper problems with such programs.

In a report released last February, the UN Special Rapporteur on Counter-Terrorism and Human Rights Ben Emmerson criticized the prevailing approach towards counter-radicalization as conceptually flawed and ineffective, noting that "states have tended to focus on those [areas] that are most appealing to them, shying away from the more complex issues, including political issues such as foreign policy and transnational conflicts," preferring instead to emphasize "religious ideology as the driver of terrorism and extremism."

The American Civil Liberties Union, Article 19, and the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University pointed out similar objections in a joint letter to Ben Emmerson, writing that counter-radicalization "initiatives in the United States and Europe focus overwhelmingly on Muslim communities, with the discriminatory impact of stigmatizing them as inherently suspicious and in need of special monitoring."

Trump's announcement that counter-radicalization programs in the US will now exclusively target "Islamist extremism" elicited a fair amount of outrage -- but the reality is that such programs have long subjected Muslims to disproportionate attention, even if this was not always as explicit prior to Trump's presidency. For instance, 68 percent of the 1,747 children and teenagers referred to the UK's counter-radicalization program, Channel, between March 2014 and March 2016 were Muslim, while Muslims constitute only 8 percent of the population. Last March, a four-year-old Muslim boy was sent to Channel when his drawing of a cucumber was misconstrued as a cooker-bomb.

Central to the assertions that counter-radicalization is a more effective mode of counter-terrorism is the assumption that there is in fact an existential threat to Western societies from groups of individuals wishing to cause it harm, many if not all of whom are considered Muslim. Terrorism as a concept itself remains unquestioned, and the state-sponsored project of defending "us" against "them" is legitimized -- although using an ostensibly softer touch than the hard violence of war and criminalization. Instead of developing community-based or individual-focused programs to counter radicalization, the Islamophobic laws, policies and imaginaries that represent Muslims as a fundamental threat to Western society must be dismantled.

Argument 2: "Inclusion Is the Answer"

Greater inclusion of Muslims in white-normative societies is often posited as the solution to Islamophobia -- and, from a national security perspective, to the alienation that supposedly produces the radicalization of young Muslims. Social inclusion is widely seen as a counterpoint to the exclusionary nativist rhetoric of Islamophobes and fascists. For example, the recent decision by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) to permit women wearing the hijab to join the federal police force has been hailed as a positive move against the exclusion of Muslims. Similar examples of Muslims taking on roles in policing agencies are heralded the world over.

Such arguments for greater inclusion, however, often fail to challenge or transform the problematic dynamics of the entities within which inclusion for Muslims is being sought. The RCMP, for instance, has its roots in the North West Mounted Police, the settler-colonial police force developed to surveil and attack indigenous communities. Racial and gendered violence continues to pervade the everyday practice of the RCMP, and the presence of Muslims did not dampen the force's deep-seated Islamophobia, but was actually exploited to entrap vulnerable Muslims in false terrorist plots staged by undercover agents presenting themselves as Islamic authorities. This experience parallels the FBI's use of Muslim informants to build its surveillance dragnet of Muslim communities.

Inclusion of Muslims, then, does not necessarily eliminate or reduce Islamophobia. On the contrary, inclusion may perpetuate institutional racism by recruiting Muslims into existing structures of power -- while at the same time making it more difficult to detect, since there is no overt exclusion involved. Instead of aiming for inclusion in existing power structures and institutions, the fight against Islamophobia must aim to dismantle institutions that sustain themselves through practices of racialized surveillance and criminalization.

Argument 3: "Islamophobia Plays Into the Hands of ISIS"

A common refrain heard in recent arguments against Islamophobic policies and anti-Muslim polemics is that the latter "play into the hands of the terrorists." It is widely claimed, for instance, that the hateful rhetoric espoused by Islamophobic populists like Donald Trump and Geert Wilders actually reinforces ISIS' narrative of a Manichean world divided between Islam and the West -- a world in which there are no gray zones where Muslims can live harmoniously with non-Muslims.

In this framing, Islamophobia is considered objectionable mainly because of how ISIS might exploit it, rather than for its own intrinsic violence. Islamophobic statements are represented as the trigger or pretext for Muslims' violence, rather than as something that is itself a source of violence -- like illegal and aggressive wars, extrajudicial drone killings, torture, secret detention, hate crimes, invasive state surveillance, and so on. While Islamophobia may be the immediate object of critique, it is still Muslims and their supposedly terroristic propensities that feature as the fundamental problem in such narratives.

As a result, the argument re-directs attention away from Islamophobia and back towards Muslim violence, even while claiming to do the opposite. Our gaze ends up being diverted from the structural racism woven into the warp and woof of Western liberal democracies -- a racism that has already undergirded the destruction of many Muslim societies in the name of fighting terrorism.

Argument 4: #NotAllMuslims -- "Islam Is Peace"

In response to prevailing stereotypes that Islam is fundamentally a religion of violence, promulgated by extremist far-right ideologues, Muslims and anti-Islamophobic allies often insist that Islam is a religion of peace. Both sides of the argument -- Islam means violence versus Islam means peace -- cite portions of Islamic religious texts, particularly the Quran, to demonstrate some authentic true nature of Islam and Muslims.

The problem with such readings is that they perpetuate the orientalist assumption that all actions performed by Muslims are somehow determined by scripture -- a reductionist conceptualization of Islam that does not reflect how Muslims have actually engaged with religious texts for centuries, through rich and diverse interpretive traditions. Theological and intellectual debates about interpretation that have gone on for 1,500 years are thus roundly ignored, and the vast cultural, political and social history of over a billion people that shapes Islam is subsumed in limited translations of particular verses.

Instead of propagating essentializing constructions to rehabilitate the image of Islam and Muslims, an anti-Islamophobic stance should focus on critiquing the state policies and public discourses that have made such rehabilitation efforts seem necessary in the first place: policies and discourses that criminalize, incarcerate and wage war against Muslims, while providing a cover for civilian attacks like the shooting at the Muslim community centre in Qubec City.

Argument 5: "Non-Muslims Are Also Terrorists"

To counteract the overwhelming tendency by fascists and other right-wing extremists to equate the concept of terrorism with acts of violence committed by Muslims, it is essential to point out that significant amounts of political violence in both North America and Europe are committed by non-Muslims, in the name of causes like white supremacy, anti-immigrant activism and nationalism. However, the assertion that all these various forms of violence should also be labeled terrorism, as Prime Minister Trudeau recently did for the Qubec mosque attack carried out by a self-avowed white supremacist, fails to challenge the legitimacy and cogency of terrorism as a concept.

This is undesirable for at least two reasons. First, because certain types of violence against civilians -- most importantly, violence committed by states -- still tend to be excluded from or marginalized in the definition of terrorism. The primary focus remains on non-state actors, even though states are the most significant purveyors of violence in our world.

Second, it is undesirable because many governments have claimed that the existential threat posed by terrorism requires the expansion of their own powers: through implementation of emergency laws, for example, and deterioration of the rights of individuals, through measures like preventive arrests and detentions. Broadening the category of "the terrorist" may therefore serve states -- from the American to the Syrian -- seeking to rationalize their own violence as necessary for fighting terrorism.

Instead of widening the scope of who is considered a terrorist to include white supremacists and fascists, the notion of terrorism must be deconstructed altogether: to demonstrate that the term depends on spurious criteria to distinguish some forms of violence (delegitimized as terrorism) from other, equally terrorizing forms of violence (legitimized as counter-terrorism).

Argument 6: "Muslim Women Are Not Oppressed -- They Choose How to Dress"

In North America, as in several European countries, Muslim women's attire has become a primary focus for Islamophobic attacks -- by the state as well as by individuals. In Canada, for example, the Conservative federal government that preceded Trudeau's issued a policy manual in 2011 preventing women wearing the niqab from swearing the oath of citizenship (this policy was eventually overturned by the Federal Court of Appeal). And there have been several efforts in the province of Qubec to pass legislation barring women in niqab from receiving or delivering public services. In these initiatives, the niqab and hijab are represented as inherently oppressive pieces of clothing imposed on Muslim women by religion, community and/or family. State prohibition is pitched as an attempt to save Muslim women from sartorial subjugation.

In response, arguments against niqab and hijab bans often emphasize that Muslim women actually choose to veil. In doing so, they reaffirm the problematic premise that the value and legitimacy of a person's actions should be judged by whether they are an expression offree choice: choice exercised without any limitations or restrictions. But choice -- all choice -- is of course fraught: the ability to see choices and pick between them is always constrained by one's upbringing and social context. Individuals never have full information or full agency. Choice also changes, and can be misconstrued.

Furthermore, the ideology of free choice has often been allied with imperial projects of violence. From the French colonization of Algeria to the American invasion of Afghanistan, multiple wars have been waged around the world in the name of bringing choice to Muslim women. But individual choice is not necessarily seen in all places and times as the central organizing principle of human life, as it is within liberal states. As Lila Abu-Lughod, Professor of Anthropology and Women's and Gender Studies at Columbia University, appropriately asks: "Might other desires be more meaningful for different groups of people? Living in close families? Living in a godly way? Living without war?"

Responses to anti-hijab laws and rhetoric cannot begin and end by valorizing choice. Rather, they must be about limiting the power of the state to withdraw benefits and services from its constituents as punishment for living lives that may not accord with liberal norms and priorities.

Argument 7: "Muslims Are Citizens Too"

The assertion that Islamophobic counter-terrorism measures violate the rights of Muslim citizens of Western liberal democracies -- who should be treated equally, without any discrimination on the basis of race or religion -- is a popular theme in organizing against such measures. However, it is inadequate to simply defend the rights of citizens while ignoring the situation of those who are not citizens of the state, but made subject to its power and violence in the name of national security. As University of Toronto law professor Audrey Macklin observes, Canadians have long tolerated serious abrogations of rights and freedoms for non-citizens that would likely be considered unacceptable against citizens. The same is true in the United States and across Europe.

In Canada, for instance, many cases involving terrorism have not been tried using criminal law, but dispatched with using immigration law, enabling the deportation or indefinite detention of suspects under a lower standard of proof and without many of the procedural safeguards (such as they exist) of criminal trials. The argument that Muslim citizens should not have to suffer Islamophobic laws and policiesbecausethey are citizens perpetuates the disadvantage and vulnerability of non-citizens.

Furthermore, in settler colonial states like Canada and the United States, the institution of citizenship is built on a foundation of indigenous genocide and dispossession. In these contexts, the quest for inclusion in citizenship risks normalizing the colonization of indigenous nations. Upholding citizenship as the ultimate source of rights, freedom and belonging tends to prevent critique of the violence and exclusion embedded within citizenship: against indigenous peoples and against migrants. The struggle ahead must be about collective liberation beyond inclusion in liberal frameworks of citizenship.

Argument 8: "Obviously Innocent Collateral Damage"

Cases of white progressive activists monitored as national security threats are frequently cited to demonstrate the absurd overreach of counter-terrorism. The injustice involved in these cases is meant to be apparent and inarguable. The protagonists are represented as obviously innocent collateral damage of counter-terrorism, and their entrapment in the expansive net of national security as a manifest wrong.

Such examples are considered persuasive because the victims are not generally regarded as legitimate objects of suspicion. This is in stark contrast to Muslim, South Asian, Black and Arab men, who are consistently demonized as national security threats, and who have suffered extreme state abuse because of this -- extraordinary rendition, torture, secret and/or indefinite imprisonment, and so on. The innocence of this demographic is not taken as obvious, but must be proven time and time again against a default presumption of guilt. Unlike the targeting of "obviously innocent collateral damage," the state's surveillance and securitization of brown- and black-skinned men is not widely treated asinherentlyirrational.

For example, Professors Deepa Kumar and Arun Kundnani observe that while the exposure of the National Security Agency's massive warrantless data collection program generated widespread condemnation, the revelation that Muslims were specifically targeted for surveillance attracted far less attention and outrage. While many objected to the US government collecting private data on ordinary citizens, Muslims tend to be seen as reasonable targets of exceptional surveillance -- simply because they are Muslim.

Arguments invoking the obvious innocence of certain victims of national security problematically entrench the problematic distinction between those who do not deserve to be treated with suspicion. They perpetuate the state's normalized suspicion of precisely those groups that are most vulnerable to the violence of counter-terrorism.

Moving Beyond Liberal Anti-Islamophobia

Critiquing common liberal arguments like these can help organizers imagine and articulate other types of responses to Islamophobia: responses that do not merely shift the position of Muslims in the state's existing racial landscape, but upheave and re-make this terrain altogether. Doing so is particularly important in our present political moment, when the ostentatious Islamophobia of far-right organizations and the Trump administration is often understood as exceptional -- occluding continuities and similarities with the Islamophobia of liberal governments like Obama's or Trudeau's. This in turn perpetuates the dangerous illusion that liberal politics are a refuge from right-wing racism, when the truth is that they are constructed of many of the same components.

Of course, opposition to Islamophobia should not remain limited to the discursive field. It should also include -- and in fact prioritize -- building and organizing within racialized communities to assert dignity, power and freedom. Examples of such organizing abound. For instance, the first iteration of Trump's Muslim ban was met by a general strike by the primarily Muslim New York Taxi Workers Alliance, whose inspiring actions set off a spate of airport shutdowns that were crucial to defeating the administration's first set of executive orders. Similarly, hours after the Qubec shooting, Muslim organizers and their allies issued a call for days of action across Canada against Islamophobia, white supremacy and deportations.

Deconstructing widespread liberal fallacies is therefore by no means a comprehensive or sufficient approach to a genuinely anti-Islamophobic politics. What it may do, however, is strengthen and further our collective struggle against the intertwined scaffolding of racism, patriarchy, colonialism, imperialism and capitalism upon which the Islamophobia of the neoliberal security state and the neo-fascist right continues to rest. Deepening our analysis in the days to come, when it may seem easier not to, would be a critical first step in building towards the worlds we want to live in.

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The Problem With Liberal Opposition to Islamophobia - Truth-Out

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On the liberal plantation – The Times and Democrat

Posted: at 5:34 pm

When considering the implications of Bill Mahers latest antics, it is important to state that Maher has over the years become the trusted media host for black left-wing intellectuals. His roster of guests includes a whos who of the black intelligentsia from old stalwart Cornel West to MSNBC host Joy Reid. So given this history, it would seem surprising that Maher would so readily toss his friends under the bus by his casual on-air use of the n-word.

But if one really considers Maher and his history, a more complicated story emerges. Maher is a liberal prognosticator who exhibits a pretense of tolerance and open-mindedness thereby giving him comedic license to offend.

Mahers latest missive responding to Sen. Ben Sasses exhortation to engage in grassroots field: political organizing in Nebraska with the dismissive remark, Senator, Im a house n***er, is not surprising. But the remark was so out of context that it could not have been anything other than a strategically timed joke one that unfortunately missed the mark.

Read in the context of Mahers irreverent stance on many issues it seems that the use of the n-word was meant to remind black liberal intellectuals that they are the wholly owned property of the liberal elite. It was an open admission of something conservatives have noted all along black intellectuals do not have an actual ownership stake of the liberal establishment, but in fact serve at the pleasure and whim of the liberal wing of the Democratic Party.

Whether Maher, a 61-year-old white guy who has been employed by HBO for the past 14 years, actually considers himself a house negro is not whats significant here. He in fact may identify his job with that of a well-kept slave on the media plantation.

That Maher chose to use the n-word on his scripted talk show (deceptively named Real Time) was undoubtedly a calculated act. This was probably not the first time Maher has used the n-word in the presence of African-Americans. He probably believes that since he allows many of them to come on to his show and debate, and that he sticks up for them against conservative straw boogeymen, he therefore has earned license to use the term. Maher didnt ask any black person for such license of course, yet he assumed it, in the storied tradition of liberal arrogance and privilege of which he is a proud descendant.

It goes without saying that the n-word is a vulgar, disgusting term, with a history fraught with pain. As someone who grew up in the deep South at a time when many parents and relatives were openly and customarily called the n-word by whites, I know first-hand how hurtful it is. The word is an obscene smear created for the specific purpose of putting black people in their place relegating them to second-class citizenship, and alerting the intended victim that he is less than human. I have personally never used the term (nor any form of obscenity), and regard it as one of the most abhorrent terms in the English language. I dont like it when black entertainers use it, and I certainly dont like it when whites use it either. The word has no place in public discourse, much less in the enlightened sphere of intellectual debate.

Curiously, the reaction among black intellectuals to Bill Mahers verbal attack has been typically passive. They seem to have taken it on the chin and let him off the hook. No one has seriously demanded Mahers resignation from HBO, and there has been no organized boycott of his sponsors at the network. Can you image the reaction if a conservative host on Fox or any conservative media channel was caught using the n-word? The black community would be in total uproar, on the warpath, seeking blood, guts and retribution. And yet weve heard barely a peep from the black intellectual elite that polices conservatives speech like a mall cop on steroids.

The reason black intellectuals wont challenge Maher and the reason he still has a show after the incident is because they cant. Maher is smart. He calculates that he can get away with a lot more offense now that Trump is in the White House. With a guy like Trump on the other side of the street, he reasons, where are black folks going to go? They have no choice but to stay on the liberal plantation, no matter how much abuse the liberal elite heaps on them. Sadly, Mahers cynical calculus seems to be correct.

Now that he has gotten away with it, Mahers behavior, despite his tepid apology, is likely to get worse, not better. In the meantime, black intellectuals will undoubtedly accept these betrayals as the so-called price of progress. They will lie to themselves and justify such open racism because at the end of the day, they think it preferable to be kept on at the Democratic plantation than to leave and have to face big, bad Donald Trump on their own.

Armstrong Williams is owner of Howard Stirk Holdings, which owns TV stations in Charleston, Myrtle Beach and other cities. He was the SGA president from 1979 to 1981 at South Carolina State University.

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John Hood: Teetotaler says alcohol laws too restrictive – Winston-Salem Journal

Posted: at 5:34 pm

RALEIGH I am a teetotaler who believes that my fellow North Carolinians should be free to buy and consume the alcoholic beverages of their choice from the vendors of their choice.

They dont currently possess that freedom. Our state places significant limits on the sale of beer, wine and spirits. Above a low statutory cap, breweries are not allowed to market their wares directly to retailers. Distilleries are even more encumbered, both in how much liquor they can sell directly to consumers and in the range of retailers they can use namely, only the government monopoly of ABC stores.

North Carolina actually fares relatively well in assessments of personal freedom, according to analysts at the Cato Institute. Their Freedom in the 50 States report uses three categories of variables: fiscal, regulatory and personal. North Carolinas overall freedom ranking is 19th, but we do best in the personal freedom category, where we rank 13th.

By this broad measure, North Carolina is the freest state in the Southeast. Still, wed be even higher on the list if our alcohol laws werent so restrictive, ranking us 35th in the country in this area.

There are two movements underway in North Carolina that, if successful, would improve the situation. One of them began at the General Assembly this year as House Bill 500. As originally written, it would have allowed craft breweries to distribute up to 200,000 barrels of beer directly to retailers, rather than having to use a state-sanctioned cartel of wholesalers. The current cap is 25,000 barrels.

The wholesalers prevailed in the initial legislative battle, so the version of the bill that ultimately passed the House in late April would only modestly expand the ability of some breweries and wineries to sell their products as they wish. In response, some craft breweries have filed a lawsuit to strike down the states distribution cap and franchise laws as a violation of the state constitution.

The other measure, Senate Bill 155, would allow distilleries to sell up to five bottles directly to visiting consumers, up from the current annual limit of one bottle. It would also loosen limits on the sale of spirits at festivals and conventions, while allowing restaurants and retailers to sell alcohol after 10 a.m. on Sundays, two hours earlier than the current limit (which is why the legislation is known as the brunch bill). It has already passed the Senate and is now awaiting action in the House.

Some opposition to alcohol deregulation comes from interest groups, public and private, that benefit from the current system. No one should be surprised by their special pleading, which is always skillfully delivered.

But others inside and outside the General Assembly argue that North Carolinas regulatory scheme is designed to curb alcohol abuse, which they tie to such social ills as drunk driving and domestic abuse. I think their concerns deserve more respect, although I dont ultimately agree with their conclusions.

As I said, Im a teetotaler. One reason is that my family has often suffered the ravages of alcoholism. As the family historian, Ive chronicled numerous cases. The great-uncle for whom I was named, for example, was struck and killed on the railroad track behind our house either because he had fallen down drunk or because hed first been beaten to unconsciousness by fellow drunks. His uncle, in turn, had been murdered decades before during an alcohol-fueled gunfight. Other close relatives have had less deadly but still debilitating experiences with alcohol.

But if your conception of freedom is that it ought only to extend to behavior with which you personally agree, youve conceived it out of existence. The state should certainly punish actions that violate the rights of others, such as drunk driving or violent crimes committed while inebriated. The adult consumption and sale of alcohol, however, are not the proper concern of the state.

Most drinkers arent drunks, most drunks arent dangerous, and most governmental attempts to save people from themselves create more problems than they solve.

The John Locke Foundation

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