The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Monthly Archives: June 2017
Veteran teaches disaster preparation skills at Heights library – The Killeen Daily Herald
Posted: June 10, 2017 at 6:59 pm
During his presentation on survivalism, Sergio Martinez removed a small Bible in a plastic bag from his duffle bag.
Staying calm is good when youre out there, he said. Like it or not, everyone is going to get religious at some point. Why not have a Bible?
Martinez, an extreme survivalist, gave a presentation to a dozen people at the Stewart C. Meyer Harker Heights Public Library on Saturday morning. He talked about what kind of items to pack away in case of emergency and how to prepare for a disaster situation.
It was toward the end of summer 2005 when Martinez first became aware of disaster preparation. He had family members who lived in Houston that were coming to stay with him during Hurricane Katrina. There wasnt enough food in the pantry, so he decided to head to H-E-B to stock up on some more groceries. When he walked out of the store, the only thing he had was a couple of loaves a bread and some cans of food. Thats when it dawned on him he wasnt nearly enough prepared for survival.
Sometimes you need to trip and fall, and then youre going to learn, he said.
Soon enough, Martinez began teaching himself about survivalism. He read books, talked to experts and watched Youtube videos, and eventually got the chance to compete for a survivalist show that airs on the History Channel.
In front of Martinez, a retired veteran, sat a green bag no bigger than the carry-on a passenger on an airplane would stow in the overhead storage bin. What he kept inside of it was not to be used for a family vacation, though, and a number of the items probably wouldnt be permitted on an airplane.
Martinez recommended preparing meals ready to eat MREs long in advance. His prepackaged MREs included peanut butter crackers, bottles of water, freeze dried food and protein bars. Canned foods including soups and beans are good to pack, too, but in moderation. Too many cans can weigh down a bag, and depending on the situation, you might have to walk for long periods of time. In those situations, any reduction in weight can help.
There were typical items found in Martinezs survival bag, such as an extra pair of clothes, a sleeping bag and a hammock. But there were also nifty tools such as a crank-up flashlight that triples as a cellphone charger and an AM/FM radio. He also pulled out a miniature propane stove and a water filter.
Much like he was prepared for any potential disaster, Martinez was ready to answer questions from the audience. One person asked him about the difficulty of catching your own food through hunting and fishing, and preparing it while in the wild.
Martinez said that with a little practice, it wasnt that difficult.
But dont expect it to taste good, he said.
Once you kill the game, how do you prepare it? We dont have chefs out there.
sullivan@kdhnews.com |254-501-7552
Read the rest here:
Veteran teaches disaster preparation skills at Heights library - The Killeen Daily Herald
Posted in Survivalism
Comments Off on Veteran teaches disaster preparation skills at Heights library – The Killeen Daily Herald
How Carmen Ejogo Helped Build a Personal Apocalypse in It Comes at Night – Den of Geek US
Posted: at 6:58 pm
For an ensemble piece about family and the pains it can endure, Carmen Ejogos Sarah is more than just the mother of an endangered den in It Comes at Night; shes the key that makes these people blood relatives. So she has the most to lose whenever any of it spills.
When the film begins, an unseen apocalypse has been muddled through for an unknown amount of time, but its certainly taken its toll on Ejogo and everyone left that matters in her life. Secluded and surviving in her presumable childhood home, a house deep in the woods, the picture opens on Sarah saying goodbye to her father Bud (David Pendleton), a man suffering from a mysterious plague that has caused blisters to crop up on his face and body. His grandson Travis (Kelvin Harrison Jr.) and son-in-law Paul (Joel Edgerton) reluctantly take the former patriarch out into the woods and euthanize him in his grave.
For Sarah, it is all downhill from there as an enigmatic family with young parents (Christopher Abbott and Riley Keough) ends up staying with them. She isnt sure if she can trust them or anyone else who isnt kin these days. But with already one loss in the family, she isnt eager to see another member vanish.
When Den of Geek sat down with Ejogo earlier this week, the foreboding nihilism of this film hung heavy around the conversation. After all, director Trey Edward Shults cited the medieval painting The Triumph of Death as one key inspiration, and the loss of a parent as the other. Ejogo is aware of the interpersonal horror in this epic worldand how unique of an opportunity it was for her and her co-stars to build that world simply through their acting choices.
In our conversation with the Selma actress, we veer from discussing how she, Edgerton, and Harrison had the freedom to conjure this reality and emotion, as well as what it means to her and our seemingly darkening world. But there is light too since we also discuss whether we might see Ejogo again in a Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them sequel!
So youve been in horror movies before, but none quite like this. Could you talk about what you mightve expected the script to be and how you reacted upon reading it?
So I got the script, thought it was really interesting, but didnt have a sense of who the director was given he had only made one film. So I went to that film, which is called Krisha. It was immediately obvious to me that this was somebody who had a very clear sense of self as a director and a filmmaker, and whatever he did next would be potentially really powerful. So I guess it was a combination of script and seeing his material that made me sign on, and then it just got better and better. I was like, Who else is probably going to be cast? Hearing about how he was going to approach lighting in the movie and the very unorthodox attempt at bringing on a sound supervisor who was going to be pretty radical in some ways.
So there were so many reasons to be excited. Because the things that are the most hard to come by in this business are original ideas that are then executed the way they are intended, which is what I think was the promise of this from the start.
How much of yourself do you look for in the subject? Because despite being such an apocalyptic setting, the film is dealing with very primordial concerns about mortality and losses within ones family.
Good question. I think often as an actor you read material and you dont even realize fully why youre responding until maybe afterwards, maybe never. That was probably the case for me. I know it was the case for Kelvin. I didnt know until today that he had gone through in some form or another Hurricane Katrina.
So he lost a home. He was only 12-years-old at the time, but thats the kind of memory that I imagine stays with you the rest of your life. So its bound to inform the kind of professional choices you make too. So I dont doubt that there are experiences I had, if I thought about it, that would keep me interested and pull me back to this sort of genre world, and this sort of darker, nihilistic kind of space we inhabit.
Did you call on anything specifically to find Sarah?
I think the one thing I drew about regularly was the relationship with my own son whos 15-years-old, who is at a very close age. I would argue that Kelvin plays it like a 15-year-old a lot of the time, in terms of his innocence, curiosity, his sexual desires for Rileys character, and so on and so forth. Its all just emerging. Its all just beginning to blossom in him.
Trey is apparently heavily influenced by Pieter Breughel paintings, specifically about medieval plagues. Obviously, theres a painting in your characters house in the movie. Did you study the paintings of Brueghel and did you get to talk to Trey about why your characters would keep this painting?
We definitely talked about why we keep the painting for sure. One of the things that became a fixation for all of us was timeline. Even if we didnt know what the backstory was entirely, we did need to have a feel for if this disease is something thats been around for six months or two years. How long does it take to die from it? How long has Bud have it before he gets the blisters? You know, these things kind of things did need to be answered in order to move forward in a way that was consistent.
So in that exploration in putting questions back and forth to Trey, it became clear he had imagined that this had been the house Bud stayed in as the family moved out and grew up, or moved to after he split with his wife or his wife died. But then there are other things he had no intention of letting us know or understand fully. He wanted to keep us in the dark. I think to fester a certain amount of paranoia among ourselves. There are things Riley knew about me that I didnt know about her and all kinds of shady stuff he was encouraging. [Laughs]
Were you, Joel, and Kelvin able to come up with your own backstory for what family life was like before all hell broke loose?
I dont know if we were ever completely on the same page to be honest. I know we all did it as part of our process. I had several dinners with Trey to talk about what I thought might make sense in terms of profession. Is this a rich family or a poor family? You know, where do we land on that stuff? So we definitely got into that. But as I said, some of the things would really live within ourselves. So if it makes sense to us, given the kind of family performance we were hoping for.
Who do you think Sarah was before the plague then?
So I think Sarah was a bit of a daddys girl, but tomboyish and resourceful, and may have learned to use guns by observing her dad, who I think its kind of clear, not really, but hes probably come home from the military or Vietnam and established the house. That maybe there is something a little PTSD about him, which may be why he is so secluded in this forest in this house. And thats also why I have an aptitude for putting together the water system or doing ABC. I can use guns it seems. Its not a big thing for me to get readythere are parts of the movie where Im using guns. So that was certainly something we explored.
But you know, I could know nothing about my character, and there still would have been enough with the paranoia.
Out of curiosity, did you speak with Chris or Riley about their own backstories, or were you as actors kept apart to build that suspicion of each other?
Yeah, I knew and I know nothing about Chris and Rileys characters. Other than what you see on the screen? Nothing else. I remember there was some kind of strange pitting us against each other by Trey, between myself and Riley, so thered be a degree of jealousy festering as well. For me, the mother of my son who clearly has thing for this other girl, and I was also jealous of their marriage, because mine is very stale and a little frigid. So these are things that arent on the page.
Theres nothing in the stage direction or dialogue that suggests thats what were playing, but there are layers and colors that lend themselves to this sort of movie, that make it very much a character-driven piece.
This movie can at times be bleakly nihilist. It goes back to Breughel and The Triumph of Death. What do you think the appeal is in such grimness from our art or even entertainment?
I think theres something a little nihilistic in every one of us. That theres this awful dance with mortality that we have to play every single day of our lives, which means theres a fascination with death and death in all the forms it can take. Whether its self-inflicted, whether its apocalyptic events, whether its pandemics, whatever it might look like. To have a grasp of it in a safe arena like a cinema screen is a kind of experience that most of us are willing to go through, because we will understand that it may only be around the corner in real-life.
On a somewhat lighter topic, I just recently rewatched Fantastic Beasts again. Have you heard whispers yet about Seraphina Picquery returning for another wizarding adventure?
Write all requests to @jk_rowling on Twitter and hopefully shell get the message that Seraphina cannot be done without for number two! [Laughs]
When I last saw it, it was actually the day before the U.S. election in November. JK Rowlings vision of nationalist forces on the rise again seems more timely than ever.
You know, Ive made a few filmsthis is very interesting, because I came up earlier with the theory about Trey, who wrote [It Comes at Night] three years ago about something completely different. It wasnt an attempt at being political or socially relevant. It was a personal film about his father dying of cancer. And yet, somehow, his feelers were out enough to tap into the zeitgeist. Ive had that experience, when I think about it, three times. So maybe its as much to do with me as it is to do with Trey in how I found myself in repeated pieces of material that really resonate in the here and now.
Certainly, which you just mentioned Selma and also this. I dont think Trey had any intention when he wrote this to tap into whats happening right now. But if youre following the newsreal newsyou saw this coming. Its not that it happened yesterday and suddenly a movie happened to coincide [with it]. It feels like its in-tune or attuned. This has been cyclical for as long as I can remember. It wouldnt surprise me around the time that Trey was writing the piece three years ago that he was just getting a feel in the air for something that was coming. Interesting that as an audience, we get to watch it right smack back in the middle of that time that he may have been sensitive to three years ago.
It feels like art will be reacting quite a bit now.
Yeah, for sure.
Thank you for doing this.
Thank you, it was great to see you.
It Comes at Night is in theaters now.
More:
How Carmen Ejogo Helped Build a Personal Apocalypse in It Comes at Night - Den of Geek US
Posted in Nihilism
Comments Off on How Carmen Ejogo Helped Build a Personal Apocalypse in It Comes at Night – Den of Geek US
What Doesn’t Kill Us does not make Us Stronger – The Good Men Project (blog)
Posted: at 6:58 pm
Last Thursday afternoon President Trump walked into the Rose Garden and told the American public were getting out of the Paris Climate Agreement. The spectacle, classically Trump, came after days of leaks saturated cable punditry with speculation and preemptive partisan squabbling. The amateurish administration watched as Twitter shifted its short attention span from Trumps most recent harmless error #covfefe to his next tragic mistake.
Trumps decision is undoubtedly tragic. The Paris Agreement represents an incredible achievement for global governance and the green energy movement. The pact, joined by nearly 200 countries, sets ambitious emission targets designed to curb global temperature increases to a manageable 2 Celsius. The United States, the worlds second largest polluter, emits 18% of the worlds carbon. We now join Syria (entrenched in a deadly Civil War) and Nicaragua (a green energy stalwart who held out for a greener deal) in a small and informidable group of dissenters.
The decision to leave the Paris Agreement is the most potent example of Trumps jingoistic America First foreign policy doctrine to date and may be the most damaging to Americas status as the worlds lone superpower. Angela Merkel has clearly moved on, speaking to German voters after Trumps romp through Europe she warned, the time that we can rely on others is a bit in the past. Europes strongest leader has already shifted her focus to China calling the quasi-communist nation an important and strategic partner.
Americas self-imposed solitude will have real consequences we have lost our seat at the table as the world begins to rebuild its energy infrastructure.
But Trumps decision to withdrawal is also a reflection of a new American ethic in the era of Trump.America is no longer a reliable ally in global governance. In Trumps White House, diplomacy and collective action are for suckers or at least elitist liberals who watch MSNBC. Trump is not content with isolation, but is imposing his own nihilism on the world through American foreign policy. His lieutenants primed the pump for a Paris withdrawal earlier this week in the Wall Street Journal articulating the administrations depressing world view. The world is not a global community but an arena where nations, non-governmental actors, and businesses engage and compete for advantage. If this is true, then Trump has made clear the United States has, at least temporarily, changed teams.
My mother used to tell me when I was a kid, show me who your friends are and Ill show you your future. Right now, Americas future looks bleak. The U.S withdrawal has already ostracized America from its most important allies. The President of the European Union, Jean-Claude Juncker, unabashedly denounced Trumps decision and added that Europe would not act as vassals of the Americans. Berlin added this morning, U.S. climate move cant and wont stop those of us who feel obliged to protect the planet. Meanwhile, in the first year of Trumps presidency hes invited Rodrigo Duterte to the White House, was silent when Erdogans thugs attacked protesters in the nations capital, and of course his association with Putin is well documented despite the Presidents best efforts.
After years of conservatives lambasting President Obama for leading from behind, Trump has abdicated Americas role on the world stage. Americas self-imposed solitude will have real consequences we have lost our seat at the table as the world begins to rebuild its energy infrastructure. Beijing will certainly be happy to fill the void left by Americas ill-fated decision and is well positioned to do so. China has invested billions to complete their One Belt, One Road initiative,building partnerships with Europe and building the developing worlds infrastructure to receive Chinese products. Trump, the ultimate deal maker, just missed out.
Originally posted here:
What Doesn't Kill Us does not make Us Stronger - The Good Men Project (blog)
Posted in Nihilism
Comments Off on What Doesn’t Kill Us does not make Us Stronger – The Good Men Project (blog)
Simply affirming someone’s presence a great gift – Times Record News
Posted: at 6:57 pm
The Rev. Father Peter Kavanaugh, St. Benedict Orthodox Church, Wichita Falls 12:02 a.m. CT June 10, 2017
Father Peter Kavanaugh is the priest at St. Benedict Orthodox Church in Wichita Falls.(Photo: Times Record News file)Buy Photo
I will never forget Susan. She was sitting in her wheelchair when I first met her. Her hair was disheveled. The expression on her face was confused. She looked into the distance with a vacant stare and waved her hand to and fro, senselessly. She did not recognize her family when they came to visit her. She did not remember the parents that raised her, the meal on which she dined that morning, nor the words spoken to her by the nurse only minutes before. Here, in the assisted living home, Susan spent the last several years of her life a frail, quiet, and for the most part, forgotten person.
The final season in life is full of profound changes. In some instances, this is a time of joy, forgiveness, revelation, and wisdom. When given the opportunity to reflect and share ones legacy with younger generations, some discover new perspectives on life, and may, for the first time, become concerned with the eternal and lasting. Unfortunately, old age can also be full of losses. Many suffer terribly when their bodies and minds slowly stop working. Old age may involve a loss of autonomy, self-respect, or even purpose. Susans situation is in no way unusual. Alzheimers and memory-loss often give rise to the most challenging situations in aging. In the light of these losses and changes, the Church cant be silent. We Christians have to look deep within our scriptures and traditions to find ways to reach out to our parents and family who are struggling with late old age.
One afternoon, I decided to spend a few minutes with Susan. She said hello and then became silent. I chatted about nothing in particular at first, and soon felt awkward and uncomfortable. So, not knowing what to do, I arose to exit. Immediately, Susan turned to me, and with words steeped in emotion and loneliness, asked me: Where are you going? I was taken aback thoroughly and sat down once again. This time I merely took her hand into mine and gazed into her eyes.
From there on, whenever I entered a room with Susan in it, her face lit up with joy and eagerness. She could not remember me on a cognitive level, but she certainly did on an entirely different level. I learned an invaluable lesson: how to be comfortable with silence, and to simply be present. In this way, we shared conversations through mere eye contact, and formed one of the most profound relationships I have known. I will never forget the brightness, transparency, and life of her eyes. There is no room for doubt, that underneath the disease, underneath the quiet, vacant, and wrinkled face, there was a living person needing love.
What does it mean to be a person? The world has all kinds of answers to this. Today, we tend to define ourselves by our accomplishments, possessions, or our social status, and on and on. But old age forces us to reexamine. A gerontologist named Glen Weaver writes, The cruelest irony of contemporary culture may be that many who thought they had found their identities in the individualism, rationalism, romanticism, and materialism of western modernity now find these foundations crumbling beneath them. While I worked as a chaplain in a memory-care center, I often heard family saying, She is no longer the same person, The spouse I married has disappeared, or We lost him years before he died. What do we say?
Perhaps the churchs greatest gift to us when faced with these trials is its affirmation of personhood. We are not, in fact, defined by our accomplishments or even our memories. Each and every one of us is a unique person made in the image of God, with a body and a soul. Paul writes, Therefore we do not lose heart, but though our outer man is decaying, yet our inner man is being renewed day by day (2 Cor. 4:16). In Christ, we trust that no matter how much the body fades and no matter what we lose in this life, the core of who we are is eternal and infinitely valuable.
What does happen to a person when they seem swallowed up by a disease? Christians have asked this for hundreds of years. In fact, in the sixth century, a church leader in Jerusalem, known as John the Solitary, also faced the question. He suggested that we can think of the soul as a musician, and the body as the musicians instrument. When a cord in a zither, or a pipe in an organ is damaged, it is not the finger that plays upon them that is at fault, but rather it is the artistic activity of the finger that is impeded from sounding forth by the zithers cords or the organs pipe because the defects are in the instrument. In other words, when the body stops working correctly, the soul remains alive and present, but is unable to communicate effectively.
No matter what happens to a person, the person is still alive and still with us. We can all help our parents, or siblings, or loved ones by simply loving them as they are. This is what Susan taught me. We didnt need to talk. We didnt need to do anything. All she yearned for was to be seen and loved as a person. All I needed to do was to slow down and be present with her. Ill never forget Susan, and I look forward to getting to know her better in the life to come.
Read or Share this story: http://wtrne.ws/2s76SBA
The rest is here:
Simply affirming someone's presence a great gift - Times Record News
Posted in Rationalism
Comments Off on Simply affirming someone’s presence a great gift – Times Record News
Are Far Right ‘Free Speech’ Rallies Breeding Terrorism? – The National Memo (blog)
Posted: at 6:56 pm
Reprinted with permission from Alternet.
The disturbing ramblings uttered by Jeremy Joseph Christian as he entered thecourtroomMay 27 drew on a horrifying trend in America: Rallying behind the right to so-called free speech, both figuratively and literally, to justify white supremacy and its violent acts.
Get out if you dont like free speech, Christian said. You call it terrorism, I call it patriotism. You hear me? Die.
Christian, 35, was arraigned on charges of aggravated murderof Ricky John Best, 53, and Taliesin Myrddin Namkai-Meche, 23. Both men were stabbed and killed by Christian on a Portland light-rail train when they tried todefendtwo young women Christian was harrasing with anti-Muslim slurs. Christian was charged with the attempted murder of athird stabbing victim, Micah Fletcher, 21, who survived and was present in the courtroom.
If there is a central theme to Christians ravings leading up to the attack, its his tendency to articulate a volatile synthesis of xenophobia, Islamophobia, and white supremacy,Jack Jenkins, a senior religion reporter at ThinkProgress, reportedthe day after Christians first court appearance.
In addition to calling for violence against Muslims on his Facebook page, Jenkins added, Christian reportedly attended a free speech rally in April, where he shouted the n-word at protesters and offered up Nazi salutes.
According to Willamette Week, Christian arrived at an April 29 free speech march in Southeast Portland wearing a Revolutionary War flag as a cape. He carried a baseball bat. He threw Nazi salutes and shouted racial slurs in a Burger King parking lot. Twice, left-wing demonstrators grew so infuriated with his antics that Portland police officers formed a barrier to shield him.
Even the alt-right marchers were divided on Christians behavior.
Some of them, leather-clad bikers, told him to shut up and tried to kick him out of the rally, added Willamette Week reporterCorey Pein. Others seemed fine with him expressing himself: Unpopular speech was the point of the event.
Eight days after the Portland murders, another free speech rally took place in the City of Roses, where14 were arrested. Similar right-wing free speech rallies have been popping up in other blue-state cities fromBerkeleyto Boston, while aWashington D.C.version is planned for late June.
In addressing President Trumps overwhelmingprioritization of fightingIslamic extremism, Dan Coats, director of national intelligence, announced at a Senate Intelligencehearing on May 11, Homegrown violent extremists remain the most frequent and unpredictable terrorist threat to the United States.
Alexandra Rosenmann is an AlterNet associate editor. Follow her@alexpreditor.
This article was made possible by the readers and supporters of AlterNet.
See the rest here:
Are Far Right 'Free Speech' Rallies Breeding Terrorism? - The National Memo (blog)
Posted in Free Speech
Comments Off on Are Far Right ‘Free Speech’ Rallies Breeding Terrorism? – The National Memo (blog)
Hate speech is the cost of free speech – Baltimore Sun
Posted: at 6:56 pm
As students of the University of Maryland College Park, we were saddened to hear of Lt. Richard W. Collins III's death. A 23-year-old student at Bowie State University, Lt. Collins was visiting a friend in College Park when Sean Urbanski, a UMD student, allegedly stabbed him at a bus stop. An investigation into Mr. Urbanski's online presence reportedly revealed he was a member of a white supremacist Facebook group, casting the stabbing in a racist light; Lt. Collins was black, and Mr. Urbanski is white. Authorities are investigating the death as a potential hate crime, and the university has taken a few unsettling steps in the interim.
Wallace Loh, president of the University of Maryland College Park, commissioned a bias-response team to address instances of hateful speech and actions. He also pumped $100,000 into the Office of Diversity and Inclusion and promised a task force for review of university policies related to hate speech and hate crimes. Mr. Loh said he hopes to "engage the campus on issues at the intersection of free speech and hate speech," which is cause for worry.
Driven in part by their restive student bodies, many college administrations around the country have introduced speech codes to their universities. While UMD and Mr. Loh have long refused them, Mr. Loh's solutions could nevertheless end up restricting free speech on campus.
The constitution doesn't distinguish between hate speech and free speech. And while we would hope that students would self-censor their comments for decency's sake, to mandate it at the administrative level endangers freedom of expression. Hate speech is broadly defined as an attack on a person based on their innate characteristics, which could be interpreted to include speech that merely offends. Where do we draw the line? Once one strain of speech loses its protection, other types will follow. Hate speech is the cost of free speech, and that cost is unavoidable.
Yet many student bodies fail to grasp this, demanding swift and bold action from their respective administrations following examples of hate speech. Ithaca College Pesident Tom Rochon and Yale University lecturer Erika Christakis were both forced to resign amid protests from students who determined the educators' approach to hate and bias did not adequately conform to their own. College administrators, when faced with accusations of being lax in standards of equality, are effectively held at gunpoint in the court of public opinion, which could explain Mr. Loh's response to this putative hate crime.
Mr. Loh's plan for the bias response team is worrisome. Similar teams at a number of U.S. universities (there are more than 100) investigate offenses that run an absurdly broad gamut. (In February of last year, for example, a University of Michigan hall director reported to that school's bias team the existence of a snow penis on the grounds.) These bias response teams largely operate in the shadows with little accountability for silencing expression, and they encourage every student around them to become an individual arbiter of justice. There is little legal standard for hate speech, and in that vacuum, students will themselves decide what does and does not offend, and report their findings. In practice, this leads to a misuse of campus resources on bogus, internecine hate-speech investigations and fosters a culture of mistrust.
Distinguishing between words that are truly threatening such as fighting words, which can directly lead to violence and are not protected by the First Amendment and constitutionally-protected free speech is vital. But creating new administrative bodies to regulate self-expression, however odious, endangers those who contribute productively to what Mr. Loh called a "marketplace of ideas."
Banning so-called hate speech would only suppress public expression of hateful views. Doing so at UMD, while likely to draw support from the student body, would do nothing to address the root of the problem. Instead of stifling those views, they should be debated. Given the opportunity to stand on their own false merits, they will collapse no prohibition required.
Hate speech and hate crimes are a pertinent issue to college students and the country, but our reaction to hate crimes and bias shows our strength of character as we combat these problems with compassion and reason. Knee-jerk reactions and forced self-censoring systems are no way to address hate. Civil discussion is.
James Whitlow (jwhitlow1994@gmail.com) and Tom Hart (tom.c.hart95@gmail.com) are students at the University of Maryland.
Read more from the original source:
Hate speech is the cost of free speech - Baltimore Sun
Posted in Free Speech
Comments Off on Hate speech is the cost of free speech – Baltimore Sun
Freedom of speech is for white people – Texas State University – The University Star
Posted: at 6:56 pm
In the past few years it has become a growing trend for individuals who feel the need to adamantly defend their constitutional right to free speech to usually be vehemently racist or otherwise problematic white people.
Whether it is Kim Davis, the county clerk who infamously defied the ruling of U.S. Supreme Court and refused to grant same-sex couples in Kentucky their marriage licenses, or Richard Spencer, a bold-faced white supremacist who advocates for peaceful ethnic cleansing, the first amendment has become a key rallying point for a growing conservative movement against a culture of Political correctness.
This particular view in a battle of principles is usually attributed to an honest and holistic respect for the American constitution as it is written. However, if this is the case, why do we rarely see these proud defendants of free speech when it comes to the frequent silencing of activists and people of color who choose to stand their ground?
A video from Texas State went viral this past semester after a student flew into a fit of rage toward a religious group that had fabricated images to persuade people to be pro-life concerning abortions. In the video, the student sets aside a balloon and bouquet of flowers to proceed through an audibly emotional tirade, kicking and punching various signs displaying graphic abortion imagery as an older gentleman attempts to calm him down.
Even many who supported his stance against anti-abortion rhetoric were eager to point out how his actions were ignorant, immature and a general disgrace to Texas States falsely proclaimed Free Speech Zone. Texas State is a public university and there is no specifically designated free speech zone, but the point to which students are willing to defend fabricated information that is obscene, hateful and potentially damaging to the mental health of many of their peers indicates a larger issue that perhaps is not tied to the sanctity of an organizations right to display poster boards.
Considering all of these are factors thatshouldfall under thelimits to free speechas defined by the Supreme Court casesGertz v. Robert Welch Inc.andMiller v. California, it becomes clear that students objections to this display of political rage are less rooted in concern for the preservation of constitutional rights, but rather fit a familiar rhetoric that desperately wishes only for peaceful, unobtrusive protests that allow the normalization of violent systems of oppression.
Whether you agree with this students actions or not, it is a silly notion to insist that he instead try talking to the organizers of the anti-choice display as if they themselves travel from university to university with the intention of having meaningful discourse and understanding. They purposefully produce hateful imagery and count on our loose understanding of constitutional free speech and need for normalcy as a buffer to spread their falsified information to vulnerable audiences. The more we find the courage to break out of these imagined rules on how to respectfully engage with perpetrators that are rarely held to the same standard respect, the more we can utilize the full range of options at hand when it comes to the dismantling of hateful institutions.
-Tafari Robertson is a public relations senior
View original post here:
Freedom of speech is for white people - Texas State University - The University Star
Posted in Freedom of Speech
Comments Off on Freedom of speech is for white people – Texas State University – The University Star
Balance Between Free Speech, Respect in Workplace Tricky but Possible – Utah Business
Posted: at 6:56 pm
Salt Lake CityAt times, the workplace can feel like a battleground between free speech and preventing harassment or discrimination. Navigating the laws concerning both can be a tricky dance for employers and managers, but it can be done, said Ryan D. Nelson, president of the Utah Employment Association.
Just as you can express yourself, your employees can and will, inside and out of the workplace, and sometimes that cause conflict, he said.
Part of the conflict comes from the fundamental basis of expression in opinionbecause its an opinion, its holder cant be right or wrong, he said, and people express it usually with a certain expectation of being right. There are a number of laws, some of which supersede others, that have to be considered when balancing maintaining a safe workplace and allowing employees to have freedom of speech, he said.
The Constitutional First Amendment right to free speech is one such consideration, but so is the National Labor Relations Act, which protects free speech and political expressions as far as they touch on wages, hours or working conditions; Title VII, which applies to public and private employers with at least 15 employees and protects against harassment or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national origin; and Utahs own free speech law, which protects persons speaking as citizens on a matter of public concern as long as it doesnt disrupt business.
Those laws can sometimes trump each other, and in some instances, speech can be protected under some but not others. Nelson pointed to an op-ed from earlier this year from then-Wasatch County Republican Party Vice Chair James Green, who argued that eliminating the wage gap between men and women would be harmful for businesses and threaten mens abilities to provide for their families. The opinion piece received explosive backlash, prompting Green to resign from his position days later.
From a legal standpoint, Nelson said, Greens op-ed was protected speech under Utah Codeit expressed his opinion as a private citizen about a matter of public concernbut was not protected under Title VII or the NLRA. If Green had been fired, rather than resigned, that action would have been appropriate under Title VII and the NLRA, but would have broken Utah law.
Likewise, if an employee wants to display a religious picture or symbol in their personal workspace, although that action is not specifically covered by NLRA or Utah law, Title VII permits itas long as non-religious personal items, including photos, are allowed in others private workspaces and the religious item is not offensive to any other protected groups.
The balance can also depend on whether a company is a public or private employer, said Nelson, and extends beyond words and actions. A 2016 case with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission centered on a Dont Tread on Me shirt worn by an employee that another employee, who was black, found offensive. The supervisor, familiar with the symbols history in the Revolutionary War, dismissed the black employees concerns that the symbol was racist. The EEOC found that while the supervisor was still within his rights to dismiss the concerns, he was negligent in researching the full history of the symbolin some areas, the familiar coiled snake is used by racist groups.
Nelson said the conflicting rules and analyses can make compliance difficult, but employers must exercise due diligence to not only be in compliance with the law but make sure their workplaces are conducive for employees. Employers might be tempted to either allow all forms of expression, or curtail personal expression altogether, but Nelson said there are problems with both of those approaches, as there is with a middle-of-the-road approach.
When youre doing this analysis running through the facts, you should have a very, very solid grasp on the facts, but also, with symbols, understand what they mean and what meaning they can have, he said. What we want to be aware of is where that line is drawn.
Nelson said employers should reiterate Equal Employment Opportunity policies and compliance, talk with managers to ensure they report issues, take inter-office employee relations into account, and be consistent with the policy across the board. By distilling a culture of co-existence, not just to managers but from bottom to top, employers can foster a welcoming workplace, he said.
Read the original:
Balance Between Free Speech, Respect in Workplace Tricky but Possible - Utah Business
Posted in Freedom of Speech
Comments Off on Balance Between Free Speech, Respect in Workplace Tricky but Possible – Utah Business
NSA-Michigan | The Home of Michigan’s Community of …
Posted: at 6:52 pm
by Greg Peters
Our Director of Marketing, Mimi Brown, reviews some of the pearls of wisdom from Corey Perlman's March program at NSA Michigan. https://www.youtube.com/embed/mzx9AYmuB0o
by Greg Peters
Penny Rosema, one of our fantastic Past Presidents at NSA Michigan, had a chance to sit down with our May 2017 seminar speaker, Laurie Guest, to talk a little bit about what we can expect. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1hsHlBTfzKs
by Greg Peters
This month, I had the pleasure of speaking with Shawne Duperon, a 10-year member of National Speakers Association and NSA-Michigan. As a former television news broadcaster and producer, she joined NSA to help her with the news speaking business. Last year, she had...
by Greg Peters
Meet some of the new faces youre seeing around the table. In our March seminar, I mentioned finding a Facebook post of mine from March of 2011. "My first NSA meeting. Friendly folks!" I'm pleased to tell you that six years later, our community is still full of...
by Breeda Miller
I wear two hats. I am a professional speaker and I am an event planner. It's always helpful to have an understanding of the people with whom you work - their challenges, goals and pain points. If you are aware you can be prepared and present yourself in the best...
by amy
Corey Perlman is bringing his eBootcamp to Michigan! Click on the image of Corey below to find out why you need tojoin us in Ann Arboron March 11.Register todayat nsamichigan.org and take advantage of early bird prices!...
Read more:
NSA-Michigan | The Home of Michigan's Community of ...
Posted in NSA
Comments Off on NSA-Michigan | The Home of Michigan’s Community of …
Contractor charged with leaking classified NSA info on …
Posted: at 6:52 pm
Reality Leigh Winner, 25, a contractor with Pluribus International Corporation in Georgia, is accused of "removing classified material from a government facility and mailing it to a news outlet," according to a federal complaint. CNN is told by sources that the document Winner allegedly leaked is the same one used as the basis for the article published Monday by The Intercept, detailing a classified National Security Agency memo. The NSA report, dated May 5, provides details of a 2016 Russian military intelligence cyberattack on a US voting software supplier, though there is no evidence that any votes were affected by the hack.
A US official confirmed to CNN that The Intercept's document is a genuine, classified NSA document.
US intelligence officials tell CNN that the information has not changed the January 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment, which found: "Russian intelligence obtained and maintained access to elements of multiple US state or local electoral boards. DHS assesses that the types of systems Russian actors targeted or compromised were not involved in vote tallying."
Prosecutors say when confronted with the allegations, Winner admitted to intentionally leaking the classified document -- and she was arrested June 3 in Augusta, Georgia.
An internal audit revealed Winner was one of six people who printed the document, but the only one who had email contact with the news outlet, according to the complaint. It further states that the intelligence agency was subsequently contacted by the news outlet on May 30 regarding an upcoming story, saying it was in possession of what appeared to be a classified document.
The Intercept's director of communications Vivian Siu told CNN the document was provided anonymously.
"As we reported in the story, the NSA document was provided to us anonymously. The Intercept has no knowledge of the identity of the source," Siu said.
"Releasing classified material without authorization threatens our nation's security and undermines public faith in government. People who are trusted with classified information and pledge to protect it must be held accountable when they violate that obligation," Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein said in a statement Monday.
Winner faces up to 10 years in prison for leaking classified information. Winner's court-appointed attorney, Titus Nichols, said a detention hearing will take place on Thursday in Augusta, where the judge will determine whether to release her on bond. Winner did not enter a plea in her initial appearance Monday.
Last month Attorney General Jeff Sessions slammed leaks in the wake of the Manchester attacks, saying: "We have already initiated appropriate steps to address these rampant leaks that undermine our national security."
Winner's mother said that her daughter is "touch and go" in an interview with CNN on Monday.
"I think she's trying to be brave for me," Billie Winner said. "I don't think she's seeing a light at the end of the tunnel."
She also said her daughter wasn't especially political and had not ever praised past leakers like Edward Snowden, to her knowledge. "She's never ever given me any kind of indication that she was in favor of that at all," her mother said. "I don't know how to explain it."
Nichols told CNN that Winner spent six years in the military, speaks Farsi and Pashtun, and has been with her current company since 2017. He added that he has not received any evidence from the government about the arrest warrant and case files, and hasn't seen evidence of a relationship between his client and the reporter.
"She's just been caught in the middle of something bigger than her," Nichols said.
Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine, the former Democratic vice presidential candidate, said on CNN's "Erin Burnett OutFront" that people who leak classified information should face the full force of the law, but added that Americans need to know much more about alleged Russian attempts to influence the election.
"Somebody who leaks documents against laws has got to suffer the consequences" Kaine said. "But the American public is also entitled to know the degree to which Russia invaded the election to take the election away from American voters."
Kaine noted he knew of no evidence that showed Russia affected machine voting totals and said he was referring to intelligence assessments that Russia had acted to influence the election.
The October information appears to be part of what is contained in the new NSA document, but the document contains additional details.
Most significantly, as CNN reported at the time, and The Intercept also reports Monday based on the this document, that there is still no evidence any votes were affected by Russian hacking.
CNN's David Shortell and Nick Valencia contributed to this report.
Continue reading here:
Contractor charged with leaking classified NSA info on ...
Posted in NSA
Comments Off on Contractor charged with leaking classified NSA info on …







