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Daily Archives: July 22, 2017
Hamburg Fairgrounds Makes Quick Progress on Cleanup – WGRZ-TV
Posted: July 22, 2017 at 8:03 am
Cleanup Continues At The Fairgrounds
WGRZ 11:30 PM. EDT July 21, 2017
Photo: WGRZ (Photo: Photo: WGRZ)
HAMBURG, N.Y. - What a difference a day makes.
Almost 36 hours after a tornado tore through the Hamburg Fairgrounds, crews made quick progress on Friday to clear off the debris scattered all across the property. Beginning at 4 a.m., they worked to collect the fallen branches, limbs and hunks of tree that had been tossed around by the sheer force of the storm.
That's good news, since the Erie County Fair is set to begin here in just 19 days. By the end of Friday, fair organizers estimated that most of the debris had already been cleared away from the fairgrounds. It would appear that the fair will begin as scheduled in August.
Although there is significant damage to the grandstands, the fair organizers have portable bleachers and will be able to make due for the concerts and other events held near the raceway.
Meanwhile, the Yankee Reigning Horse Association's "Summer Spectacular" horse show continued as planned on Friday.
Courtney Craig, the president of YRHA, said the tornado came through like a "flash" on Thursday and cut power to the barns. Many people are attending the show from out of town, and Thursday was their "move-in" day. Many campers behind barns had broken glass windows due to the tornado.
Craig had to decide whether to proceed with the show.
"We decided we'd go on with the show," she said. "It was a big decision, because we didn't have power in all of our barns. We didn't have camper power until today. But we decided we'd go on, and have our show, as usual."
So it would seem that not even a tornado can stop the horse show-- or the Erie County Fair.
2017 WGRZ-TV
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Mayor: Findlay making progress on flood control – The Courier
Posted: at 8:03 am
Chris Oaks spoke with Findlay Mayor Lydia Mihalik. Q: With another flood event behind us, protocol dictates a review of the response. At this point, however, is there anything more than can be learned about how to better respond to these events? A: Right now were still focused on helping our residents recover, so the full postmortem discussion has yet to take place. But we do know that well have to look at the efficiency with which we are able to close down roads, for one thing. Some of that has to do with the software we use in our computer-aided dispatch center and the way we communicate with various departments who help us do that. Of course, that was complicated by the sheer number of road closures due to the nature of this event. So, were going to evaluate how we do that and how we can more quickly and efficiently stay on top of the situation. Its always an ongoing process. Q: Last weeks event was unique in that it was actually two separate events in succession first the flash flood, then the major river flooding. To what extent did that tax the citys resources? A: I cant remember a time when citywide we have been pushed to the limits like this. Our storm sewer system is good, but not good enough to handle 4 to 5 inches of rain in two hours. And, of course, you noticed that we werent the only ones with that issue several cities across the state faced a similar challenge in that respect. The thing we had to deal with then, of course, was the river coming up. I think at one point we were using all the barricades we had available from both the public works department and storm sewer maintenance department. So it definitely kept us pretty busy. Q: Knowing that a potentially major event was in the forecast, one of the lessons from past events was the importance of splitting response services effectively to the north and the south of the river. Were you happy with the way that plan was executed? A: I was. Were talking about making sure police and fire resources are positioned for timely response when the city is split in half, which is even more critical now because of the extensive construction on I-75 as it is the only reliable north-south artery in these conditions. The fire department is naturally pretty well split in that way, but we want to make sure they are adequately staffed. And then we also stationed two different groups of police working the north and south end. Like I said, we havent had our official postmortem conversation, but it seemed as though our organization and response times were good. That said, Im sure those folks will have ideas for further improvement in the future. Q: And the city itself wasnt immune to the impact of the flood, either. A: Right. We have some essential city services located in the heart of the flood plain. Our utility billing office, our water distribution group and our water treatment office all had to make preparations. Our public works crew had to make sure all the heavy rolling stock was out of the way of the water. So it was certainly an all-hands-on-deck situation where just about everyone had something that had to be done. Fortunately, or unfortunately, depending on how you look at it, weve had experience at this. Q: As you are aware, many residents are also weighing in with their analysis, much of which has been harshly negative. Realizing that comes largely from frustration, whats your reaction to those voices asking when were going to stop studying and discussing and start actually doing something about all of this? A: I really do understand the frustration, and we feel it too. One thing that is painfully obviously to me and our team is that weve done a poor job of communicating about our efforts to date. Setting aside the flash flood last Thursday, which is impossible or nearly impossible to do anything about, our abatement program through the acquisition of now some 150 homes has been very effective at dealing with the river flooding issue. When the Blanchard comes up to 14 or even 15 feet, it doesnt impact near as many homes and businesses as it used to. We are now in the design phase of a significant mitigation project that should commence by the end of this year or early next. We are making progress, but we need to communicate better and Ill own that. Can we do more? Really, thats up to the community to decide what options are acceptable and at what cost. At the end of the day, however, these events are natural disasters, and no amount of money or human engineering will eliminate them completely. Good Mornings! with Chris Oaks airs from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. weekdays on WFIN, 1330 kHz. He can be reached by email at chrisoaks@wfin.com, or at 419-422-4545.
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Evacuation orders lifted for Mariposa as crews slow progress of massive wildfire – Los Angeles Times
Posted: at 8:03 am
Evacuation orders were lifted for the historic mining town of Mariposa on Friday morning, as firefighters slowed the progress of a massive wildfire burning near Yosemite National Park.
Authorities lifted the evacuation order at 11 a.m., but warned residents: There will still be smoke in the respective areas as firefighters continue firefighting operations. If at anytime you feel unsafe, please call 911.
The blaze, which has scorched more than 70,000 acres, is now 15% contained, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. It has gutted 58 homes, damaged 11 others and triggered the evacuation of approximately 4,000 people in Mariposa County communities.
Dozens of other structures have been destroyed or damaged, Cal Fire said.
Thousands of firefighters plodded through steep hillsides and canyons overnight to reach flames smoldering in chaparral, and at least one firefighter was injured Friday when a fire engine rolled down a hill, officials said. The condition of the firefighter has not yet been made public.
Temperatures should warm up this weekend, but isolated thunderstorms could sweep over the southern Sierra Nevada range on Sunday, according to the National Weather Service in Hanford.
On Thursday night, residents displaced by the Detwiler fire attended a community meeting at the Merced Theatre, where they expressed concerns about security and inquired when they could return home.
Mariposa County Sheriff Doug Binnewies said he hoped downtown Mariposa would reopen Friday, but he warned that some roads would remain closed because firefighters were still trying to mop up.
Binnewies said deputies were patrolling neighborhoods that were abandoned by homeowners who were forced to flee. He said anyone attempting to commit a crime would be arrested.
If youre coming here to do something nefarious, we dont want you here, the sheriff said. Get out.
With officials opening some areas Friday, Allison Byerley, a pastor in Mariposa, said she planned to prepare a special sermon for Sunday to give thanks and raise spirits.
Byerley said she will quote from Isaiah 43, which reads in part: Do not fear, for I have redeemed you. ... When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned; the flames will not set you ablaze.
If prayers could put out fires, this one would have been dead awhile ago, Byerley said.
Sights, sounds, and the people that made the first day of 2017's Comic-Con a sight to behold.
Sights, sounds, and the people that made the first day of 2017's Comic-Con a sight to behold.
Democrats Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Tim Canova are preparing already for their August 2018 congressional primary rematch by raising and spending campaign money.
Democrats Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Tim Canova are preparing already for their August 2018 congressional primary rematch by raising and spending campaign money.
ALSO
The fight to save the gold-mining town of Mariposa from a monster fire
'Explosive' flames destroy 45 homes as 70,000-acre wildfire rages near Yosemite
Whittier fire in Los Padres National Forest consumes more than 18,000 acres
UPDATES:
11:35 a.m.: This article was updated with details on evacuation orders being lifted for Mariposa.
8:35 a.m.: This article was updated with information about the possible return of evacuated Mariposa residents.
7:15 a.m.: This article was updated with new figures on the size of the fire and number of homes destroyed.
This article was originally published at 4 a.m.
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Pete Mackanin lauds Maikel Franco’s progress after Phillies’ road trip – Philly.com
Posted: at 8:03 am
Its like playing golf, Pete Mackanin said. In golf, you want to let the club do the work, swinging downward to try to elevate the ball. In baseball, the Phillies manager wants hitters still to elevate the ball, but do so by pushing a level swing through the bottom half of the baseball.
In the age of the term launch angle, Mackanin said he believes that metric is overemphasized. It encourages hitters to dip the bat and swing up, which projects the ball at a higher angle andcan result in more unproductive fly balls.
Theres this trend for hitters to want to lift the ball and they do it wrong, Mackanin said. They dont understand the whole concept of getting the ball in the air. And a nice level swing will get the ball in the air.
The manager used the example of Daniel Murphy, who is slugging .576 with 16 home runs for the first-place Washington Nationals. Murphys swing generates backspin to drive the ball out of the park. Mackanin said he believes thats the way to lift the ball, which brought him back to the revival that his own hitter, Maikel Franco, has experienced over the past week.
The manager noticed instantly during the teams trip to Milwaukee last weekend that Franco had leveled out his swing. The third baseman was hitting just .217 with a .384 slugging percentage at the all-star break, in the midst of the worst of his three full seasons with the Phillies. But Mackanin noticed Francos new swing again during batting practice in Miami on Tuesday, and predicted to pitching coach Bob McClure that he would have a good game.
Franco went 3-for-4 with a home run.
Im kind of cautiously optimistic about this, Mackanin said. If he continues to do what hes doing, hes going to have a good second half, I believe.
In the six games since the break, Franco has hit safely in five and gone 11-for-25 with four doubles.
Of course, he has had stretches like this in the past. He strung together six different hitting streaks of five or more games last year, but his batting average only rose above .260 for a couple of weeks after the first month.
Mackanin has reason to believethis time is different. Franco is not just golfing low pitches into the seats. He appears to have made a lasting tweak to his swing.
Thats what hes been doing daily in batting practice, Mackanin said. And the last three or four games he has been swinging like that. So Im pretty excited. Every day I hope to see the same swing path.
POLL: Can Franco and Herrera improve in the second half and help prevent the Phils from a 100-loss season?
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Published: July 21, 2017 3:01 AM EDT | Updated: July 21, 2017 6:31 PM EDT
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Federal legislators reflect on progress, look ahead | Gaylord … – Petoskey News-Review
Posted: at 8:03 am
WASHINGTON Michigans two U.S. senators say environmental issues will be a big topic of policy discussion in 2017.
At the same time, U.S. Rep. Jack Bergman, who represents Michigans 1st District, said he is focused on the budget.
Federal lawmakers were asked about their accomplishments for the first half of 2017, and what they believe will be the big issues they will be tackling for the next six months.
U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow
For the first six months, Stabenow, a Democrat, said she has been focusing on protecting the Great Lakes and strengthening the healthcare system.
Stabenow is a co-chair of the Senates bipartisan Great Lakes task force. She is focused on doing everything possible to preserve the Great Lakes, including controlling the water quality and invasive species like Asian carp, Stabenow said.
Stabenow said shes pushing back on President Donald Trumps budget, which ends all funding for the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative. According to its website, the initiative focuses on cleaning up the Great Lakes areas of concern, preventing and controlling invasive species, reducing nutrient runoff that contributes to harmful algal blooms and protecting native species.
(Protecting the Great Lakes is) about jobs, its about the quality of life, its really who we are in Michigan, Stabenow said.
Stabenow said she is also fighting back efforts to end the Healthy Michigan Plan, which is a program that gives health care to low-income adults who do not qualify for Medicare or Medicaid.
I am always opposed to eliminating health care for millions of people in Michigan, Stabenow said. Instead, I have been focused on lowering the cost of prescription drugs and lowering the cost of health insurance.
Stabenow hopes two of the bills she has introduced will be debated and passed in the next six months. One bill would give a 50 percent tax credit for the cost of small businesses providing healthcare for their employees. The other bill is a five-year farm bill, meant to help people and businesses in the agriculture business.
U.S. Sen. Gary Peters
In a statement, Peters, a Democrat, pointed to legislative efforts he has been working on in 2017.
Peters, along with U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, introduced a bill meant to help local fire departments. The bill would allow fire departments to use Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response grants to promote part-time and on-call firefighters to be full time. Currently, the grants can only be used to hire and train new firefighters.
The legislation has passed the Senates Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, but has not been voted on by the full Senate, the statement said.
Members of the Senates Commerce Committee approved Peters amendments meant to improve airport security outside screening areas. The amendments would allow airports to use already existing funds to update their infrastructure outside Transportation Security Administration-screened areas, such as baggage claims and drop-offs. For example, airport officials could use the funds for ballistic protective podiums and camera installation.
Peters will continue in the next six months to improve public services and strengthen protections for the Great Lakes and Straits of Mackinac, he said in a statement.
U.S. Rep. Jack Bergman
Bergman, R-Watersmeet, said he is proud to have voted for several bills that are now laws. One of those laws is the Department of Veterans Affairs Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act. Bergman said it gives the VA a streamlined process to fire employees for poor performance. He said employees still have due-process rights.
Before we did this, it took forever (to fire bad employees), and because of that slowness, the veterans floundered, Bergman said.
He said lawmakers got rid of many regulations put in place by the Obama administration. Bergman said the reduction of regulations is going to save businesses billions of dollars. He said representatives also increased defense spending.
Bergman, part of the budget committee, said he has been spending much of his time preparing the fiscal year 2018 budget.
We have too much of the government which on whats called autopilot spending, thats the mandatory spending. We cant continue down a road like that because we are broke at that rate, Bergman said.
Bergman said he is working on legislation to support the Soo Locks in Sault Ste. Marie. He also said he will work on giving more power to the state government and reduce the size of the federal government.
What might work in Michigan, may not work in Mississippi or New Mexico, Bergman said.
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Construction crane signals progress at Vancouver waterfront – The Columbian
Posted: at 8:03 am
A A
The first of two construction cranes expected on the Vancouver waterfront this summer was erected Thursday and Friday.
The progress, clearly visible from downtown and the Interstate 5 Bridge, illustrates the transformation of the old Boise Cascade paper mill site into offices, restaurants, retail and residential space.
Underground parking will be provided in two of the first four buildings now under construction by the firm of Robertson & Olson. One building will be for offices; the other, apartments.
A pier jutting into the Columbia River and a waterfront park are also under construction, as are two retail/restaurant buildings. The first waterfront restaurants should open sometime in 2018.
Gramor Development is the lead on the public-private project, which at full build-out will cover 21 blocks at an investment estimated at nearly $1.5 billion.
To the east, nearer the bridge, the Port of Vancouver also has major development plans for its property.
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Ill Behaviour, review: the chuckles are broad but the grisly nihilism is rather unpalatable – Telegraph.co.uk
Posted: at 8:00 am
This prompts his friends Tess (Jessica Regan) and Joel (You're the Worst's Chris Geere) to bundle their pal off to a country house for a crash course of involuntary chemotherapy. Noble intentions dont make them any easier to root for. Joel is a nostalgia-obsessed man-child recently divorced by his megabucks wife, Tess a frustrated IT drone dabbling in robot porn.
Riley's real-life fiance Lizzy Caplan (Masters of Sex) also pops up as an alcoholic oncologist who furnishes the conspirators with purloined medicines. Caplan is great at playing drop-dead cynics. However, shes jarring here, her hard-nosed performance at odds with a comedy which, serious subject matter notwithstanding, is largely concerned with gross-out gags and puerile back-and-forths.
Episode one, in particular, zipped along but how much of Bains freewheeling nihilism can we stomach before turning green at the gills and requiring a lie-down?
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Last Night Guns N’ Roses Played An Epic Set At The Apollo, Today Appetite For Destruction Turns 30 – Stereogum
Posted: at 7:59 am
Appetite For Destruction turns 30 today. If youre a fan of rock music, it doesnt really matter when you were born thats bound to make you feel old, whether you were a teenager in 1987 or whether that album served as a hand-me-down gateway drug 10 or 15 years later. You could look at 80s hard rock and hair metal as the bastard child of classic rock, the delinquent and mutated end game, and now its best and most respected poster boys have a debut thats a full three decades old. Guns N Fuckin Roses doesnt have quite the same ring when it applies to guys in their 50s sporting a somewhat frightening array of hats. And yet, here we are.
Last night, the semi-reunited Guns N Roses played for subscribers of SiriusXM (a GNR channel launched on the satellite radio service this month) at Harlems historic Apollo Theater. It was the kind of thing that thoroughly underlined their status in some echelon of the classic rock pantheon: a sprawling three hour set that made room for an instrumental cover of Wish You Were Here and a Layla tease before November Rain, an Allman Bros. intro to Patience, a Voodoo Child tag on Civil War, and full readings of the Whos The Seeker, Soundgardens Black Hole Sun, and AC/DCs Whole Lotta Rosie. (As of last year, Axl Rose moonlights as AC/DCs new frontman.) The Kills another performatively rock n roll group in a very different context opened, prompting conversations like, Wait, whos the opener? I dont know some indie rock band
On some level, Guns N Roses status is very much solidified a massively popular band with only a few albums and one of the most its better to burn out than to fade away stories in rock history at the same time as its a dragged out, zig-zagging epic fitting for any of their 70s stadium rock forebears. But seeing them in the context of Appetites 30th birthday highlights the inescapably lost quality of their identity now. Theyre caught in some nexus between the bloated final act of classic rock in the late 70s up against the rise of punk, and then on the other side the rise of Alt Nation and a new era of now-classic rock, with a much different set of standards and proprieties that made Guns N Roses seem like dinosaurs when they were just about 30 years old.
Even when if you set aside how poorly some of this has aged their casual misogyny, Axl being a complete asshole, the general image of a belligerently wasted and debaucherous young group now scanning completely illegibly you have to buy into it if youre going to enjoy Guns N Roses in 2017. I mean, this is a band with people named Axl Rose, Duff McKagan, Slash, and Dizzy Reed. Again, there are a lot of hats and leather, and long solos, and rock n roll swagger. Theres a quality to the whole thing that, essentially, feels like the sort of fever dream someone would concoct for either a very ham-fisted fiction about a stratospherically successful (and thus free to be very dumb) rock band, or a Spinal Tap-esque parody.
On the flipside, thats precisely what always made them so cool. Thats precisely what made them one of the last real rock n roll demigods that suburban kids around the country looked at and thought, Thats the life. Three decades on, their power might seem alien in our current musical landscape, but it is far from diminished.
Technicalities first: somehow blatantly defying a wildly self-destructive past, Axl sounds pretty great live these days, especially considering hes now in his mid-50s and some of these songs require screams and actual range. And even though it isnt the full classic lineup, its something else to see Axl flanked by Duffs punk-leaning sneer and Slash as the still-vigorous guitarist, duckwalks and everything. There are still a few anonymous figures hanging out onstage, but its better than Axls very obvious attempt to replace Slash with his cartoonish doppelgnger Buckethead.
As for that three hour setlist, it afforded the group time to play just about everything youd want to hear. (And a few things you could probably do without, but who would expect rigorous self-editing from the crew behind the dual Use Your Illusion release, let alone now that they stand as one of the last torchbearers for an ancient hard rock brand of excess.) The setlist was pretty much the same as at any given recent show, with no alteration for or acknowledgment of the fact that it was the eve of their first albums 30th anniversary. Axl barely said anything, for that matter, aside from occasionally shouting out a band member or thanking the crowd.
The latter part worked in favor of the show, though: This was a no-nonsense, powerhouse set despite its rambling length deep into the night. They played the exact Chinese Democracy songs youd want to hear Better is a monster live and selected a good mix of hits and deep cuts from the Use Your Illusion albums, with You Could Be Mine a particular burner live, Estranged the still-more-interesting cousin to November Rain, and the welcome surprise of Coma.
Then, of course, there was the Appetite material the stuff where most of us first fell in love with them, the stuff that had a heightened impact given the timing. Thirty years later, Its So Easy and Mr. Brownstone make for a perfect, decadent one-two punch of an opening. Thirty years later, Sweet Child O Mine is still the earnest salve to its more caustic siblings. Thirty years later, Rocket Queen remains one of their best songs, a blend of serpentine groove and genuine beauty. Thirty years later, Welcome To The Jungle is as foreboding and exhilarating and infectious as ever, deserving a spot amongst the greatest classic rock songs.
By the time they finally finished playing at 1:30 AM, the weight of those 30 years could be felt in other ways, too. There was something out of time about the whole thing, seeing one of the most monolithic stadium rock bands ever in a tiny-ish theater, all these years removed from their heyday, their relevance. Out of any of the revivals and retro trends from the past 10 or 15 years, theres almost nothing major that you could point to and find actual sonic influence from Guns N Roses or their peers. Without being as vaunted as their 60s or 70s predecessors, Guns N Roses have found themselves in a similar place, exhuming the now increasingly distant past night to night.
But none of that really matters, because when you see them play these songs live, it has the effect its supposed to. It makes you feel like a wannabe rebellious teen all over again. It makes you fall back in love with their extreme depiction of rock n roll hedonism from the final days of that brand of rock n roll hedonism. It makes you remember that this was a band formed of lost kids who somehow conquered the world and for a time were the biggest thing anywhere and, song to song, it makes you remember exactly why.
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BDS: Free-Speech Conservatives Oppose Senate Bill That Would … – National Review
Posted: at 7:58 am
Sometimes in the course of our political life, someone proposes something so mind-bogglingly stupid that its hard to know exactly what to say about it. Senate Bill 720 is one of those things.
Over the past few years, a small but prominent movement has cropped up, using the age-old tactic of boycott to protest what it sees as Israels unjust occupation of territories that are assumed to belong rightfully to the Palestinians. Called BDS (boycott, divest, sanction) after the strategy it employs against the state of Israel and goods produced therein, it has acquired a certain notoriety on college campuses, not least for its uncomfortable associations with veritable anti-Semites.
Israels supporters in the Senate, justifiably seeing this as a problem, have come up with an innovative solution: Make participation in BDS or other boycotts of Israel a felony, punishable by enormous fines and up to two decades in prison. The Israel Anti-Boycott Act enjoys remarkable bipartisan support: Its not often you can get Ted Cruz and Ben Sasse to sign onto a measure alongside Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand. Its proponents number 43 in the Senate and 234 in the House.
The American Civil Liberties Union opposes it. This bill would impose civil and criminal punishment on individuals solely because of their political beliefs about Israel and its polices, the organization writes in a letter to senators. The thrust of itscriticism is simple. Many companies and individuals conduct no transactions with Israel, for lack of a need to; the bill would make illegal such an action only if it bears a political motivation. The bill therefore penalizes political beliefs and so is both unconstitutional and unconscionable.
This is correct, and we should be pleased that the ACLU has taken a break from mind-numbing Resistance-focused anti-Trump litigation and has rediscovered the meaning of the civil liberties so prominent in its name. This proposed legislation is indeed unconstitutional and unconscionable, an abridgment of the right to free speech, which is quasi-sacred in American life and enshrined in the founding document of our government. The senators who currently support it should be, quite frankly, ashamed of themselves; they have lost sight of one of the founding principles of American government, allowing it to be overshadowed by the spectral world of the IsraeliPalestinian dispute.
This condemnation will, I would hope, suffice for those on the Left whose first instinct, on hearing the news of the bills consideration, was to ask somewhat sardonically when the ostensible right-wing defenders of free speech would profess their opposition to the bill. Sean McElwee wrote on Twitter: I expect our valiant campus speech warriors will stay silent. From The New Republics Jeet Heer: Its interesting how silent free speech absolutists are when attack is not on campus but from Senate.
This point, now made rotelyon the left, is meant to insinuate that those on the center and Right who care deeply about the state of free speech on campus Conor Friedersdorf, Nicholas Christakis, Jonathan Chait, even some at National Review are in fact nothing but reactionaries dishonestly appropriating the free speech argument to keep the boots of the rich, white, and powerful stamped down upon the backs of leftist agitators.
This is, of course, total bunk. A significant number of prominent supporters of campus free speech have also expressed opposition to the Senate bill. Nicholas Christakis has; Jonathan Chait has; Yair Rosenberg has; Walter Olson has. The hypocrites whom those on the left desperately wish their opponents to be have not materialized; they are, by and large, a highly principled bunch.
Such is exactly how most debates over free speech have played out recently. Consider the case of Lisa Durden, an adjunct professor at Essex County College who was fired after making controversial comments on Fox News. Leftists jumped on the apparent lack of outcry as prima facie proof of conservative hypocrisy on the subject: Conservatives care only when its one of their own facing opprobrium. One commentator wrote:
In contrast to other free speech-related controversies on college campuses, there has been almost no media coverage of Durdens ouster. That omission is part of a pattern: When wealthy, right-wing speakers encounter protest, the tendency among both right-wing and centrist writers is to scold snowflake students while dutifully preaching the virtues of diverse ideas in a college education, no matter how outr or dangerous those ideas may be. When marginalized faculty, often women of color, encounter professional censure, the same centrist writers say nothing. Once could almost conclude that the PC-run-amok and trigger warning controversies exist solely to reaffirm existing power dynamics. Its not really about free speech on campus at all.
And, yes, when it comes to Mike Cernovich and Milo Yiannopoulos or Tomi Lahren, thats more or less correct; they really are distasteful hypocrites who care not one bit about free speech and who use the principle instead to advance their particular cause. They are of the new breed of conservatism that views its primary goal as melting special snowflakes and doesnt give much of a damn about anything beyond that. But we knew that already; weve always known theyre unprincipled actors seeking only to aggrandize themselves. Their silence on Lisa Durden tells us nothing new or interesting about their character. Their place in the intellectual debate over free speech is marginal in any case, and what really matters is not what they think but what the more rational, principled minds of the Right and center say. From them we might be able to glean whether the defense of free speech is something truly principled or is just a veil for contemptible beliefs.
From them we hear a near-universal condemnation of Durdens firing. Jonathan Haidt of Heterodox Academy, a centrist talisman for the free-speech cause, wrote that in 2017, its clear that the threat profile is now bipartisan. Jonathan Marks, a conservative, said, I am no fan of Lisa Durden....Yet it is precisely as an academic conservative that I must say, to coin a phrase, Im with her. Similar reactions could be found across the span, from right to center, of defenders of free speech. Again, the supposed hypocrites were not what they were presumed to be.
As goes the debate over free speech, so drifts the broader current in our public sphere. Over and over again, it seems, we care more about scoring partisan points in the eternal shouting chamber of Twitter than we do about achieving concrete change in the tangible conditions of everyday life. Rank partisanship has allowed us to rest quite content with having uncovered hypocrisy on the other side. This tactic is nothing but a cheap cop-out. We blissfully avoid all the difficulties of a serious debate that challenges our intellectual precepts. It is possibly the least edifying, most counterproductive way to run a civil society. It only heightens the tensions already latent in our partisan system. It distracts us from the content and merits of the issue at hand.
Ive focused on the Left so far, but I dont mean to suggest that this phenomenon occurs only there. Its prominent enough on the right as well publications like The Federalist specialize in a sort of Obama did it too! smarminess, always allowing them to the elide the actual issue at hand. Through this strategy, they decline to express an opinion on the content of the actual matter, instead directing their ire at the Left. This is a convenient way to avoid being trapped in the contradictions and convulsions of the Trump administration, but its a terrible way to run a public sphere in a democratic society.
What, then, is a reasonable path forward? Besides taking a Luddite approach to Twitter a remarkably poor platform for any sort of reasoned and constructive discussion, prone more to aggravation than to conciliation the world might be a substantially better place if we simply decided to step away from the partisan register in which we conduct our debates. Stop thinking about what the other side thinks, at least for a while. Start looking more critically, with a more penetrating eye, at what you and your side think. Otherwise the cycle of finger-pointing will do little but deepen, and our public sphere become all the more barren.
Noah Daponte-Smith is a student of modern history and politics at Yale University and an editorial intern at National Review.
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Take that Milwaukee. Pokemon Go is protected free speech – CNET
Posted: at 7:58 am
Do you think the creators of Pokemon Go should have to fill out a 10-page event-permit application each time you want to play the augmented reality game in a public park?
Neither does a Wisconsin district judge, who just pressed pause on a local ordinance that singled out AR games for particularly tough treatment.
Some three months after Candy Lab, the creator of a Pokemon Go-like game sued Milwaukee County over the local law, US district Judge J.P. Stadtmueller gave the company, and by extension the makers of other AR games, a temporary win.
In an order Thursday, Stadtmueller ruled AR games constitute free speech and thus any law affecting them would have to be narrowly tailored so as not to unreasonably harm companies or citizens and avoid falling afoul of the First Amendment. The county had been trying to control the games after parks were allegedly trampled by Pokemon Go players last year.
Here's the ordinance:
Permits required for location-based augmented reality games. Virtual and location-based augmented reality games are not permitted in Milwaukee County parks except in those areas designated with a permit for such use by the director of the department of parks, recreation, and culture (DPRC). Permits shall be required before any company may introduce a location-based augmented reality game into the parks, effective January 1, 2017. The permitting application process is further described on DPRC's website for companies that create and promote such games. That process shall include an internal review by the DPRC to determine the appropriateness of the application based on site selection, protection of rare flora and fauna, personal safety, and the intensity of game activities on park lands. Game activity shall only occur during standard park hours, unless otherwise authorized by the DPRC director, who has the authority to designate special events and activities within the parks outside of the standard operational hours.
The permit application also requires a $250 deposit and for the event sponsor to have $1 million worth of general liability insurance.
As it stands, the judge believes the law may be unconstitutional. So Milwaukee is now unable to enforce it, at least until the relevant lawsuit -- again, by Candy Lab, not Pokemon Go creator Niantic -- reaches its conclusion.
Representatives for Milwaukee County, Candy Lab and Niantic didn't immediately respond to requests for comment.
You can read the judge's order below.
Candy Lab Wisconsin Preliminary Injunction Order Augmented Reality Games by CNET News on Scribd
via The Associated Press
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Take that Milwaukee. Pokemon Go is protected free speech - CNET
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