Daily Archives: August 10, 2017

Euthanasia bill consistent with right to life, conscience and freedom … – Stuff.co.nz

Posted: August 10, 2017 at 6:39 am

STACEY KIRK

Last updated16:26, August 10 2017

Four MPs have tried to get Parliament to legalise voluntary euthanasia.

A bill that would legalise euthanasia under strict controls,has been given a legal stamp of approval that if passed, it would not infringe on basic human rights to life.

It's been welcomed by the bill's holder, ACT leader David Seymour, who said it debunked the "myths" put forward by critics that the bill was poorly drafted.

The report is a standard assessment by Attorney-General Chris Finlayson, which test all proposed legislation against the Bill of Rights Act.

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ACT leader and Epsom MP David Seymour says the Attorney General's report shuts down any argument that his euthanasia bill does not contain the necessary safeguards to protect the vulnerable.

Finlayson found the bill was inconsistent with the Bill of Rights' section pertaining to age - in a purely legal sense, the age restriction of 18 on Seymour's bill was discriminatory under the Act.

READ MORE: *Parliamentary inquiry into record euthanasia submissions: 'note' response *Euthanasia: How is it done, and what's it like putting down something you've vowed to care for? *Helen Kelly:'Why can't I have the option of assisted dying?' *MPs to vote on euthanasia after bill places the issue back in front of Parliament

But it was fully consistent with the rights not to be deprived of life, freedom of conscience and freedom of expression.

Seymour said he expected the report to provide assurance to MPs on the fence about supporting his bill, when it's expected to come before the house for its first reading in the next parliamentary term.

"Opponents will now need to explain why they would not allow dying people, in extreme suffering, to have a choice about how and when they die - rather than hiding behind those straw men," he said.

"I am particularly pleased that the report finds my bill consistent with the right not to be deprived of life.

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Parliament to debate a bill that would allow voluntary euthanasia.

"The report says that the eligibility criteria are narrow enough, and the safeguards strict enough, that the bill will not cause wrongful deaths, and that assisted dying will be available only to the group the bill intends incurably or terminally ill, and in unbearable suffering."

Finlayson's report only related to legal questions of Seymour's bill. It did not assess it against any moral, ethical, religious or clinical views.

Seymour said that on the question of the right not to be deprived of life, his bill was consistent with the principles of fundamental justice.

"This differs from the previous bill on assisted dying, in 2003. That bill was found to be inconsistent with the right not to be deprived of life. It didn't have all of the same safeguards that my bill contains."

Recently, a separateParliamentary investigation into euthanasia detailed an overwhelmingly negative response by New Zealanders who took the time to submit to Parliament's Health Select Committee.

In a report to Parliament, generated from that investigation, MPs laid out the issues that sparked concern from more than 21,000 submissions. It also acknowledged a number of scientific polls that showed up to 75 per cent of New Zealanders were in favour of euthanasia.

-Stuff

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Legal euthanasia debate to ramp up as parliamentary committee convenes – ABC Online

Posted: at 6:39 am

Posted August 09, 2017 19:35:29

West Australian politicians could vote as early as next year on whether to legalise voluntary euthanasia for people with terminal illnesses, with the Premier Mark McGowan among those pushing for change.

The Lower House of Parliament is set to vote tomorrow to establish a committee to examine 'end of life' choices, with a report then due to be released mid next year.

Mr McGowan said he hoped legislation would be brought before Parliament in 2018, meaning a vote to decide whether euthanasia is legalised could come late next year.

But the likelihood of any bill to legalise voluntary euthanasia passing Parliament is unclear, with Labor, the Liberals, Nationals and One Nation all giving their members a conscience vote on the issue.

The committee was proposed by Labor's Morley MP Amber-Jade Sanderson, who said she believed there was strong public support for legalising euthanasia.

"Politicians and parliaments have been deeply reluctant to examine this issue further," Ms Sanderson told Parliament.

"It is a hard issue, it is a personal issue, about ethical dilemmas, grief and loss."

Mr McGowan said he wanted a bi-partisan approach to the development of any legislation.

"I'd like legislation to come in next year, put together by this committee, that everyone can have their own free vote on," the Premier said.

"I am not going to try to ram my views down peoples throats, but I do think that its time has come."

Several bills to legalise euthanasia have been brought to State Parliament in the past, but the most recent to come to a vote was comfortably defeated.

The creation of a committee had expected to be a formality today, but debate became bogged down for hours over procedural and minor wording matters delaying its passage.

For nearly an hour, Liberal MPs argued Labor had moved the motion to establish the committee at an inappropriate time.

Some opponents of legalising euthanasia expressed confidence that any bill to legalise voluntary euthanasia would be defeated in Parliament.

"The risks are too great and the consequences are final," Liberal MP Nick Goiran said.

Anti-euthanasia advocate Father Joe Parkinson warned that, even if assisted dying was legalised solely for people with terminal illnesses, that would be expanded in the future to other groups.

"No matter how tightly constrained that legislation is, euthanasia always expands out to other categories," he said.

"It begins with people in pain, it goes on to people who are elderly and people who are suffering with disability."

Topics: euthanasia, state-parliament, wa

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Police program helps people with drug addiction – Middletown Transcript

Posted: at 6:39 am

Suspects won't be charged if they complete treatment

By Christopher Kersey, chris.kersey@doverpost.com

Middletown police have started an angel program where people with a drug addiction who are taken into custody for misdemeanor offenses wont be charged if they complete a treatment program.

We realize with the epidemic we have here now, especially the heroin, were not going to solve the problem with arrests only, said Police Chief Daniel Yeager.

The departments new program, which started Wednesday, is modeled after the angel program at the Gloucester Police Department in Massachusetts, where people with substance abuse problems can come to the police station and bring their drugs and paraphernalia. They are not arrested, charged or jailed by Gloucester police, but, instead, police take them to the hospital where they are paired with a volunteer or angel who guides them through the process of getting into a treatment program.

The Middletown polices program goes a step farther.

Lt. William Texter and Sgt. Scott Saunders did some research with the Gloucester police program, worked with the Delaware Attorney Generals Office, and modified the program to apply in Middletown.

With the Middletown police program, people [who commit] victimless crimes could also potentially go into this program in lieu of an arrest, Texter said.

For example, a victimless crime would be simple drug possession, he said. So, somebody who had a couple bags of heroin a misdemeanor could voluntarily enter into a treatment program as long as they meet conditions such as not having active warrants for other crimes, he said.

And if they successfully completed the program in lieu of being arrested, there would be no charges, he said.

The program is for victimless crimes, he said. The program doesnt apply to people arrested for felonies or driving under the influence.

Also, participants who dont complete the [treatment] program will be charged with the offense they committed prior to entering the program, Texter said.

The program is an opportunity for somebody who needs help, who may not have on their own sought it out, but maybe under another set of circumstances get some help, he said.

When the police officer brings the person with the drug addiction to the police station, a representative from Connections Community Support Programs comes to the station and assesses the individual, said Douglas Spruill, site director of the Harrington Withdrawal Management Center.

The person is taken to the Harrington Center for inpatient care for three to seven days. Then, he or she enters into an intensive outpatient program for 90 days and counseling afterwards.

After six months of treatment, the criminal charge will be dropped, Spruill said.

People suffering from addiction can also come to the Middletown police department, bring their drugs and paraphernalia and ask for help like the Massachusetts program. They will undergo the same program.

Thats always an option. What we are doing is extending it further[If its] a simple possession charge and they ask for help, we are going to give them help and hold off on the charges, Yeager said.

Middletown police decided to start the program because they are trying to give assistance to people addicted to substances, Yeager said.

A lot of our misdemeanor property crimes like thefts from yards and shoplifting is all to supply a drug habit. Not all of them, but a majority of it is to supply a drug habit, he said.

So, if we can stop you from using drugs, then youre not going to be stealing. So its going to increase the quality of life for everybody. Thats our main goal, he said.

The angel program isnt new to the First State. The Dover Police Department became the first in the state to establish the program where, like in Massachusetts, people with substance abuse issues can seek help at the Dover police station without getting charged.

Master Cpl. Mark Hoffman, Dover police spokesman, said its possible for the officers on patrol to get someone into the program.

The New Castle County Police in collaboration with state Department of Justice and the state Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health--has a program called hero help, which provides addiction treatment to qualifying adults who contact police and ask for help.

The program is voluntary for adults who are addicted to heroin, opiates, illegal drugs or alcohol. Individuals interested in the program must be willing to be admitted to a drug rehabilitation center and agree to a review of their criminal history and to all program requirements.

Medical insurance isnt required.

For more information, contact the Hero Help administrator at 302-395-8050.

Other resources and phone numbers for those with substance abuse issues include the Heroin Alert Program at (302) 395-8062; Connections at 1-866-477-5345; Brandywine Counseling at (302) 656-2348; Gaudenzia Fresh Start at (302) 737-4100; Open Door at (302) 798-9555; and Kirkwood Recovery Center at (302) 691-0140.

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Focus on restitution, not incarceration, to better serve justice – LA Daily News

Posted: at 6:39 am

It is often noted that Americans live in a very litigious society. This criticism is typically leveled at frivolous tort cases and ambulance-chasing trial lawyers, but it extends equally to the legislators who write unnecessary laws and the government agents such as district attorneys, judges and police who enforce them.

The U.S. has the largest incarceration rate in the world, aided by the prevalence of victimless crimes (particularly nonviolent drug crimes) and a predilection for incarceration as primary option for punishment. But while there may be a strong drive to do something when someone is harmed by another, locking people up is oftentimes not in the interest of justice. Perhaps this is best illustrated in cases involving accidents, especially when those at fault are family members.

In one high-profile example, just last month an 18-year-old woman was arrested on suspicion of gross vehicular manslaughter and drunk driving after she crashed her car in Merced County, killing her 14-year-old sister, who was not wearing a seatbelt and was ejected from the vehicle. The case received heightened attention because the accident was captured in a graphic livestreamed video recording on Instagram, which showed her fatally wounded sister lying in a grassy field.

Last year, a 53-year-old Arkansas man was charged with felony manslaughter for the death of his 4-year-old grandson, who was killed in an accident while mowing some brush on the family ranch. A tractor tire hit a hole in the ground and the boy fell off the tractor and was run over by the mower.

Then there are the instances where distracted or forgetful parents have been charged for the death of a child inadvertently left in a hot or even mildly warm vehicle.

I cannot imagine how those at fault in the cases above will be able to deal with what they have done. That torturous guilt is a greater punishment than any that could be inflicted by a judge and prosecutor.

A family is only doubly punished, however, when a second family member is taken from it, this time by the state, to waste away in prison. It is as much a punishment to the other victims the remaining children, who must grow up without a mother or father, or the spouse, who is now rendered a single parent who must support the rest of the family alone as it is to the one at fault. In an added cruel twist, the family is forced to support these efforts to further tear it apart through their taxes.

In such cases, society is not served by turning a private tragedy into a larger public burden. Sometimes a tragic accident is just an accident, and the consequences are punishment enough.

Even in cases that do not involve parties within the same family, victims should have more say on the punishment of perpetrators, and the focus should be more on restitution than incarceration.

Sentencing someone to prison may pad a district attorneys tough on crime bona fides, but it does little to compensate the victims. The criminal will rot in prison, on the taxpayers dime, and perhaps learn even more criminal, anti-social behaviors from his fellow prisoners, which he may then inflict on society if he gets out.

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But before government assumed a greater role in crime and punishment, and even still today in places like Japan or informal tribal arrangements, perpetrators and victims were encouraged to negotiate to agree upon an appropriate restitution to compensate the victims, or their families. If the criminal could not afford the restitution all at once, he could pay it off over time through his labor. In a stark contrast to the incarceration model, this also encourages him to develop skills and to once again become a productive member of society.

In cases of extreme violence, where the facts are clear and the criminal exhibits no remorse, incarceration and an eye for an eye approach may be appropriate. But we should recognize that, as in other areas, the politicization of crime and punishment has led those in government to lose sight of individual rights in the pursuit of a nebulous societal good, and to serve the interests of the government agents charged with enforcement, not necessarily the interests of victims. A system of true justice and compassion would recognize that sometimes accidents result in tragedy that no prison cell can remedy, and would focus on addressing the needs and wishes of the victims, not adding another notch on a DAs belt before the next election.

Adam B. Summers is a columnist with the Southern California News Group.

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INHUMAN TRADE: Sex trafficking victims manipulated, controlled for profit – Wicked Local Hingham

Posted: at 6:39 am

Gerry Tuoti Wicked Local Newsbank Editor

EDITORS NOTE: This is the second in a series of stories exploring human trafficking in Massachusetts. The series will delve into the widespread commercial sex trade in our cities and suburbs, the online marketplaces where pimps and johns buy and sell sex, cases of modern-day slavery and victims tales of survival.

Often lured or forced into the commercial sex trade as young teens, women who manage to leave that life are confronted with a host of major obstacles.

Youve been taken out of school. You dont have a diploma, said Cheri Crider, who escaped from her sex traffickers 37 years ago and now works as the office manager at Amriah, a North Shore safe house for sex trafficking victims. They take your IDs away and you cant even prove youre an American citizen. How are you going to go to school? How are you going to get a job? How are you going to rent an apartment? You have no job experience, so you have nothing to put on a resume. You have no references, because youve been taken away from all your family support. Those are huge obstacles for girls getting out.

Victim advocates have tried in recent years to reshape the popular dialogue surrounding the commercial sex trade. Rejecting the thought that prostitution is a victimless crime, they say the overwhelming majority of sex workers are coerced or psychologically manipulated by a pimp or trafficker into selling their bodies.

Theres a lack of knowledge or desire for knowledge in society, said state Sen. Mark Montigny, D-New Bedford, the lawmaker behind the states 2011 human trafficking law. Its easier for people to think of them as delinquents and prostitutes rather than enslaved, trafficked, human beings.

So who are the victims of sex trafficking in Massachusetts? In some cases, they have been foreign nationals forced into performing sex acts at massage parlors that act as fronts for brothels. Multiple Asian massage parlors in Massachusetts have been busted in prostitution and sex trafficking investigations in recent years.

But the majority of the time, victims of sex trafficking turn out to be women and girls from the local community.

Part of what were trying to get people to understand is that this is actually much more of a homegrown problem involving 12-, 13-, 14-year-olds growing up in suburban or rural Massachusetts, in our cities, who are specifically targeted then brought in by someone posing as a boyfriend who turns out to be a trafficker, a pimp, said Attorney General Maura Healey. Victims of human trafficking are not Asian women solely. Get that out of peoples heads.

Millis resident Joli Sparkman said she was first drawn into the sex trade while a teenager with a rocky home life in Rochester, New York. The owner of a pizza parlor, she said, befriended her and began giving her free food and gifts. After a time, he began manipulating her to perform favors for him in return. He eventually coerced her into dancing for his friends. From there, things spiraled further out of control, and the teenager found herself coerced into posing for nude photographs, then eventually sleeping with men for money, which her trafficker kept.

I felt dead. I felt empty, she said. I just wanted to die.

Pimps and traffickers, experts say, often prey on young women, and sometimes boys, who have a vulnerability that can be exploited. They then begin a process of grooming the victim, isolating him or her from friends and families.

The kids we serve are, for the most part, the most vulnerable in our communities, said Lisa Goldblatt Grace, executive director of Boston-based My Life My Choice, which works with young women who have been victims of sex trafficking. While this could happen to any child the vast majority of the kids have already experienced abuse and neglect well before entering the commercial sex industry. Theyre often hungry for unconditional love and acceptance and belonging. An exploiter can prey on that desire.

Its very common for young trafficking victims to be lured in by a boyfriend, who isolates them, manipulates them and controls nearly every aspect of their lives to make them dependent on him.

Its a very complicated mixture of love and fear, Goldblatt Grace said. This person is usually incredibly violent. Its complicated by this person frequently saying they love them.

The women who have received services from My Life My Choice report, on average, that they began performing sex acts for money at age 14.

Many advocates say specialized services for male victims, a traditionally overlooked population, are also needed.

From a global cultural perspective, we perceive men to be perpetrators and women to be victims, said Steven Procopio, a social worker and consultant who runs trainings and educational programs about male victims of sex trafficking.

Male victims, he said, may be even more reluctant than female victims to come forward.

In some circumstances, theres too much shame and guilt from a sexism and homophobia dynamic, he said.

Amirah, one of four New England safe homes for trafficked women, is among the organizations that help female victims rebuild their lives. When women are referred to Amirah, they typically enter an initial 30-day residential program and are connected to mental, social, emotional, medical and vocational services. Following the initial 30-day program, most women stay at Amirah for two years.

Victims, Amirah Director Stephanie Clark said, often have deep emotional and psychological trauma. Most are also addicted to drugs, particularly heroin. In some cases, the women are addicted before entering the sex trade. In other cases, they begin using opioids while being trafficked as a way to cope with the emotional pain.

What we see in our population is a woman in her 20s or 30s who is trafficked for a period of time, then ran away, is picked up for drugs or is picked up for prostituting herself because she doesnt know how else to make money, Clark said. It takes, on average, seven times for a woman to break out of that cycle. They end up getting sucked back in due to huge challenges they face in finding a job, finding trustworthy relationships, and because of the abuse theyve suffered.

While there are more resources for victims than there used to be, advocates say even more are needed. Montigny has called for allocating money for a victim services trust fund. He has also sponsored bills intended to strengthen to 2011 state law. His new proposals, which were discussed at a July 18 hearing at the Statehouse, include new public awareness campaigns, as well as training to help law enforcement and medical staff recognize the signs of human trafficking. One bill would vacate trafficking victims convictions for nonviolent misdemeanor crimes committed as a result of being trafficked.

You cannot get these people back into productive lives if you do not give them a path from victim to survivor, he said, explaining that a criminal record often makes it hard for people to get housing, jobs or access to credit.

Crider, the office manager at Amirah, said she hopes to one day work as a mentor to young women trying to escape the sex trade. Shes encouraged that there are now resources available to help sexually exploited people rebuild their lives.

When I got out, there were no programs, she said. There were no safe houses. We didnt even have the term human trafficking. I lived with the lie of what they told me I was. I believed it was my choice. Thats the coercion they use. Thats the manipulation.

From sex worker to murder defendant

Sparkman traces her own journey into the commercial sex trade to her childhood in upstate New York. Born to a drug-addicted mother and an incarcerated father, Sparkman recalls a rough childhood that included being molested at daycare and going in and out of foster care.

In the mid-1980s, when she was around 14, she was living in Rochester, New York, and befriended an older man who owned a pizzeria. He started giving her free food, then small gifts and money. Gradually, she said, his true character emerged.

Then later on he would ask me for a favor. He took me to an Italian social club and asked me to dance for his friends, she recalled. He said, Ive been giving you all these things. You have to do this for me.

His demands progressed to posing for nude photos for his buddies, which the men threatened to share with her friends if she refused to do what they asked her to do. Eventually, they began driving her to hotels and forcing her to have sex with other men for money.

They saw a vulnerability factor, and they preyed on that. It really destroyed my soul and made me feel worthless and that things didnt matter, she said.

Sparkman eventually fled to Massachusetts, settling in Springfield. By age 23, she was married and had three children, but was trapped in an abusive, violent relationship. When her husband ended up behind bars, Sparkman found herself unable to pay for daycare and rent. As eviction notices piled up, she made a difficult decision.

I didnt know what I was going to do, so I went back to what I knew, she said.

First, she worked in a strip club, then as an escort, sleeping with men for money. By the time her pimp at the escort service took his cut, she said she was barely left with enough to cover her bills.

Her life soon spiraled further out of control, and before long, she found herself convicted of second-degree murder.

Sparkman, who was paroled in 2014, was working as an escort in Springfield in 1997, when prosecutors say she conspired with her pimp and his cousin to rob a third man, Sherwood Gray. Sparkman drove Gray to a preplanned location, where he was fatally shot by the cousin, who mistakenly thought Gray was reaching for a gun.

She and the gunman were convicted of second-degree murder, while her pimp, who she was also dating, was convicted of manslaughter.

A deep sense of shame, she said, led her to lie to police and refuse to cooperate with investigators. Sparkman insists her pimp deceived her into playing a part in the botched deadly robbery.

When police talked to me, I lied to them, she said. When the district attorney asked me what happened, I wouldnt tell them. I didnt want them to know what I was doing. I didnt want them to know about that night, and I didnt want them to know about my life. I didnt want them to know I was a prostitute. I was ashamed.

After serving nearly 18 years at MCI-Framingham, surviving multiple suicide attempts and going through years of intensive therapy, Sparkman says she has found a new purpose in life -- to help others whove suffered from sexual exploitation.

When I was inside, it was very hard for me, she said. I had never dealt with any of the stuff Im talking about now.

Surviving the circuit

When Crider was growing up in southern Maine, she lived in a family that struggled with alcoholism and violence. That background, she said, made her vulnerable to predators.

It started as the guy across the street who wanted to date me, she recalled. Before I was old enough to date him, he raped me, and that resulted in an unwanted pregnancy.

She was just 16. Once the baby was born, she recalled, the man used the child as leverage. With a combination of sweet talk and abuse, he convinced her to start dancing for money, then that gradually escalated into pornographic stage shows and prostitution.

I turned 18 on stage at an adult book store, she said. I believed the dream he sold me that we could have a house and a happy family and have lots of money and travel and do all these things you didnt get to do when you were growing up. It sounded good to me, coming from where I did, and I bought into the dream.

Crider said her trafficker worked with a Mafia-affiliated organization, and that following a dispute, she was essentially sold to the mob.

They moved me away from my family, she said. They do that to isolate you from rational voices. Before long, they moved me again. I started working on whats known as the circuit. It goes all over the country. I started in Maine to Boston, Boston to New York, New York to Chicago, all over the country.

A mob-connected biker gang then began trafficking her, she said.

Eventually, Crider said, she and her boyfriend became entangled in a conflict between the bikers and the Mafia, and she fled, essentially going into hiding.

Her advice to young victims of trafficking -- Find an adult you can trust. Find someone who will defend you. Dont ever believe someone who wants to treat you disrespectfully loves you, no matter how confused you might be about what love is. Dont believe thats love.

NEXT: The third part of the series explores labor and commercial trafficking in Massachusetts, a practice advocates call modern-day slavery.

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Libertarian Party expands leadership – The Hendricks County Flyer

Posted: at 6:37 am

The Libertarian Party of Indiana (LPIN) has announced the installment of new leaders in several counties across the state. This continues the pattern of growth for the LPIN, even in an off-cycle year for elections.

The first half of 2017 saw the expansion of Libertarian leadership in Carroll, Morgan, Montgomery and Jasper counties.

We're continuing to experience a surge in activity all around the state, LPIN State Chair Tim Maguire said. After the 2016 election, we never saw new interest in the Libertarian Party dwindle. Through that desire for liberty from our citizens, we have been able to identify the excitement found in these new leaders. They are just a small portion of the former Republicans and Democrats that have realized that the old parties don't represent us anymore.

Maguire added that the party has now installed new county chairs in Knox, Jackson and Hendricks counties. Those roles have been filled by Micah Haynes, Erin Meadors and Eric Knipe, respectively.

Im actually the temporary chair because were looking to re-affiliate Hendricks County with the Libertarian Party, Knipe said.

Knipe, a freelance real estate consultant, said the party has been affiliated with Hendricks County in the past, but that affiliation was lost. At an organizational meeting on Sept. 1, a vote will be held to pass bylaws re-affiliating the county with the Libertarian Party.

A vote will also be held on my permanent installation as county chair at that meeting as well, Knipe said.

Knipe said he is looking to get the Libertarian Party ramped up again in Hendricks County.

We really have a lot of activity, he said. Its exciting. Theres going to be some pushback and a lot of hard questions to answer, but I think we can do it.

Like Republicans, Libertarians too believe that government should be smaller and less invasive in the lives of Americans. Yet, unlike Republicans, Knipe said Libertarians have more follow through and want to make that belief a reality.

I live in Brownsburg and we have experienced some efforts of forced annexation, which is something Libertarians generally oppose, he said.

He said abuse of eminent domain has occurred on Green Street as a result of redevelopment efforts.

Its not neighborly to force citizens to sell their land, he said.

Knipe said he believes President Donald Trump has been great for the Libertarian Party.

People have been even more disenfranchised and just cant relate to him, he said. I think it just goes to show that its important to have principled leadership in place.

While good leadership at the top is crucial, Knipe believes that government is most effective at the local level.

[We need to] get quality candidates, he said.

The Libertarian Party of Indiana is always looking for people interested in helping spread liberty by taking leadership roles in their community, Maguire said. I encourage anyone looking for a way to participate to reach out to me. We are excited about the possibility of working together with you.

Knipe may be reached via email at eric@ericknipe.com or by phone at 317-456-2297. For more information on the Hendricks County Libertarian Party, find them on Facebook.

Stephanie Dolan writes for the Hendricks County Flyer and may be reached at stephanie.dolan@flyergroup.com. Follow Stephanie on Twitter @StephanieDolan.

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Winterport Libertarian declares candidacy for 2nd District – Republican Journal

Posted: at 6:37 am

Brian Kresge of Winterport, senior application developer with RKL eSolutions LLC of Lancaster, Pa., and former director for Jewish outreach for the Johnson/Weld 2016 Presidential campaign, has declared his candidacy for Maines 2nd Congressional District as a Libertarian.

I am excited to announce my candidacy for the House. My wife, Leah, and I, have found our place in the world in our move to Maine," Kresge said. "Our friends and neighbors believe in smaller, more effective government, and I want to represent that vision in this race.

My candidacy could focus on the failure of Republicans and Democrats to adequately represent Maine in Washington, but I would prefer to focus on what I, as a Libertarian, would do to be successful in the role.

Kresge served in the United States Army as a paratrooper, Pennsylvania Army National Guard as a paratrooper and Stryker infantryman, and the Maine Army National Guard in varying capacities, with three years total overseas service. He's been a mentor with veteran's court programs and served on executive boards and other leadership roles in synagogues and various Jewish organizations, he said. Kresge also has served on a zoning hearing board and as a judge of elections as well as running for municipal and state office.

Equally relevant are my experiences as a business software developer," he said in a press release. "Ive written tax and accounting software, invoicing systems for private and public state health care exchanges, discrete manufacturing integrations, and a wide variety of business mobile applications. Understanding regulatory compliance is a key component in my job.

We face serious challenges in healthcare and economic growth that are organic to our states evolution as well as byproducts of hyper-partisanship. Now, more than ever, we are ready for a third way in politics, one that respects civil liberties and your wallet. The House must reassert its role as a coequal branch of government that represents the people and stands firmly against abuses of executive power.

I look forward to a positive, issues-based campaign, meeting citizens, and building on Governor Johnsons success in Maines 2nd Congressional District. The Libertarian Party is here and is serious about representing your interests.

For more information on Kresge, visit kresgeforcongress.com.

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Subverting the golden rule in our time – New Zimbabwe.com – New Zimbabwe.com

Posted: at 6:37 am

WRITING on what he saw as the re-emergence of balance of power politics in the world, Waldo Bello in his treatise of August 2003 stated: The last few years and the coming ones have been and will be bad for world peace. They are, however, rich in lessons about international power relations. And the lessons are not all grim.

He added, To be sure, the first lesson is discouraging: That unchallenged superpower status stimulates conflict, not peace. This did not seem so clear in the immediate aftermath of the Cold War.

In the first place, Waldos assertion about how the worlds prospects for peace are and will be grim, is derived from his reading of the unilateralist stance of the United States of America following the demise of the Soviet and demonstrated most aptly in the George W Bush era when America defied the United Nations and attacked Iraq on the basis of fictitious weapons of mass destruction allegedly held by Saddam Husseins Iraq.

The world now knows that it was all a lie and that there were no weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. What was at stake was Americas quest for world hegemony.

We are experiencing first-hand the destabilising effect of super power politics with America dictating what is ethical and what is not. What is ethical and acceptable is that which promotes American interests at any cost.

NATO countries are mere lackeys of America and will generally do whatever that country says or wants. The latest example of Americas hegemonic programme is the destruction of Libya for once again concocted reasons.

The real threat from Libya was its economic clout. Some of the countries in the coalition that attacked Libya had a GDP much lower than Libyas, Spain for instance.

The next stop after Libya was Syria where Bashar-al-Assad the Syrian President was falsely accused of using chemical weapons against his own people when the facts point elsewhere.

As part of Americas regime change politics the Americans created the now dreaded Islamic States ISIS, (the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria) and ISIL (the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant).

The fighters of these two groupings were armed and trained with NATO collusion. Attempts at dislodging the Islamic groups from the areas they occupy are no more than window-dressing only.

They have to be seen to be trying to reign in their Frankenstein monster who is becoming alarmingly more and more independent in thinking and in action. ISIS has wreaked havoc all over Europe as evidenced by the 2016 Brussels and 2015 Paris attacks.

The well-coordinated Brussels attack left 31 dead and 198 wounded while the Paris attacks left up to 140 people dead after attacks at different places including a rock concert.

Significantly, where ISIS fighters blow themselves up in coordinated actions, the real perpetrators go scot free and no one talks about the loss of life in Nigeria at the hands of Boko Haram.

In what Amnesty International described as the deadliest massacre in Boko Haram history the Islamic militants are thought to have killed as many as 2000 people after militants drove into Baga, a Nigerian town near the border with Chad, firing rocket-propelled grenades and assault rifles on fleeing town residents.

The Guantanamo Bay detention centre is an American military prison on the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba. America imprisons without trial suspects often captured in clandestine operations.

This prison is standing testimony to Americas double standards. Americans hold people without ever charging them or sending them to trial, very often on the basis of the flimsiest evidence and still go to call themselves the worlds greatest democracy.

Quite the opposite is, in fact, true. The detention centre uses torture techniques and detains people indefinitely without trial. Hardly anyone in the West expresses any concern about the goings-on on Guantanamo Bay where horrid torture techniques go under the euphemism enhanced interrogation techniques.

Horrors similar to those of Guantanamo were also recorded at Abu Ghraib military prison in Iraq. At the height of the scandal the facility was said to hold up to 3800 prisoners who mostly lived in tents in the prison yards.

An investigative report called The Taguba Report included among others, the following abuses inside the prison complex:

.Punching, slapping and kicking detainees and jumping on their naked feet; .Videotaping and photographing naked male and female detainees; .Forcibly arranging detainees in various sexually explicit positions for photographing; .Forcing detainees to remove their clothing and keeping them naked for several days at a time; .Forcing naked male detainees to wear womens underwear; .Positioning a naked detainee on a box, with a sandbag on his head, and attaching wires to his fingers, toes, and penis to simulate electric torture

Abu Ghraib caused such an uproar even among the United States and its allies that it was necessary to be seen to be doing something about the outrage.

The acknowledged facts are that during the war in Iraq which began in March 2003 members of the United States army and others committed physical and sexual abuse, torture, rape, sodomy and murder. George W. Bush tried to dismiss Abu Ghraib as an isolated incident but multiple investigations by independent bodies such as The Red Cross, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch showed that these malpractices were common in American overseas detention centres including. Guantanamo, Afghanistan and Iraq.

Some scholars went so far as to classify the crimes as state-sanctioned crimes. In fact, evidence pointed to sanction from high up the military establishment and even to as far as Secretary of Defence, Donald Rumsfeld.

In view of the public glare and interest and as a public relations exercise someone had to be seen to be made to pay. Nine US soldiers were court-martialled and convicted of crimes at Abu Ghraib prison.

However, the US armys judicial system has tended to ensure that accountability up the chain of command does not go beyond the rank of staff sergeant, no commanding officer has ever been brought to trial for Abu Ghraib crimes.

American hypocrisy in such matters is stunning to say the least. They have cleverly hedged themselves against prosecution, no matter the crime. Their spin-doctoring is unprecedented anywhere in the world. America and her allies have one single narrative that they stick to: it says that they are the good guys and everyone else is one of the bad guys.

To make sure that they never have to defend themselves in an international court of law, they have conveniently never acceded to the protocols of the ICC (International Criminal Court). The ICC, located in The Hague is described as the court of last resort for the prosecution of genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. Its founding treaty, the Rome Statute came into force on 1 July 2002.

Interestingly the countries that make the greatest noise around ICC-related issues are still themselves to accede to the Rome Statute. While 139 countries signed the Rome Statute, 32 are yet to ratify it.

Israel, Sudan and the United States have unsigned the Rome Statute, meaning that they do not intend to become members of the ICC. Yet countries like Botswana have tried to get South Africa to arrest Sudanese president, Omar al-Bashir when he visited that country on African Union business in 2015.

Omar Hassan al-Bashir is accused of genocide as are a number of former African Heads of State who are currently held by the ICC. There seems to be an obsession with African leaders given that neither George W. Bush nor Tony Blair, former British premier, have suffered any calls to have them arrested for their crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan.

It is time that Africa retaliated in like measure and in retrospect. Europe must be taken to The Hague for partitioning Africa and colonising her people. The genocide in Namibia by the Germans must be brought to the fore and all former Rhodesian operatives and apartheids functionaries too must have a case to answer.

The killers of Eduardo Mondlane, Samora Machel., Patrice Lumumba, Amilcar Cabral. Thomas Sankara, Walter Rodney, Edison Sithole, Steve Biko must be brought to book. There can be no other way in this given that Africans are always turning the other cheek to no avail, and that what we do unto others they do not do unto us.

In the changed circumstances of todays world, Africas agenda 2063 will fail dismally unless the continent asserts itself everywhere: the United Nations Security Council, the ICC (by insisting on the arrest and trial of people past and present) and in such matters as moving away from Americas petrodollar. Gadhafis dream of a strong single African currency must not be allowed to die away. Countries like the DRC with strategic mineral reserves must withhold these until the people can benefit from the extraction of such minerals.

Africa can no longer justifiably do unto others what they do not do unto her.

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At Google and in academia, liberal pieties clash – Washington Examiner

Posted: at 6:37 am

Liberal pieties, because they lack a limiting principle, inevitably grow large enough that they crash into other liberal pieties. Just this month, the burgeoning pieties have collided in two liberal habitats, Google and academia.

An overheated and misleading New York Times story (sadly a norm in the Trump era) claimed the administration "wants to investigate colleges for discriminating against white applicants," as the paper's Twitter feed put it.

This overblown report raised questions about why and how the administration would investigate colleges for discriminating against whites? The answer was that the Department of Justice, under federal law, may launch investigations into bias or discrimination and sue institutions to end violations.

Affirmative action in college admissions, which is both marginally legal and marginally unconstitutional, is perfect example of a good liberal intention growing unchecked until it becomes a monster.

Diversity is worthwhile for various reasons. In an academic setting, a student's background informs his or her arguments and understanding of a subject. Colleges may find it valuable to search extra hard for applicants from underrepresented populations or to unearth qualified students from communities that may not be oriented toward applying to college.

But the Left took this good little idea and made it absolute, wanting colleges and other institutions to impose racial quotas. Every panel discussion must be 50 percent female. Blacks and Hispanics must have proportional representation in the boardroom and the C-Suite of every corporation.

This daunting and in any case undesirable task is, ironically, made impossible even to approach because another ungoverned good idea, nondiscrimination, has grown up to fight it. Racial discrimination has torn the United States since its birth. Women have always been the victims of sex discrimination. Mitigating these wrongs was right. Passing layers and layers of state and federal anti-discrimination laws and multiplying the protected classes at every opportunity was, however, a foolish but highly predictable overreach by the Left.

So now you have two incompatible pieties at odds with each other. Discrimination on race or sex must be punished and prevented by law, yet it is demanded that institutions do whatever it takes to achieve sex and racial parity and proportionality.

The same story of a sort of internecine ideological cannibalism is taking place at Google.

Tolerance and sensitivity toward other people are both obviously good things. But when both of them grow without limit they cannot coexist. Google tried to prove its tolerance through an internal message board, which solicited ideas and debate. In this forum, a software engineer penned a "memo" expressing minority views on sex differences and diversity.

But sensitivity to the politically correct orthodoxy, which had metastasized into an absolute intolerance toward minority views, led Google to fire the programmer.

The substance of the memo and the blowback show the same phenomenon.

Feminists have for decades insisted that gender is a social construct shaped by culture rather than by biology. Encourage girls to play with toy trucks, it was said, and they'd grow up with the same tastes and other characteristics of boys. But that idea, which voluminous data shows to be false, is also damaging, for it undermines the argument of those who say women should receive different treatment from men in certain circumstances.

The sacked engineer, James Damore, suggested that Google make software engineering more "people-oriented" by pairing programming with greater collaboration in order to interest more women in the field. He also suggested the company find ways reduce workplace stress and facilitate greater work-life balances.

Objectively, each of these efforts could actually make it easier for women to succeed at Google. But the notion that the sexes are naturally different in significant ways undermines the premise that equality must not be questioned.

The irony is that when feminists insist on interpreting biological differences as insults and perceive the offer of help as an insulting lowering of the bar rather than as a leveling the playing field, they undermine policies that could go a long way toward achieving the parity they desire.

Google is one of the biggest companies in the world, but it wasn't big enough for both these ideas. Tolerance, diversity, nondiscrimination, equality, and accommodation cannot all make absolute demands at the same time.

Left-wing ideas have reached an odd stage at which they are turning on each other and devouring their own.

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New York’s Liberal Subway War – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Posted: at 6:37 am


Wall Street Journal (subscription)
New York's Liberal Subway War
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio famously hate each other, but they seem to agree that the victims of their feud should be the people of New York. Witness their brawl over who deserves the blame for the rapid ...

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New York's Liberal Subway War - Wall Street Journal (subscription)

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