Monthly Archives: June 2017

Minneapolis City Council Ignores Damning Seattle Study, Passes Its Own $15 Minimum Wage – Reason (blog)

Posted: June 30, 2017 at 5:10 pm

A week after the release of a study revealing the high cost of Seattle's minimum wage, the Minneapolis City Council rammed through a $15 minimum wage over the strenuous objections of workers and businesses.

The council voted 13-1 in favor of a tiered minimum wage roll-out schedule for large and small businesses modeled closely on Seattle's. The first of the wage increases will kick in in January 2018.

"The majority of the city council has given us two middle fingers," said Sarah Webster Norton, of Service Industry Staff for Change, which has been fighting the minimum wage ordinance.

Much of the opposition in Minneapolis has centered on the council's refusal to allow restaurants and bars to credit tips to the base hourly wage of their workers.

The tip credit puts more cash in the pockets of workers and gives businesses more flexibility in adjusting to wage hikes. Webster Norton, a server with 24 years of experience, says she expects businesses and customers will scale back or eliminate tipping, cutting her take-home pay by half.

"We've tried to show them the numbers and show them the math, they absolutely, staunchly refuse to listen," she said.

A survey of more than 100 Minneapolis restaurants by Pathway to 15a pro-minimum wage, pro-tip credit organizationfound that 81 percent of businesses would reduce hours, and another 55 percent would eliminate current positions without a tip credit.

Roughly 63 percent of business owners surveyed said they would implement a service charge or change their tipping model if a tip credit wasn't included in the Minneapolis minimum wage ordinance.

Minneapolis Mayor Betsy Hodges, a minimum wage proponent, however, described tipping in an essay as a legacy of slavery and demeaning to women. Webster Norton said Hodges and the council have abused identity politics to quiet opposition.

"It's insulting to those of us who have tried to hone our craft, who have worked our asses off to become knowledgeable about food and beverage and alcohol and wine," Webster Norton said. "All the things that make a good tipped employee. It basically just implies that we have to use our feminine wiles to get tips."

Steve Minn, a former council member himself and owner of affordable housing developments in the city, told Reason the rush to a minimum wage increase was political pandering by Hodges and councilman Jacob Frey, who are vying for the nomination for mayor at the Democrat-Farm Labor Party convention July 8.

Minn wrote a lengthy op-ed in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune detailing his concerns.

"If this was about good policy, they would have waited and done their study, and paused when the most recent data on Seattle came back," Minn said. "The rush to deal with it this month has everything to do with the mayoral convention that happens in two weeks."

The new ordinance leaves Minn in a tough spot, prohibiting him from raising rents of his affordable housing, thanks to a contract with the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Minn says his alternative will probably be to trim services to his tenants.

"Instead of having three cleaning crews a week," he said, "maybe I'll have two."

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We live longer. Why not work longer? – MoneySense

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(Getty Images)

Would-be retirees are often dismayed when they look at retirement projections based on todays low interest rates and are told their choice is simply to work longer, increase investment risk and/or scale back their expectations of retirement. Sadly, champagne aspirations on a beer budget are not the recipe for a happy retirement.

But working longer need not be as unpalatable as it might seem on first blush. Governments around the world are doing what they can to encourage workers to stay in harness just a few years longer. They have our interests, as well as their down, at heart. Theyve seen the rising life expectancy stats and would prefer that we work longer and keep feeding tax coffers, while at the same time deferring the moment when we start drawing on our government retirement benefits.

The Stephen Harper Conservatives even tried to bump the qualification age for Old Age Security to 67 from 65, although this was later reversed by the Justin Trudeau Liberals. The Tories were on the right track; fact is, we are living longer and healthier lives, which is both good news and bad. Good news because we all want to live a long and healthy life. But not so good to the extent a long life raises the odds youll run out of money before you run out of life.

Add in the fact that many of todays workers will not enjoy the plush defined benefit pension plans many Boomers and their parents received. Then throw in the new reality of miserly interest rates with the risk of soaring inflation. What you get, and its little wonder, many would-be retirees err on the side of working just a little bit longer if theyre at all in doubt about their financial preparation for a comfortable retirement.

Consider the benefits of working a few years longer. Financially, it means that if you are in a DB pension, the ultimate payout will be that much higher. And if your retirement nest egg is based on a defined contribution (DC) plan or RRSP, a couple more years of growth fuelled by todays buoyant equity markets will be that much better. And dont forget that on the withdrawal side, two or three years fewer of annual withdrawals also means your nest egg will be that more sustainable.

Even if you are not part of a company pension plan, working longer can benefit both your eventual CPP and OAS pension streams, says Matthew Ardrey, wealth advisor and vice president with Toronto-based Tridelta Financial. For every year you defer the receipt of CPP benefits, your ultimate payout from the plan will rise by an extra 8.4%, to a maximum of 42% for those who wait right until age 70.

For OAS, the bonus for deferral is slightly less but still tempting. Each year that is deferred results in 6% higher payments, to a maximum of 36% at age 70. This is an important consideration, since both these government pensions are indexed to inflation, deferral can be a double win. Those who lack a DB inflation-indexed pension will want to consider this option carefully.

Of course, the trick is to make it to 70 using alternate sources of income, a luxury not everyone can afford. Some may choose to start withdrawing money from their RRSPs early (and paying tax as they do), or set up their RRIFs a few years in advance of when its required in your early 70s.

Delaying OAS may not make sense for everyone, particularly those who expect to have high enough income that OAS benefits start to get clawed back, which kicks in currently at an annual income of about $75,000. OAS is completely clawed back at an income around $121,000. If youre in those brackets, consider taking OAS as soon as its available at age 65. CPP does not generate clawbacks but like OAS is taxable: the case for waiting till 70 if at all possible is, therefore, more compelling for CPP than for OAS.

One of the benefits of a semi-retirement approach to retirement is that it cobbles together multiple streams of income: employer pensions, government pensions, RRSPs and TFSAs, and non-registered savings. And dont forget the stream of income called part-time work, which can provide a significant boost to your passive retirement income streams. As I have noted in a past MoneySense Retired Money column, even if a single retiree earns just $1,000 a month between ages 65 and 75, it greatly lowers the odds youll run out of money in your late 90s. If youre one half of a couple and both spouses earn that much from consulting or freelance work, so much the better.

The bonus of keeping your hand in the working world is youll feel a lot less isolated: continued interaction with co-workers or clients and some semblance of structure to the working week can provide emotional and even mental health benefits. Having some work-oriented purpose gives you a reason to get out of bed each morning.

Part-time work will feel completely different than the wage slavery of full-time employment. With a traditional job, you have a mix of activities some pleasant, some not so much but in semi-retirement you can jettison the tasks you dont feel drawn to and focus on what youre good at and enjoy. Odds are youll find youre able to be more creative in the assignments you do choose to take on, and ideally find a way to reinvent yourself.

I think of my friend David, who went to a life coach (his sister-in-law) in his mid 50s and discovered he didnt want to be a financial advisor anymore. She helped him rediscover his childhood ambition to become an actor. He started small, taking improv classes then acquired an agent, landed small engagements in TV commercials, moved on to the big screen for some movie shorts and recently returned from the Middle East where he acted in a PBS production on the life of Jesus.

Like anything else its a question of putting in your 10,000 hours and mastering your craft. If you love what you do, it may not even feel like work, in which case why would you ever want to stop?

Jonathan Chevreau is founder of the Financial Independence Hub and co-author of Victory Lap Retirement. He can be reached at jonathan@findependencehub.com

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Town panchayat officials stage demonstration – The Hindu

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The Hindu
Town panchayat officials stage demonstration
The Hindu
Periodical promotion to staff at various levels in town panchayat, washing allowance to sanitary workers, counselling for transfer, formulation of new work guidelines, abolition of new pension scheme, creation of new posts and introduction of 'equal ...

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Where Despots Rule – Jacobin magazine

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Elizabeth S. Anderson

First, there are some easy fixes that could be achieved within the terms of current law, or with some modifications of current law.

Chief among these would be rigorous enforcement of existing labor laws, abolition of mandatory arbitration over violations of wages and hours regulations, and abolition of bans on class action suits by groups of workers over unfair treatment by their employer. Rigorous enforcement especially needs to include protecting the free speech and association rights of workers to complain about working conditions and to organize labor unions at the workplace.

In addition, non-compete agreements need to be banned. These prevent workers from taking their human capital with them when they quit or are fired. If workers cant exit without abandoning the use of their skills, their already weak bargaining power within the firm is destroyed.

Immigrant workers, too, need the freedom to quit. Without that freedom, they are grievously exploited. Interns, who do work of economic value to their employers, should have the same rights to pay and other legal rights as any other employee. So-called independent contractors are often functionally employees, and should have the same rights as employees. Temps should enjoy the same pay, benefits, conditions, and rights as regular employees of the firm.

Second and more ambitiously, the rules of workplace governance need to be changed to give workers a permanent institutionalized voice at work, whether or not they belong to a labor union.

This is the system that prevails among larger employers in many rich European countries. It requires that workers be consulted about how the work process is organized. In such systems of co-determination, workers have a real say in how they are governed, and the work process is jointly determined by workers and managers.

Labor unions engage in collective bargaining over wages and benefits, but the conditions on the shop floor are managed by co-determination. This means that workers are entitled to a real say in how they are governed even if they have not elected a labor union to represent them exclusively in collective bargaining.

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Where Despots Rule - Jacobin magazine

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Freedom Awards Gala recognize community activists and leaders … – Daily Herald

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Gabe Adams was born in a Brazilian hospital more than 20 years ago without any limbs. Adam Paul Steed exposed inhumane treatment of political prisoners being held captive in Syria, saving hundreds of lives. Taj Khyber Rowland provides education and income opportunities in impoverished nations. And Raymond Beckham has chaired countless boards and projects to beautify and develop Utah Valley.

These four have done more than many may do in a lifetime. For their contribution to the liberty and well-being of others, they were honored Thursday night at the 32nd annual Freedom Awards Gala held at the Utah Valley Convention Center.

Freedoms messy. It is so messy, said Steed, one of the award recipients. Is it worth it? Yeah. Its always worth it.

The Freedom Awards are a part of the annual Americas Freedom Festival Provos city celebration that includes the Stadium of Fire, Balloon Fest and Grand Parade.

Past recipients of the award include Timothy Ballard, CEO of Operation Underground Railroad; Gail Halvorsen, the legendary Candy Bomber; and the late Boyd K. Packer, once president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Dancing usually involves a lot of footwork, some twirling and the occasional cha-cha-cha. But not so for Adams.

Adams was born in Brazil without limbs. But rather than lay around, mope and feel pitied, he worked hard and overcame his obstacles to be on his high school cheerleading team at Davis High School.

Adams has a unique zest for life and hopes to spread his cheerful disposition to others through motivational speaking.

Someone once said, Dont let what you cant do interfere with what you can, he said.

Adams has become independent in his own sense and enjoys personal freedom by overcoming what couldve been a negative aspect of his life.

I love the kind and generous people who I love and who have blessed my life in too many ways to count, more than I have on my fingers, he said jokingly.

Rowlands childhood was far from ordinary. When he was a boy, Rowland was born into poverty and struggled to keep himself and others of his family even alive.

I have early memories of scrounging through restaurant garbage for little bits of food, just trying to stay fed, Rowland said.

At a young age, Rowland was kidnapped and sold to a Christian orphanage in India. He was then adopted by Fred and Linda Rowland of Orem.

The Rowlands had no idea their new son wasnt an orphan. They worked tirelessly to find Rowlands childhood home, but to no avail.

For years, he searched for his forgotten home, remembering as many small facts of geography and unique landmarks as he could, going so far as to draw a map of what he could remember.

Years later, he and his wife, Priya, returned to India and he found the village of his childhood.

Rowland felt inspired from his reconnection with his biological family and after understanding more of the lives of impoverished communities, he and his wife founded Taprish, a nonprofit that provides educational and income opportunities to low-income communities across the world.

Freedom, to me, is probably the greatest gift Ive been given through adoption, he said. It allowed me to live a life that, otherwise, I would not have had.

If you take Beckham out of Provo, youre not left with really a lot.

Beckham has been on the boards of countless projects and councils for Utah Valley and particularly Provo. Beckham was directly involved in the building of LaVell Edwards Stadium, the Marriott Center, the BYU Museum of Art and the Provo Recreation Center, not to mention restorative projects in downtown Provo and the citys parks.

If you want to be happy, serve others, he said. I think all of us want to help the poor, to give comfort to those who are troubled. But its not enough to just want to. You have to do it.

Beckhams years of countless service and dedication to his community are an example of what he hopes to see in others.

May we always be searching for ways to serve others to take care of our communities and to volunteer, Beckham said.

Steed has provided the gift of freedom to the lives of hundreds by working hand in hand with Syrian refugees.

In September 2015, Steed, who was working at the time in Greece with Syrian refugees, learned of hundreds of political prisoners leading a revolt in a Syrian prison. He received video from the inside of the prison and published it through the European media. Steed said he knew that if Bashar al-Assad saw the unedited, raw videos, Assad would release the prisoners so as to not damage his public reputation.

This strange group of people came to them from the palace in Damascus and instead of killing these people, they came into them and were like, Hey, were your friends. Heres food and water, Steed said.

And just like that, hundreds of lives were saved from unknown fates.

But Steed isnt the only one who can save lives. He urged all in attendance to make a difference and fight for those who only want a piece of the freedoms enjoyed in America.

If I can say anything thats truly beyond measure, its that you can save these people, Steed said. You can do better than me, if that, and more.

Americas Freedom Festival continues through the weekend until July 4. A list of events can be found in our special section devoted to the festival.

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Even Scripture Makes the Case for Defending Religious Freedom: Paul in Acts – CNSNews.com

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Even Scripture Makes the Case for Defending Religious Freedom: Paul in Acts
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In late May, Alan Sears, the founder of the Alliance for Defending Freedom, was awarded the Wilberforce Award for his and the Alliance's efforts on behalf of religious freedom. At the ceremony, several speakers testified about Sears' commitment to ...

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Religious Freedom Laws Are More About Suppressing Visibility Than Protecting the Pious – Slate Magazine (blog)

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They don't want to see us.

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Hey, Daddy! is a monthly column exploring the joys and struggles of parenting from a gay fathers perspective. Got a topic idea or question for Daddy? Send your letteralong to johnculhane@comcast.net.

Discrimination threatens LGBTQ visibility by encouraging subterfuge. I know from experience.

When David and I were foster parenting our daughters, I was in court for a remarkable exchange. Even though the status hearing to discuss the birth mothers progress wasnt supposed to be about usexcept to make sure the girls were in an appropriate placethe attorney for the birth mother went down an unexpected path. He asked the city worker for the names of the foster parents. Taken aback, she provided them, and the attorney then repeated them, loudly, for the benefit of the court: John and David, Your Honor.

This revelation put the judge on high alert. In his chambers before the next hearing, he expressed concern that the girls were with two men. (One of the attorneys ratted him out to me, a courageous act for which I will be forever grateful.) The judges concern had real consequences. He entertained a ridiculous suggestion that would have torn the girls away from us after a year, and prolonged the termination of parental rights process for about a year beyond what the law and the evidence called for. (Only after that step was completed were we able to adopt our children.)

It would have been worse had the law not been on our side. Philadelphias antidiscrimination law protects the LGBTQ community, so I was able to work behind the scenes to move the case to a just resolution. Without that law, there would have been no effective way to get the judge to do the right thing. Since we couldnt marry at that time in Pennsylvania in any case, without the laws protection we probably would have been advised to hide our relationship, and for one of us to have entered the foster/adopt rolls as a single parent.

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The Real Goal of Religious Freedom Laws? Making Queer People Go Back Into the Closet.

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Mainstream LGBTQ Activism Is Built on Visibility. But What if Thats Inherently Anti-Black?

Although Philadelphia has a law that outlaws discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity (SOGI), Pennsylvania offers no similar protection. People can be fired for coming out at work and denied basic goods and services available to the general public. Thats also true in about half the states, even as of this writing. And this lack of protection has real-world consequences. When I lived in Dallas for a few months, I was shocked by the tiny pool that the LGBTQ swim team occupied. I was even more aghast when I learned that the team had been turned away from a much more suitable location expressly because it was gay-identified. Many of the gay men I met there were closetedwhich is exactly the result youd expect when people know they can be treated so crappily when they come out.

These experiences were very much on my mind as I read Debating Religious Liberty and Discrimination, the new book pitting John Corvino against Ryan Anderson and Sherif Girgis. Corvino, a philosophy professor, has long been one of the leading public intellectuals arguing for a progressive, but not radical, LGBTQ rights regime. Anderson and Girgis are best known for writing, with Robert George, What is Marriage?, a book that presents a natural law argument for defining and limiting marriage to the union of one man and one woman. (Echoes of their argument about the natural complementarity of mothers and fathers can be found in Justice Alitos dissent in Obergefell v. Hodges, the 2015 Supreme Court marriage-equality decision.)

As the title suggests, Debating Religious Liberty and Discrimination is a chapter-by-chapter volley between the combatants. They argue over the wisdom of religious freedom restoration acts, which excuse non-compliance with various laws. Among those laws, of course, are SOGI antidiscrimination statutes. In an unexpected twist, Corvino is forced to spend much of his time and space making what should be the easy case for such laws, because Anderson and Girgis think they arent needed in the first place. For them, religious exemptions need not even arise in the case of anti-LGBTQ discrimination, because such discrimination should be perfectly legal.

Their argument, in a twisted nutshell, is that the strongest grounds for enacting SOGI lawsdenials of housing, or employment, or medical careare mercifully rare to vanishing. So are denials in public accommodations. Tell that to any trans-person caught up by laws mandating that they use restrooms inconsistent with their gender identity. (They also suffer extensive discrimination in other public accommodations.) More centrally, as Corvino points out, there is a substantial literature demonstrating not only the harms of anti-LGBT discrimination but also the effectiveness of antidiscrimination law in ameliorating it.

Anti-discrimination laws are important not just for the legal protections and recourse they create, but also for their teaching function. As Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy stated in a 1996 case, enumeration is the essential device used to make the duty not to discriminate concrete; naming protects the group in question and serves the laws important signaling function. By stating that racial, gender, disability, SOGI and, yes, religion are protected, antidiscrimination laws have vital secondary effects. As Corvino points out, they reduce the incidence of hate crimes and cut down on stigmawhich is itself a risk factor for discrimination, anxiety, and even suicide.

Anderson and Girgis ignore these concerns. But just in case there are SOGI laws, they argue in support of businesses that would just rather not deal with LGBTQ couples trying to use wedding-related services: Their rights to public accommodation, not to mention just being themselves in public, should be trumped by the business owners rights to invoke religious exemptions. After all, they say, its not the parties sexual orientation the business owners object to, but their conduct in marrying.

Corvino skillfully picks this nonsense apart, noting that Anderson and Girgis arent as skeptical of other antidiscrimination laws. He wonders whether they would support a motel owner who refused to rent a room to a Catholic couple on the grounds that they werent true Christians. (I have a guess: They wouldnt.) His peroration is devastating: Religious freedom laws are not really about freedom. Theyre about signaling disapproval for certain forms of life. Their proponents want freedom for themselves that they proudly oppose for LGBT citizens: the freedom to marry, [and] the freedom to enter the commercial sphere without the threat of discrimination. Its a double standard.

Legal protections, even where they exist, are hardly a panacea. When I returned from Dallas, secure in the belief that what happened there could never happen to my Philadelphia LGBTQ swim team, I was coaching one evening when the coach of the youth diving team, which used the diving well right next to the pool, approached me angrily to complain that two of the guys had kissed each other on the pool deck. (Kids dont need to see that!) Never mind that he was likely the only one who even noticed the kiss. Never mind that on a diving team there were sure to be some young gay divers. (Greg Louganis, Tom Daley ) Never mind that a similar, utterly chaste kiss between a man and a woman would have gone unremarked. A few weeks later, we were kicked out. So were all other outside groups that had been renting the pool. Although wed never be able to prove it, that one kiss had caused a cataclysm, culminating in a camouflaging wholesale policy change.

Thats the kind of visibility-punishing outcome Girgis and Anderson are after. They turn the facts of the world upside down, ignoring the deep homo- and transphobia that still persists even today and casting the vast Christian majority as the true victims. The universe theyd prefer to inhabit would drive LGBTQ people back into a closet, afraid that visibility would compromise their jobs, their safety, and even their lives. For some, thats already the reality. We cant afford to fall further back.

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Around Freedom – Ravenna Record Courier

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By Amanda Garrett Published: June 30, 2017 4:00 AM

Freedom Township was a hub for communications around the world last weekend.

Members of the Portage County Amateur Radio Service held their annual field day Saturday and Sunday at the Freedom Community Park on S.R. 700. Field day is a 24-hour event in which PCARS members set up state-of-the-art technology to communicate with other amateur radio enthusiasts in the U.S., Canada, and even around the world.

While the field days allows PCARS members to hone their amateur radio skills and socialize --there was plenty of good food available in the park's picnic area -- it also has a serious purpose in emergency preparedness, which is reflected in Ohio Gov. John Kasich's proclamation of June 24-25 as Amateur Radio Operators' Appreciation Day.

"We like to say 'when all else fails, amateur radio works'" Freedom resident and PCARS media relations manager Tom Parkinson said. "In the case of a major emergency, we as amateur radio operators can step up and help out."

When I visited on Sunday afternoon, the park had been transformed into a mobile communications center with several antennas and a large generator spread around the park grounds. PCARS members Andrew and Jennifer Williams were working to contact operators in Southern states like Alabama, Florida, and Texas, Terry Morris was busy sending out signals via Morse code, and Mike Ryan and Al Nagy were communicating via microphone.

This is the second year that the field day has been held in Freedom and Parkinson said the members are very satisfied with the location because the large amount of space and rural location give them the advantage of using their equipment to the best advantage. Last year, PCARS finished fifth overall and second in Ohio among groups in their class, and they were on course to match or exceed their 2016 numbers by Sunday afternoon.

The members were mostly communicating with others in the U.S., but they did receive international calls, including one from far-away New Zealand.

"It came through about 3 a.m.," Nagy said. "And we all about fell off our chairs."

To learn more about PCARS, visit their website at portcars.org.

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Another great Freedom event held last Sunday was the annual open house for Peter and Susan Schneider's garden. The Schneiders open their Vair Road garden to the public every June, so visitors can view the more than 1,200 roses including rare and hard-to-find varieties from England, France and Germany.

My mother and I visited on Sunday and the eight-acre grounds were like stepping back into a British period drama. There were roses in almost every color of the rainbow, including bright orange, pale lavender, deep red, and every possible shade of pink, and the fragrant scent of the blooms filled the air.

The eight-acre property also includes two lily ponds, an orchard, and other flowering trees and shrubs.

You can visit the Facebook page Freedom Township: Then and Now for more photos of the roses and the field day event.

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The township's annual trash drop-off weekend on June 8 to 10 was a resounding success, Trustee John Zizka reported. Residents filled up six 40-cubic-yard containers of trash, four containers of tires, and three containers of recyclable material.

However, despite the success of the trash drop-off, some people are still dumping their trash in the recycling containers next to the town hall, Zizka said. The trustees are considering ways to curb this behavior including hiring a deputy from the Portage County Solid Waste District to monitor the containers, installing video cameras, and instituting curbside recycling.

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The Freedom Township Historical Society had another great crowd out for our June meeting, which was a special presentation from FTHS member Jeannette Wilson Marvin-Hall on the history of the Freedom school system, Freedom High School, and Freedom alumni. There were also several historical artifacts on display, including Speedometer yearbooks, bricks from the high school, and a band uniform. A fascinating fact I learned from the presentation was that Freedom High School's colors were orange and black, and its sports teams was known as the Yellow Jackets.

Also, it was especially nice to see former Freedom Station resident the Rev. Lyle Petit and his wife, Jeannette, at the meeting. They traveled all the way from Arizona to visit family in Ohio, and they were gracious enough to take the time to stop by and visit and share their Freedom memories.

Our next meeting will be at 7 p.m. July 11 at the Freedom Community Center, 8940 S.R. 700. There will be a talk by FTHS Vice President Claudia Garrett on the early settlers of Freedom with a special focus on the pioneer women and the hardships they faced. There will also be Fourth of July-themed refreshments followed by a business meeting.

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The First Congregational Church of Freedom held its annual Father's Day picnic on June 2 following the worship service. The ladies of the church outdid themselves with all the wonderful food and preparation for this special event, the Rev. Jim Melick reported. Everyone enjoyed not only the good food, but great fellowship with lots of fun and joy.

Michael Gardner will be ministering in music and preaching at 10:30 a.m. July 9 at the historic building at the intersection of S.R. 88 and S.R. 303. He has many years of experience sharing the Gospel of Jesus Christ and Christian music in an uplifting and encouraging ministry. Pastor Melick and his wife, the Rev. Janie, invite everyone from Freedom and the surrounding community to join them for this special service.

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Happy Fourth of July to all my readers!

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Contact Amanda Garrett at agarettsun@yahoo.com or at 330-842-4374.

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Around Freedom - Ravenna Record Courier

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Rod Liddle’s Freedom Dinner speech: Emily Thornberry, Diane Abbott and the metro-liberal left – Spectator.co.uk (blog)

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Its that time of year again. After Rod Liddle used the key address at the fifth annual Freedom Dinner to turn his attention to Labours Jew-bashing, the anti-Brexit mob and Tim Farron, he was invited back by popular demand to speak at the event this week.

At the annual libertarian bash, hosted by Forest, Liddle spoke frankly on a range of topics calling out the double think among the metro-liberal left, namely Diane Abbott and Emily Thornberry:

Double think, as Orwell put it, is kind of unique to our metro-liberal left. Its kind of how they live their lives. Take Diane Abbott, for years Diane railed and railed against the institution of private schools, but then she sent her brat to one, and admitted that it is unforgivable.

But more than that, theres Emily Thornberry, Lady Nugee, (lets give her her proper name, she is Lady Nugee) MP for Islington South I believe, has also railed, not only against private schools but against selective schools, against grammar schools. She doesnt want you to have your kids to have the chance to go to a selective school because they are bright but shes sent her kids to one. Remarkable.

Not only that, but she also railed for years about the policy to sell off old housing association properties. She thought it was immoral and wrong, voted against it, thought people shouldnt be allowed to buy them: bought one herself! I mean, you cant make this stuff up! She bought one herself. And, you know, I used to think this was hypocrisy, but its more than that. Its a kind of weird separation from reality, a sort of schizophrenia if you like. For Diane and Emily, and so many of the left, theres this stuff in their heads, a pink marshmallow-y stuff, and thats what they believe in. And then some miles distant, theres the real world, where other stuff happens, where reality happens.

Theres an awful lot of people like that. Ive got a friend here tonight, Rob, who is unfortunate enough to live in London. And he can tell you of many, many people, lefties, who voted for Corbyn at the last election and prayed to the Lord Jesus Christ that he wouldnt get in. Now that really is a kind of madness isnt it? Its where a sort of fantasy world and the real world suddenly collide.

Double-standards more double-standards: do you remember Stephen Fry and a whole bunch of others railing about the winter Olympics being held in Sochi, in Russia, because of Vladimir Putins supposed homophobia? Ive never taken much of an interest in the Winter Olympics, nor has most of Britain actually, its not a hugely popular event. And at the very moment he was ranting about Russia, the cricket world cup, a game we do play a lot of, was getting under way in Bangladesh, where the penalty for same-sex relationships is life imprisonment. In Russia, its legal.

The Bangladesh escape censure because its an Islamic country, and the lefties never wish to be nasty about Islamic countries. More recently, you will have heard them all screeching about the horrible Democratic Unionist Party and their homophobia and how utterly ghastly they are. But again they make no comment whatsoever about the approach to homosexuality in the Islamic world and within the Muslim communities. That is never mentioned.

And there is a difference, you lefties, there is a difference.

If you are gay and you want to get married it may well be that the DUP would be a little bit churlish about decorating your wedding cake. But theyre not going to push you off a fingbuilding are they? Theyre not going to stone you to death. Theyre not going to put you in prison.

I made this, what seems to me, very, very obvious point, to one of those gibbering snowflakes recently, and he thought about it for a bit, and then he said: The difference between Islam and the DUP, is really only one of degrees. Right.. okay.. quite a large number of degrees isnt it? I would say somewhere in the region of 180.

But people who think that there is an equivalence cant be argued with, its impossible to debate because the delusion has gripped them so tightly that theres kind of no way through. There is the real world, and then there is the place they inhabit. Dont forget, these are the people who decided that something that wasnt a circle could be a circle if it really wanted to be.

Let me tell you more about this. This was a study, and it was done in America and it was an American experiment designed to seemingly prove the very point I have been making. People were shown this shape and asked if it was a circle.

Liberals, overwhelmingly, said yes. Because they are inclusive. But its not a circle is it? Its not! They got it wrong! And theres nothing you can do about this. Theres no arguing. If you want it to be a circle, it can be a circle.

Added to this separation from reality of course is this, is a tendency to consider their opponents not really wrong, but bad people. Scum. Evil. You wont let that shape be a circle, you murdering bastard!

Weve seen an awful lot of this sort of stuff at the moment, the protestors shouting Tory scum, the people insisting that Theresa May is responsible for the murder of those poor people in Grenfell Tower, the shrieked asides at every single turn.

One of my favourites, actually, of this sort of approach came just after the 2015 general election, when unexpectedly for the liberals the Conservative party won, and it was a response from the university lecturer called Rebecca Roache that really cheered me up, she was fab.

What she did, was she put out a poster on social media and she said I am de-friending anyone who sends me anything about the Tories. Right okay.. and then she went on: Ive had it up to here, I dont want any conservative friends, the time for reasoned debate is over. Go on.. what subject do you think she taught? Yes shes a philosophy lecturer!

Or heres one from more recently, and it is typical of the way these people behave. The liberal journalist, Sophie Heawood, who tweeted recently, that she looked forward to the day when all Daily Mail readers were dead. Yep, all 4 million of them. Incredible. I was so shocked I rang Impress, which is the new regulating body funded by Max Mosley, who, if you remember, got upset when people interfered in his orgies, and so set up this regulatory body, (with his friends from Hacked off), which has won approval from the government, and will soon be telling us what we can and cant write.

So I rang up about Sophie Heawood and tried to get a response to this, seemed to be something worthy of a response. Three times I rang. And I just didnt get an answer from her. The person I really wanted to talk to was a chap called Jonathan Heawood, the boss of Impress yes hes Sophies brother.

And Im afraid were back at last years speech where I talked about my favourite board game, 6 degrees of Shami Chakrabarti, because all these fers are related to each other. There is a small, finite number of these people in an endless multitude of quangos and jobs. And so you have JonathanHeawood, a former Labour candidate of course, as you would expect, someone whos a fan of Max Mosley, and boss of Impress, his sister works for the Guardian and wants all Daily Mail readers dead. His wife is the daughter of Polly Toynbee. I mean, theyre all there, theyre all lined up.

And its very, very common and again its a separation of reality. I would assume Sophie Heawood really doesnt think that all Daily Mail readers should die; its just a sort of insanity.

Another example, a few years back, I argued that as we as a country and we as a continent opened our doors to more refugees or supposed refugees from North Africa many more would die in the seas attempting to come here. This is exactly what has happened: more people have died, something like four-fold have died because Europe has said we must let more people in so more have tried to make the crossing meaning more people have been killed. But the shrieking when I made this point was remarkable and someone said racist.

These people are human beings, it was shouted at me. Simon Schama, screeched at me, the gravest insult he could find which was that I was suburban. And had a real go at me.

Its a separation of what is actually happening with what goes on in their minds. It may be the sign of the rest of lefties wanting to feel good about themselves by saying we should allow more refugees in. What has that done is kill more refugees. The double think and the demonisation of opponents is on the surface quite funny, even profitable, but it does serve to close down the debate so that real issues are very difficult to discuss. Suddenly perfectly sensible things become unsaleable. Such as this is not a circle.

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Rod Liddle's Freedom Dinner speech: Emily Thornberry, Diane Abbott and the metro-liberal left - Spectator.co.uk (blog)

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A State of Freedom by Neel Mukherjee review vital meditations on … – The Guardian

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Repeated words, pronouns not clearly referring to one character or another, flabbily padded phrases, irritating tics of style (the use of the word all as in all longish hair), eruptions of verbosity (the indescribable sound that emanated from that swiftly engorging clot of people): there is so much distractingly bad writing in the first section of Neel Mukherjees new novel, its difficult to concentrate on what he is actually saying. As far as the plot goes, it seems to be something at once melodramatic and not all that surprising. An Indian father born in Calcutta but now working in the US takes his six-year-old son, who has been raised in America, to see the Taj Mahal and the nearby monuments at Fatehpur Sikri. Here, thanks to a bit offunny business with shadows and guides (Marabar Caves, anyone?), the son freaks out, and the father is forced to accept that he has become a tourist in his own country.

Its not a good start, from a writer who has already been shortlisted for the Booker and the Costa and won the Encore prize for his second novel, The Lives of Others. But anyone tempted to abandon the book at this point should persevere. Although later pages are still liable to congestion and carelessness, they are much better written. Theyre also ambitiously and intelligently engaged with important themes several of which are treated explicitly (deracination, the inequalities of Indian society), and one of which emerges more subtly, through clever and well-handled plotting.

At first glance the narratives of the five sections seem discrete, although all tending towards similar interests and conclusions. As scene follows scene, however, Mukherjee returns tocharacters and events that have previously appeared only in the background of each story, to flesh out their details. So, for instance, a horrible accident involving a construction worker who falls from the scaffolding of a new building, witnessed in passing by the father and son in the first section, links both to a later section in which we hear the story of the victims earlier life, and to the final section in which we read the unpunctuated monologue spoken immediately before his death. In the same way, a poverty-stricken man leading a dancing bear, who appears briefly beside the car window as the father and son return toDelhi, turns out to be the brother of the construction worker, and later gets most ofa whole section to himself. We hear about his family and their hardships, about the training of the bear, about their time on the road together, and about the ways in which their relationship allows and simultaneously denies a state of freedom.

This linked structure emphasises the value of life as life, regardless of wealth and status and circumstance. But it also conveys a sense of inter-relatedness that allows Mukherjee to say something about how families and communities work in general, and about how Indian society functions in particular. His sharpest focus is on the way life carries characters like dice on the slot of a roulette machine and delivers [them] to destinations that [are] endlessly repeatable, each ever so slightly different from the other, all more or less the same. In this respect A State of Freedom touches on distinctly English-Victorian themes. And like the intricately woven novels of say Dickens, it has its foundation in the denunciation of injustice, and the valuing of compassion.

In the second section, for instance, ason raised in India but now working in London stays with his parents in Mumbai, and becomes interested intheir cook, Renu, and another servant named Milly. As far as the parents are concerned, the significance of these two consists largely in how well or badly they do their work. But the son more liberal, more curious, and like several other characters in the book, very interested in food and its preparation inquires into their lives, and is eventually encouraged by Renu to visit her home village. When he does so, he receives a lesson in social awkwardness, and in the limits of his own capacity to imagine the lives of others, which picks up themes that are announced in Mukherjees opening pages.

The sound of grief is audible everywhere, but it never drowns out the voices insisting on their right to thrive

Much the same goes for the fourth section, in which were given the backstory of Milly, the other servant. Originally named Manglu and the daughter of a drunken father, she was raised in great poverty. She seeks to improve her lot by taking work as a servant away from her village: during her travels and travails, which Mukherjee describes with an impressive sense of actuality, she experiences various degrees of tolerance and intolerance, culminating in a life of more or less complete captivity from which she is eventually rescued.

Millys childhood friend Soni, meanwhile, stays behind in the village and joins the local Maoist guerrillas, living in the woods and enduring her own form of hardship. When Milly hears news of her, her response contains questions that unite the two strands of the narrative, and resonate throughout the novel. What are the costs of leaving and staying at home? What are the limits of human resilience? Or as Milly herself says: How can movement from one place to another break you? Are you a terracotta doll, easily broken in transit?

At a time when the manifold dramas of migration are centre stage, we often hear writers making the sound of lamentation. The sound of grief is audible everywhere in A Sense of Freedom, but itnever drowns out the voices insisting on their right to thrive. One of the most dynamic aspects of Mukherjees flawed but vital novel isthat even while facing up to unhappiness it continues toshow an affirming flame.

Andrew Motions Silver: Return to Treasure Island is published by Vintage. A State of Freedom is published by Chatto. To order a copy for 12.74 (RRP 16.99) go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over 10, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of 1.99.

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A State of Freedom by Neel Mukherjee review vital meditations on ... - The Guardian

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