The Prometheus League
Breaking News and Updates
- Abolition Of Work
- Ai
- Alt-right
- Alternative Medicine
- Antifa
- Artificial General Intelligence
- Artificial Intelligence
- Artificial Super Intelligence
- Ascension
- Astronomy
- Atheism
- Atheist
- Atlas Shrugged
- Automation
- Ayn Rand
- Bahamas
- Bankruptcy
- Basic Income Guarantee
- Big Tech
- Bitcoin
- Black Lives Matter
- Blackjack
- Boca Chica Texas
- Brexit
- Caribbean
- Casino
- Casino Affiliate
- Cbd Oil
- Censorship
- Cf
- Chess Engines
- Childfree
- Cloning
- Cloud Computing
- Conscious Evolution
- Corona Virus
- Cosmic Heaven
- Covid-19
- Cryonics
- Cryptocurrency
- Cyberpunk
- Darwinism
- Democrat
- Designer Babies
- DNA
- Donald Trump
- Eczema
- Elon Musk
- Entheogens
- Ethical Egoism
- Eugenic Concepts
- Eugenics
- Euthanasia
- Evolution
- Extropian
- Extropianism
- Extropy
- Fake News
- Federalism
- Federalist
- Fifth Amendment
- Fifth Amendment
- Financial Independence
- First Amendment
- Fiscal Freedom
- Food Supplements
- Fourth Amendment
- Fourth Amendment
- Free Speech
- Freedom
- Freedom of Speech
- Futurism
- Futurist
- Gambling
- Gene Medicine
- Genetic Engineering
- Genome
- Germ Warfare
- Golden Rule
- Government Oppression
- Hedonism
- High Seas
- History
- Hubble Telescope
- Human Genetic Engineering
- Human Genetics
- Human Immortality
- Human Longevity
- Illuminati
- Immortality
- Immortality Medicine
- Intentional Communities
- Jacinda Ardern
- Jitsi
- Jordan Peterson
- Las Vegas
- Liberal
- Libertarian
- Libertarianism
- Liberty
- Life Extension
- Macau
- Marie Byrd Land
- Mars
- Mars Colonization
- Mars Colony
- Memetics
- Micronations
- Mind Uploading
- Minerva Reefs
- Modern Satanism
- Moon Colonization
- Nanotech
- National Vanguard
- NATO
- Neo-eugenics
- Neurohacking
- Neurotechnology
- New Utopia
- New Zealand
- Nihilism
- Nootropics
- NSA
- Oceania
- Offshore
- Olympics
- Online Casino
- Online Gambling
- Pantheism
- Personal Empowerment
- Poker
- Political Correctness
- Politically Incorrect
- Polygamy
- Populism
- Post Human
- Post Humanism
- Posthuman
- Posthumanism
- Private Islands
- Progress
- Proud Boys
- Psoriasis
- Psychedelics
- Putin
- Quantum Computing
- Quantum Physics
- Rationalism
- Republican
- Resource Based Economy
- Robotics
- Rockall
- Ron Paul
- Roulette
- Russia
- Sealand
- Seasteading
- Second Amendment
- Second Amendment
- Seychelles
- Singularitarianism
- Singularity
- Socio-economic Collapse
- Space Exploration
- Space Station
- Space Travel
- Spacex
- Sports Betting
- Sportsbook
- Superintelligence
- Survivalism
- Talmud
- Technology
- Teilhard De Charden
- Terraforming Mars
- The Singularity
- Tms
- Tor Browser
- Trance
- Transhuman
- Transhuman News
- Transhumanism
- Transhumanist
- Transtopian
- Transtopianism
- Ukraine
- Uncategorized
- Vaping
- Victimless Crimes
- Virtual Reality
- Wage Slavery
- War On Drugs
- Waveland
- Ww3
- Yahoo
- Zeitgeist Movement
-
Prometheism
-
Forbidden Fruit
-
The Evolutionary Perspective
Monthly Archives: May 2022
Dutchtown, St. Amant baseball headed to state tournament – The Advocate
Posted: May 11, 2022 at 11:17 am
Ascension Parish baseball has been strong this spring and two teams are headed to the state tournament on Thursday in Sulphur.
The Dutchtown Griffins (35-3) and the St. Amant Gators (32-7) won their quarterfinal matchups and are set for semifinal games. Dutchtown, the three seed, swept Central with scores of 3-2 and 6-1. The Griffins, under coach Chris Schexnaydre, have been a model of consistency this season. They return to the semifinals for the first time in 12 years.
Dutchtown will play the number two seed, West Monroe, on Thursday at 6 pm. The St. Amant Gators did the improbable in the quarters, they beat the top seed.
St. Amant traveled to Barbe high school and won two out of three games. They won game one 7-4, lost game two 5-0 and won game three 5-4. Coach Brandon Bravata will lead his team to a semifinal matchup with the fourth seed, Sulphur. It will be home game for Sulphur as they play at McMurry Park during the regular season. That should not faze the Gators as they are battle tested.
Both semifinal matchups will be played at 6 pm. Ascension parish will be well represented in Sulphur. Victories by Dutchtown and St Amant on Thursday would set up an all-Ascension Parish final on Saturday at 6 pm. No matter the outcome, baseball in Ascension parish has been stellar this spring, something tells me we will see more outstanding play in the future.
Read more:
Dutchtown, St. Amant baseball headed to state tournament - The Advocate
Posted in Ascension
Comments Off on Dutchtown, St. Amant baseball headed to state tournament – The Advocate
Sunday Scripture reading, May 29, 2022: The Ascension promise – Catholic News Service
Posted: at 11:17 am
The Ascension of the Lord
1) Acts 1:1-11Psalm 47: 2-3, 6-92) Eph 1:17-23 or Heb 9:24-38; 10:19-23Gospel: Jn 24:46-53
Making, keeping, or breaking promises are part of daily human interactions. We promise to be on time for meetings and we promise children rewards for good behavior.We promise to spend time with family and friends, and we make promises in the form of engagements, vows, and other small and big life commitments.
On this Ascension Sunday as Jesus ascends to his heavenly father his final words are filled with divine promises to his disciples and to us.
So, as we allow Gods word to dwell in us, we reflect on the promises of God made real in the promises of Jesus at the sacred moment of his ascension to heaven. For in his divine promises, we find hope and strength for the daily journey of faith.
In the opening verses of the Acts of the Apostles, we are told that the risen Jesus instructed his disciples not to leave Jerusalem but to wait for the promise of the Father about which you have heard me speak; for John baptized with water, but in a few days you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit.
Why does Jesus promise the gift of the Holy Spirit at his ascension? Because his disciples, the apostles and the church would not have the courage or wisdom to proclaim boldly the life-giving message of Jesus without the strength of the Holy Spirit.
We know this from the words of Jesus himself, who says, You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, throughout Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.
The Gospel also directs our gaze to the promise of Jesus to remain with his disciples, and us, until the end of time. This promise was especially comforting to the disciples as they experienced, first hand, Jesus leaving their company in his ascension to heaven.
At this pivotal moment, Jesus explains the meaning of his suffering, death on the cross and resurrection on the third day. He willingly endured his paschal mystery so that repentance and forgiveness of sins could be preached to all in his holy name.
The ascension of Jesus is a moment of hope and mission for the church. For Jesus assures his disciples that he will remain with them in the gift and mystery of the Eucharist. And he sends the disciples on mission to be loving witnesses of all that they had seen and heard in the events of his passion, death and resurrection.
So, as he returns to his heavenly Father, Jesus says, And behold I am sending the promise of my Father upon you; but stay in the city until you are clothed with power from on high.
Gods promises carry with them the certainty of divine power and merciful love. While our human promises may fail from time to time, we can trust fully in the promises of God. Because God is love. And Gods promise of divine love never fails.
If you have experienced broken promises, let this Ascension Sunday be a time of renewed hope in the promises of God that never fail. In the sure hope of the promises of Jesus at his ascension, we pray with joyful faith, speak to me, Lord.
Question:
What does the promise of Jesus at his ascension mean to you personally?
Read the original here:
Sunday Scripture reading, May 29, 2022: The Ascension promise - Catholic News Service
Posted in Ascension
Comments Off on Sunday Scripture reading, May 29, 2022: The Ascension promise – Catholic News Service
Ascension Parish reported 53 additional COVID-19 cases this week – Weekly Citizen
Posted: at 11:17 am
Mike Stucka USA TODAY NETWORK| Gonzales Weekly Citizen
New coronavirus cases leaped in Louisiana in the week ending Sunday, rising 30% as 2,163 cases were reported. The previous week had 1,664 new cases of the virus that causes COVID-19.
Louisiana ranked 41st among the states where coronavirus was spreading the fastest on a per-person basis, a USA TODAY Network analysis of Johns Hopkins University data shows. In the latest week coronavirus cases in the United States increased 33.2% from the week before, with 501,037 cases reported. With 1.4% of the country's population, Louisiana had 0.43% of the country's cases in the last week. Across the country, 43 states had more cases in the latest week than they did in the week before.
Ascension Parish reported 53 cases and zero deaths in the latest week. A week earlier, it had reported 20 cases and zero deaths. Throughout the pandemic it has reported 33,230 cases and 293 deaths.
Within Louisiana, the worst weekly outbreaks on a per-person basis were in Orleans Parish with 144 cases per 100,000 per week; St. Bernard Parish with 93; and Jefferson Parish with 80. The Centers for Disease Control says high levels of community transmission begin at 100 cases per 100,000 per week.
Adding the most new cases overall were Orleans Parish, with 563 cases; Jefferson Parish, with 344 cases; and East Baton Rouge Parish, with 202. Weekly case counts rose in 37 parishes from the previous week. The worst increases from the prior week's pace were in East Baton Rouge, Orleans and Lafayette parishes.
>> See how your community has fared with recent coronavirus cases
Louisiana ranked 48th among states in share of people receiving at least one shot, with 61% of its residents at least partially vaccinated. The national rate is 77.7%, a USA TODAY analysis of CDC data shows. The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which are the most used in the United States, require two doses administered a few weeks apart.
In the week ending Wednesday, Louisiana reported administering another 19,025 vaccine doses, including 2,727 first doses. In the previous week, the state administered 23,113 vaccine doses, including 3,305 first doses. In all, Louisiana reported it has administered 6,248,403 total doses.
Across Louisiana, cases fell in 18 parishes, with the best declines in Jackson Parish, with 1 cases from 9 a week earlier; in Sabine Parish, with 0 cases from 7; and in Caldwell Parish, with 4 cases from 10.
In Louisiana, 28 people were reported dead of COVID-19 in the week ending Sunday. In the week before that, 25 people were reported dead.
A total of 1,175,460 people in Louisiana have tested positive for the coronavirus since the pandemic began, and 17,276 people have died from the disease, Johns Hopkins University data shows. In the United States 81,863,725 people have tested positive and 997,526 people have died.
>> Track coronavirus cases across the United States
USA TODAY analyzed federal hospital data as of Sunday, May 8.
Likely COVID patients admitted in the state:
Likely COVID patients admitted in the nation:
Hospitals in 36 states reported more COVID-19 patients than a week earlier, while hospitals in 32 states had more COVID-19 patients in intensive-care beds. Hospitals in 35 states admitted more COVID-19 patients in the latest week than a week prior, the USA TODAY analysis of U.S. Health and Human Services data shows.
The USA TODAY Network is publishing localized versions of this story on its news sites across the country, generated with data from Johns Hopkins University and the Centers for Disease Control. If you have questions about the data or the story, contact Mike Stucka at mstucka@gannett.com.
Follow this link:
Ascension Parish reported 53 additional COVID-19 cases this week - Weekly Citizen
Posted in Ascension
Comments Off on Ascension Parish reported 53 additional COVID-19 cases this week – Weekly Citizen
Celebrating super moms this Mother’s Day – WXYZ 7 Action News Detroit
Posted: at 11:17 am
(WXYZ) It's Mother's Day and we wanted to shine the light on the family of one of our homegrown Tigers players - Eric Haase.
He and his wife just celebrated the birth of their fourth child only 4 months old. Three of the four were born at home at Ascension Michigan where his mom has been helping to deliver babies for more than 25 years.
As we've seen throughout this pandemic our health care heroes never stop working, especially when it comes to delivering babies because COVID or not babies never stop coming.
Lori Haase has helped bring thousands of babies into this world. She's been a labor and delivery nurse at Ascension Michigan for 27 years.
"For a short period of time you're a part of someone's family bringing a new member into the world," she sasy.
Lori is also mom to a daughter and our homegrown Tiger great Eric Haase. He and his high school sweetheart and now wife Maria moved home two years ago.
Sports Director Brad Galli asked him about playing for the team he grew up rooting for, his success on the field, and now raising a family in his hometown.
"Just like out at Costco or running to the grocery store, people are genuinely surprised when I still do dad stuff. It's hilarious," he said. "you live at home and drive to the stadium."
Eric and his wife now have four little ones, including a baby daughter just 4 months old.
"We used to stay with Lori all the time for the season. We'd pile into her house. Now we were able to buy our own house."
All but one of their babies were delivered at Ascension Michigan, but this last go-round Maria and Eric were both hit with COVID two days before.
Still, it was disappointing Eric could not be there, so Lori stepped as her support person.
"We Facetimed with Eric so he got to see the baby and all the kids were gathered around the computer when the baby was born."
Now on this Mother's Day, with Eric playing in Houston for the Tigers?
"I just realize these times when they're so little, it's just important to appreciate this time even though it's really hard there are challenging days."
So to all our moms no matter which hat you're wearing today we say Happy Mother's Day.
Continued here:
Celebrating super moms this Mother's Day - WXYZ 7 Action News Detroit
Posted in Ascension
Comments Off on Celebrating super moms this Mother’s Day – WXYZ 7 Action News Detroit
Everything we know about Kuki Shinobu in Genshin Impact – PC Gamer
Posted: at 11:17 am
Looking for more information on Genshin Impact's upcoming character, Kuki Shinobu? This Electro sword-wielder is the Deputy Leader of the Arataki Gang in Inazuma, alongside Arataki Itto. Unlike Itto, she does her best to keep the gang out of trouble.
Kuki Shinobu was first revealed alongside Yelan, the five-star character expected to arrive during the same update. While we haven't seen Shinobu in-game yet, we've got a good idea of how she'll play, and this guide should help you figure out if she's a good fit for your team. Here's what we know about Genshin Impact Kuki Shinobu, including her abilities and Ascension materials.
Kuki Shinobu is expected to arrive with the Genshin Impact 2.7 update, though this version has recently been delayed indefinitely. I'll update this guide as soon as we have new information.
We have a good idea of Kuki Shinobu's abilities, thanks to Honey Hunter. Since she hasn't released yet, these may not be final, but I'll keep this guide updated in case of any changes.
Character
You need to collect specific Ascension materials to level up Kuki Shinobu. The Vajrada Amethyst items are dropped by Electro Hypostases and Thunder Manifestations. Runic Fangs are dropped by level 30+ Ruin Serpents found in the Chasm in Liyue. You'll also need:
The Spectral items are dropped from Specter enemies found in Inazuma. And lastly, Naku Weed is gathered from the wilds of Inazuma, most often on Kannazuka Island.
Talents
You need these materials if you want to level up Kuki Shinobu's talents:
Elegance items are rewarded for completing the Violet Court domain on Tuesday, Friday, and Sunday, and Spectral items are dropped by Specters. Meanwhile, Tears of the Calamitous God is a drop from the Guardian of Eternity weekly challenge in Inazuma.
The Crown of Insight is a reward from various seasonal activities, such as Midsummer Island Adventure or Thunder Sojourn. You can also get it as a one-off reward by upgrading the Frostbearing Tree in Dragonspine or the Sacred Sakura in Inazuma.
See the article here:
Everything we know about Kuki Shinobu in Genshin Impact - PC Gamer
Posted in Ascension
Comments Off on Everything we know about Kuki Shinobu in Genshin Impact – PC Gamer
Rabbi Helps Jewish Hospital Patients in Northern Oakland County Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News
Posted: at 11:17 am
Rabbi Menachem Caytak, co-founder of Chabad Jewish Center of Troy with his wife, Chana Caytak, has made it a priorityto service Jews in need throughout northern Oakland County as well as Macomb County, especially those in the hospital, who cant practice and join in Jewish traditions by themselves.
A few months ago, Rabbi Caytak began servicing Jewish patients in Beaumont Troy and now is getting ready to service the Jewish patients at Ascension Providence Rochester.
Rabbi Caytak is a volunteer rabbi on call at Beaumont and will soon be a volunteer rabbi on call with Ascension Providence Rochester. This means he can visit at least once a week with Jewish patients, who can also request to see him at any time. He provides Shabbos candles, an opportunity to do a mitzvah before Shabbos, challah, Jewish prayers and counseling. Before Passover, he distributed matzah to the Jewish patients in both hospitals.
These are Jews who are not necessarily involved with our organization, or for that matter, any Jewish organization, Rabbi Caytak said.
The Lubavitcher Rebbes inspiration is what inspires us to service Jews, he continued, no matter their background or affiliation. For us, a Jew is a Jew no matter what. We have a saying: Labels are for shirts. There is no such thing as labeling a Jew. Even a completely not practicing Jew is the same Jewish as the most religious rabbi.
For many of the patients, seeing a familiar face, a Jewish rabbi offering families customs and traditions, is very meaningful.
It means so much for them to be able to do a mitzvah, a Jewish traditionor even just a prayer during a time when they are most vulnerable and in need of support, he said. Once, a patient told me, Rabbi, I usually wouldnt do this Jewish mitzvah, but now I really want to do it for my health.
Rabbi Caytak tells a story of a man he met in a surgical waiting room. While his wife was in surgery, they put on tefillin together and the man was moved to tears. He could not stop thanking me for giving him this incredible opportunitywhen he needed it most.
Rabbi Caytak said the chaplains at both hospitals are incredibly welcoming and helpful, and he has become good friends with many of them.
During the height of the pandemic, there were Jews in COVID rooms at Beaumont Troy. He was unable to wear the regular protective gear to seal his face because the N95 mask doesnt completely seal with a beard. The hospital specifically arranged a CAPR, a helmet that seals behind the beard, to accommodate! he said.
Chabad Jewish Center of Troy continues to look for ways to service Jews. We are starting a program now to provide Jewish holiday programming for local senior living and nursing homes, Rabbi Caytak said. The Lubavitcher Rebbes vision to touch every Jew with the warmth and light of Judaism is becoming a reality in northern Oakland and Macomb County.
Visit link:
Posted in Ascension
Comments Off on Rabbi Helps Jewish Hospital Patients in Northern Oakland County Detroit Jewish News – The Jewish News
Republican and more Republican: Idaho shifts ever rightward – The Guardian
Posted: at 11:16 am
A peregrine falcon swoops over grazing cows. A giant Stars and Stripes is painted on wood with Bundy for governor and No trespassing attached. Up a gravel drive, past an upturned wheelbarrow, is a red, white and blue Bundy campaign bus and a sign that declares: Keep Idaho Idaho.
Ammon Bundys compound is situated under rolling green hills and a broad Idaho sky. From his five-bedroom farmhouse, the far-right activist gazes out at his 240 apple trees along with cherry, peach and pear trees. He points to the homes of two neighbors, both military men and both flying the American flag upside down.
Its a sign of distress, Bundy says. Im not influencing them in any way but, if there is going to be some type of civil war, I think it will be the military fracturing. I hope not. I believe more in a separation, if it was needed.
The bearded 46-year-old, notorious for armed standoffs with law enforcement that landed him in prison, has no chance of becoming governor of Idaho. But the mere fact that, during a year in solitary confinement, he wrote in his journal about a plan to run for elected office is indicative of a change in the political wind here.
Idaho has long been one of the most conservative states in America with its fair share of extremism. Now, critics warn, the extremists are being normalised. Once dismissed as backwoods fanatics, the far right have entered the political arena and identified a path to power.
That path leads through a state Republican party that has long exploited tensions between independent-spirited Idahoans and the federal government, which manages two-thirds of the states land, and more recently embraced former president Donald Trumps culture of grievance.
Trump beat Joe Biden with 64% of the vote here in the 2020 election. Democrats have not held the governors office since 1995 or statewide elected office since 2007. Most elections for the state legislature do not even feature a Democratic candidate.
Chuck Malloy, a columnist and former communications adviser to the House Republican caucus, said: Sure, we have a two-party system: its Republican and more Republican. Idaho is shifting more to the right every day.
In the Republican primary election for governor on 17 May, incumbent Brad Little, a stalwart conservative by national standards, is portrayed as a Republican in Name Only (Rino) by his even more extreme challenger, Lieutenant Governor Janice McGeachin (Bundy dropped out of the Republican race and is running as an independent).
McGeachin has sought to grab attention by issuing executive orders banning coronavirus mask and vaccine mandates when Little was out of state only to see them overturned on his return. But the political grandstanding appears to have backfired. Opinion polls suggest that McGeachin is heading for defeat.
Little, who can boast of a record $1.9bn budget surplus, could not be described as much of a liberal saviour, however. He made a pilgrimage to Trumps Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida only for the former president to endorse McGeachin four days later. As the state partys centre of gravity shifts right, he is shifting with it.
The governor recently signed one of the most extreme abortion laws in the country, banning the procedure after a foetal heartbeat is detected and allowing family members of rapists to sue providers. He also signed a bill banning transgender women from competing in womens sports.
Malloy observed: Little cant come across as looking pro-abortion in any way, shape or form so he signs this bill and makes the comments, well, I think its unconstitutional, but Ill sign it anyway. He doesnt want to go into a Republican primary election by being soft on the abortion issue or guns. Hes been picking his fights.
He added: Democrats cant be crazy about Brad Little. But to at least some people its a matter of do I vote for sane or insane?
Lauren Necochea, chair of the state Democratic party and a state representative, confirmed that she is unimpressed by the governor. She said: The difference between Little and McGeachin is really more style than substance. She personifies the far-right extremism while he panders to it.
Although Little is likely to retain the governors mansion, elections for other offices of state are more competitive between the hard right and harder right. Priscilla Giddings, a McGeachin ally, is running for lieutenant governor, while Dorothy Moon, a member of the far-right John Birch Society, is a contender for secretary of state.
Ral Labrador, a former member of the influential US House Freedom Caucus who once proclaimed Nobody dies because they dont have access to healthcare, is among the candidates for state attorney general.
The extremist faction has also been expanding its influence in the state house and senate, recently attempting to block government funding for healthcare and television and to criminalise librarians for disseminating material harmful to minors, though the measures were ultimately thwarted.
House member Chad Christensen, for example, proudly declares on his webpage his membership of the Oath Keepers, a militaristic, anti-government group whose founder, Stewart Rhodes, is facing charges of seditious conspiracy for his role in the January 6 attack on the US Capitol.
Scott McIntosh, opinion editor of the Idaho Statesman newspaper, said: When I moved here in 2006, the Republican party was very much dominated by reasonable Republicans. Brad Little would be in that category. All they were worried about was running a good small state government.
Theyre still here but the Republicans who are getting elected, particularly in the past 10 years, are more interested in coming to the state capitol and pushing transgender rights, abortion, library criminalisation bills that are more culture wars they see going on in other parts of the country that they want to stop from happening here in Idaho.
Perhaps most insidiously, a new far-right generation is targeting and taking over Republican central committees at county level. It means that the election for governor might be less important than it seems since the winner will find themselves tugged to the right by a radicalised state government.
Shea Andersen, a marketing consultant who has worked on political campaigns, agreed: Theyve figured out that the real power in Idaho is not to hold the governors seat necessarily though certainly it would send a great message for them but any sort of fringe political viewpoint is better served by fanning out and getting your positions represented in more day-to-day operations, whether that is state legislature or county commissioner races or even races for treasurer and secretary of state.
The trend is especially pronounced in northern Idaho, a region infamous in the late 20th century for Richard Butlers effort to establish a white homeland from his 20-acre Aryan Nations compound. Butler was eventually bankrupted by the Southern Poverty Law Center and the compound was burned in June 2001.
Chris Fillios, a moderate Republican seeking re-election as a county commissioner in Kootenai county, has observed extremists on the march there. They have been told, infiltrate at every level: school board, county, city offices, anywhere and everywhere they can, state level, federal level, infiltrate, infiltrate.
Fillios sees a connection with alt-right figures such as Steve Bannon, a former chief strategist in the Trump White House. If we start from the national level and we look at Steve Bannon having identified his so-called 40,000 shock troops, the most fertile ground that they could find would be northern Idaho. If they can get a foothold here, they could use it as sort of a launch pad for the rest of the country.
A driving force is the Idaho Freedom Foundation, a thinktank that vets legislation and legislators for their conservative and libertarian credentials. Approached for an interview, the foundation emailed a one-word reply: Nope. Approached in person at its office near the state capitol in Boise, the foundations staff gave a brusque refusal.
Tellingly, the foundations website asks: Are you a refugee from California, or some other liberal playground? Did you move to Idaho to escape the craziness? Welcome to Idaho. Were glad to have you here. You are one of the new Idahoans. The people who came to the Gem State seeking a home that reflects their values: small government and a freer life.
This is a trend that has been called right flight as conservatives pour into Idaho from liberal, racially diverse states. It could be seen as part of the grand sorting of American national politics as liberals move to places where they will find like minds and conservatives do likewise, meaning that blue states turn bluer and red states turn redder.
Stephanie Witt, director of the Applied Research Center at Boise State University, said: The newcomers arent liberals. Theyre as conservative or more conservative than the people who are here.
I remember one woman I met at a county womens forum. She was a recent transplant from southern California and shes just like, We cant let California happen here. She felt like she was really holding a line.
California is the most diverse state in America; Idaho is 93% white. But Tom Luna, the first Hispanic person elected to statewide office in Idaho as superintendent of public instruction, denies that race is a motivating factor. I dont see white flight as a reason at all for people moving here. I dont know the numbers but Ive met a lot of new people that have moved here and I see quite a diversity that identify themselves as Republicans.
Luna is now chair of the state Republican party. He rejects the notion that it has gone rogue. This is the same party that has led for the past 20 years resulting in now one of the fastest-growing, if not the fastest-growing, state in the country, and one reason is because of quality of life.
But among the new arrivals is Bundy, who grew up in Utah and lived in Arizona before moving to Idaho seven years ago. The father of six children settled on farmland outside Emmett also the home of Governor Little, a third-generation sheep and cattle rancher about an hour north-west of Boise.
Bundy was infamous for standoffs with federal agents near his familys ranch in Nevada in 2014 and at the Malheur national wildlife refuge in Oregon in 2016, which left one man dead. He served prison time but denies that he was leading armed rebellions and claims he won the PR battle.
The federal government has been attacking the land users ranchers, loggers, miners and other people, he said in an interview, wearing a checked shirt and paint-flecked jeans and sitting near a baby grand piano. Theres been this almost theological battle thats been going on for decades and decades over the land in the west.
He articulates the small government ideology of many far-right Republicans here: I believe that we should become independent. Weve got plenty resources and we should be able to stand on our own and not be dependent on the federal government to pay our medical bills and to build our buildings and all of that. But were like welfare junkies. We cant seem to get off of it.
Bundy has been arrested multiple times in Idaho. Once such incident occurred in 2020 because he refused to leave a statehouse auditorium while protesting against pandemic legislation after officials ordered the room to be cleared. Earlier this year he was involved in protests that helped force a hospital into temporary lockdown.
The rise of such tactics by extremists, which has included harassing and intimidating Republican legislators deemed too moderate, and storming into school or district health board meetings, sometimes with AR-15 rifles, has raised the specter of political violence in the states future.
McIntosh of the Idaho Statesman said: I only see it getting worse. I dont see a way out of it.
View post:
Republican and more Republican: Idaho shifts ever rightward - The Guardian
Posted in Alt-right
Comments Off on Republican and more Republican: Idaho shifts ever rightward – The Guardian
Listen up! Here are the finalists of the 2022 Student Podcast Challenge – GBH News
Posted: at 11:16 am
Is it possible to love a stranger? Why do dancers have to wear leotards? How can you track the endangered Preble's meadow jumping mouse when it's difficult to track them with a collar because of their tiny necks?! Kids have the unique ability to ask questions that adults might not think too much about.
These questions provide insight into the minds of young people. This year, we received over 2,400 entries from 45 states and the District of Columbia, and the creativity, innovation, and emotion students were able to pack into eight minutes impressed us.
We loved listening to every minute. NPR has spent weeks listening to, agonizing over and judging the entries. Today, we're announcing our 15 high school and 10 middle school finalists! Our judges will select two grand prize winners from this list.
In our fourth year of the Student Podcast Challenge, students are reflecting on the opportunities and evils of the internet, asking questions about their hometowns and taking a look at the kid in the mirror.
Students are asking big questions about the world wide web
How can the web harm us? Where is the good in the internet? How can it help?
From relative obscurity to having a Chipotle bowl made in your name, high schoolers Justin Alexander and Ben Kirsch in Scarsdale, N.Y. look at how TikTok has revolutionized the music industry. They cite the app's ability to catapult "quintessential starving artist" types like Tai Verdes to stardom in Unprecedented and Unavoidable: Tik Tok's effect on Music Industry.
But students are exploring the darker sides of the web, too. In One Click Away: How Online Extremism is Hidden in Plain Sight, Sophia Shin, Matthew Suescan and Emily Zhang from Hackensack, N.J. create a fake Facebook profile of a middle aged woman who had "right leaning tendencies" to see what the platform's algorithm would serve up.
You can find inspiration in your own backyard
From exploring Amarillo, Texas' coffee culture to asking why the previously bustling small town of Wiggins, Miss. only has two businesses left standing, there's no place like home (to create a podcast).
When Carmel, Calif. high schooler Owen Shirrell's great uncle received a draft notice during the Vietnam War, he got creative with hypnosis to excuse him from his assignment overseas. Take a listen to How A 1950 Lincoln Continental Saved My Uncle From Vietnam to hear the rest.
In Changes in Our Backyard: Gentrification in DC, high school students Arjun Nair, Alis Chang, Ishani Biswas, and Sarah Hailu visit local businesses and ask residents about gentrification. One interviewee says gentrification is, "to push out the people who are already there and can barely afford to live there and come in with condos and upscale housing."
Young people are narrating their own stories
Students are turning the mic on themselves in a big way this year, 8 of our 25 finalist podcasts deal with questions of identity. One offers insight into how the tabletop role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons allows some students to explore their LGBTQ identity while another emphasizes the importance of inclusive dance for people with disabilities.
Christina Zhang from Biloxi, Miss. details the comfort she finds in her small Chinese-American church. As Zhang describes in Having the Grace to Find a Sense of Place, Chinese Grace Bible Church is one of the few places she feels represented.
"The people sitting in the pews, which are actually just office chairs," Zhang says, "are Chinese-Americans who find comfort in knowing ... they can feel a perfect balance of ebullience and fortune without the fear of prejudice or exclusion."
In the Holden Immigrant Experience, Su Hay Thi Lin, Erika Flores, Trefena Sumoket describe the challenges faced by those who make their way to the United States.
"When I see immigrant students in my classroom, it reminds me of the struggles that my father went through," explains the students' teacher. "It took him five years to graduate high school because he didn't have any [English language learner] support."
Congratulations to all our finalists!
2022 Student Podcast Challenge: The Finalists
Content warning: some podcasts include topics that may be sensitive for some listeners/readers, such as school violence and sexual harassment.
High School Finalists
Love and Hate - Mendocino, CA
By: Arete Gagnon, Geneveve Schaner
Submitted by: Marshall Brown, Mendocino High School
Today, most people would say our world revolves around hate, but is that really the case? To better understand the human relationship with love and hate, Mendocino High School students Arete Gagnon and Geneveve Schaner ask members of the public.
Tea, Toast and Truth: Connecting Through Climate Change - Ashland, OR
By: Anya Moore, Mira Saturen, Kena Robertshaw, Amelia Wilkinson, Ella Gibbs, Tate Oliva
Submitted by: Shane Abrams, Ashland High School
The climate crisis impacts us all. But for teenagers, the ones who are going to have to live with the consequences, facing the future can feel daunting. From fear to anger, bewilderment to hope, a group of Ashland High School students sought to capture teenagers' responses to climate change in an effort to make all the young people out in the world experiencing similar emotions feel a little less alone.
More Players at the Table - Silver Spring, MD
By: Maggie Crow, Marie Spirtas
Submitted by: Sarah Forman, Montgomery Blair High School
More Players at the Table shines new light on how the tabletop role-playing game, Dungeons & Dragons, can be an accepting space for queer people. With the use of personal testimony from many Queer D&D players, high schoolers Maggie Crow and Marie Spirtas explore the freedom and self-expression found within the game.
How A 1950 Lincoln Continental Saved My Uncle From Vietnam - Carmel, CA
By: Owen Shirrell
Submitted by: Barbara McBride, Carmel High School
Faced with the impending threat of an induction notice in the spring of 1969, Owen Shirrell's great-uncle and grandfather demonstrated that necessity truly is the mother of invention. This podcast details how the brothers used hypnosis in order to avoid being drafted for the Vietnam War with only, ehm, minor consequences.
Nervous Laughter - Rockville, MD
By: Teagan Hyun-Suk Nam
Submitted by: Jonathan Brammer, Northwood High School
After an attempted school shooting, students have a strange response: humor. Nervous Laughter analyzes why not just high schoolers, but people everywhere, can bring themselves to laugh in the darkest of times.
Having the Grace to Find a Sense of Place - Columbus, MS
By: Christina Zhang, Sawyer Levenson
Submitted by: Thomas Easterling, The Mississippi School for Mathematics and Science
Annie Hsu, a 24-year old community leader, serves as an inspiration to many. Volunteering as a local Chinese church Sunday school leader at Grace Baptist Church, the lessons she teaches Asian-American youth in Mississippi reach far beyond bible verses.
IC And FP Sexual Harassment JHS - Jericho, NY
By: Farrah Park, Isla Chan
Submitted by: Suzanne Valenza, Jericho High School
Sexual harassment is an issue everywhere including high school. Students Farrah Park and Isla Chan discuss instances where they were harassed and the negative long-term effects it had.
From Nowhere: Food & Farming in Korean America - Troy, NY
By: Sabrina Antrosio
Submitted by: Gemma Halfi, Emma Willard High School
How does food interact with identity? In her podcast, high schooler Sabrina Antrosio says "it isn't just something we mindlessly consume. What we eat can be used to identify and identify with others." Antrosio interviews her mother, grandmother, and Korean-American farmers to explore how Asian-Americans have made space for themselves in America.
Changes in Our Backyard Gentrification in DC - Poolesville, MD
By: Arjun Nair, Alis Chang, Ishani Biswas, Sarah Hailu
Submitted by: Clayton Traver, Poolesville High School
In this entry, Poolesville High School students talk gentrification in Washington, D.C. They interview residents and local business owners about what gentrification really is and what it means to them. The high schoolers offer their own ideas on how the problem of gentrification can be mitigated.
Food Sharing with the Homeless - Teterboro, NJ
By: Queenie-Michelle Asare-Gyan, Justin Jang, Mia Palli
Submitted by: Erica Golle, Bergen County Technical Schools- Teterboro Campus
Bergen Tech seniors Queenie-Michelle Asare-Gyan, Justin Jang, and Mia Palli analyze Newark's proposed ordinance to require permits for distributing food to homeless individuals in public areas. Accompanied by bursts of energetic commentary, the students come to their own conclusions regarding the ordinance's implications.
How Family Can Hurt - Cicero, IL
By: Nayely Lopez
Submitted by: Jeremy Robinson, JS Morton East High School
"Gordita, flaco, chaparro, chaparra." All of these are comments Nayley Lopez has received or heard given from family members on her or others' bodies, and it hurts. Lopez uses her podcast to discuss the effects her family's comments have on mental health and offers guidance for those in similar situations.
Amarillo Coffee Culture - Amarillo, TX
By: Joe Mueller, Kloee Pratt-Castaneda, Jared Medina
Submitted by: Jenny Inzerillo, AmTech Career Academy
Three Amarillo high school students wanted to know: does their hometown have a "coffee culture?" And if so, what is it? They did the research, asked around and got answers about how a caffeinated beverage might have shaped this rural community.
Unprecedented and Unavoidable: Tik Tok's effect on Music Industry - Scarsdale, NY
By: Ben Kirsch, Justin Alexander
Submitted by: Molly Earle, Edgemont Jr./Sr. High School
TikTok has propelled many artists to global stardom. Without the app, singers and songwriters who, by now, have been nominated for Grammys, performed on Saturday Night Live and gotten signature Chipotle bowls might still be unknown. So has TikTok truly started a revolution in the music industry?
One Click Away: How Online Extremism is Hidden in Plain Sight - Hackensack, NJ
By: Sophia Shin, Matthew Suescan, Emily Zhang
Submitted by: Carly Berwick, Bergen County Academies
This podcast explores one of the most harmful phenomena to arise from our current technological age: online extremism. Students Sophia Shin, Matthew Suescun, and Emily Zhang share the procedure, results and analysis of their own investigation into the alt-right pipeline conducted on Facebook and TikTok. Their study reveals that anyone is susceptible to falling victim to this dangerous rabbit hole.
You Can Go Back Home Again - Columbus, OH
By: Raegan Calvert, Braedon Rothert
Submitted by: Thomas Easterling, The Mississippi School for Mathematics and Science
Wiggins, Miss. used to be a town bustling with life. Its downtown area, Pine Hill Avenue, once had businesses lining its streets. But nowadays, there are only two businesses left standing. Calvert reports on why this happened and the debate residents have over Wiggins' next steps towards growth.
Middle School Finalists
No Cap - Medford, MA
By: Giancarlo Astuccio, Frank Barbosa, Christian Bernier, Christie Bonocoeur, Carducci Cherry, Paul DeMayo, Francis DiRienzo, Latrell Huggins, Yisel Romero, Gavin Lin, Carlos Loredo, Makayla Maccarone, Marcello McLaughlin, William Ogles, Amari Peoples, Wildji Simon, Gabriel Waple
Submitted by: Amelia Whalen, Andrews Middle School
Displeased with their school district's policy restricting students from wearing hats and hoods, a group of middle schoolers plan to challenge the rule at an upcoming school committee meeting. Over the course of this podcast, the students explore the history of this rule and lend insight on how they plan to challenge it.
Uncovering the Secrets of the Modeling Industry - New York City, NY
By: Matilda Fried Levenstein
Submitted by: Jessica Nelson, The Clinton School
The reality of the modeling industry might surprise you: rather than glamour, money and fame, it sometimes ends in debt, exploitation and harassment. Middle schooler Matilda Fried Levenstein interviews those who have seen behind the industry's magic curtain to discuss both their positive and negative experiences in the modeling world.
Endangered - Cloverleaf, CO
By: Pearl Leubner, Emily Quintana, Serenity Smith, Madeline Meraz, Rachel Barth, Allison Kenney, Danielle Kenney, Zoe Frank
Submitted by: Karen Penry, Cloverleaf Enrichment School
The black-tailed prairie dog, the Preble's meadow jumping mouse and the black-footed ferret are endangered. The students at the Cloverleaf Enrichment School share tips on how to protect our furry friends like making sure not to let your cat out if you live near the jumping mice.
The Worlds We Create - Rockwall, TX
By: Blake Turley, Wesley Helmer, Kit Atteberry, Harrison McDonald
Submitted by: Misti Knight, Williams Middle School
Have you ever come across a "tea" account on social media? If not, this is the podcast for you. A group of students at Williams Middle School discuss the online world of school gossip and conduct a surprising experiment to show just how fast it can spread.
Monnishaa Tambe - Powell, OH
Read more from the original source:
Listen up! Here are the finalists of the 2022 Student Podcast Challenge - GBH News
Posted in Alt-right
Comments Off on Listen up! Here are the finalists of the 2022 Student Podcast Challenge – GBH News
Saving Academic Freedom From Free Speech – The Chronicle of Higher Education
Posted: at 11:10 am
We expect a great deal of criticism of our new book, Its Not Free Speech: Race, Democracy, and the Future of Academic Freedom, but we were taken aback by Jeffrey Aaron Snyders misconstrual of its main argument. If you go by Snyder, weve written a deeply flawed book attacking three racists that is bound to get attention because of its bold thesis. Snyder positions himself, in his essays in these pages, as a defender of free speech against left overreach and the excesses of diversity, equity, and inclusion offices, and he has also written a notable entry in the free speech is threatened by both sides subgenre. Articles like those can help fuel exaggerated perceptions of campus politics, but we do not begrudge him this territory. Its just not our territory. We are not interested in saving free speech: We are interested in saving academic freedom from free speech. Its Not Free Speech explains how academic freedom differs from free speech and why that difference is of great importance in the era of what Richard Hasen calls cheap speech.
At one point, Snyder invokes the authoritarian legislation sweeping the country and snarkily suggests that our time would have been better spent mobilizing resistance to that even though much of Chapter 4, Whos Afraid of Critical Race Theory Today?, is devoted to explaining those attacks and their origins. (As it happens, Jennifer does spend her time promoting the African American Policy Forums campaign against those bills.) But the real issue is that Snyder does not grasp the main point of the book. Its Not Free Speech is an argument against the bills and the right-wing movement behind them (calling them a perfect, and perfectly hideous, example of intellectual authoritarianism), precisely because it insists that academic freedom is the collective responsibility of faculty members in their disciplines. It is not something politicians can interfere with without destroying the role of the university in a democratic society (as Jennifer has argued in these pages). Central to the book is the belief that academic-freedom cases must be placed in the hands of faculty peers, not administrators vulnerable to outside political pressures or the courts with their wildly uneven record on academic freedom.
So the issue here is not just a misrepresentation here and a misconstrual there. There is something more important at stake: a real disagreement about the relation of academic freedom to free speech.
But as for those misrepresentations: the most serious concerns Snyders claim that we would rule out of bounds any debate about Brown v. Board of Education. This claim rests on a sloppy reading of two sentences in chapter four: Some things are not worthy of entertaining as if we could pretend they were bloodless. Whether Brown v. Board of Education should have happened is one. The phrase should have happened comes from a Princeton undergraduate, Brittani Telfair, who was arguing that some debates do not make symmetric asks. Black people who have to argue, again and again, against the premises of segregation and Jim Crow are not in a symmetric relation to people whose forebears never experienced segregation and Jim Crow. This is an important and, we hope, by now elementary point about the difference between free speech in theory and free speech in practice. Brittney Cooper made it brilliantly back in 2017 in these pages. Snyder implies that by the logic of our book the kinds of arguments made by Derrick Bell regarding how Black children might conceivably have been better off under Plessy v. Ferguson or by Gloria Ladson-Billings on the price paid for Brown v. Board would be off limits. This strikes us as absurd, and we think will strike careful readers of the book as absurd as well.
Snyder missed that point by focusing on the phrase not worthy of entertaining and ignoring as if we could pretend they were bloodless. He also ignores our citation of our Black colleagues Carolyn Rouse and Mark James, who, in the pages that lead up to those two sentences, explain that debating the virtues of segregation or the benefits of colonialism puts Black people in the position of having to take seriously the belief that racism is and always has been justified and having to pretend that the question is bloodless. Of course debate about Brown v. Board is legitimate. The only ideas were proposing to exclude or to put in the dustbin alongside phrenology and phlogiston are the white supremacist ones that provided the foundations for Jim Crow, for eugenics, and for the Holocaust.
But then, Snyder takes things out of context, while cleverly accusing us of taking things out of context. He writes: The authors refer to legions of racist professors and the entrenched, unshakeable beliefs of the white-supremacist professoriate. Snyder does not explain that the phrase refers to the historians of the Dunning School, who devoted their careers to arguing that Reconstruction failed because Black people are incapable of self-government, and that the second phrase was delivered in the context of a discussion of Gregory Christainsen, now retired from California State University-East Bay, a race realist who taught students that there are measurable differences in the intelligence of various races; that these differences are captured in IQ scores; and that they are attributable to genetics rather than to social variables. Anyone familiar with the legacy of pseudoscientific racism would know that these beliefs are indeed entrenched and unshakeable. (Christainsens field? Economics.) His university ignored student complaints about his courses, as readers of our book will learn. We do not think that the professoriate is packed with Klan members; we do think that there are some zombie ideas that keep making a comeback despite their being repeatedly discredited.
James Yang for The Chronicle
It is fitting, somehow, that when Snyder baselessly accuses us of taking a professors words out of context, the professor in question is the notorious Amy Wax of the University of Pennsylvania. Snyder objects to our calling Wax a white supremacist: The authors evidence consists of two excerpts, largely stripped of context, from a speech that Wax gave at the 2019 National Conservatism conference. In that speech, which we discuss in detail, Wax promoted a cultural distance nationalism whose premise is that we are better off if our country is dominated numerically, demographically, politically, at least in fact if not formally, by people from the First World, from the West, than by people from countries that had failed to advance or, more succinctly, our country will be better off with more whites and fewer nonwhites. Snyder writes, Without seeking additional information beyond what they have presented, I am not sure how many people would feel qualified to judge whether Wax is a white supremacist. I dont. But when someone says that white people are better (more civilized, more advanced) than nonwhite people, that is literally white supremacism. We cant imagine what else to call it. (Fortunately, The Chronicle provided a link to Waxs speech in Snyders essay, so curious readers can read her remarks for themselves.)
This disagreement about Wax brings us to another fundamental misrepresentation in Snyders review: the implication that we are the ones calling these shots or ruling anything out of court. We explicitly say that we are not. We are calling for what the American Association of University Professors has long considered best practice: a deliberative process, with authority distributed among a horizontal panel of peers in the relevant fields. Too many cases today, we argue, are decided without such a process and, importantly, this includes the adjunct instructor who can simply not be rehired to appease complaining students, parents, or donors. We think academic-freedom committees can do a better job adjudicating the controversies that pop up almost daily than can an individual provost, a series of tweets, or arguments made in The Chronicle of Higher Education.
Free speech as a slogan once served dissenting voices and struggles (the Berkeley Free Speech Movement was about the right to protest the Vietnam War on campus), but thats not how it typically functions today. In the public sphere, it facilitates hate speech and conspiracy theories. Most important, the widespread conflation of free speech and academic freedom makes it incredibly difficult for universities to do their jobs, which is to discriminate between high-quality speech (which refers to disciplinary expertise and is protected by academic freedom) and low-quality speech (which refers to ungrounded opinion).
The First Amendment doesnt demand or expect that speech be responsible or informed in any way, but academic speech speech with a claim to expertise does. That distinction is critical. When commentators ritualistically frame every academic disagreement in terms of free speech, they blur an essential distinction and facilitate the movement by which self-interested and partisan forces actively undermine democracy.
The contribution of Its Not Free Speech is not so much to recognize that content-free ideals like free speech work differently at different times on playing fields that have never been even; many people understand this better than we do. (We turn to the philosopher Charles W. Mills for help with this). Our contribution is, we hope, to think about what these insights about content-free ideals, cheap speech, and who makes judgment calls in the academic arena now mean for how we realize academic freedom. Of course, we are not the only ones trying to think this through. A growing body of work analyzes the relationship of power to academic freedom: We are thinking, for example, of Steven Salaitas Uncivil Rites; Johnny E. Williamss article The Academic Freedom Double Standard: Freedom for Courtiers, Suppression for Critical Scholars in the AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom; and Reshmi-Dutt Ballerstadt and Kakali Bhattacharyas collection, Civility, Free Speech, and Academic Freedom in Higher Education.
We welcome spirited discussion of Its Not Free Speech. We hope, though, that it will be discussion aimed at addressing some of the serious problems we face in academe and in democracy.
See the rest here:
Saving Academic Freedom From Free Speech - The Chronicle of Higher Education
Posted in Free Speech
Comments Off on Saving Academic Freedom From Free Speech – The Chronicle of Higher Education
Missouri AG targets Biden, Big Tech in free speech lawsuit: Taking on the biggest, most corrupt institutions – Fox Business
Posted: at 11:10 am
Missouri AG Eric Schmitt argues the government's alleged collusion with Big Tech to violate the First Amendment 'needs to stop.'
Missouri AG Eric Schmitt slammed the Biden administration for allegedly colluding with Big Tech to censor free speech, arguing his lawsuit will take on big government and Big Tech, "two of the biggest, most corrupt institutions that are out there."
ERIC SCHMITT: The government can't violate the First Amendment by suppressing speech, and the government can't outsource that also to the Big Tech partners. And that's what we're alleging in this lawsuit. And we're taking on two of the biggest, most corrupt institutions that are out there, big government and Big Tech
FCC COMMISSIONER SAYS BIDENS 'DISINFORMATION BOARD' IS 'UNCONSTITUTIONAL'
First, they hold over these special protections that big tech has, principally section 230, which makes them immune from typical liability because they're not considered a publisher. So they hold that over, the left does, unless they censor more.
Missouri AG Eric Schmitt discusses the Biden administration's alleged collusion with Big Tech during "Varney & Co." on May 9, 2022. (Fox News)
MUSK HOPES TO BUILD BRAND TRUST THROUGH FREE SPEECH, TRANSPARENCY WHICH 'BIG TECH NEEDS': FMR PARLER CEO
The second way they do it is the direct collusion that we see now and Jen Psaki in press conferences has told us with her own words that they're working directly with Facebook to flag, quote unquote, disinformation. And this has played itself out on a number of different fronts, whether it was the laptop from hell, election integrity issues, certainly during COVID with the origins of COVID and then with the efficacy of masks. So those are just a few examples. But in this lawsuit, we're essentially alleging that they're violating the First Amendment, and they're doing it with their big tech partners, and it needs to stop.
GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO BY CLICKING HERE
WATCH THE FULL INTERVIEW BELOW:
Missouri AG Eric Schmitt discusses his lawsuit against the Biden administration and top officials for allegedly colluding with Big Tech to censor free speech.
Read more from the original source:
Missouri AG targets Biden, Big Tech in free speech lawsuit: Taking on the biggest, most corrupt institutions - Fox Business
Posted in Free Speech
Comments Off on Missouri AG targets Biden, Big Tech in free speech lawsuit: Taking on the biggest, most corrupt institutions – Fox Business







