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Monthly Archives: March 2022
Peaceful protests work, from the Salt March to the Freedom Convoy | The Right Stuff – Enumclaw Courier-Herald
Posted: March 18, 2022 at 7:59 pm
What do you do when no one will listen to you? Nowadays, if you try to make a controversial point online, and Big Tech says that you are trying to spread misinformation and deletes you article and your accounts, taking to the streets is the only option you have left. Here are some peaceful protests that have worked throughout history.
In early 1800s India, British rulers made it illegal for Indians to produce their own salt, as well as heavily taxed the imported salt from England. There were many attempts to overturn the tax and break up the English monopoly on the vital mineral, but it was Mahatma Gandhi who led the first movement that gained any sort of traction.
In March, 1930, Gandhi and his followers made a 240-mile trek to the Indian coast and when they got there, they all reached down and gathered up their own salt. In typical tyrant fashion, over 60,000 people, including Gandhi, were arrested and put in jail.
The trek was handled non-violently and there were no reports of mostly harmless riots with pictures of the city burning in the background. As the world looked on, the sympathies of the world started supporting the people of India instead of the British.
Just a few decades before, in 1913, the U.S. Womens Suffrage movement held the first large political march on Washington for political purposes. Just before Wilsons inauguration, between 5,000 and 10,000 thousand women gathered together to pressure the government to allow women to participate in politics and to be treated as citizens of the U.S. They were trying to prove that you can be beautiful and smart and deserved the ability to vote.
It was a cold winter in 1913, and rumors of the beds being extra cold in the D.C. area were going around.
50 years later, Martin Luther King Jr., a follower of Gandhi and a lot of his beliefs, Had a Dream. He held the 1963 March on Washington where over 200,000 demonstrators gathered peacefully around the Lincoln Memorial; all he asked, was to follow the science that all men (and women) were created equal.
Here we are today in 2022, with our brothers and sisters in the north (Canadians) have the stereotypical identity of being polite the meme of a violent protest in Canada is a middle-aged man holding a sign that states, in no uncertain terms, Im a little Upset or I am so angry; I MADE A SIGN! So it was in amazement, in the middle of January, that a large protest took place that involved thousands of people on both sides of the border.
The protest was a reaction to Prime Minister Justin Trudeaus vaccine mandates for truckers traveling into the country from the United States no vaccine, no entry. Estimates at the time expected as many as 32,000 of the 160,000 cross-country truck drivers would have been affected by the mandate.
It didnt matter if you have already had COVID and had natural antibodies in your system; If you didnt show your papers you were not getting back into your own country. If you chose to remain unvaccinated, you would have to stay in a hotel room for two weeks to prove you were clean. Most truckers do not have the ability to make a living by sitting on their tushes for that long every time they cross the border.
Hence, the Freedom Convoy 2022 Tamara Lich and Benjamin Dichter, who were not long-haul truckers, came up with the idea of a convoy of trucks as a peaceful protest that would travel across Canada and head to Ottawa to get rid of the vaccine mandates and the (vaccine) passports, Dichter said. That passport, thats the really concerning one.
Long haul truckers on both sides of the border started to join the movement. Lots of other people also showed up with their cars, pickups, and family vans. Most all of the main entrances between the U.S. and Canada ended up with hundreds and thousands of participants. They formed long lines going into the country, or going into the Capitol in Ottawa, and in some cases, they just parked. And now for the horror the drama, the unmitigated gall they honked their horns!
There were reports of the peacefulness of the protestors. There were several stories of local Canadian police that was talking to the truckers and several of them donated to the cause. The mainstream media got on the bandwagon when some of the protestors took a statue of a local hero and cancer research activist, Terry Fox and decorated it with some Confederate flags and other graffiti didnt pull it down, or damage it, but put graffiti and a Confederate flag on it. The thing that wasnt broadcast was that other truckers cleaned it up afterwards.
To help pay for the food and the fuel and expenses of the protestors, people contributed to the crowd-sourcing site GoFundMe in a couple days, the fundraiser gathered over $8 million, but the vast majority of that money was held back by the website when it determined the fundraiser violat[ed] its terms of service and started refunding donors.
Supporters then turned to GiveSendGo, another crowd-funding site, and raised another $16 million. But the Canadian government had other ideas, and the Ontario Superior Court of Justice froze those funds from going to truckers.
The situation got nastier: Police began confiscating fuel, and arresting people who were bringing fuel and other essentials to the truckers. To frustrate officers, supporters started walking around with fuel cans full of water.
Trudeau and the government also enacted the never-before-used Emergencies Act to freeze trucker bank accounts and suspend all donations flowing to the convoy, and ordered insurance companies to drop policies on participating vehicles.
What, exactly, was the emergency? Surely, the honking horns werent that bad.
Weeks into the protest, Ontario (where Ottowa is located) announced it would lift its COVID-19 proof-of-vaccination mandate in two weeks not because of the protests, the premier said, but because it is safe to do so.
I am sure that it is only a coincidence.
The truckers disbanded in late February, seemingly having scored at least a partial victory by pressuring the region to lift local vaccine mandates.
Sometimes you have to do something out of the ordinary to get people to pay attention to you. Doing so peacefully is a good thing. Standing up for what you believe in is a good thing.
The important thing is to not just be a sheeple get involved, talk to friends and neighbors, try and make a difference.
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Freedom Convoy briefly converged on Washington’s Black Lives Matter Plaza – Washington Times
Posted: at 7:59 pm
Several trucks rolled past Black Lives Matter Plaza on Friday after members of the Peoples Convoy vowed earlier to take it back.
Since arriving in the Washington metro area on March 4 to protest COVID-19 mandates, the gathering of 18-wheelers and cars has mostly stayed on the Capital Beltway but in recent days began slowing traffic within city limits.
In a video posted on Twitter Friday morning, a speaker at the convoys staging site declared the groups new aim in Washington.
Whats going to happen up here in D.C.: Black Lives Matter Street, were gonna take it back, said a man at the groups morning send-off meeting. All that paint is coming off the street.
Later Friday, a small group of trucks drove near the two-block plaza thats just a stones throw from the White House and then departed the area.
The bright yellow markings denoting the BLM Plaza, which was established during the nationwide George Floyd protests in 2020, remained intact as of Friday afternoon.
On several occasions this week, the convoy made detours into the city, creating traffic jams and infuriating residents.
The protest echoes Canadas Freedom Convoy that overtook several Canadian cities and key border crossings for several weeks last month.
Nearly all U.S. cities have curbed many pandemic restrictions in place during the height of the pandemic. Federal mask mandates remain in place for public transport and flights.
Ramsey Touchberry contributed to this report.
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Freedom Convoy briefly converged on Washington's Black Lives Matter Plaza - Washington Times
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In An Era Of Smothering Control, The Fall Gave Me Freedom – Talkhouse
Posted: at 7:59 pm
When I think of one of the most anarchic albums of all time, my mind strangely wanders to a goofy, tourist-filled sunflower field. In the throes of the pre-vaccine pandemic, all my wife, Brenna, and I could do was drive endlessly through the countryside (a time I detailed in my Talkhouse essay about Neil Youngs Silver and Gold). But a few months into the endless road trip, our conversations grew darker.
What we noticed was that the rah-rah Were all in this together messaging had given way to something uglier: information clampdown and a sea of shrieking, masked avatars. Somewhere between the edge-of-your-seat COVID death ticker, the Fiery but mostly peaceful chyron, and the spike in petty Twitter cancellations, the world felt smoothed over, like a ball bearing. Stick out and be ground down, culture seemed to communicate.
Thats why we wanted to throw our computers in the ocean and see some sunflowers on a glorious day but our hearts sank. What should have been a cost-free excursion was $15 a pop and a parking fiasco, flooded with yahoos taking influencer selfies. Given that everything felt like a tiresome lecture already, this gatekeeping of God-given beauty felt like rat poison to the soul. Not everything can be streamlined, I thought. Not everything can be monetized.
So we pulled a U-turn, kicked up dust, and cranked up an album that feels liable to shake apart at any moment: The Falls Hex Enduction Hour, which turns 40 this month. After maybe a hundred listens, weve declared it to be one of the greatest rock & roll albums of all time but it cuts even deeper than that. Hex as we call it in shorthand every time we need a dose fulfills the definition of the word. More than any other album in our lives, its become a spell against uptightness, self-consciousness, and whats become a mass, pathological need to constantly be upset and angry.
I first got into Hex back when we lived in Queens. During commutes to my old internship at Billboard, when I felt like my train was about to derail, I fell in love with Jawbone and the Air-Rifle. The surf-rocky main riff reminded me of 13th Floor Elevators Roller Coaster; it felt like an invitation to a knife fight. And when it lurched into the wonderfully nauseating half-time section with singer Mark E. Smith reporting his outlandish lyrics like a freight conductor it felt legitimately dangerous. This music made me feel alive.
When we moved out of the city in 2019, I kept that exhilarating feeling in my back pocket. And during a miserable period when 24-year-olds quote-tweeted the CDC and, overall, acted like insufferable church ladies, Hex worked like a charm. When the internet became an unbearably arid place to be, we simply put on opener The Classical, and within 20 seconds, all the elements were there. The double-drum-kit attack and the often unprintable, Nazi-skewering lyrics were a reliable balm for our agitated brains.
But the first two tracks aside seriously, has there ever been an opening salvo like The Classical and Jawbone? theres not a weak song on Hex, and so many outlandish artistic choices still make Brenna and I cackle with delight.
Why did they kill the hurtling momentum on track three with Hip Priest, a mishmash of mumbles and guitar meanderings seemingly stuck in first gear? How does the cowbell on Mere Pseud Mag. Ed. go so hard? Why are there gurgling orcs on Who Makes the Nazis? How did all this chaos produce a ballad as hypnotic and beautiful as Iceland, which features a recording Smith made of wind against his bedroom window? And so on and so forth.
Now, Ive grown to love lots of Fall records sometimes, Im more in the mood for Live at the Witch Trials or Perverted by Language or Imperial Wax Solvent. But as terrific and idiosyncratic as they are, none of them hold a candle to Hex Enduction Hour, in my opinion. Brenna and I have tried to figure out why this is. Maybe they just needed two drummers at all times for maximum impact. Or maybe it was just a case of right place, right time it hit us hard when it needed to
Whatever the case, Hex Enduction Hour is a zonked universe I keep returning to when I dont feel like being pushed around, or mentally policed, or shamed into subscribing to someone elses thinking. Its also infected my music-making: My default is melodic, folky power-pop songs, but lately, Im working on a rather demented project called Mouser, where Im trying to choose the ugliest chords, the most hypnotic rhythms, and the most smothering atmospheres.
Most of all, Hex just gives me a boost of creative affirmation the feeling that there are still dangerous and thrilling unknowns in the world, and that my generation isnt doomed to molder in bed, smoke weed, watch Netflix, and hate the president.
Everythings pretty much back to normal now, but Brenna and I still have our trusty playlist when were headed into some excruciatingly stifling social situation. First, we put on Captain Beefhearts Frownland, where Don Van Vliet explains that his heart and soul are limitless and that you cant wipe the grin off his face, no matter how dismal things get. And then, we put on you-know-what.
And nothing makes my heart sing than three words, spat at everything and everyone: Hey there, fuckface!!! Hey there, fuckface!!! In those moments, in a torrent of noise, with the world on its knees, Ive never felt better in my life.
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In An Era Of Smothering Control, The Fall Gave Me Freedom - Talkhouse
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Friday Freedom Kicks: Taxiarchis Fountas to D.C. United, USMNT roster for March qualifiers, and more – Black And Red United
Posted: at 7:59 pm
Good morning! Tomorrow D.C. United plays a day game in Toronto, your NWSL champions the Washington Spirit are in Orlando for their Challenge Cup opener, and Loudoun United have a bizarre 1pm kickoff up in New Jersey. Were in the deep end at B&RU! Hope you like to read articles online about soccer.
Speaking of...
D.C. United strikes deal to acquire Taxiarchis Fountas earlier than expected | Washington PostSteven Goff is reporting that United has agreed to a deal with Rapid Wien to bring Taxi Fountas to the District sooner than originally planned, with roughly $400,000 going to the Austrian side to buy out the remaining few months of Fountas contract. Its no secret that United has been pushing for this, and reports in Austria have pointed towards Fountas wanting to make the move happen ASAP as well, so if it costs a little money...I think the Black-and-Red will be able to live with it.
Fountas will need time to get his visa, so dont expect him to make a dramatic, WWE baw gawd thats Taxis music!!! entrance tomorrow at BMO Field, but itll still be a boon to a team that needs sharper movement and more creativity in the attack.
Speaking of Uniteds attack, Michael Estrada has been officially called up by Ecuador:
We already heard that Estrada is out for this weekend for family reasons and would stay in Ecuador to join up with the national team, so this is just crossing a T and dotting an I.
Spirit Coach Kris Ward Uses a Player-First Philosophy In Search of a Second NWSL Title | Washington City PaperNot only is this a good read about Kris Ward and his path to becoming the Spirits head coach, but it contains some news about the teams acting GM (its a familiar name!) and that the club will soon hire Angela Salem who retired after an NWSL Best XI season in 2021, and who played for the Spirit in 2015 as an assistant coach.
Ward spoke to media yesterday, breaking some news, praising Ashley Sanchezs growth (if you like Sanchez, we have more about her coming up in an hour, or in the past if you didnt read this post right when it went live), and alluding to adjustments in style of play. Heres the thread of press conference quotes:
Washington Spirit Sign Defender Amber Brooks | WashingtonSpirit.comWashington also added NWSL veteran Amber Brooks to its squad yesterday, a move that seemed expected once her preseason trial carried on through the Florida leg of training camp. Brooks will battle against Karina Rodrguez and Alia Martin for the job of being the go-do center back option when Emily Sonnett and/or Sam Staab are unavailable, but with international call-ups, Brooks and Martin will both get chances to play alongside Staab (unless Vlatko calls Staab up too, which...look Im just a blogger but I feel like that should have happened months ago).
What Im saying is that the Spirit are deep.
Interview with Andi Sullivan | RFK RefugeesAndi Sullivan stopped by RFK Refugees to talk about whats to come for the Spirit, her USWNT play, and of course the mystery of the cherry blossom kits.
Ill throw in that there is a new Plex Weather coming out in literally hours.
NWSL Challenge Cup: Taking stock of every team as the games begin | Just Womens SportsWant to know whats going on with the rest of the league? Claire Watkins has a preview covering the basics for all 12 NWSL teams, including a note that the Spirit are right up there among the favorites.
USMNT roster named for March World Cup qualifying window | Stars and Stripes FCGregg Berhalter announced his 27-man USMNT squad, but it sounds like theyre probably going to have to make a quick change based on what happened just a couple of hours before the announcement:
Not ideal!
Its like trying to hold water in your fist: Searching for the truth behind the Quertaro stadium violence | The AthleticThis is a long read, but some tremendous on-the-ground reporting from Pablo Maurer and Felipe Cardenas on how things are in Quertaro in the aftermath of the horrible fighting seen at a match between los Gallos Blancos and Atlas.
Alright, thats it for me for now, but theres plenty more to come today and tomorrow. Enjoy your Friday, and go Terps!
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Freedom: Winners of the Chronicle’s poetry contest | The Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle – thejewishchronicle.net
Posted: at 7:59 pm
The Pittsburgh Jewish Chronicle thanks all those who submitted poems to its third poetry contest. Once again, our judge was Yehoshua November.Yehoshua November is the author of two poetry collections, Gods Optimism (a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize) and Two Worlds Exist (a finalist for the National Jewish Book Award and the Paterson Poetry Prize). His work has been featured in The New York Times Magazine, Harvard Divinity Bulletin, The Sun, Virginia Quarterly Review, and on National Public Radio and On Beings Poetry Unbound podcast program. Here is a link to one of his poems analyzed on a recent episode of On Being.
Three winners were selected: Freedom by Cathleen Cohen; Immigrant by Daniel Shapiro; and The only word you need by a.e. dickter.Poets were asked to write on the theme of freedom. In addition to their poems being published below, each winning poet will receive a $54 gift card to Pinskers Judaica, courtesy of an anonymous donor for whose generosity we are grateful.
FreedomBy Cathleen Cohen
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This year we lost an oakto illness that withered the grasses,leeched sap from trunks in amber dropsuntil the yard was bleached of green,deep sienna and crimson
like lifeblood. Lantern flies feast,wilt the willow our neighbors plantedwhen their daughter was born.And weve had storms,dark, out of season, changing
how we watch the skyfor signs. All this freedomwas given, choicesin how to live.Is landscape enacting
old stories, old lessonsthat weve forgotten plagues, storming waters,viruses, wars, emerald borersin the ash trees?
Our neighbors wrap willow brancheswith nets and tapeto trap swarming nymphs.So fragile.We rush to help them.ImmigrantBy Daniel Shapiro
When Mae thinks of her homelandit is in the shape of a scarfwrapped around her head. Onceshe believed there was morethan one way to give feet to freedomand hands to dreams. The Old Countryand the Singer sewing machinemade her life tight.Both gone, she wears scarves like dust.
Sam, part-time machinistnever took rail-way passes;A waste no time for pleasure, she saidand walked beside himback into the beet fields.Carving horses for the childrenhe promised more than liceon a fine-tooth comb, the raw earth.
The only child born herebreathed blood. Maewent back to the fieldsburied the child in a black scarf;the milk in her breasts, the unused dreams.Now she nurses the night. Survivorwith shrinking scarves pulled tightunder her chin.
The only word you needBy a.e. dickter
I know one word in Ukrainian
Taught to me by my friends aged motherone eveningwhen I asked her toplease teach me some Ukrainian words,such as please and thank you or hello and good-bye becauseI remembered her homemade pickles and borscht andpierogis and stuffed cabbage andthe black bread spread out in a feast and theywere as good as my Jewish grandmothers
As she waited for placement in a home whereno one knewmy language and no one knewmy religion and she could no longer get tomy church and where she would have ample time toremember the destruction of her villagewhen borders changed and the years as a slavelaborer in Nazi Germany and thedeath of a beloved baby from lack of medicine andthe family left behind and still in Ukraine and thetrip to a new land and learning yet another language andstarting all over again and the factory work and .
she answered with a single word:
/ Svoboda / Freedom
It should have been her birthright
May her memory be for a blessing and maythe word ring out, loudly and speedily, in our day PJC
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David Adler: Life behind an Iron Curtain without freedom of the press – Bismarck Tribune
Posted: at 7:59 pm
Vladimir Putins infliction on the Russian people of a second Iron Curtain has demonstrated more effectively than any number of seminars and lectures possibly could the critical importance of freedom of the press to governmental accountability.
Putins nationwide censorship of any news or reports that contradict his characterization of the lie that he is de-nazifying Ukraine, enforced by a brutal 15-year prison sentence for violators, has plunged most Russians into a state of darkness and ignorance. Most know very little about the horrific, unprovoked war that Putin has launched against Ukraine and the atrocities against civilians that constitute war crimes, by any measure.
Such is life in a totalitarian nation in which freedom of the press does not exist. Some Russians, through access to private internet networks, are aware of Putins horrors and are demonstrating against the dictator in Moscow and elsewhere. Some 8,000 courageous protesters have been jailed, leaving them to face a very uncertain future.
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Suppose circumstances were otherwise. Suppose an iron curtain had not descended across the country and Russians were, in fact, informed by professionally trained journalists who report from the front lines about the conduct of the war -- its costs, casualties and tragedies. Armed with knowledge about the war, the Russian people might rise in opposition and bring it to an end.
Putins censorship, however, chokes the pipeline of information and knowledge and, with it, the emergence of dissenters capable of ending the catastrophe. His totalitarianism, including his war on the press, represents a stark lesson for Americans who take freedom of the press for granted.
Freedom of the press, we should recall, serves several vital functions in a democracy. It certainly promotes individual fulfillment, knowledge and understanding of the issues of the day. It is critically linked to self-government, social change and the exchange of ideas. A free press, in its historic role as the fourth estate, performs the crucial function of checking government and holding it accountable to both the law and the American people. In addition, a free press is capable of confronting powerful institutions and organizations and other centers of authority.
The founders of the First Amendment, Justice Hugo Black wrote in his powerful opinion in The Pentagon Papers Case, had these critical functions, among others, in mind when they drafted the Free Press Clause: In the First Amendment the Founding Fathers gave the free press the protection it must have to fulfill its essential role in our democracy. The press was to serve the governed, not the governors. The Governments power to censor the press was abolished so that the press would remain forever free to censure the Government. The press was protected so that it could bare the secrets of government and inform the people. Only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government.
Freedom of the press, alone, cannot prevent governmental errors of policy, laws and programs, any more than it can guarantee that an informed citizenry will act wisely and exhibit good judgment. Nor does freedom of the press guarantee that newspapers will be free of errors, but what profession is always right?
What freedom of the press does do, more than anything else, is that it gives democracy an opportunity to succeed. No country aspiring to become a democracy, and no democracy aspiring to success, can accomplish such an end without freedom of the press because, without it, the citizenry will live in ignorance and darkness. Governmental accountability will forever lie beyond the reach of the people without freedom of the press.
For all those in recent years who have railed against the press as the enemy of people and delighted in despoiling the Fourth Estate and destroying its reputation because it represents a hindrance to their own autocratic aims, it is important to understand that those attacks are cut from the same cloth as Putins attacks on independent news in Russia.
The line between democracy and authoritarianism is thin when the institutions created to defend the rule of law, liberty and justice are brought low. The line, we might say, begins and ends with an informed citizenry determined to defend democratic values, principles and freedoms. Justice George Sutherland, one of the most conservative justices in the history of the Supreme Court, wrote in 1936, in Grosjean v. American Press Co., that the people are entitled to full information in respect of the doings or misdoings of their government; informed public opinion is the most potent of all restraints upon misgovernment.
David Adler is president of The Alturas Institute.This "We the People" series is provided by the North Dakota Newspaper Association and Humanities North Dakota.
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David Adler: Life behind an Iron Curtain without freedom of the press - Bismarck Tribune
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Ukraines fight for freedom and what it teaches us – IrishCentral
Posted: at 7:59 pm
The Irish Voice Editorial ponders on the privilege of freedom that President Zelenskyy and his people fight for.
"From every mountainside let freedom ring were famous words uttered by Martin Luther King in his I Have a Dream speech of 1963.
We in America have been given the wonderful gift of freedom. It is not something we think often about, but every now and then the incredible importance of the gift becomes clear.
George Washington tasted it, as did his army and the people after the British left America on Evacuation Day in 1783. Abraham Lincoln knew what it meant for those enslaved in 1865.
Now we are learning it from a little-known country far away.
Just three weeks ago, Ukraine was a place many Americans would not find on a map. Now the country is on everyones mind in one way or another.
We watch daily as the noble people of Ukraine fight, sometimes with their bare hands for the freedom, we take so much for granted. This generation of world citizens are seeing in real-time what freedom means to an innocent country attacked needlessly by a savage tyrant, and we are getting an education on an incredibly brave resistance.
In President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukraine has found its George Washington, a brave leader who has inspired not just a nation but most of the world. Fearless and tireless, he makes clear there will be no surrender in the evilest war since World War II.
Like that war, there is no equivocation over who the monsters are. Russia is trying to crush the freedom that Ukraine currently is fighting for. Zelenskyy is just the latest in an honor roll of worldwide leaders who sacrificed all for freedom.
This St. Patricks Day, as we march joyously, we remember those from Ireland through the centuries who gave their lives so we and they could be free.
But we must also salute the men and women of Ukraine outmanned, outgunned, outnumbered and still holding off what was once considered one of the two most advanced armies in the world
Resisting the occupier is part of Irelands fundamental history. From the men and women of Easter 1916 to the United Irishmen and women, to the Famine immigrants who risked everything on a coffin ship to attain freedom from the tyrannical landlords, we Irish know what freedom means and what it was to die for.
The Ukrainians are fighting and dying for their right to elect their own government, to salute the blue and yellow flag, to laugh, live and love in their own cities and towns, and rural areas, to have lively discussion, political argument, intense feelings. But always such differences stem from the bedrock principle that you are free to say what you like.
Instead, for wanting such freedoms they are being attacked with live fire by a Russian leader who is matching Hitler and Stalin for sheer viciousness. Nuclear reactor? Attack it with live fire and seek to terrify the watching world. Nuclear bombs? Threaten to use against anyone who will oppose them.
Maternity hospital? Bomb it. Refugees fleeing? Fire military ordinance at them. There is no end to the war crimes that have been committed against ordinary, decent Ukrainians.
Someday we can hope that like Hitlers lieutenants, Vladimir Putins mobsters will be brought to justice before the International Criminal Court and that, unlike Hitler, Putin will be put on trial. Let him face the loved ones of those he disposed of or killed.
Let him hear the heartbreaking stories of the refugees, but most of all, take freedom away from this sick little man. The Ukrainians deserve to see that day.
*This editorial first appeared in the March 16 edition of the weekly Irish Voice newspaper, sister publication to IrishCentral.
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Thompson calls for UW surveys on campus freedom of expression – WKOW
Posted: at 7:59 pm
Tommy Thompson celebrating "70 for 70" campaign in video
MADISON (WKOW) -- As he wraps up his term as president of the University of Wisconsin System, Tommy Thompson told reporters Thursday he wants to better gauge perceptions students' freedom of expression on the state's campuses.
Thompson, whose final day as system president is Friday, said he wanted buy-in from campus leaders on a survey of all students and faculty across the system's 13 campuses.
Republicans in the legislature have moved to address what they believe is a climate at universities that is hostile to conservative thought. They passed a bill making it easier to sue university professors over alleged violations of a student's freedom of expression.
Democratic Gov. Tony Evers will likely veto the bill, which was passed in a package of education bills that allowed parents to opt their kids out of mask orders and restrict the way universities and technical colleges can teach about race.
Thompson said he believe the bill removing qualified immunity from professors was premature and based on incomplete evidence.
"Let's not pass legislation before we know a problem exists," Thompson said. "If there's a problem, and let's not base it on anecdotal evidence, let's base it on real facts, a real questionnaire."
To that end, Thompson said he wanted to issue a system-wide survey to both students and faculty asking about their level of comfort in voicing beliefs they feel may be unpopular. Thompson added he would need buy-in from the campus leaders but was "holding out hope" they would move forward with the surveys after his term.
"We're gonna send out an exhaustive survey to all the students and the faculty in our universities and let's hear directly from them," Thompson said. "Let's have the empirical data compiled as to whether or not there's a problem.'
Thompson, 80, has not ruled out running for a fifth-term as governor. He previously served as a Republican before joining the George W. Bush administration as secretary of Health and Human Services.
When asked whether he's decided on whether he'll run for office again, and what his thoughts are on the current state of the Republican Party, Thompson said he would not address "partisan" issues or his future until April at the earliest.
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Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe. Was the cost of her freedom too high? – ConservativeHome
Posted: at 7:59 pm
Nazanin-Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a dual British-Iranian national, has been released from custody in Iran, and is making her way home to the UK. Detained by the Iranian government over five years ago under allegations she was plotting to overthrow it, her case became even more high profile when Boris Johnson, as Foreign Secretary, misleadingly commented that she had been teaching people journalism in the country. Since then, her husband Richard, assisted both in and out of government by Johnsons successor Jeremy Hunt, has been zealously pursuing her release.
Speaking yesterday morning, the Liz Truss said securing Zaghari-Ratcliffes freedom had been an absolute priority. But that the crucial breakthrough has come at our particular moment of geopolitical tension is not wholly surprising
One of the reasons used to justify Zaghari-Ratcliffes detention has been a 400 million debt owed by the British government dating back to the 1970s. We had sold the Shah 1500 tanks. Before the order had been fully delivered, the Iranian revolution brought the Shah down, and replaced him with the theocracy that has continued to blight that historic and beautiful country until the present day. Unsurprisingly, Margaret Thatcher was hardly keen to hand over weaponry or cash to a regime that considers Britain the Little Satan. The debt has been a point of tension ever since.
Hunt has been calling for the government to pay up for Zaghari-Ratcliffes freedom since last year. A debt, whilst naturally undesirable, sounds better than a ransom, as Henry Hill pointed out on this site last year. When asked about the it yesterday, the Foreign Secretary commented that we were looking for ways to pay it and that the debt was legitimate.
That the Government has decided to take this view now is likely driven not only by a desire to finally wipe out a black mark in the Prime Ministers ledger. With energy prices surging and weaning Europe off Russian oil a priority, getting Irans stocks back onto the world market would be as helpful as a positive outcome to Johnsons current visit to Saudi Arabia. Moreover, any effort to split the Iranians off from their old ally Russia would be a geopolitical boon.
Nonetheless, this move also stems from the primary objective of post-war British foreign policy: keeping in with the Americans. Since Donald Trump removed the US from the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) the Iran nuclear deal, as everyone calls it and revived sanctions against the state, the foreign policy bigwigs on both sides of the Atlantic have wanted to undo his actions.
Consequently, paying up to Iran would remove one obstacle in the way of clinching for Joe Biden the same prize that the last Democratic occupant of the White House so coveted. But as Stephen Pollard pointed out for Cap X yesterday, the inconvenient truth for Western policymakers was that sanctions had been effective in 2018 and 2019, Irans economy shrunk by 14.3 per cent. That was less cash to spend in its continuing efforts to de-stabilise the Middle East.
If the oil is to flow again (and a cool 400 million is to appear in the Mullahs bank accounts) then that economic pain wont be for much longer. Though the Prime Ministers conscience may be a little clearer this morning, it would be a shame if it has come at the cost of paying up to a vile and repressive regime especially just at the time he has been doing such a good job at standing up to Russias. At least, for all that, today a little girl has been reunited with her mother, and a husband with his wife. But the Ayatollah and his regime have never been known for their sentimentality.
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Globalive offers $3.75-billion to buy Freedom Mobile – The Globe and Mail
Posted: at 7:59 pm
Critics have credited Freedom Mobile with driving competition in the wireless industry, and have argued that allowing Rogers to acquire the unit would lead to higher cellphone bills.Todd Korol/The Globe and Mail
Anthony Lacaveras Globalive Capital Inc. has made a bid to buy Shaw Communications Inc.s SJR-A-X Freedom Mobile for $3.75-billion as Rogers looks to gain regulatory approval for its takeover of Calgary-based Shaw.
The financing would be provided by a group of investors led by Twin Point Capital, a U.S. principal investment firm founded by Lawrence Guffey and Jonathan Friesel, and Baupost Group, a Boston-based investment manager, according to a source. The Globe is not identifying the individual because the discussions are confidential.
The all-cash offer to acquire Freedom Mobiles wireless licenses, customer accounts, cellphone towers and stores was presented to Rogers last week, the person said.
When reached by The Globe, Mr. Lacavera said he has previously expressed his interest in the assets publicly and has no further comment. Representatives of Twin Point Capital and Baupost did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
A spokesperson for Rogers declined to comment.
Mr. Lacavera founded wireless upstart Wind Mobile in 2008. In 2016, it was sold for $1.6-billion to Shaw, which renamed it Freedom Mobile. Today, Freedom has about two million wireless subscribers in Alberta, B.C. and Ontario, making it the countrys fourth-largest wireless carrier.
Critics have credited Freedom with driving competition in the wireless industry, and have argued that allowing Rogers to acquire the unit would lead to higher cellphone bills.
Ottawa sending mixed messages about wireless competition as it mulls Rogers-Shaw deal
Shaws Freedom Mobile faces tough national competition if sold in Rogers deal, BCE executive says
The Globe previously reported that Rogers Communications Inc. RCI-B-T has initiated talks with prospective buyers for Freedom Mobile, and that Quebecor Inc., which has publicly expressed interest in the assets, is absent from those talks.
Rogers $26-billion takeover of Shaw is under review by three regulators: the Competition Bureau, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) and the Ministry of Innovation, Science and Economic Development. Both companies have said they expect the deal to close by the end of June.
Earlier this month, Innovation, Science and Industry Minister Franois-Philippe Champagne said he would not allow Rogers to acquire all of Shaws wireless licences, as doing so would be incompatible with Ottawas desire for competition in the sector.
Tony Staffieri, president and chief executive officer of Rogers, has said he will work with regulators to find a solution that achieves their objective of having a fourth wireless player.
This was, from the very outset, a cable acquisition for us, Mr. Staffieri said during a telecom, media and technology conference held by Bank of Nova Scotia last week. So thats 90 per cent of the transaction for us and thats what were focused on, he added.
In a previous interview with The Globe, Mr. Lacavera said his track record of competing against the Big Three wireless carriers (Rogers, BCE Inc.s Bell Canada and Telus Corp.) when he ran Wind Mobile makes him an attractive bidder from Ottawas perspective. He has also said he has a long-term investment horizon and would consider expanding Freedom beyond its current markets.
Desjardins analyst Jrome Dubreuil said in a research note that the offer is generally aligned with the markets expected value for the assets.
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