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Monthly Archives: April 2021
Podcast Ep. 370: The Bible is Just a Collection of Florida Man Stories – Friendly Atheist – Patheos
Posted: April 19, 2021 at 7:04 am
In our latest podcast, Jessica and I discussed the past week in politics and atheism.
We talked about:
Jerry Falwell, Jr. just got sued by Liberty University. (0:59)
The problems with Richard Dawkins comments about trans people. (7:23)
A West Virginia lawmaker sank a sensible life-saving suicide prevention bill by blaming the teaching of evolution. (24:56)
The Bible makes way more sense as a series of Florida Man stories. (32:39)
The Melania-loving misogynistic pastor is back. (33:59)
I think this pastor just threatened me. (43:33)
A Polish town that declared itself free of LGBT now wants to take it back. (45:00)
The Mormon Church is on the verge of excommunicating a sex therapist who puts science over dogma. (48:12)
An atheist is suing LOreal for being subject to offensive slurs and proselytizing at work. (54:12)
The MyPillow guys new free speech app restricts anti-Christian speech. (57:26)
Iowas GOP governor used her position to raise over $30,000 for a private Christian school. (1:02:13)
Secular Democrats outnumber White Evangelical Republicans. (1:04:51)
Wed love to hear your thoughts on the podcast. If you have any suggestions for people we should chat with, please leave them in the comments, too.
You can subscribe to the podcast on iTunes or Google Play, stream all the episodes on SoundCloud or Stitcher, or just listen to the whole thing below. Our RSS feed is here. And if you like what youre hearing, please consider supporting this site on Patreon and leaving us a positive rating!
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Podcast Ep. 370: The Bible is Just a Collection of Florida Man Stories - Friendly Atheist - Patheos
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Our religious studies programs are in trouble. Here’s what we miss out on if we don’t save them. – America Magazine
Posted: at 7:04 am
As universities reopened this past fall, the educational landscape was significantly altered by the Covid-19 pandemic. The switch to remote classes, discounted tuition and the delay or even cancellation of football season are just a few of the unprecedented changes experienced on college campuses. What is not new, however, is the compromise universities make when faced with financial setbacks. Canisius College in Buffalo, N.Y., for instance, responded to its $20 million deficit with layoffs, salary cuts and the elimination of nine majors. Though Canisius is a 150-year-old Jesuit school, its eliminations included the religious studies major.
Canisius is not alone in this decision. Elmira College, Hiram College and Connecticut College have either eliminated or expect to eliminate their religious studies programs. The humanities are often the first victims of budget cuts, but the fact that a Jesuit university eliminated religious studies says something about religions place in academia. Religion and, more specifically, Christianity is not only expendable at universities but often actively excluded. From my personal experience in graduate school at the University of Chicago, professors derided religion, students readily signaled their lack of religious views, and I received surprised looks when I shared my Catholic faith. It was as though the study of English literature and Catholicism were incompatible.
I once attended a panel titled Religion, Identity, and the Construction of Faith that had been described as a debate among an atheist and two believers about the future of religion, but I found the believers rather lukewarm in their faith. In fact, during the question and answer period, one attendee called their discussion a secular love fest. One member of the panel, an ordained minister and divinity school professor, expressed an ethic much more existential than Christian.
The evidence for the diminishing place of religion in higher education and for Christianitys diminishing place in academia is overwhelming. In times of financial hardship, religious studies is often the first program to go. This happens at schools that, at least traditionally, have Christian affiliations. Moreover, scholars, even those who study religion, seem reluctant to admit they are religious. Many also hold the assumption that one cannot be religious and intellectual. In part, this could be because the currently most famous intellectuals have divorced religion from rational thought. For instance, Sam Harris (one of the so-called Four Horsemen of Atheism) claims that the conflict between religion and science is inherent.
How we arrived at this moment is not obvious. The problem of the perceived conflict between religion and intellectual pursuits is twofold. This view of the two in conflict emanates from these public intellectuals who proclaim the disconnect between religion and progress. From the bottom up, students and faculty members perpetuate the image of the atheist intellectual. The university is the place where public intellectuals cut their teeth. It is where we cultivate the future Sam Harrises dedicated to completely secular scholarship. This, however, need not be the norm. Society needs to find a way to make it O.K. to be a religious intellectual, to be a Catholic intellectual.
The exclusion of religion from intellectual circles is a relatively recent phenomenon. For much of Western history, religion was not just acceptable in intellectual circles; it was the means for the greatest thinkers to explore the cosmos or ask philosophical questions. The Hellenistic Greeks, for instance, thought Pauline theology amenable to their philosophy. As St. Paul wrote letters to Diaspora Jews in Greek cities like Philippi, his teachings resonated with their Stoic practices.
Christianity built upon this philosophy to develop the ethic that dominated Western thought for centuries. Thinkers like St. Thomas Aquinas, St. Anselm of Canterbury and St. Thomas More continued the Catholic intellectual tradition. Their writings shaped philosophy, politics and literature. During a time when the vast majority of the population was illiterate, Catholic monks and members of the clergy were the European literati.
The exclusion of Christianity from academia began when religious thinkers became secular thinkers and when thinkers began to distrust institutions. During the Protestant Reformation, Martin Luther rebelled against the most important institution in Europe, the Catholic Church. From the writing of Luthers 95 theses criticizing the church to the present day, there has been a gradual shift from questioning institutions to outright rejection of them.
The Enlightenment was the next major event that accelerated the rejection of institutions. After Catholicism, religion itself became a target, as many Enlightenment thinkers turned their skepticism toward the Catholic Church to skepticism toward religion, absolute monarchies and rigid class systems.
Though we have this skepticism to thank for the political freedoms we enjoy today, the Enlightenment bolstered the notion that a religious setting was no longer the best place for intellectual inquiry. Even those who invoked God to substantiate the rights of individuals (including some of the founding fathers of the United States) saw God more as a detached creator than the Christian God. Thus, in academic and intellectual circles, religion continued to wane in importance.
While religion enjoyed a meager presence among Enlightenment intellectuals, late 19th and early 20th-century philosophers often completely excluded it. These philosophies, not coincidentally, were the most iconoclastic; they were devoted to undermining institutions. Karl Marx, for instance, called religion the opium of the people. There would be no place for religion, the nation-state or other traditional institutions in a communist social system.
Todays public intellectuals are a product of movements and philosophies, including the Enlightenment, nihilism and post-structuralism. As provocateurs who question every assumption from ethics to politics, many public intellectuals act as if institution-probing were their job description. For many contemporary scholars, institutions like marriage, the mainstream media, capitalism and, yes, organized religion are not to be trusted. Their probing of institutions, however, has gone so far that it is leading to their unraveling.
Instead, in many circles, science has become the hallowed institution that will solve all problems (even moral ones). Though the vast majority of Christians embrace the study of science, a number of prominent scientists see Christianity as inimical to rational, scientific approaches to thinking. Steven Pinker, a psychologist and author of Enlightenment Now and The Better Angels of Our Nature, warns against relying on dogma rather than trusting science to fill in the gaps of human understanding.
Thinkers like Mr. Pinker and the Four Horsemen conform with the archetype of the atheist intellectual (or, to use the softer label, secular humanist). It is an archetype toward which many young students strive and one that shuts down religious approaches in academic spaces. To be a religious student or professor in the pursuit of intellectual inquiry is to not be taken seriously. How could someone, say, criticize patriarchy when his or her beliefs are grounded in an institution as traditional as the Catholic Church?
Signaling a lack of religious views can be about more than just fitting in with fellow students and faculty; it can also be a way of avoiding ridicule. There is a way in which a reference to religion has become a punchline. While all religions face ridicule, the readily visible symbols, practices and leaders of the Catholic Church make it an easy target. The television comedy South Park, for instance, once ridiculed the reverence of Catholics for ritual and authority in an episode that culminated in the Vatican consulting The Queen Spider to amend church law.
Catholics can certainly take a joke. The question is how we contend with the fact that religion is too often treated as a joke or a threat. For many, it is funny to rely on faith when science can dispel its notions. But it is also seen as unscholarly to approach intellectual questions with religion when secular tools are at our disposal. For young people, especially those in an academic setting, the association of religion with the ridiculous (the religulous, as Bill Maher puts it) makes it difficult for them to share their faith when they want their scholarship to be taken seriously.
So how might academia and society at large make space for the religious intellectual? First, we need to stop thinking of religious scholarship as a separate category from other modes of inquiry. Right now, the public is fine with intellectual Catholics weighing in on politics, human rights or culture. People are far less accepting when the opinion comes from a Catholic intellectual. The distinction? Catholics have their fair share of doctors, professors and authorsnot to mention a disproportionate share of Supreme Court justices. Their faith probably influences their work, but their work does not take place within an explicitly acknowledged religious framework.
But where are the public intellectuals who make their inquiries through their Catholic faith? There are Catholic intellectuals everywhere, but their work is often relegated to the realm of the religious and treated as a separate category from secular work. Take, for instance, St. John Paul II. He weighed in on human rights, ethics and politics, often through scholarly writing in books like Love and Responsibility and Person and Act. He was our eras Thomas More. His role as pope, however, made people regard his work as specific to Catholics. His ethics were Catholic ethics, his politics Catholic politics. As a recent graduate student, I can attest that at a secular university, one would be wise not to refer to John Paul II in a philosophy paper.
The task, then, is to use the work of Catholic intellectuals like St. John Paul II to answer questions that secular modes of inquiry cannot. Catholic scholarshiplike the theology of the bodyhas the capacity to argue a sexual ethic that science or secular thought do not make apparent, such as the sacred nature of sex or the value of monogamy. The importance of these questions is by no means limited to Catholics.
If society is to make space for religious intellectuals, for Catholic intellectuals, the work starts at the university. Professors who have tenure and the freedom to pursue the projects they wish should not refrain from using their faith in their projects. A few intellectual Catholics have shown us what that looks like. The Yale law professor and author Stephen Carter, in books like Gods Name in Vain, argues for the productivity of religious belief in political movements. Mr. Carter went from intellectual Catholic to Catholic intellectual when he made a crucial step: He spoke of his faith in his scholarship at a secular elite university while writing a book in a field dominated by secular thought. And he was taken seriously.
But the work of intellectual Catholics begins before they get tenure. Students who may one day assume the name recognition of these lecturers and authors need the courage to use religion. They must overcome the raised eyebrows or ridicule. Moreover, the risks of not finding an advisor, of not landing a tenure-track job in a difficult market and of not being taken seriously as a scholar are real. But the bravery of students and faculty members is what will keep religious studies off the chopping block when times are tough. It is what will make intellectuals sit on a stage and express not lukewarm approval but exuberance for the possibilities of religion in scholarship.
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Our religious studies programs are in trouble. Here's what we miss out on if we don't save them. - America Magazine
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From cover-up to propaganda blitz: China’s attempts to control the narrative on Xinjiang – News-Daily.com
Posted: at 7:03 am
China's Foreign Ministry this month issued the most forceful defense of its policies in Xinjiang to date, calling allegations of "genocide" in the region the "lie of the century."
The statement -- made in response to ongoing calls for a possible boycott of the 2022 Beijing Olympics -- represents the culmination of a long evolution of China's official narrative regarding its treatment of Uyghurs.
This evolving strategy, from outright denial to hardened public defense, is closely tied to the Chinese government's own increased sense of confidence on the world stage, and its willingness to confront its critics in the West head on, be it over Xinjiang, the South China Sea or Hong Kong, a CNN analysis shows.
In recent months, Xinjiang has become something of a patriotic litmus test, in which those wishing to do business with China must pick a side -- either stand with Beijing in implicit defense of its policies, or face the consequences.
The propaganda campaign has also reached a fever pitch, with state media reporters dispatched to Xinjiang to supposedly "prove" there is no oppression there, a "La La Land"-inspired musical released to make Beijing's case, while critics overseas have faced sanctions and harassment.
While China has always maintained a sophisticated propaganda apparatus at home, its recent campaign over Xinjiang, particularly disinformation and harassment of critics overseas, is more in keeping with similar efforts by Russia, including deploying "whataboutism" in claiming any US denouncements are tainted by the legacy of slavery and genocide on the American continent.
Warning signs
After she was "de-radicalized," Amina Hojamet swapped her burqa for a silk dress, put a traditional flower-patterned hat on her head, and sang "Without the Communist Party, there would be no New China."
She didn't know it at the time, but Hojamet, along with over a dozen other women from her village in Shufu County, in western Xinjiang -- whose story was recounted in a report by the state-run Xinjiang Daily -- would serve as proof of concept for an "anti-extremism" campaign that has engulfed the Chinese region since 2017.
Survivors of the camps report experiencing or witnessing widespread abuse, and incidents of torture, rape and forced sterilization. The crackdown has been denounced as "genocide" by the United States government and the Canadian and Dutch parliaments for its effects on the Uyghur people and their culture.
When reports of the camp system first began to emerge around 2017, China issued staunch denials, or refused to comment altogether. As this has become increasingly impossible in the face of mounting international attention and subsequent condemnation, Beijing has shifted to an angry defense of its "de-radicalization" program, which it has even started to tout to like-minded countries as a way of dealing with their own Muslim "problem."
Meanwhile, evidence of the camp system, such as early reports in state media like one which gave Hojamet's story in late 2014, have been scrubbed from the internet altogether and are accessible only in archived form, a CNN analysis shows. Other materials researchers relied on to expose the camp system -- such as government tenders and official documents -- have also been deleted.
Multiple foreign journalists who reported on the camp system have been expelled from China, while academics, activists and survivors who sought to expose its reach have been denounced, and harassed. Those who have dared speak out inside of China have been silenced or detained.
The clampdown has been accompanied by a new, coordinated propaganda campaign touting the successes of the "vocational training" system, with heavily choreographed media tours for sympathetic outlets, interviews with "graduates" praising the system, and disinformation which aims to sow confusion about the scale of the camp system and the abuses experienced by detainees, while painting Beijing as the victim of both violent extremism and Western misinformation.
Crackdown
Located in the far west of the People's Republic of China, Xinjiang is among China's most ethnically diverse regions. It is home to about 11 million Uyghurs, a predominantly Muslim ethnic minority, who speak a language closely related to Turkish and have their own distinct culture, as well as significant populations of Kazakhs.
Rich in natural resources, especially oil and gas, the region has seen a large influx of Han Chinese, the country's majority ethnic group, amid recent, concerted efforts by the government to tie Xinjiang closer to the wider economy.
Xinjiang -- the name means "New Frontier" in Chinese -- has long been of strategic importance for its rulers in Beijing. The vast region borders Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Afghanistan, as well as Mongolia and Russia in the north and Pakistan and India in the south. Its importance has only increased with the advent of President Xi Jinping's Belt and Road Initiative, a trade and infrastructure mega project connecting China to markets across Central Asia to Europe and beyond.
Information about such incidents was often hard to come by, with reports in state media sporadic and sparsely detailed. Few foreign journalists ever visited Xinjiang, both due to the region's remoteness from Beijing and the harassment and surveillance by local authorities of those journalists who did travel there.
Such controls only increased as the situation became more unstable and the authorities cracked down harder. In 2009, following deadly ethnic riots in the Xinjiang capital of Urumqi, the entire region was cut off from the internet for almost a year, and many Uyghur writers and intellectuals were jailed.
In October 2013, a group of Uyghurs were alleged to have driven a sports-utility vehicle into pedestrians on Beijing's Tiananmen Square. Five people died in the incident, described by authorities as a terror attack, including three in the car. Some 40 people were injured.
Following the incident, Xinjiang's anti-terrorism budget doubled. The regional government, meanwhile, said it was "determined to curb the spread of religious extremism as well as prevent severe violent terrorist attacks." As part of this, what was called "vocational training" could be provided to those "more easily manipulated by religious extremism."
In early 2014, 31 people were killed, and more than 100 were injured, during a knife terror attack in a crowded train station in Kunming, in China's southwestern Yunnan Province. Four people were convicted of plotting the attack, which the government blamed on Uyghur separatists.
During a visit to the region in April 2014 in the aftermath of the Kunming attack, President Xi called for an all-out "struggle against terrorism, infiltration and separatism," according to leaked internal speeches published by the New York Times.
Around this time, in a village in Shufu County, near the ancient Silk Road trading stop of Kashgar in western Xinjiang, local officials identified 16 women in need of "educational transformation," according to the Xinjiang Daily article. Their offense? Wearing the burqa.
These women, one of whom was Hojamet, were initially "very resistant and unwilling," but "gradually realized the essence and harm of religious extremism," eventually choosing to abandon conservative Islamic dress for regular clothing.
Another woman also told the paper her husband had been detained by the police for religious extremism and taken for "de-radicalization" in an unspecified location. "I hope that he will receive a good education, transform well, and reunite with us soon," she was quoted as saying.
Cover-up
While in 2014 and 2015 the burgeoning "re-education" system was still years away from reaching its current scale, or from becoming public knowledge, it was clear the situation in Xinjiang had escalated following the high-profile Kunming attack.
Visiting the region weeks later, Ursula Gauthier, a journalist with the French magazine L'Obs, reported an intense system of surveillance, police checkpoints, and widespread fear of being reported or denounced among any Uyghurs she spoke to.
"In Xinjiang, where the police respect legal procedures even less than in the (rest of China), arrests are not reported to families. They simply disappear," Gauthier wrote, adding many Uyghurs reported being constantly afraid, such that fear "creeps into all parts of life, poisons relationships and paralyzes the most serene minds."
This experience was at the forefront of her mind when, about seven months later, ISIS-linked terrorists attacked targets across Paris, killing 130 people and wounding hundreds more.
Disgusted by the bloodshed in her home capital, Gauthier was also dismayed by the reaction from the Chinese government, which she felt was attempting to take advantage of the incident to gain international support for its crackdown in Xinjiang.
In expressing sympathy with France, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said China was also a victim of terrorism and complained about a "double standard" in the West in which media and politicians minimized or sought to justify terrorist incidents against Chinese.
In a column for L'Obs, Gauthier noted the astonishing outpouring of sympathy and solidarity she had experienced in Beijing from ordinary people, while pointing out what she felt were the Chinese government's "ulterior motives" in conflating ISIS attacks with violence in Xinjiang.
While other outlets made similar observations -- "China Responds to Paris Attacks Through a Domestic Lens," read a headline in the New York Times -- Gauthier's article struck a nerve.
The Global Times, a nationalist, state-run tabloid, published multiple articles attacking her, and she was summoned to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to explain herself. She was told to apologize but refused, saying she was being accused of saying things -- such as that Chinese victims of terror deserved to die -- she never wrote.
Fanning the controversy, Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang accused Gauthier of having "blatantly championed acts of terrorism and slaughter of innocent civilians, igniting indignation among the Chinese people."
Exposed
While she was not alone in criticizing or exposing China's policies in Xinjiang, or even in calling out Beijing's attempt to conflate ethnic unrest with global terrorism, Gauthier appears to have been caught up in a shifting policy on Xinjiang, as the government became far more sensitive to outside scrutiny.
"We know today that Xi Jinping had made the decision to change the policies in Xinjiang, so in (late 2014) they were preparing the crackdown," she said. "It was just the fact that we didn't know back then."
The scale of this transformation would not be known for several years. Even as people began disappearing into the camp system, which was built up between 2014 and 2017, before massively expanding that year, the heavy surveillance in Xinjiang, ongoing intense censorship of Uyghur issues on the Chinese internet, and its relative remoteness compared to the rest of the country, meant the news did not immediately spread.
But as human rights groups and members of the Uyghur diaspora started reporting increased disappearances and people being taken away for "political education," a number of foreign journalists were able to travel to Xinjiang to see if the stories were true.
In late 2017, a series of on the ground reports were published by US outlets, BuzzFeed, the Associated Press, and the Wall Street Journal, all testifying to the intense surveillance all Uyghurs in Xinjiang were subject to, and to the burgeoning camp system.
"Since this spring, thousands of Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities have disappeared into so-called political education centers, apparently for offenses from using Western social media apps to studying abroad in Muslim countries, according to relatives of those detained," Buzzfeed's Megha Rajagopalan reported.
While officials defended security measures in Xinjiang as necessary for preventing terrorism, at first, Beijing denied reports about the camp system, with a foreign ministry spokesman telling Rajagopalan "we have never heard about these measures taken by local authorities."
According to a CNN review of Chinese government statements from 2015 onwards, officials largely avoided addressing the issue of Xinjiang until around mid-2018, when growing scrutiny made this impossible.
In particular, China appears to have switched strategies in response to a hearing of the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination in August of that year, where it was estimated by the Germany-based World Uyghur Congress that as many as 1 million people could have passed through the camps.
China's representative to the committee said this was "completely untrue," while acknowledging people had been assigned "to vocational educational and employment training centers with a view to assisting in their rehabilitation."
Speaking in mid 2019, Liu Xiaoming, China's ambassador to the UK, gave a staunch defense of the program in an interview with the BBC, saying "extremist ideas have easy penetration to the poorer areas. The idea is to help the people, to lift them out of poverty."
"They can leave freely. They can visit their relatives. It is not a prison. It is not a camp," Liu said.
While China has sought, sometimes successfully, to muddy the waters on Xinjiang, attacking individual researchers and think tanks, and trotting out family members of survivors to criticize them in dubious videos, much of the evidence showing the scale of the camp system is in fact open source.
For example, the growth of a camp in Shufu County, around 7 kilometers (4.5 miles) from Amina Hojamet's village, can be tracked via satellite imagery on Google Earth. The installation was first built around 2013, though it may have initially been used for another purpose. In the years since, it has more than doubled in size, and what appear to be watchtowers can be seen on walls around dormitory-like buildings, according to a review of historical satellite imagery.
Other open source data helps confirm this: a tender for business issued by the Xinjiang government in 2017, reviewed by CNN, seeks a $21 million refit and expansion of the camp -- described as a Legal Education Transformation School.
As scrutiny over Xinjiang increased, reports in state media about the "de-radicalization" program, as well government announcements about the various camps and tenders for supplying them appear to have been scrubbed from the internet, with only a small proportion surviving in archived form.
This effort appears to have been inconsistent, with some materials surviving online, along with reports in state media that can be used to track the evolution of the "vocational training" system, even as similar articles which had been written about by human rights groups, such as that which contains Hojamet's story, were deleted.
In the past year, Chinese state media and officials have begun attacking researcher Adrian Zenz, who was the first to use government documents to expose the camps, and the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, which popularized the use of satellite imagery to track their growth. Zenz was among multiple academics and politicians in the European Union and United Kingdom sanctioned by China in March.
Beijing has also punished those journalists who helped draw attention to Xinjiang early on. Rajagopalan, the Buzzfeed reporter, was forced to leave China in August 2018, after her visa extension was denied. Two years later, Gerry Shih and Josh Chin, who wrote early reports on Xinjiang for the AP and WSJ respectively, were among a number of American reporters expelled from China in retaliation for Trump administration limits on US-based Chinese state media.
Pivot
While it would continue to officially deny any "camps" exist in Xinjiang, with Foreign Ministry officials reprimanding reporters who used those terms, from late 2018 onwards, there has been a concerted shift in China's messaging on this issue.
In October of that year, the Xinjiang government all but acknowledged reports about the "re-education" system were correct, calling on local officials to expand the number of "vocational skill education training centers" and "carry out anti-extremist ideological education."
The following week, Shohrat Zakir, a high-ranking Xinjiang government official, told state media the Chinese government was fighting "terrorism and extremism" in its own way, and in accordance with UN resolutions.
Former detainees, he said, had been transformed for the better by their time in the "training centers." Instead of being led by religion as in the past, now they "realized that they are firstly citizens of the nation," Zakir said.
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In a white paper published by the State Council Information Office in August 2019, China's top administrative body wrote "Xinjiang is a key battlefield in the fight against terrorism and extremism in China."
"(The government) has established vocational education and training centers in accordance with the law to prevent the breeding and spread of terrorism and religious extremism, effectively curbing the frequent terrorist incidents and protecting the rights to life, health, and development of the people of all ethnic groups," the paper said, adding "worthwhile results have been achieved."
Sean Roberts, an expert on Central Asia at the George Washington University and author of "The War on the Uyghurs: China's Internal Campaign against a Muslim Minority," said many officials in Xinjiang appeared to have internalized Beijing's narrative on the issue.
"People high up know the real extent of the threat and how minor it is, but I think some of the lower level officials really do believe what they are doing is saving Uyghurs from extremism and terrorism," he said.
At the international level, Beijing has leaned on its allies to push back on criticism from western countries over Xinjiang. After a representative for the United Kingdom issued a statement at the UN General Assembly in 2019 on behalf of 23 countries raising concerns about human rights abuses, Belarus made its own statement on behalf of 54 countries voicing approval of China's "counter-terrorism" program in Xinjiang. Signatories included close allies of China, such as Russia, Egypt, Bolivia and Serbia.
"They have a kind of hubris about this," Roberts said of how China's messaging has evolved since then. "There's a level of confidence in having escaped a lot of criticism from the international community, a sense that nobody is actually going to punish us for this."
As well as securing international recognition (of sorts) for its efforts in Xinjiang, Beijing has also sought to link its "de-radicalization" program with anti-extremism efforts elsewhere, providing a sheen of legitimacy even in practice the comparisons are rather far-fetched.
Foreign Minister Wang Yi, among other officials, has claimed China's system is in keeping with the UN "Plan of Action to Prevent Violent Extremism."
"The Plan of Action suggests early engagement and combining counter-extremism actions with preventive measures," Wang said in a 2019 speech. "That is precisely what Xinjiang has been doing. Visible progress has been made: There has not been a single case of violent terrorism in the past three years."
That same year, Zakir, the region's top Uyghur official, said "most (detainees) have already gone back to society."
"I can say 90% of them have found suitable and enjoyable jobs that bring them considerable income," he said, adding many Uyghurs were originally lacking employable skills and jobless, though records kept by overseas Uyghur groups suggest many intellectuals and highly-qualified individuals have also been sent to the camps.
Both French and British programs involve individuals convicted of terrorism offences or on watchlists, and are governed by both domestic human rights law and the European Convention on Human Rights. By contrast, many detainees in Xinjiang are locked up for non-terror related offences, such as breaching family planning regulations, or for religious practices deemed to be indicative of alleged "extremism," such as wearing the burqa, growing a beard, or reading the Quran.
For its part, the UN plan also notes "violations of international human rights law committed in the name of state security can facilitate violent extremism by marginalizing individuals and alienating key constituencies, thus generating community support and sympathy for and complicity in the actions of violent extremists."
Propaganda
Months after censors scrubbed stories like Amina Hojamet's from the internet in an apparent attempt to cover-up evidence of what was going on in Xinjiang, a new wave of propaganda was pushed out by Beijing, emphasizing both the supposed terrorist threat and the success of the government's so-called "anti-extremism" program in tackling it.
In a video published by state broadcaster CGTN in late 2019, one prominent interviewee suggests -- over footage of the 9/11 attacks and the Boston Marathon bombings -- that the response to such attacks in the West may "have actually served to help the purposes of terrorists and their organizations."
"In their responses, you can see the main reasons why terrorism has failed to be curbed at the root," says Li Wei, a research fellow at the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, a government think tank.
During an anti-terrorism symposium held on the sidelines of the UN Human Rights Council meeting in Geneva in 2020, co-sponsored by Beijing's mission to the UN, participants heard how "China is willing to share the 'Chinese experience' with the international community," according to an official write up of the event.
This shift may have been motivated by a wave of leaks -- largely unheard of in Chinese politics -- which exposed both the scale of the camps and the largely inconsequential "offences" which got detainees sent there, as well as the involvement of President Xi and other top officials in putting the system in place.
While China denounced the leaks, secret speeches credited to Xi published by the New York Times appear to line up with coverage in state media from the time they were given. With Xi so publicly identified as one of the architects of what has since been called a genocide in Xinjiang, China's propaganda bureau may have felt obliged to spin the entire situation as a success.
Xi himself said in September 2020 that the policy followed in Xinjiang has been "completely correct," and called on the government to "tell the story of Xinjiang in a multi-level, all-round, and three-dimensional manner, and confidently propagate the excellent social stability of Xinjiang."
Chinese state media, particularly those outlets targeting foreign audiences, have pushed this line hard. While stories such as Hojamet's were scrubbed from the internet in what may have been a kneejerk reaction to international criticism, they have been replaced by a glut of content showcasing happy, successful graduates from the "vocational training" system.
"Through the training, I realized that my past beliefs were completely wrong and religious extremism was our enemy. It's a disease which poisons our body and a drug which leads us to death," one woman told reporters at a press conference held by the Xinjiang government. "I must stay away from religious extremism and lead a normal life."
Foreign diplomats from countries close to China -- including Iran, Pakistan and Russia -- have been invited to tour Xinjiang, even visiting camps, though representatives from the US and other countries have complained of being denied unfettered access to the region.
Such visits have been denounced as "Potemkin-style propaganda tours for unwitting foreigners" by Amnesty International, producing a stream of positive stories about the situation in the camps and China's success in fighting terrorism which often blindly repeat official propaganda.
One of the few US publications able to send a correspondent to Xinjiang in recent years was International Focus, a tiny Houston-based magazine which caters to the city's diplomatic community.
According to a piece by publisher Val Thompson from May 2019, she was invited to go to Xinjiang by the State Council Information Office, joining a multinational group of journalists.
Writing of visiting the government-run "Exhibition of Major Terrorist Attacks and Violent Crimes in Xinjiang," Thompson said the experience was "eye-opening, I had no idea the PRC was dealing with extremist activity."
At the Kashgar Vocational Skills Educational and Training Center, she said she interviewed "several" detainees, who "were, or could be, victims of extremist teaching."
"They were treated well by their supervisors," Thompson wrote in her article, which has been promoted online by China's State Council. "For those who want to believe these young people may have been coerced, I say you can't fake happiness; and happiness is exactly what I saw."
Thompson and International Focus did not respond to a request for comment.
In recent weeks, China's propaganda organs have ramped up their counter narrative, including producing a musical -- "The Wings of Song" -- purporting to show the ethnic harmony that exists in modern Xinjiang.
State broadcaster CGTN, which targets foreign audiences, also dispatched a reporter to Kashgar last month, from where she filed live reports, signing off with the line: "There's definitely no genocide, so to speak. So Michelle, back to you."
One video released by CGTN may have made the opposite point however: a new documentary about the threat of "extremism" that existed prior to the recent crackdown gave as examples textbooks published and approved by China's own propaganda organs, demonstrating how previously innocuous references to Uyghur culture and Islam have become taboo.
Retaliation
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The Federal Government Will Now Give PPP Loans to Borrowers in Bankruptcy – ProPublica
Posted: at 7:01 am
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The federal government has quietly reversed course on a policy that had kept thousands of businesses from applying for pandemic economic aid, with only weeks to go before funds are expected to run out.
In late March, ProPublica reported on a Small Business Administration rule that disqualified individuals or businesses currently in bankruptcy from getting relief through the Paycheck Protection Program, an $813 billion pot of funds distributed to small businesses in the form of loans that are forgiven if the money is mostly spent on payroll. The agency had battled in court against several bankrupt companies attempting to apply for PPP loans, and did not change course even after Congress explicitly passed legislation in December allowing it to do so.
Referencing ProPublicas story, the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys wrote a letter to newly installed SBA Administrator Isabella Guzman urging her to follow Congress suggestion and tell the Executive Office for U.S. Trustees a division of the Justice Department that oversees most American bankruptcy courts to allow debtors to receive PPP loans.
The agency has not yet contacted the Justice Department. But on April 6, the SBA released new guidance as part of its frequently asked questions for the program, redefining what it means to be presently involved in any bankruptcy. Under the new interpretation, debtors who filed under Chapter 11, 12 and 13 which cover businesses, family farms and individual consumers, respectively are eligible for PPP loans once a judge has approved their reorganization plan. A spokesperson for the SBA said the explanation had been added for clarity.
A reorganization plan specifies the debtors path to paying off obligations to creditors, and is monitored by a trustee. In simple cases, a judge can confirm it within a few months of filing. This is what often happens in consumer Chapter 13 cases, about 279,000 of which were filed in 2019, as well as in relatively straightforward Chapter 11 cases that dont require extensive litigation. About 5,500 companies filed for Chapter 11 in 2019.
The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts doesnt track how many of those companies have confirmed reorganization plans in place, but its estimated to be in the thousands. Now, companies on the road out of bankruptcy which usually takes years to complete can apply for PPP loans before the programs May 31 deadline. With $50 billion left after several extensions, PPP funds are likely to run out before then.
Ed Boltz, a bankruptcy attorney on NACBAs board who circulated the organizations letter, said he believes the SBA changed its position after becoming aware of the foolishness of the prior administrations position.
How a Federal Agency Excluded Thousands of Viable Businesses From Pandemic Relief
The change would not have helped all the companies that sued the SBA over its policy. Florida-based Gateway Radiology Consultants, for example, didnt have a confirmed reorganization plan before it applied for a PPP loan last year, prompting a lawsuit. But the bankruptcy lawyer in that case, Joel Aresty, said plenty of his current clients could benefit.
If they were lucky enough to already be confirmed, they could freely qualify for a PPP loan the fact that you were in bankruptcy is no longer a deterrent, Aresty said. Its amazing how difficult they made such a simple proposition, really.
The new definition may now help Mark Shriner, a coffee shop owner in Lincoln, Nebraska, who filed for Chapter 13 bankruptcy in 2018 following a divorce. His plan was confirmed the same year. The SBAs exclusion of debtors from the PPP originally prevented him from applying, forcing him to take on higher-interest loans to keep his doors open.
His cafe likely would have qualified for up to $25,000, and Shriner said he could have used some of the money to improve his online ordering or devise a takeout-friendly menu. Even now, he said, getting PPP money would help him plan for the future and bring back more staff.
Informed of the change last week, Shriner sent an application to his bank, which said it would hear back from the SBA within a couple weeks.
Wow, Shriner said. That would be great.
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Hertz Bankruptcy Bidding War Heats Up With New Counteroffer – The Wall Street Journal
Posted: at 7:01 am
A bidding war over Hertz Global Holdings Inc. intensified as previously outbid investors returned to the table with a counteroffer for the bankrupt car-rental company, backed by Apollo Global Management Inc. and existing Hertz shareholders.
Investment firms Knighthead Capital Management LLC and Certares Management LLC, which previously offered to buy Hertz out of chapter 11 only to be eclipsed by a competing investor group, returned with a sweetened bid late Thursday that values Hertz at $6.2 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.
Apollo has agreed to supply up to $2.5 billion in preferred equity financing for the proposed restructuring, which unlike the prior offers would pay off the rental-car companys funded debt in full, people familiar with the matter said.
The revised bid challenges a restructuring offer that Hertz accepted earlier this month, backed by Centerbridge Partners LP, Warburg Pincus LLC and Dundon Capital Partners LLC and valuing the company at about $5.5 billion.
The competing proposal presents a choice for Hertz, which is racing to exit from bankruptcy by the end of June and has already put the restructuring terms it selected earlier this month up for approval from the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del.
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The restaurant chain bankruptcy wave is not over – Restaurant Business Online
Posted: at 7:01 am
Photograph: Shutterstock
The bankruptcy filing this week by Golden Corrals second-largest franchisee is at least the 35th such filing by a large franchisee or restaurant chain since the outset of the pandemic.
It wont be the last, either. Even as restaurant sales surge, its entirely likely we could see more such filings as valuations for restaurant chains reset while landlords and lenders start asking for the funds theyre owed.
Whats going to precipitate more bankruptcies is when banks have to start, wait a second, its been a year, year and a half now, we need to get some money in, Dave Bagley, managing director of the investment bank Carl Marks Advisors, said on an upcoming episode of the Restaurant Business podcast A Deeper Dive. Thats coming as summer approaches.
The biggest issue, he said, is valuations.
Bankruptcy filings are most of the time transactional moves. The lender wants to be repaid. Or, in an increasing number of cases, it wants to take control of a company after having acquired the debt on the secondary market. Eighty to 90% of such filings lead to a transaction, Bagley said.
Valuation levels in the restaurant space were uncertain over the past year. That likely kept many chains out of bankruptcy because lenders had no idea how much the company was worth.
Whats more, Bagley said, the lenders didnt have to push the issue. The same was true with their landlordswho have debt of their own. Lenders didnt force them to pay off their debt because they didnt have to.
This created a were-all-in-this-together scenario in which landlords didnt force restaurants to pay all of their rent and lenders didnt force them to pay off debt.
That gave chains more time to develop strategies for surviving the pandemic. It has likely kept many restaurants from closingonly 2% of the restaurants in the Top 500 closed last year, a remarkably small number. And only about 5% of casual dining restaurants closed, which is also small given that the typical casual dining restaurant lost about a quarter of its business last year.
There was no one pushing the restaurant to do anything, Bagley said.
This didnt work for everybody, of course. Some chains were pushed into a bankruptcy filing quickly, and some landlords forced the rent issue. After all, it wasnt as if there werent any bankruptcies or closures.
Now, restaurant sales are on the upswingmany chains have reported record sales in recent weeks and just about every sector is seeing post-pandemic highs, at least, as consumers spend their stimulus cash on restaurant food.
Whats more, Bagley said, some certainty on valuations is coming. At some point, the lenders know what they have. That could force more companies into bankruptcy court.
None of this is to say that well have a massive rash of bankruptcy filings. But the industry isnt entirely out of the woods when it comes to seeking out debt protection, even with strong sales. Indeed, as I was writing this we learned of 36th filing, this one from the 13-unit fast casual chain Meatheads Burgers & Fries.
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Plaintiffs say Shotgun Willies bankruptcy filing is an attempt to avoid paying – The Denver Post
Posted: at 7:01 am
Family members of a Kroger real estate executive who died following an altercation at Shotgun Willies in 2019 say the Glendale strip clubs recent bankruptcy filing is an attempt to use the COVID-19 pandemic as a smokescreen to limit the debtors liability in six pending lawsuits.
The truth is that the debtor is a profitable company that will likely recover quickly from the pandemic and has the financial wherewithal to provide a significantly higher return to unsecured creditors, the surviving wife and children of Randall Wright wrote in a March 24 court filing.
Wright was 48 when he died in May 2019 after being put into a chokehold by a bartender at the club, according to a wrongful death lawsuit his family filed five months later. The local district attorneys office announced in September 2019 that it would not file charges in connection with the incident, citing multiple factors.
The club disclosed the familys lawsuit and others pending against it when it filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in November. In a statement to BusinessDen at the time, Shotgun Willies attributed the filing to the pandemic, noting the club was prohibited from operating for weeks in the spring, and again around the time of the filing.
We believe this action gave us the only chance of surviving in this uncertain climate and was unfortunately unavoidable, the club said.
But the Wright family has asked the court to reject Shotgun Willies reorganization plan, characterizing the bankruptcy as just the latest example of the clubs efforts to hide its ability to pay the Wrights in the wake of the lawsuit.
The family notes that an entity called Glendale Holdings LLC was registered in August 2019, and ownership of the clubs building at 490 S. Colorado Blvd. was transferred to that entity in early 2020. The transaction was later reversed. Stephen Long, an attorney representing Shotgun Willies, previously told BusinessDen the transfer was done for tax purposes in case the club was sold.
While Shotgun Willies owns the building it operates in, it doesnt own the land the building sits on. That is owned by Coal Creek Partners LLC, which is made up of some but not all of the owners of Shotgun Willies, according to the club. While preparing to file for bankruptcy, the club and its landlord determined they werent on the same page about how much the club owed, ultimately settling on a higher amount than the clubs original estimate, according to court documents.
The Wright family refers to the situation as the debtors convenient discovery of additional debit to a related entity. The family also questions the strip clubs forecast regarding how long it will take to get the business back to where it was before the pandemic. The strip club had revenue of about $7 million in 2019.
The debtor projects that even five years after the most devastating economic effects of the pandemic are expected to subside (and despite widespread vaccinations already well underway as of the date of this filing), the debtors annual sales will still be approximately $4 million, significantly less than in the years prior to the bankruptcy filing, the Wrights said in their recent filing. This forecast is at odds with the views of most economic experts.
The Wrights are represented in their objection by attorney David Warner of Littletons Wadsworth Garber Warner Conrardy. He is also representing another party that objects to the reorganization plan using similar language. The individual, Charles McClure, filed a personal injury lawsuit against the strip club in April 2020.
Models Lucy Pinder, Dessie Mitcheson and Carmen Electra have also objected to the reorganization plan. They sued the club in 2019, claiming Shotgun Willies was using images of them in advertising without permission or compensation.
Long, the attorney representing Shotgun Willies, told BusinessDen Thursday that a hearing on the objections is scheduled for June 1. He noted that the clubs reorganization plan has the support of the U.S. trustee and the Subchapter V trustee, Harvey Sender.
Long also defended the veracity of the financial projections that the Wrights described as dour.
The projections that were submitted to the court were not our projections, Long said. They were projections by an independent financial analyst.
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Playland Operator Reaches Settlement with Westchester County – The Examiner News
Posted: at 7:01 am
Under the settlement, Standard Amusements will invest millions more in rides and food and other improvements at Playland than under the 2016 agreement.
The Westchester County Board of Legislators last week approved a bankruptcy court settlement with Standard Amusements regarding the management of Playland Amusement Park in Rye.
The settlement, which the board approved 13-4, was negotiated by the county and Standard the terms of which were previously approved by the bankruptcy court.
The agreement gives the county significantly improved terms compared with the 2016 agreement, which had become the subject of a dispute in Standards bankruptcy reorganization filing.
The choice legislators faced was voting to approve the settlement, with its improved terms, or against the settlement, thereby sending the case back to bankruptcy court where Standard could move to assume the 2016 contract.
Under the settlement, Standard will invest millions more in rides and food and other improvements at Playland than under the 2016 agreement.
The settlement also gives the county significant new oversight over Standards operation of the park controls that were not in the 2016 agreement.These new oversight powers include the power to review and approve Standards construction plans, approval of new rides, new and more specific financial reporting requirements for Standard, and county approval of an annual operating plan for the park, among others.
In addition, the settlement contains new terms under which Standard can assign the contract to another company. The county will now have the ability to object to an assignment, and there are new requirements that any company that might take on the contract must have years of amusement park management experience and demonstrated financial resources.
There are also improved financial terms for the county.Under the 2016 agreement, the county shared only in Standards net profit and only after Standard recouped its capital investment.Under the settlement, the county will be paid from the beginning out of gross revenue over $12 million. The county also will receive an annual fee starting at $300,000 in 2022, increasing to $400,000 in 2023 with annual adjustments thereafter.
If Standard fails to generate at least $12 million in gross revenue per year for four straight years, the county may terminate the contract.
The settlement also heads off expensive litigation in the future by hiring a commercial arbitrator, to be agreed to and paid for by both parties, to resolve disputes.
Any county workers at Playland, not hired by Standard, or who do not want to work for Standard, will continue to be employed elsewhere by the Parks Department. Standard is committing to continuing to hire a diverse slate of young seasonal workers during the summer as well as older workers.
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Boy Scouts, Pressured to End Bankruptcy, Explore Leaving Local Councils Behind – The Wall Street Journal
Posted: at 7:01 am
The Boy Scouts of America, under pressure to end a costly bankruptcy case, are exploring an alternative exit from chapter 11 that the youth group said abandons its longstanding goal of protecting hundreds of affiliated local councils from sex-abuse litigation.
The Boy Scouts put forth an alternative chapter 11 plan that would resolve sex-abuse liabilities for only the bankrupt national organization, while leaving local councils spread across the country open to thousands of legal claims.
The contingency plan isnt a first choice for the Boy Scouts, which filed for bankruptcy in hopes of shielding the local councils and the wealth they hold from legal exposure over childhood sexual abuse. Since filing for bankruptcy last year, the Boy Scouts have favored a broad deal between abuse victims and local councils, which are tied to the institution but arent themselves in bankruptcy.
That remains on the table, Boy Scouts lawyer Jessica Lauria said in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington, Del. But if the preferred plan falls to gain traction among victims or cant clear bankruptcy court, the Boy Scouts would pivot to an alternative version that only covers the national organization, she said.
In that scenario, local councils in California, New Jersey, New York and other states would be exposed to the kind of legal action that the Boy Scouts had filed for bankruptcy to resolve, according to court papers filed Monday.
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Avianca to Seek $1.8 Billion With Bankruptcy Exit in Sight – Bloomberg
Posted: at 7:01 am
Avianca Holdings SA plans to raise $1.8 billion to repay debt and provide new financing as the Colombian airline eyes an exit from the bankruptcy reorganization it was forced into last year during the pandemic-driven travel collapse.
The air carrier retained Seabury Securities LLC to help raise the exit financing, likely a combination of debt and equity, the company said in a regulatory filing Wednesday. Avianca said it will repay $1.4 billion in bankruptcy loans and have around $1 billion in liquidity when it emerges from the reorganization at some point this year.
Avianca was Latin Americas second-largest airline before the Covid-19 pandemic slowed air travel to a trickle last year, leading it to file for Chapter 11 protection in a New York court in May. Latam Airlines Group SA and Mexicos Grupo Aeromexico SAB also were forced into bankruptcy as the region suffered one of the worlds sharpest drops in flights.
Read more: Avianca Adding Routes to Beaches With Eye On Bankruptcy Exit
In addition to the $1.4 billion in loans it plans to refinance, Avianca raised $900 million from a group of investors including United Airlines, hedge fund Citadel Advisors LLC and Salvadoran air mogul Roberto Kriete. The company is negotiating final terms to convert that tranche into equity as it builds its new capital structure. Its still not possible to know whether the value of existing shares will be diluted, according to the filing.
When it emerges, Avianca signaled that its costs will be cut drastically. It said some 300 initiatives will save $500 million annually, helping cut leverage to below three times Ebitda from 5.8 times as of the end of 2019.
The case is Avianca Inc., 20-11133, U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York (Manhattan).
Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
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