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Monthly Archives: June 2021
Liberals team up with Bloc to limit debate on controversial Bill C-10 – National Post
Posted: June 9, 2021 at 2:50 am
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'This kind of motion on time allocation will do real damage to this place, not just today, not just tomorrow. But in the coming years'
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The Liberals and Bloc Qubcois voted to limit debate on controversial Bill C-10 Monday, as Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault blamed critics of the broadcasting bill for delaying the introduction of his governments promised online hate legislation.
The Conservatives, NDP and Green Party opposed the time allocation motion, but were outnumbered by the Bloc and Liberals, who want to push Bill C-10 through the before summer break.
The motion gives the heritage committee, which is currently amending the bill clause-by-clause, five more hours to complete its work before C-10 heads back for a vote in the House of Commons.
That process has been delayed over the past month, after the Liberal government introduced an amendment that critics said was a violation of free expression because it gave the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission regulatory authority over social media posts. The government later limited that authority, stipulating the CRTCs only power was to force platforms to promote Canadian content.
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The Conservatives have been the most critical of the free speech implications of the bill since the exemption for user-generated content was removed, but on Monday the NDP and Greens took issue with the governments move to shut down debate at committee.
NDP MP Alexandre Boulerice said in the House of Commons his party agrees with the aim behind C-10, which the government says is to ensure web giants like Google pay into the Canadian content system.
The minister talks about the importance of making the web giants pay their share. We agree in principle. We voted for this bill at second reading, Boulerice said in French. And thats not the issue. The debate now is the use of a gag to prevent parliamentarians from doing their work at committee.
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Time allocation has only ever been used three times to halt work at committee, Boulerice said, adding the NDP wants to let the MPs on the committee keep doing their work to fix the bill. Green Party MP Elizabeth May said the motion is the first time in 20 years that time allocation has been used to push a bill through committee, and it sets a bad precedent for Parliament.
This kind of motion on time allocation will do real damage to this place, not just today, not just tomorrow. But in the coming years, well find this used more and more and more to whip committees into shape, May said.
Guilbeault has argued time allocation is necessary to pass C-10, because otherwise it would be stuck in committee for months, time during which the Canadian cultural sector would miss out on hundreds of millions in contributions from large digital platforms. The committee has made it through more than 80 proposed amendments, including voting down a Conservative proposal to restore the exemption for social media content, with dozens more to go.
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During an appearance at the House ethics committee Monday, Guilbeault said the delay over C-10 is the reason his government hasnt yet tabled a separate bill that would tackle online harms. In early March, Guilbeault promised that bill would be introduced within weeks. Guilbeault acknowledged Monday he had initially planned the bill to be introduced even earlier.
Unfortunately, the systemic obstruction of the Conservative Party regarding Bill C-10 has prevented me from doing so. But I am still hoping to table this bill as soon as possible, he said.
Guilbeault was at committee as part of its study of allegations Montreal-based PornHub has distributed exploitative and illegal material. Though Justice Minister David Lametti told the same committee in April Canadian law may not apply to the company due to factors like the location of its servers, Guilbeault said Monday the online harms bill would cover any website accessible from Canada.
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He said the aim behind the legislation is to ensure whether or not the company is Canadian, or based in Canada or registered in Canada or its websites are housed in Canada, if they broadcast images and videos in Canada, then the law will apply to them.
That bill would require social media platforms to take down, within 24 hours, five categories of illegal posts: hate speech, terrorist content, posts that incite violence, child sexual exploitative content and intimate content that was shared without consent.
Guilbeault has said in the past the government would create a new regulator to enforce the online harms bill. On Monday his answers indicated that may have changed, as he declined to answer questions about whether the CRTC would be put in charge.
Guilbeault told the committee the goal behind the online harms bill is to develop a proposal that establishes an appropriate balance between protecting speech and preventing harm.He added that the objective is not to reduce freedom of expression, but to increase it for all users and ensure that no voices are being suppressed because of harmful content.
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Liberals team up with Bloc to limit debate on controversial Bill C-10 - National Post
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Reality bites Liberals and crime spikes – The Economist
Posted: at 2:50 am
AFTER THE sweet tea was poured but before the tomato soup arrived, in the middle of a crowded restaurant, Bill White lifted his shirt-tail to reveal the rubberised grip of a .38 revolver. Everyones got one these days, he says. Over lunch, he and two other residents of Buckhead, the wealthy northern section of Atlanta, swap stories: packs of cars blocking intersections for illegal street races, would-be thieves casing houses, neighbours too frightened to leave their homes. Lenox Square, an upscale mall, installed metal detectors after a spate of shootings. Mr White is CEO of the Buckhead Exploratory Committeea group of residents who have organised to push for Buckheads independence from Atlanta, driven, he explains, by three factors: crime, crime and crime.
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As of May 16th, murders were up by 59% in Atlanta compared with the same period in 2020. Rapes, aggravated assaults and thefts from and of cars are also well above levels in 2020. Nor is this just an Atlanta problem. Nationally, the spike in murders that began in 2020according to data from the Major Cities Chiefs Association, homicides in American cities rose by 33% from 2019 to 2020shows no sign of abating. This is a problem first, of course, for the people living in the neighbourhoods where much of this violence takes place. But it also poses a problem for advocates of criminal-justice reform, who made great strides in the 2010s, when violent crime was falling. Convincing people to back lighter sentences and decrease their reliance on police when murders are rising may prove more difficult.
The reasons why murder rates are on the rise nationally remain unclear. In fact criminologists are still debating why crime fell in the 1990s and 2000s. The pandemic closed schools and other institutions, leaving young people unoccupied and anxious. Police who might otherwise have been deployed to high-crime neighbourhoods or investigative duty were assigned to respond to protests. Gun sales soared, and many faced financial hardships and other stresses. But violent-crime rates were rising, albeit more slowly than over the past 14 months, even before the covid-19 epidemic began, beginning in 2014.
Whatever the reason, homicides can be sticky, says John Pfaff of Fordham University in New York. A shooting in March can lead to a subsequent shooting in July, when retaliation comes up. In other words, even if the pandemic is partly responsible for the homicide spike, any post-pandemic decline may well be gradual.
As a result, crime now has a political salience that it has not had in years. A poll released last month showed crime was the second-most-important issue (behind covid-19) for Democrats in New York, who will choose a mayoral candidate in a primary on June 22nd. Eric Adams, a former police officer who has recently defended the use of stop-and-frisk tactics and made public safety the centre of his campaign, leads in some polls. Jenny Durkan, Seattles mayor, has faced criticism from both the right and left over her handling of the citys police-free autonomous zone and tactics used by police against protesters; she will not seek another term. Chesa Boudin, San Franciscos district attorney, faces a recall campaign, driven by the perception that he is too soft on crime. Crime has become central in the race to succeed Keisha Lance Bottoms, Atlantas mayor, who also unexpectedly declined to seek a second term.
But before she leaves office, she plans to hire another 250 police officers. Other cities have taken a similar approach. Minneapolis, where a majority of the city council voted last year to defund and disband the police department, will spend $6.4m to hire new officers. While president of Baltimores city council, Brandon Scott championed a measure to cut the police departments budget by $22.4m; since taking office last December as mayor, he has proposed increasing it by $28m. Oakland will soon restore most of the $29m it cut from the police budget last year.
Such reversals testify more to the political than the budgetary costs of criminal-justice reform. But that does not mean reform is doomed, or that all voters will reject all reform-minded candidates. Last month Tishaura Jones was elected mayor of St Louis on a platform that included reducing reliance on police and closing one of the citys prisons. In a primary race on May 18th, Larry Krasner, Philadelphias crusading district attorney, trounced his police-union-backed opponent. On that same day, Ed Gainey, running on a reformist platform, defeated Bill Peduto in a primary election. He is poised to become Pittsburghs first black mayor.
Still, blame-mongering for violence is an effective cudgel for conservative state-level politicians to wield against liberal cities. Brian Kemp, Georgias Republican governor, is making Atlanta crime central to his re-election campaignthe better to win back Trump-hesitant Republicans in the citys suburbs. Florida has passed a law that lets the governor and his cabinet reverse any changes to cities police budgets that they deem unwise. Other states have proposed (and Texas has passed) measures cutting off funds to cities that slash police budgets. Unlike states, which the Tenth Amendment protects against federal overreach, cities are subsidiary creations of the state, and have no legal shield against these sorts of pre-emptive measures.
Reformers will have to change how they pitch their ideas. They cannot simply make a moral case. The impetus that led conservative and liberal states alike to reduce their prison populations in recent years was largely to save money. And, as Mr Pfaff notes, homicides are up nationwide, so if rising violent-crime rates indict reform in liberal cities, they must also indict the status quo in more conservative areas that have not pursued reform.
The rise in violence just makes everything related to these debates over how to reform policing and how to deal with police violence more difficult, explains Patrick Sharkey, a sociologist at Princeton University. Theres a knee-jerk response because weve been so reliant on police and prisons as the institutions we turn to to deal with violence. Faced with a choice between more and less policing, people frightened of violent crime will rarely choose less.
In fact the choice is not binary. Police play a crucial role in fighting crime and, in the near term, cities may require a more robust police presence than some reformers would like. They do not play the only role, however. A wealth of evidence exists that other institutionsanti-violence non-profits, drug-treatment programmes, summer jobs for young peoplealso help. Politicians who want to reduce violent crime in their cities and states should remember that, just as activists should remember that reform is a harder sell when people do not feel safe. Because, since murders usually rise in the summer, when people are out in the streets until late, safety is unlikely to return soon.
Correction (June 6th): A previous version of this article stated that Bill White was head of fundraising for the Buckhead Exploratory Committee
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline "Reality bites"
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Heres how a Liberal Arts degree from NMIMS can open a world of lucrative career prospects – Times of India
Posted: at 2:50 am
If you are also at the crossroads of deciding which academic way to head for a prospering career, its worth considering the upcoming field of Liberal Arts. Today, many students have legit questions about what this field is all about, which institute would be the best to pursue this course from, and if there are enough lucrative career prospects out there?Lets first start by understanding what a Liberal Arts degree usually entails. It usually includes the study of history, literature, writing, philosophy, sociology, psychology, creative arts and much more. Key among the many skills students with Liberal Arts degree learn are formulating effective arguments, communicating well and solving problems, says Lasya Karthikeyan, a B. A. (HONS.) Liberal Arts alumni of Jyoti Dalal School of Liberal Arts (JDSoLA), NMIMS.'; var randomNumber = Math.random(); var isIndia = (window.geoinfo && window.geoinfo.CountryCode === 'IN') && (window.location.href.indexOf('outsideindia') === -1 ); //console.log(isIndia && randomNumber I, for instance, cultivated effective communication, analytical and research skills that I put to use in my profession almost daily, he says. Karthikeyan is a Brand Consultant with an organisation of repute. Jogging down his memory lane, he shares how he entered college with highly rigid ideas of what the world was, and what his place in it would be. It didn't take long for those ideas to get replaced with a broad-minded thinking. On a usual workday, you will find me solving multiple problems by taking different approaches; its all because of what I learnt during my college days, he says. Congratulations!
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At JDSoLA, the curriculum is a perfect balance between theory and practical learning allowing students to learn from different vantage points. Liberal Arts studies offer an immersive educational experience grounded in experimentation, deliberation, and creativity. You will join a small community of scholars with significant exposure to activities, projects, and trips, thereby readying you for life, says Vartika Arora, Associate Professor at JDSoLA, NMIMS.
Thanks to the experienced visiting faculty from industry, civil society, academics, government services and the arts, you can expect core academics to be supplemented with skills needed for the workplaces of the future.
Tell me more about B. A. (HONS.) Liberal Arts program at JDSoLAThe B. A. (HONS.) Liberal Arts program at JDSoLA combines Humanities and Social Sciences with Natural Sciences, Creative and Performing Arts. Dont get overwhelmed by this transdisciplinary approach because education goes far beyond just textbooks. For instance, theres scope for exposure outside of classrooms at NMIMS. Students even have the option of attending workshops for active and guided learning. They are exposed to field-based learning through regular community engagements, visits and fieldwork. All in all, the program provides exposure and helps in developing key research, critical and analytical skills, among several other capabilities.
What are my career prospects?
The world is a canvas for a B. A. (HONS.) Liberal Arts graduates. For instance, you can undertake higher studies in your area of interest at Indian and international universities like Kritiksha and Tanishk. Kritiksha Sharma, is Batch of 2016-19 graduate of B. A. (HONS.) Liberal Arts program at JDSoLA. Currently, she is pursuing a Master of Fine Arts course at Sarah Lawrence College (with a specialization in Creative Writing).
I started with Liberal Arts as a doe-eyed teenager who thrived on utopian enthusiasm and believed that the world was her oyster. I had high ambitions to be a writer but no tangible path to get there. Very few institutions are able to nurture young minds to create a realistic path of their own choosing, regardless of how unrealistic their dreams might be. But look at me. I am someone who got into a reputed art school with a rather unconventional degree of my choice, and in that, I feel honoured to call myself a part of the NMIMS family, she says.
The Fun ElementIf its getting all about academics, this school is also a great place for your overall personality development, thanks to the exposure to fun, outdoor camps and learning activities done here. Earlier in 2019, students were taken to Karnataka as a part of the Discover India campaign! You can expect a guided tour of the Asiatic library Book Conservation Lab or you could also find yourself writing for the institutes monthly newsletter and blogs made by students discussing current topics. The school has seen famous guests like Naseeruddin Shah and Tom Alter grace their important occasions. Also, JDSoLA students-run Paperplanes is one of the most exciting college fests!
NMIMS AccreditationsNMIMS is placed at the forefront of educational platforms owing to its academic quality, research focus and faculty from top national and global institutes and industries. In 2003, NMIMS was declared deemed to be a university under UGC graded autonomy regulator. With a NAAC score of 3.59 and grade A+, NMIMS has received Category-I Autonomy Status. A liberal arts education provides a strong foundation across disciplines and inculcates critical and professional abilities in students. This enables them to develop their interests, mould their personal pursuits and eventually find their career path. Tertiary education will equip our schools graduates with a range of skills. Critical thinking, the ability to recognise multiple perspectives, the proficiency to generate an argument, and the dexterity to acknowledge diverse stakeholders, says Dr. Achyut Vaze, Dean Incharge, Jyoti Dalal School of Liberal Arts (JDSoLA), NMIMS.
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Fifty years of Martyn Turner cartoons: I have always been a liberal bigot – The Irish Times
Posted: at 2:50 am
Martyn Turner began contributing cartoons to The Irish Times in the summer of 1971. Half a century later, hes still a satirical genius
Martyn Turner is at his drawing board, brush in left hand, inking an addendum to the Irish Times guide to common garden birds that satirises vulture-like law professionals, cuckoo funds and the recently chosen leader of the DUP. Do you think The Irish Times will allow me callEdwin Poots a Wee Orange Tit?
Turner is nearly 73, and his first Irish Times cartoon was published 50 years ago this weekend. He is a satirical genius.
He is tall and bearded and has colourful clothes and, currently, a shock of grey hair. I said to Jean [his wife], The Irish Times are coming out on Thursday and she said, You should get your hair cut and I said, Oh no, they might want to take photographs and it would be much funnier with my hair like this.
Were sitting in a refurbished cowbarn connected to their house a few kilometres outside Naas. Its Turners studio. Theres an exercise bike in the middle of the room (Wasted on us) and a Duracell bunny stuck to the half-door. Ollie, an exuberant red setter (their 22nd red setter to date), has been expelled for the duration of the interview. Turner draws on paper and then scans his work on to a computer in the corner, where he adds colour sparingly.
His collection of cartoon books is smaller than it once was but there are still loads on the shelves. He has donated most of it to University College Cork (and while Im there, he donates one book to me). His own older cartoons went to the National Library of Ireland. He has, over the years, published 20 books himself. On his shelves I see copies of The Whole Earth Catalogue, Art Spiegelmans Raw, Alan Moores Watchmen and Goscinny and Uderzos Asterix.
The walls are lined with pictures by Erich Sokol, Clay Bennett, Hunt Emerson, Roy Peterson and more. By his drawing desk theres a painting of Neil Young by Sebastian Krger. The international fraternity of cartoonists all know each other and swap pictures at festivals such as the Guinness International Cartoon Festival, which Turner ran with the late Terry Willers in the 1990s.
He and Jean have lived here since 1976, the year he got his first full-time contract with The Irish Times, buying the property with money from Jeans father and her bank in Slough Jean had a real job as a librarian after a bank manager at EBS rejected him. I said, Im a freelance political cartoonist. He just started laughing. Which I thought was great. Nobody ever laughed at my cartoons.
Turners love of print media started in primary school in Essex, where a schoolteacher and local journalist called Ms Cook encouraged the pupils to create their own paper. In secondary school he produced an anti-school newspaper pseudonymously.
Fifty years later I met the guy who was the manager, he says. I was responsible for all the writing and the drawing. He was responsible for selling it. He said to me, We made a great profit. I didnt remember any money. But its nice to know I worked at a newspaper that actually made a profit. I dont remember working on any other newspapers that managed to make any money.
He was a scholarship boy at Bancrofts public school inWoodford Green, on the northeast edge of London, which he hated. He had wanted to go to Leighton County High because the footballer Phil Woosnam was the chemistry teacher, but his mother (she kind of lived her life through me) insisted on public school.
There were two places for poor boys I got one of the two places and it was hideous. So when I applied for university, I applied for all the ones as far away from the school as was physically possible.
This is how he found himself studying geography in Queens University Belfast in the late 1960s. Did he know much about Ireland? I had never heard of Ireland, he says. You can live a whole life in England without hearing the word Ireland ever mentioned.
At Queens he edited a general interest magazine called Interest. Then in 1970 he became a cartoonist on the non-partisan political magazine Fortnight, before later becoming its editor when the guy who started it decided to go off and write the constitution of New Guinea.
At Fortnight, Turner had friends on both sides of the political divide. Being an outsider is useful for a cartoonist, he says. I dont have any baggage. Im not Protestant or Catholic. Im not a unionist or a nationalist. I dont give a fig for either of them really. And when I came down here, I wasnt Fianna Fil or Fine Gael. They both seem equally daft to me.
Its quite handy to be of the culture but outside the culture. Its quite common in cartooning A lot of the British cartoonists are Australians Vicky, the other great British cartoonist, was Hungarian.
He began contributing cartoons to The Irish Times in summer 1971. When he joined the paperofficially in 1976, after five years of sending cartoons down on the train, it had, to his knowledge, never had a full-time political cartoonist.
They had a lovely pocket cartoonist in the 1960s called NOK [Niel OKennedy]. I met him one day on the street, and he told me that he stopped because when he got middle-aged he suddenly started seeing other peoples point of view. He laughs. Which is something Ive never suffered from. Ive always been a liberal bigot.
Turner is instinctively self-deprecating. I ask him about the evolution of his style. My secret is I cant really draw, he says.
I tell him I love the way he scratches and shades his work and he says, I used to do a lot of lines because I used to figure the more lines I did, the more theyd think it was worth paying money for If I had a very simple style, youd think: Well, anyone can do that.
He resists any attempt of mine to elevate cartooning to a higher plane. When I paraphrase a Steve Bell quote about how its a cartoonists job to go too far, he laughs and says: A cartoonists job is to feed his family.
In the early days cartoonists were so low in the hierarchy, people would just cut up the original cartoon to fit the page, he says. Cartoons would come back in pieces Once I went in to [The Irish Times] and there was a hushed silence and a pompous subeditor came up and said, I really liked that cartoon you did the other day. I decided Id have the original, so I took it home. Heres a pound for yourself.
So cartooning is a slightly disrespected, disgraceful branch of news media? He laughs. Well, I hope so.
Cartooning is much more respected in Europe. He tells me about sitting in a Parisian cafe with Steve Bell from the UK and Eric Rauschenbach from Germany. Steve said to me, Hows your book going? And I said, Fine. We printed 5,000 and weve almost sold out. I said, What about you? And he said, We printed 9,000 and about half of them are gone so far. We said to Eric, Have you ever had a book out? and Eric said, The last one sold a quarter of a million.
Whats it like when someone new comes to the forefront of politics and he has to figure out how to draw them? He puts his head in his hands and whispers in despair, I cant draw I remember after Bertie [Ahern] took over, [Irish Times colleague] Pat OHara used to send me text messages or emails saying, Almost Almost and after nine months of drawing Bertie every day he said, Yes.
He likes finding little details he can use as shorthand. He stuck a cigarette in Brian Cowens ear. He drew Haughey with a fish in his pocket after his boat capsized. The little worm that frequently turns up in the corner of his own frames was an attempt to fit in extra jokes.
The editors who hired me left The Irish Times and then [Douglas] Gageby came back, he says. We were thick as thieves when he left but initially he wasnt very keen on me because he didnt approve of what I wrote in Fortnight. I was far too non-republican for his liking So Id make the cartoon reasonably bland so Gageby wouldnt get upset but then Id put this little thing in the corner, which is what I really wanted to say. Then I was in the office one day, and Gageby said, You know what I really like about your cartoons? I like that little thing in the corner.
People didnt always take kindly to his work. In 1995 he was unsuccessfully sued for blasphemy for a cartoon he drew featuring Christ during the divorce referendum. Charles Haughey kept trying to get him sacked, he says.
I met PJ Mara [Haugheys adviser] once at a do, and Mara asked did I ever get any offers from any other newspapers. I said, Funnily enough I just got asked if Id like to go and work in Scotland but [its] a lot of upheaval and I really like The Irish Times. Mara said, If youre thinking of moving we would probably pay your removal expenses. You could never tell with him if he was being serious.
Does he get many complaints? He doesnt know. The woman who once fielded the calls at the newspaper told him that if he had done a cartoon on the church, she used to call in sick.
Does he worry about the responses he might get? I made a pact with myself that as soon as the cartoon leaves this house, I dont care what happens to it. Because otherwise you go crazy.
I tell him my wife asked me to thank him for the cartoon he did about the X case, in which a little girl stands on the map of Ireland, surrounded by fences. The caption reads: The introduction of internment in Ireland ... for 14-year-old girls.
They say that every cartoonist has one cartoon in their life if theyre lucky enough, and that was my one, he says. At the time, it was just another cartoon.
Later, he says: The X case one is awful because you hoped that the situation was that you never have to draw that cartoon. And its the most reprinted cartoon. Ill never take any money for it. You cant take money from someone elses misfortune.
A year later the girl at the centre of the case visited him with her social worker and her mother. She spent the day here. Shes got the original of the cartoon.
In 2014 The Irish Times printed a Martyn Turner cartoon featuring three priests looking at the new Children First Bill stipulating mandatory reporting of abuse and singing, Id do anything for children (but I wont do that).
It was removed from the website and The Irish Times printed an apology to Catholics who were offended. What I said was quite reasonable, particularly if youre a parent. I know what they mean when they say its unfair to demonise the whole of the clergy for just a few thousand rotten apples, but these are cartoons.
He estimates that the paper has rejected his work about six times in 50 years, which, compared with the experiences of his international colleagues, he thinks is a very good record. If I was an editor, I wouldnt print half of them, he says. When I was an editor [at Fortnight], I used to leave out almost all my cartoons Theres no other paper Ive worked for that leave you alone so much [as The Irish Times]. And I dont know whether thats a conscious decision or whether thats just neglect.
He still does four cartoons every week for this paper. He was once talking with his friend, the longform comic book legend Will Eisner, and I was about to say to him, I dont know how you do this; I couldnt do this in a month of Sundays. Just before I opened my mouth, he said, I dont know how you do your job. I dont know how you think of things every day.
The truth is, he says, he has 400 ideas an hour because thats the way my mind works. Most of them are stupid. Poor Jean has to listen to the nonsense I spout because I have no sense of whats terribly clever or whats good and whats bad.
Does he show his work in progress to Jean? Jean isnt allowed [to see them], he says. She used to, but if she didnt smile or groan or react, Id tear it up and start again, so she isnt allowed.
Whats his routine? I wake at seven. I listen to the radio all morning until I can listen no more and then I go and lie on the bed at lunchtime. I usually fall asleep during the one oclock news. When I wake up at around 1.45pm, theres usually something in my head, even if its just the notion of a subject to do. And then I labour away until theres something that I can use.
The core of it, he says, is an attitude. I always have to disagree with something. It was a lot easier in the old days, but Ireland has changed so much since I arrived. They kind of agree with me now on everything. Whereas you can imagine what it was like in the 1970s. I was interviewed once by this radical student newspaper, who said, Youre very extreme left-wing arent you? Not really, why do you think that? Well, you believe in divorce and contraception.
He worries for younger artists that there isnt much future in cartooning, but he seems content with his own lot. He and Jean are both fully vaccinated (Im coming up to 73 and Jean is 140, he says) and hes back playing golf. He nearly became a professional golfer in his teens, he tells me, but his mother put a stop to that. He loves the sport. Your mind goes completely blank. The cares of the world go off your shoulders.
Hes also a relatively new Irish citizen, a status he and Jean pursued after the Brexit vote. He never understood nationalism, he says. People kept trying to explain to me that because you live in this country, youre perfect and because you live in this country youre absolute crap.
Why does he keep drawing? Whats it all for? I start from the point of view that Im trying to change peoples opinion or to reinforce peoples opinion, he says. But trying to make people laugh is one of the most noble causes you can have.
He remembers a quote: Laughter is the best medicine ... Unless youve got syphilis then try penicillin.
To mark the 50th anniversary of Martyn Turners cartoons in The Irish Times, you could win a signed collection of his 16 political cartoon books by going to irishtimes.com/martynturner50
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Fifty years of Martyn Turner cartoons: I have always been a liberal bigot - The Irish Times
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CNN mocked over reporting study conservatives more likely than liberals to believe misleading news reports – Fox News
Posted: at 2:50 am
Media top headlines June 4
Mike Pompeo alleging that the NIH tried to suppress a State Department COVID-19 probe, Fauci telling Americans to not be so accusatory with China, and a Yahoo News reporter asking Jen Psaki about a possible White House cat round out todays top media headlines.
CNN was mocked this week for its a piece citing a study that disparaged conservatives' news judgment.
In the piece, the liberal network cited a "small but intensive" study compiled by communications specialists at Ohio State University, who claimed that "more engaging but false stories tended to support beliefs held by conservatives, while viral news stories that were also true tended to support beliefs held by liberals."
The network promoted the piece in a tweet Thursday, writing, "The research is the latest in a series of studies that show people on the political right tend to not only be targeted by fake news, but to believe it's correct."
CNN CALLED OUT FOR USING OUT-OF-DATE STORY TO HIDE RATINGS COLLAPSE: CANT GET MORE FAKE NEWS THAN THAT'
Fox News contributor Mollie Hemingway slammed CNN for its report, saying it had repeatedly misled its viewers and readers on key issues.
"They lied about Russian collusion. They lied about the 2016 election. They lied about Brett Kavanaugh. And they lied about the origins of COVID-19. And their liberal viewers believed them," she said. "These corrupt partisans in the media are in no place to lecture anyone about disinformation, of which they are the most responsible for its harmful spread."
This led to the liberal outlet being lambasted on social media with examples of "fake news" it had been criticized for pushing in the past, including outright dismissing the lab-leak theory on coronavirus' origins, reporting on the racial controversy in the infamous Covington Catholic incident, and misinformation revolving around the Russian dossier following the 2016 election.
CNN HAS SHED MORE THAN HALF ITS VIEWERS SINCE BIDEN TOOK OFFICE, DOWN STAGGERING 60 PERCENT IN KEY DEMO
DON LEMON CLAIMS CNN RATINGS DIVE DUE TO TRUMP ABSENCE WORTH IT, 'BETTER FOR THE WORLD' HE ISN'T POTUS
FACT-CHECKERS IN EMBARASSING POSITION AFTER LAB LEAK THEORY ABOUT-FACE: REALCLEARPOLITICS
One conservative writer shared a photo of CNN's Brian Stelter interviewing disgraced Democratic attorney Michael Avenatti, who became a ubiquitous presence on CNN and MSNBC in 2018 for his anti-Trump activism.
The piece noted that the study ran from January to June in 2019, but did not cover the period under the coronavirus pandemic. It also noted the research team was now separately looking into misinformation surrounding the pandemic.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
The network also claimed that the researchers "carefully fact-checked" every article that was considered in the study based off social media engagement, but it didn't offer an explanation as to what the fact-checking process entailed.
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It Is Only In This Country That Things Are Very Liberal Where Health Is Concerned: Supreme Court – Live Law – Indian Legal News
Posted: at 2:50 am
"It is only in this country that things are very liberal where health is concerned", remarked Justice M. R. Shah on Tuesday in a plea for anticipatory bail in a case of adulteration and sub-standard quality of grain.
On Tuesday, Justice Shah expressed incredulity at the relief of anticipatory bail being sought in the facts of the case and the offences of which the petitioners have been accused. "This is a case of adulteration and sub-standard quality of grain and they have come in an anticipatory bail plea!", commented Justice Shah at the outset.
"Would you and your family eat that grain? Be fair to the court! When you are not willing, should we let the citizens die?", asked Justice Shah.
"That issue would arise upon conviction. And I am not even asking for quashing of the case! I am only on bail", pressed the advocate.
The bench even refused the plea for protection for a limited period to allow the petitioners time to move the appropriate court for regular bail.
"Please grant me protection for 4 weeks for moving the court for regular bail. Only limited protection for this purpose", pleaded the advocate.
"No, no, no", said the bench.
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Trudeaus Liberals promised to end the blood ban. Now they say its complicated. – 660 News
Posted: at 2:50 am
Trudeaus Liberals promised to end the blood ban. Now they say its 'complicated'. - 660 NEWS Rogers Media uses cookies for personalization, to customize its online advertisements, and for other purposes. Learn more or change your cookie preferences. Rogers Media supports the Digital Advertising Alliance principles. By continuing to use our service, you agree to our use of cookies.We use cookies (why?) You can change cookie preferences. Continued site use signifies consent.
by the big story
Posted Jun 7, 2021 5:13 am MDT
Last Updated Jun 7, 2021 at 6:27 am MDT
In todays Big Story podcast, the promise was pretty clear: During his first successful campaign as Liberal leader, Justin Trudeau told LGBT voters that we would end Canadas longstanding ban prohibiting men who have sex with men from donating blood. At the time, it seemed like a simple promise to keep. A few years later, he claimed it wasnt so simple.
Now, its 2021 and Erin OToole is criticizing Trudeau for his failure as the Conservatives seek LGBT support. How is the blood ban still in place? When Trudeau claims his government will follow the science what is he referring to? Is a discriminatory approach really still necessary when technology has rapidly advanced and Canada needs blood more than ever?
GUEST: Justin Ling, investigative journalist
You can subscribe to The Big Story podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google and Spotify
You can also find it at thebigstorypodcast.ca.
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Trudeaus Liberals promised to end the blood ban. Now they say its complicated. - 660 News
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LETTER | Let’s have a more liberal, open-minded university education – Malaysiakini
Posted: at 2:50 am
LETTER | After 13 years of education in a controlled and strictly disciplined environment in schools, we send our children to a university to broaden their horizons in preparation to face the real world. They are already young adults by then with minds like a sponge eager to absorb and grow into this new phase in their lives.
The university is where we entrust our children will be taught how to think laterally and out of the box to meet the challenges of the real world. We expect them to be mature and confident with the ability to grow and excel in their chosen professions and compete with their peers nationally and internationally. Only then can they make a difference in the world and blaze new trails through their innovative minds.
However, looking at the situation today and how our children are not given the freedom to be exposed to the realities of life, is this hope just wishful thinking? How can the horizons of our children be opened when their minds are still conditioned and encaged? They are not given the liberty to be adventurous, encounter new perspectives and form their own perceptions and opinions. This only dampens their thirst for knowledge and the unknown.
A case in point is the abrupt cancellation of an online dialogue with Ramli Ibrahim, a renowned artiste in the performing arts. This is an opportunity missed to pick the brain of someone who pursued his passion in an art form of another race and religion. What made an engineering graduate embark and excel in an artistry alien to his natural psyche? They will never know nor be able to cross borders like Ramli did - to take a leap of faith to achieve his dreams.
I was fortunate to be an undergraduate at Universiti Sains Malaysia in the 70s. The rounded exposure I experienced was like opening a new world to me. In the first year, I was exposed to a diversity of subjects within the school of Humanities. These included Visual Arts, Critical Thinking, Performing Arts, Communication, Statistics, to name a few. Two of the 10 subjects had to be from a cross-discipline, so I did International Relations and Sociology.
In the second and third year, I majored in Mass Communication but still had to take subjects across disciplines so I added French, Philosophy, Photography and Dance to my course. All this was to provide a fully rounded education and knowledge I never experienced in my primary and secondary education.
The beautiful part of the system was also to accrue marks from coursework throughout the year. As such, we had to work hard throughout the year and there was less pressure in the year-end final exams. We would already know our grades for most subjects and could therefore spend more time and focus on the weaker subjects. It was less mental stress compared to when the final exams accounted for 100 percent of your marks.
On a lighter note, I found that I could take better photographs than my other travelling companions - understanding light and composition - and managed to find my way when lost in France with the splatter of French words I could still remember!
My hope is for a more liberal and open-minded exposure to the real world and applicable living skills to survive in this competitive world today. Education is key to make this happen. Otherwise, our future graduates will remain jobless, not in demand, and ultimately end up being garbage collectors in Singapore as has proven to be the case.
The views expressed here are those of the author/contributor and do not necessarily represent the views of Malaysiakini.
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COVID-19 freedom rallies actually undermine liberty heres why – The Conversation CA
Posted: at 2:49 am
Lets be clear: freedom rallies protesting against COVID-19 restrictions dont challenge laws. In fact, these rallies attempts to make provocative statements, shock and change people which in reality is spreading lies and conspiracies often fail.
The spaces these rally attendees go to protest are contagious, but it isnt just the transmission of COVID-19 we should fear.
These rallies spread and transmit insidious lies and conspiracies. Festering and incubating denial and deceit, rally attendees then spew misinformation out into communities that are doing their best to follow government public health orders.
If this imagery is alarming, it should be: denial and deception can be harmful weapons with lethal consequences. Heres why neither logic or law is on the side of freedom rallies.
A recent large gathering in Saskatoon, planned to protest COVID-19 measures, included a childrens festival promising entertainment and games. In an attempt to promote the freedom rally, children were used as pawns to further an agenda that spews conspiracies, falsehoods and denies death and suffering caused by the pandemic.
For a group of people that believes wearing a mask, staying socially distant and getting a vaccine are losses of liberty, you would think rally attendees would harbour concern for the loss of liberties of those not attending rallies or that this concern would be extended to the rest of their communities they go home to once the rally is over. Unfortunately, this is not the case.
It is quite something that children and minors under the care of adults (the latter consenting to put themselves in harms way by attending these rallies and potentially spreading the virus) are put into situations that are inherently dangerous. These rallies have the potential to become superspreader events, elongating and exacerbating the pandemic as a result.
In short, freedom rallies lead to the spread of the virus, which leads to further lockdowns, which lead to less freedom, and so on. Rally attendees want to blame governments for restricting their rights, but they themselves continue this unfortunate cycle.
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is based upon what a reasonable person would or should do under given circumstances. Historically, we see courts try to balance individual rights against the common good of the community for example, in how we have stricter gun laws in Canada than in the United States.
Canadian courts often side with the protection of the community, like rejecting the notion that Canadians have a right to possess firearms. This comes into play as judges weigh the scientific and legal evidence alongside the need for the charter to uphold values like dignity and equality for all citizens.
Individual liberties are respected under the charter. While rally attendees believe they are promoting their charter rights, this is an individualistic understanding of the charter that doesnt align with longstanding Canadian law and social culture.
Empathy is essential here: just because we may not witness the harm done to our communities doesnt mean it is not happening.
As Canadians, we each have an individual responsibility to protect our health and safety, but the charter (and scientific evidence) demonstrates that collective, community responsibility to one anothers health and safety will keep our communities healthy and safe overall.
Not only do we owe ourselves the chance to get vaccinated, but we owe our neighbours, friends and other community members (whether we know them or not) to get vaccinated too. Overwhelming evidence suggests that COVID-19 preventative measures work and complicit ignorance of scientific evidence does not. Rally attendees must face this truth.
The latest freedom rallies held in Saskatchewan were attended by Maxime Bernier, the leader of the Peoples Party of Canada. These rallies have also taken place in Winnipeg, Toronto and other cities across the country.
Politicians, police and community leaders need to condemn these freedom rallies and the lies rallies spread. If they dont, rally attendees and their motivations to deny facts will continue to put people in harms way.
We must continue to question how certain groups of society have become so content in ignoring compelling evidence.
Whether a decline in empirical or media literacy, denial and deceit provides contented solace to lockdown and vaccine naysayers. We cant allow this to continue. Just because you can have a rally doesnt mean you should.
We cant let the actions of the selfish few compromise the hard work and sacrifices of the selfless many. These freedom rallies are unreasonable and will always do more harm than any good proposed.
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COVID-19 freedom rallies actually undermine liberty heres why - The Conversation CA
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Charter of Freedom setting proposed in Wilkes | News | journalpatriot.com – Wilkes Journal Patriot
Posted: at 2:49 am
The Wilkes County commissioners received a proposal for establishing a display of full-scale replicas of the U.S. Constitution, Bill of Rights and Declaration of Independence at a public site here during their June 1 meeting.
Ron Lewis and David Streeter from Foundation Forward Charters of Freedom explained plans for the display (setting) and requested county government support.
Founded in 2014 by Vance and Mary Jo Patterson of Burke County, Charters of Freedom has dedicated dozens of Charters of Freedom settings across the nation and has more in the works.
According to the June 1 presentation, the Vances were inspired to set up Foundation Forward when they first saw the original U.S. Constitution, Bill of Rights and Declaration of Independence at the National Archives in Washington, D.C.
Streeter said Foundation Forward is an apolitical, areligious, nonprofit educational organization.
Eddie Settle, chairman of the commissioners, told Lewis he was preaching to the choir and asked what was needed from Wilkes County government.
Lewis said that if the commissioners will approve a resolution saying they would like to have a Charters of Freedom setting, he will provide a memo of understanding for them to approve. Settle said he would get the resolution on the agenda for a meeting in August.
Lewis said the cost is about $75,000. According to news articles on the Charters of Freedom settings established elsewhere, each project is covered by donations of materials, labor and money from citizens and no direct tax dollars are used.
Lewis said the location in Wilkes is up to the commissioners, but Foundation Forward will provide input. He said he already had seen a half dozen potential locations, all within a rock throwing distance from the Wilkes County Office Building in Wilkesboro.
The full-scale replicas of the U.S. Constitution, Bill of Rights and Declaration of Independence are engraved on bronze tablets, placed in decorative reinforced concrete and brick settings and covered with shatterproof glass.
Wilkes County Commissioner Casey Joe Johnson, an elementary school social studies teacher, said he is excited about the information Lewis and Streeter shared. It should be a good way to teach students to respect their country. Johnson said the Wilkes Heritage Museum, which hosts many Wilkes school field trips, seemed like a good location.
Streeter asked Johnson to help arrange for him to meet with Wilkes school principals and the superintendent (Mark Byrd) to help them understand what Foundation Forward Charters of Freedom is about.
A Charters of Freedom display beside the Caldwell County Courthouse in downtown Lenoir was dedicated on July 3, 2019.
According to the City of Lenoir website, this project was led and funded by Foundation Forward Inc. and completed with the help of Caldwell County Public Schools and the City of Lenoir Public Works Department. Students from the masonry programs at Hibriten High School, South Caldwell High School, and West Caldwell High School bricked the setting.
Lewis said a Charters of Freedom setting is being completed now in the 25th North Carolina county and work will start soon on one in Alaska.
Streeter said the settings arent called monuments because theyre not erected to pay homage to a person, event or other things no longer with us. He said the Charters of Freedom arent dead.
These three documents give us many things that we enjoy each day as far as our liberties and freedoms, all the way from the lowest courts that deal with traffic issues all the way up to the Supreme Court, said Streeter.
We may not always agree with everything that comes from the courts, but we all live under those. And thats one of the reasons we live in the great land that we do.
Lewis said Foundation Forward is excited about being in Wilkes County. COVID is calming down now and were raring to go. He said there are people who live in Wilkes who are anxious to see it get started.
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