Monthly Archives: May 2022

Green light for extension to landfill operation that will help create new nature park – Gary Skentelbery

Posted: May 9, 2022 at 9:13 pm

PLANNERS have given the green light for an extension to landfill operations, that by default will create a new nature park and protected habitat for great crested newts and other wildlife, on land at Woolston Eyes, close to Thelwall Viaduct.

Churchill Enviro Ltd has been given a three-year extension to their existing consent by Warrington Borough Council planners for deposit ground No 1, south of the River Mersey and north of the Manchester Ship Canal.

There had been opposition by Woolston and Rixton Parish Council who had registered to speak against because they wanted to make sure that they would be consulted about similar applications in future by the Borough Council.

They also wanted it noted that they needed to be involved in who can have access rights to the landfill site when it becomes a Nature Park in 2025. Having made their points they said that they had no objections to the planning application.

Cllr Mark Jervis asked about the type of landfill being used and wanted this clarified. The WBC officer immediately discussed this with the applicants representative. Assurance was given that the waste used for landfill would be inert and unlikely to give rise to environmental pollution or harm human health.

Cllr Bob Bar congratulated everyone especially officers, for the presentation and clarifications which made it clear what the processes and outcomes were going to be. He also said that he used to live in the area and had seen many positive outcomes from the landfill projects.

Former councillor and planning committee member Geoff Settle spoke about his ecology, environmental and planning experiences in this area of Warrington. These included the campaign against the Rixton Clay Pigeon Shooting Club, Colliers landfill extension and being a Woolston Parish Footpath Warden.

He said he knew the place and people well. The noise and dust would be managed from its position alongside a footpath to generate less noise than the clay pigeon guns. The additional time given to Colliers had been granted because industrial waste had been reduced in content and frequency as a direct consequence of successful national campaign to recycle such products. This had a direct impact on Colliers timescales and impacted their landfill operation, hence the need for an extension.

Cllr Judith Wheeler asked what would happen if this application was not approved. She was told that if it was rejected some of the wildlife gains already realised would, unfortunately, be at risk.

Mr Settle, Chair of the Warrington Nature Conservation Forum said that this was not an acceptable option and that the three-year extension needed to be approved. In addition, he welcomed, further protection for the Nature Park under the custodianship of the Woolston Eyes Conservation Group who have performed the role successfully for the Woolston Eyes Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) for the last 40 years.

He also mentioned the nearby successful Rixton Clay Pit SSSI, a reclaimed clay quarry that had been brought back to life as a home to the great crested newt, dragonflies, insects, and butterflies. It is less than a mile away from the new Nature Park. In fact, he had visited the place only a few days before and seen many butterflies, insects and dragon flies emerging in the warmth of the sunshine.

Mr Settle commented: As I was leaving, I glanced at the blackboard where visitors record their wildlife sightings and was amazed, someone had seen North Americans Bigfoot! This is something rarely seen anywhere in the world by a handful of people. Whilst it needs verifying by experts there were more credible sightings on the board such as speckled wood butterfly, water shrew, black sheep, robin, and reed warbler, who knows what will be seen at the New Nature Park!

He added: It should be noted that the term Nature Park is not used as meaning open to everyone. Its access will be restricted, and nature conservation will become the principal focus so that the wildlife is protected and managed.

Hopes for a new nature park to be created

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Calgary convenience store faces dozens of charges related to sale of vaping products – Global News

Posted: at 9:11 pm

A northeast business has been charged with selling vaping products to minors.

The owner and manager of Gemini Convenience Store in the Pineridge community face 42 counts of violating the Tobacco, Smoking and Vaping Reduction Act. Charges include selling vaping products to minors and failing to request ID from customers under 25.

Business license inspectors and the Calgary Police Service were involved in the investigation after members of the public complained to 311.

I would like to thank those that reached out to us via 311 and would encourage others to do the same, if they learn of a business selling smoking and vaping products to minors, Michael Briegel, the citys chief business license inspector, said in a statement. It is important that we protect the health of young people age requirements are in place for these products for a reason.

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If convicted, Maple Gifts and Confectionary Enterprise Ltd., Nupar Vasistha and Sudhakar Tandon could face fines of up to $10,000 for the first offence and $100,000 for subsequent ones.

The city also said it will conduct a business license review of Gemini Convenience, given the seriousness of the charges.

2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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Parents Invited To Vaping Prevention Town Hall On May 12 Parkland Talk – Parkland Talk

Posted: at 9:11 pm

{Photo by Jovan Barretto, Pexels}

By Jill Fox

Learn about the dangers of vaping and whats being done to address the problem at a town hall meeting on Thursday, May 12.

Hosted by the Department of School Climate and Disciplines Kimberly Young, the discussion covers the facts about vaping and the resources available to students and families.

Panelists include Lori Alhadeff, school board member, Dr. Barry Hummel, Jr., CEO of the QuitDoc Foundation, and representatives from the Broward Sheriffs Office, Florida Department of Health in Broward, and Memorial Healthcare System.

We want to start changing the perception that vaping is safer than cigarettes, said Alhadeff. We have a panel with extensive experience on the topic, and they will be covering a lot of important information with the audience.

They plan to educate the public about Tobacco 21, the consequences of vaping, how harmful it is to the developing brain, how big tobacco companies target youth, and how easy it is to buy vapes over the mail.

The Town Hall is set for Thursday, May 12, 2022, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at J.P. Taravella High School. Attendees can register and submit questions for the panelists here.

J.P. Taravella is located at 10600 Riverside Drive in Coral Springs.

Send your news to Parklands #1 news source,Parkland Talk.

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Over vaping devices, New Trier High School refers students to local police, who have issued dozens of tickets in last 3 years – The Record – The…

Posted: at 9:11 pm

New Trier High School is among numerous Illinois schools that refer students to local law enforcement following certain on-campus transgressions, as revealed on April 28 in a thorough investigation by ProPublica and the Chicago Tribune.

The report explains how students in districts across the state face fines and court appearances for relatively minor in-school offenses, even though a state law prohibits schools from fining students as a form of discipline.

According to the reports findings, over the most recent three school years (2018-19, 2019-20, 2020-21), Winnetka and Northfield police combined to issue 62 citations (Winnetka: 56; Northfield: 6) to New Trier students for violations occurring on school grounds.

School officials told The Record that a vast majority of the citations were part of an initiative to curb student use of vaping devices to consume nicotine and marijuana. Other districts in Illinois, according to the articles research, refer students to local law enforcement for violations such as truancy, littering and vulgar language, among other things.

A day after the investigation was published, Illinois State Board of Education Superintendent Dr. Carmen Ayala sent a letter to all Illinois school leaders, urging them to immediately stop enabling the fining of students.

Alaya wrote in the letter that fines can have a tangible impact on the safety, security, and wellbeing of an entire family and that multiple laws in Illinois intend to prohibit the ticketing of students as a form of discipline.

However, some schools have found loopholes between the Illinois School Code and the Municipal Code and abdicated their responsibility for student discipline to local law enforcement, she says.

New Trier Superintendent Dr. Paul Sally said the district will review its policies in response to Ayalas letter, but he does not believe referring offending students to police runs afoul of the state laws in all cases.

Sally added that he understands scrutiny for law-enforcement involvement in certain in-school offenses, such as truancy, but believes the districts policy to combat vaping devices aligns with the health and safety priorities of the community.

The shared interest for our community is keeping our adolescents healthy, Sally wrote in an email to The Record. The Village has a vested interest in partnering with us to put policies, procedures, and ordinances in place that promote and support the health and safety of our students. To that end, we follow local ordinances when it comes to engaging the police on violations such as nicotine and THC possession, and in the aim to help students learn and grow, the primary consequences the police use are community service and peer jury.

In 2018, Sally said, New Trier student usage of vaping devices more than doubled from 19 percent in both 2014 and 2016 to 42 percent leading to a new district strategy involving local law enforcement.

A district memo to the School Board in August 2018 mentions fines and court appearances as possible consequences for vape usage or possession.

To address this issue along with an increase in marijuana usage due to vaping, we made curricular and policy changes with the goal of educating students about the risks, helping them make informed choices, and when appropriate, providing a consequence, Sally wrote.

In the memo, Asst. Superintendent for Student Services Tim Hayes wrote that addressing the vaping concerns requires a community-wide approach and reported that beginning that school year the district would notify its school-resource officers who are employees of the local police departments when a student is found in possession of a vaping device or e-cigarette.

Our hope is that these citations will provide an additional incentive for students to cease using these devices, Hayes wrote.

Winnetka Police Chief Marc Hornstein said the school resource officers have discretion on whether to issue a citation, which may include a fine if the offending student is under the age of 18. A fine does not accompany a marijuana citation, he said, but $75 is the departments standard fine for underage tobacco use. Hornstein added, however, that in most cases fines are waived in favor of community service or peer jury deliberation. A court hearing fee of $40, though, may still apply.

Sally said that the strategy has reduced student vaping on school grounds.

Hornstein told The Record that the Winnetka Police Department does not typically work with Winnetka Public Schools District 36 to issue tickets to students. Neither does the Wilmette Police Department, according to Chief Kyle Murphy, who said most Wilmette schools handle disciplinary issues in-house and the goal of both the district and police department is to avoid citing students unless it is necessary to open the door for a specific course of action.

Officials from Glencoe D35 and Avoca D37 agreed and said they do not refer minor in-school violations to local police.

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Over vaping devices, New Trier High School refers students to local police, who have issued dozens of tickets in last 3 years - The Record - The...

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Blackburn vaping company might be pioneers but there are calls for tougher regulation – Lancs Live

Posted: at 9:11 pm

The concept of vaping is something few people are unaware of but back in the early 2000s it was an unknown phrase.

Although electronic cigarettes date back to the 1960s it was a patent filed by Hon Lik in 2003 which really kickstarted the industry. Fed up with his own 20 a day habit and the fact that his father was dying of lung cancer, Hon Lik set about inventing a less harmful cigarette.

The story is that the idea came to him in a dream, where he was dying via drowning, his lungs were filling with water, and suddenly the water turned into a harmless vapour, and hence the idea for the e-cig. Many companies have since jumped on the vaping bandwagon but it was way back in 2008 that Totally Wicked was launched in Blackburn.

READ MORE: Blackburn Rovers confirm new front of shirt sponsor after Recoverite partnership ends prematurely

On October 8 that year the company was launched by Jason Cropper with his brother Fraser, who is the current chairman, saying 10 years later: "It was a true pioneering moment; with the term vaping still at least three years away from making its appearance, e-cigarette manufacturers and retailers had a tremendously difficult task of creating awareness and trust in our products. Even in our earliest infancy, we were privileged to be able to rely on the support of some tremendously loyal customers, who understood first-hand the potential of vaping."

Jason is no longer involved in the running of Totally Wicked, having stepped down from the multi-million pound company in 2013, after his comments to politicians deemed 'not to reflect the views of the company'. Marcus Saxton is the current chief executive.

Although Totally Wicked now has over 500 shops across the UK including company-operated outlets and franchises, as well as selling in Asda, Sainsbury's and Bargain Booze stores, its roots in Blackburn are a big part of the firm. Totally Wicked has been the shirt sponsor of Blackburn Rovers since 2018 and has been the club's principal sponsor since January of this year after Rovers parted ways with Recoverite Compression.

Fraser Cropper, Totally Wicked's chairman, has been a lifelong supporter of the club, having sold programmes at Ewood Park when he was a youngster, and seeing his company's logo on the front of his beloved team's shirts is something he takes great pride in. The sponsorship also helped Rovers out of a budgetary quandary and Totally Wicked has also been a sponsor of St Helen's Rugby FC for the last 10 years.

Totally Wicked directly employs more than 140 people, as well as supporting many more jobs through franchises, and the company posted a turnover of 43.5m for the 12 months to March 31, 2021, up slightly from the 43.3m it achieved during the prior year. Headquartered in Stancliffe Street, the firm takes its responsibilities seriously, requiring age verification for online sales, and in 2016 was the founding member of the Independent British Vaping Trade Association (IBVTA) which was established to support the independent vape industry.

Being a responsible vaping company is a hot topic at the moment. Last month Conservative MP Adam Afriyie, the vice chairman of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Vaping, demanded tougher regulations on e-cigarettes after a report revealed that thousands of vaping devices have been sold to schoolchildren.

Mr Afriyie warned that online sellers are using colours and flavours to target under-18s as trading standards officers have reported that thousands of children have been sold vaping devices. According to a new report by Scottish Trading Standards (SCOTSS) a total of 88,839 disposable vaping devices were removed from sale as they were either not labelled correctly in accordance with the Tobacco and Related Products Regulations 2016.

In line with tobacco products, e-cigarettes and liquid have an age restriction meaning you have to be 18 to buy them, but earlier this year a BBC investigation found a third of shops selling to underage youngsters. An increase in the number of children vaping has led to calls for tighter regulations on the sale of e-cig products.

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Flavored tobacco ban bill heads to state Senate with a week left in Colorado’s legislative session – Colorado Public Radio

Posted: at 9:11 pm

Lawmakers in Colorado's House passed one of the sessions most hotly debated bills a ban on flavored tobacco products this week. But the clock is ticking, and more than 220 bills await passage.

The bill now goes to the state Senate. Even with the session end looming, one of its co-sponsors, state Sen. Rhonda Fields said she was optimistic.

You know, it looks great. It's on its way to the Senate, and then we'll make sure it goes through all the appropriate committees and I'm looking forward to debating it, said Fields, a Democrat from Aurora.

Opponents say a ban would hurt convenience stores and vape shops and have argued the issue is one of personal choice.

For Fields, she said its aboutthe toll tobacco consumption, driven by attractive flavors like menthol, has taken on the community.

It started back in the 60s, (the brand) Kool Cigarettes, all these menthol flavors, she said. The industry has now put flavors into vaping, into cigarettes to make it more attractive for young people to start smoking early.

The tobacco industry has denied deliberately targeting communities of color, but the industrys own documents show companies developed sophisticated campaigns to addict Black consumers.

Last month, the FDA proposed new rules to prohibit menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars in what it said was a push to prevent youth initiation, significantly reduce tobacco-related disease and death. The change would not impact flavored vaping products.

The Democratic majority in the House passed the flavored tobacco ban bill 35-27 on Wednesday after the appropriations committee approved it earlier in the day on a 7-4 vote.

How did the bill manage to progress despite a ticking clock to the sessions end?

We've stayed on message. This is about kids health we see way too many kids using these products, said another co-sponsor, Rep. Kyle Mullica, a Democrat from Northglenn. We have the data backing us up. We have the science backing us up and we never stopped talking about that.

Mullica said the bill has survived despite heavy lobbying its the third-most lobbied bill this session, according to an analysis by the Colorado Sun, involving more than 140 lobbyists representing nearly 90 clients on both sides.

I think that that's amazing that we didn't let big tobacco, and their well-funded industry, be able to beat this back, he said.

The measure, HB22-1064, bans retailers of cigarettes, tobacco or nicotine products from selling or marketing any flavored product. Those are defined as products imparting a taste or smell other than the taste or smell of tobacco.

Menthols are a critical element of the ban, but the legislation also would cover newer products, like the fruit- and candy-flavored vape products that are attracting a new generation of users.

Supporters of the measure gathered on the west steps of the state Capitol after House lawmakers approved the bill on a largely party-line vote.

When we fight, we win! When we fight, we win! they chanted.

Nyla Pollard, a senior and member of the Black Student Union at Aurora's Smoky Hill High School, said she sees a lot of vaping in her school, especially in the bathrooms and classrooms. The vaping products are very easy to hide and teachers don't know, she said, adding that teens consider vaping as less damaging and better than cigarettes.

I see lots of my friends, not knowing they're addicted or saying they'll stop and there's no harm, but they can't stop because they're addicted, she said.

Other speakers echoed those concerns and raised others, about the long-term health impacts of flavored tobacco and nicotine use.

A report issued by a coalition of health and civil rights groups last year, called Stopping Menthol, Saving Lives, explained that "in the 1950s, less than 10 percent of Black smokers used menthol cigarettes. Today, that number is 85 percent."

Sondra Young, the president of the Denver branch of the NAACP said the majority of Black women who smoke use menthol cigarettes.

"And there's a growing concern regarding mental health, maternal health, infant mortality. We simply cannot ignore these dangers, she said.

Addiction is real, said Pastor Thomas Mayes of the Greater Metro Denver Ministerial Alliance. Flavored tobacco is more addicting than just about anything on the market right now. And it's not just harming our generations coming. It's killing them, it's killing their minds. It's killing their desire to succeed.

Regular use of vaping products by Colorado youth exceeds the nations, and heavily-Latino Pueblos rates are even higher, said Rudy Gonzales, executive director of Servicios de La Raza, He said a recent poll showed most Coloradans support banning flavors to address the issue.

The situation in Pueblo is just one example in Colorado, but it is an important example for the Latino community, and the impact these flavored products are having on our children, in our neighborhoods, he said.

The speakers urged the governor to sign the bill if lawmakers pass it.

The governor recently told CPRs Colorado Matters he opposes the measure, calling banning flavored tobacco products a local issue. In December, Denver Mayor Michael Hancock vetoed a similar citywide measure, saying the issue should be handled at the state level.

The bill faced strong pushback in committee hearings, as well as on the House floor.

Republican House Minority Leader Hugh McKean attempted to create an exception for menthol.

This is a product that's been on the market for a very long time. It's been on the market, has lots of adults that appreciate it, use it, want it to stick around, he said.

That amendment failed.

The bill has been one of this sessions most contentious and lawmakers listened to many hours of impassioned testimony. On one side, there were frustrated moms and educators, doctors and public health folks.

On the other, concerned adults who say vaping products helped them quit, along with vape shop owners and employees, saying the products make up a considerable share of their revenues.

Some warned if passed and signed by the governor, the bill would result in the closure of hundreds of small businesses.

Make no mistake, that's exactly what this bill would do. Banning flavored nicotine doesn't magically make it go away, testified James Howard, who said he was representing his two small vape shops and thousands of Coloradans. All it does is shutter small businesses and create a black market that gives no regard to who its clients are.

Vapor businesses provide 2,370 jobs in this state, 126 million a year in wages and over 366 million a year in annual economic impact to Colorado, Amanda Wheeler, president of the Rocky Mountain Smoke Free Alliance told lawmakers.

She said shes a former smoker who used vaping products to quit traditional cigarettes, like millions of other Americans. Wheeler cited research showing flavored e-cigarettes are used by more than three-quarters of adults who currently vape.

Here's what that means. Nicotine vaping is the single most effective smoking cessation method ever devised, Wheeler said. And the most appealing reason people are able to switch is because of the variety of flavors.

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Webinar Reiterates That The Evidence on E-Cig Effectiveness is Undisputable – Vaping Post

Posted: at 9:11 pm

The case studies clearly indicate that vapes are at least 95 percent safer than combustible tobacco products, and twice as effective as traditional nicotine replacement therapies.

They presented findings of a recently released white paper containing case studies related to vaping carried out in four countries, and answered questions from the audience who joined the live session. In line with statements by established health agencies such as Public Health England, the case studies clearly indicate that vapes are at least 95 percent safer than combustible tobacco products, and twice as effective as traditional nicotine replacement therapies.

The paper highlighted that data from countries where these findings are considered and incorporated in local regulations, reflect the benefits of the products. Countries that embrace vaping, such as France, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and Canada have witnessed a decrease in smoking rates that is twice as fast as the global average, the paper noted.

Michael Landl emphasized the difference that such a change in approach could make. Progressive countries are implementing vaping regulations. If Bangladesh implements the regulation for vaping, it could be 6 million people who could switch to vaping than smoking cigarettes as per our calculation, said Landl.

Vapes are at least 95% safer than the traditional combustible tobacco, according to the Public Health England. Its not the nicotine that kills people, but its the tar from smoking, the speakers said while replying questions., he added.

Meanwhile, a small-scale focus group study by the locally-based Dhaka Ahsania Mission, recommended a total vape ban despite finding that most of the participants took up vaping to help them quit smoking.

Carried out between January and February 2020, the survey consisted of three focus group discussions with students from two universities: Dhaka University and North South University. All students were regular vapers, and most reported preferring open system vapes that have refill tanks.

The compiled data indicated that most of the [[participants] believed that there werent enough scientific studies showing e-cigarettes as harmful. A total of 65% said they started vaping because of how they taste, and many said that vaping helped them quit cigarette smoking. Despite this, the research team recommended a comprehensive ban on vaping to [safeguard] health and safety of youth and future generation.

Earlier this year, anti-tobacco campaigners said that a sharp turn and strong actions are required if Bangladesh is to achieve its set target of becoming tobacco-free by-2040-target. Bangladesh was the first developing country to sign the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) in 2003. Two years later, in 2005, the government had passed the Tobacco Products (Control) Act in 2005, which was revised and amended in 2013.

Sadly following in the footsteps of neighbouring India, in 2019, a Bangladeshi health official had announced a plan to prohibit the sale and use of vaping products and other electronic cigarettes. The ban was to be incorporated in the new tobacco control policy, currently being drawn up by the government, said the official at the time.

Read Further: The Business Standard

Bangladesh: Four MPs Call For Tobacco and Vape Tax

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Luke Kirkness: What I think about getting hooked to vape despite not being a smoker – New Zealand Herald

Posted: at 9:11 pm

Thieves break into vape store and steal $12,000 worth of items. Video / CCTV

OPINION:

New Zealand, the land of the long white vape trail.

That doesn't sound right, does it? My mouth is overcome with a nasty taste, like a cigarette might, as I write those words but it's our reality.

In 2018/19, 21.2 per cent of adults had tried vaping, up from 18.5 per cent in 2017/18, according to Stats NZ. The figure is bound to be higher now.

I've been vaping for near-on two weeks.

People would be right to question why I picked up vaping because I'm not even a smoker. I needed it as part of a costume for a party.

I dare say many Kirknesses would scoff after that, mainly due to the dickish way people look puffing out plumes of vapour.

There's a theory it takes about 21 days to pick up a habit and I'm well on the way to being hooked on vaping but I'm trying to stop.

Why do I continue when I think it won't have anything but negative consequences? The answer, I'm sure, is nicotine - a chemical in tobacco that causes temporary pleasing effects on the brain. Temporary is the keyword there.

I'm not opposed to a coffin nail after a few beers but the taste it leaves on my lips is foul and the smell even worse.

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That's nothing at all like my experience with vaping.

While someone might be off-put by the taste and lingering effects of cigarettes, vape flavours help mask the problem.

I have two sweet flavours for my vape device: watermelon ice and blueberry ice. You can also get flavours like cotton candy and bubblegum.

It's the more egregious, youth-focused flavours I would suggest are causing health professionals headaches because they could lead to nicotine addiction without people ever smoking a cigarette.

And it seems to be working that way, with a recent survey showing one in five secondary school students are addicted to vaping.

Vapes have the power to help people stop smoking but it's not clear what long-term problems they have themselves.

Smoking can cause cancer, heart disease, strokes, lung diseases, disabilities and other terrible problems.

Vaping? Who knows?

The Ministry of Health encourages smokers who want to use vaping products to quit to seek the support of local stop smoking services because they provide the best chance of quitting successfully, it said in its position statement on vaping.

"The Ministry of Health will continue to monitor the uptake of vaping products, their health impact at individual and population levels, including long term effects and their effectiveness for smoking cessation as products, evidence and technologies develop."

What is clear is they lead to nicotine addiction and that is a bad thing, causing things like anxiety, irritability, restlessness, frustration and insomnia.

People have questioned why vapes are so readily available and not in the hands of health professionals. It's a good question. Apparently, rapid retail expansion meant when government regulations came into play, it was too late.

I believe it makes sense to get vapes out of the hands of people in dimly lit stores and allow them to be controlled by medical professionals.

It's worth limiting the number of flavours too, to stop enticing people to try vaping. If the flavours were awful like cigarettes or brussels sprouts, I probably wouldn't vape.

Some might say that taking vapes away from retailers would result in a black market for vape products.

That could happen because anyone who wants to get a hold of something probably can, no matter if it's illegal or not - just look at our nation's drug trade.

I believe that's just something we'd need to tackle - if it occurred - because who knows what impact a generation of vapers might cause in the coming years.

While the ministry might say vapour has toxicants at levels much lower than cigarettes or at levels unlikely to cause harm, a range has still been found including some cancer-causing agents.

Just because there is no clear evidence now doesn't mean we should hold on to a she'll be right attitude, especially when it comes to a product featuring a restricted drug.

If vapes are used as they are intended, to help people quit smoking, then it makes complete sense to make it mandatory to get a prescription from a medical expert.

There's no way a health professional is going to sell a vape to a young person without a proper reason - like trying to look cool at a party.

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Luke Kirkness: What I think about getting hooked to vape despite not being a smoker - New Zealand Herald

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Letters to the Editor | Opinion | benningtonbanner.com – Bennington Banner

Posted: at 9:10 pm

Dont fall for Joe Namaths ads

You probably have seen Joe Namath on television hawking Medicare Advantage plans. Dont be fooled! Joe was a decent quarterback, but a health insurance expert, he is not. Right now, there are two versions of Medicare: Original (federal) and Advantage (commercial). In addition, there is a new program called REACH which can switch your plan from Original to a commercial plan without your consent. Commercial insurance companies such as United Health Care, Cigna, and Aetna make huge profits if they can sell their Advantage plans. These insurers are overpaid middlemen. They spend your premium dollars on fat-cat executive salaries, lobbying, investor dividends, advertising, and political donations, not on your medical care. In addition, the government subsidizes Advantage plans using Original Medicare funds, thereby making the Advantage plans even more profitable and depleting the Medicare Trust Fund.

Advantage plans will limit your care if they can. They will insist that your doctor prescribe certain drugs and not others. You will be restricted to a certain panel of doctors, and they will make it difficult for you to go to anyone outside this panel. If your doctor orders a test, they might not pay for it unless you get prior approval. If you get really sick and you want to switch back to Original Medicare because it provides more options, you will do so at a greater cost. If you switch from one Advantage plan to another, you may have to switch doctors as well.

Dont be fooled by Joe Namaths slick but empty promises. Commercial insurers have turned our health care system into an expensive, poor performing mess. They are profit motivated not patient-care motivated. The only way out of this mess is a federally funded single payer system which would insure everyone from birth to death.

G. Richard Dundas, MD

Bennington

When you opt for Medicare Advantage (MA) instead of traditional Medicare, you place decisions about your health in the hands of a big insurance company intent on making a profit. Three quarters of the MA business is currently in the hands of six huge insurers: Humana, CVS, Anthem, Kaiser Permanente, Centene, and Cigna.

Because of the potential incentive for Medicare Advantage Organizations (MAOs) to deny beneficiary access to services and deny payments to providers in an attempt to increase profits, the Health & Human Services agency Inspector General just reviewed the performance of MA insurers. The results were not good. Of the prior approval requests that MA insurers denied, 13 percent should have been approved. Of the payment denials by MA insurers, 18 percent were improper under both the rules of Medicare and the MA insurers own rules.

Some improper decisions were reversed by the MA insurer, but this often happened only after a beneficiary or provider appealed or disputed the denial. The three causes of these improper denials: Using clinical criteria that Medicare does not impose; requesting unnecessary documentation; and errors in the insurers manual review or system.

Since every improper denial is a money-saver for the insurance company, you have to wonder how intentional this rate of impropriety is. Since every improper denial is a hardship to a patient and/or medical provider, you have to wonder how the government can allow this kind of behavior, while also allowing MA insurers to tout the MA program as Gods gift to seniors. The government also knows that MA insurers are also manipulating the system to increase the amount of money they get from Medicare, a fiasco that is surely a testament to how much money these insurers devote to shaping regulators opinions.

It will get worse. Ideas similar to those behind the Medicare Advantage program underlie Medicares new mania for value based care. The agency recently announced that all Medicare beneficiaries should be in value-based care programs by 2030.

Lee Russ

Bennington

President Biden recently said, the MAGA crowd was the most extreme group in the Country. I usually dont believe in slogans but, in these trying times, how could make America great again be a bad goal for us. Then I asked myself the question did this Group burn down and loot our cities and kill and maim our citizens? The answer to this question is no. He must have been referring to ANTIFA and the gangs of losers and have-nots.

Is President Bidens MAGA statement another one of his euphemisms, to be later clarified by his handlers? Did he realize that he was referring to 50 percent of our nation, and its leader, past Pres. Trump who gave us so many successful plusses during his term that he in fact made America great again?

Lets imagine getting back to energy independence, no budget busting inflation, full employment, respect from our allies as well as our enemies, stability in the Middle East, and too many other plusses to list here.

Lets make it happen at the Polls this November, and at future elections.

Perry Green

Manchester Center

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Between a Rock and a Hard Place The Brooklyn Rail – Brooklyn Rail

Posted: at 9:10 pm

The French presidential elections brought what many were dreading, a standoff between what has long been called the authoritarian liberalism of Emmanuel Macron and the avowed fascism of Marine Le Pen. For a small month-long window before the elections people who dont usually vote began to talk about voting for Jean Luc Mlenchon, whether matter-of-factlyhis program is correct, said my favorite barman Kamel at the Mouton Blanc in Strasbourg St Denis as he served me a pint-sized spritzor resignedly, its the only chance we have against Le Pen because its not a given that people will vote for Macron against her.

A couple of weeks before the elections tensions ran high against the Jadotistesthe kind of bourgeois-bohemians who might have voted for Mlenchon in the last election (the problem with such a leopard is hes always changing his spots, his party, his discourse) who were now voting Jadot, an ecological candidate whose program was actually less green than Mlenchons. Bruno Latour himself had come out and supported Jadot publicly, along with a scattering of left-wing intellectuals who clearly refused to see that the only candidate who could get any kind of traction against the Le PenMacron black hole was Mlenchon, according to the polls.

In the rain in Belleville a few days before the first round I found some surprising green-haired steam punks distributing tracts for Jadot, telling me that even though he wouldnt win it was important to vote for what we believe in. These are the words of a Green party of bureaucrats in its death throes; they want the racket to exist after the election, or they have to reimburse their campaign money. The week before the election I sat in a bar in the 12th Arrondissement with people who dont usually vote, making paper airplanes and origami frogs and birds out of Mlenchons campaign leaflets, which used the 1968 slogan another world is possible. We read his program, which everyone found not so bad after all: freezing the prices of basic necessities and energy costs in the face of the gas and inflation crises, raising unemployment benefits, requisitioning empty houses and second homes for public housing, outlawing eviction, reforming the police, and reinstating retirement at sixty.

Perhaps Fabien Roussel, the Communist Party candidate, who seemed to have lost his mind and was framing his campaign solely on anti-ecological solutions on the basis that ecology is anti-working class, telling anyone who would listen that he would continue to eat meat and at all costs keep using nuclear power, ought to have stood down in the interests of a left coalitionhe garnered only 2.28% which could have pushed Mlenchon into the second round. Viewed this way, we could consider Jadot and Roussel to reflect each other: both make a kind of identity politics out of suggesting that an ecological position, or a working-class culture are incompatible with the Left, Mlenchons program seemed to defend both working-class and environmental interests without suggesting that they are opposed. Jean-Luc came in at 22%, behind Macron in first place with 27.8%, and Marine Le Pen at 23.1%. Two candidates from the far and center right followedEric Zemmour with 7.1%, Pcresse, the Rpublicain, with 4.8%. One has to gain over 5% of votes for campaign money to be reimbursed: much to everyones amusement, Pcresse had invested 5 million euros of her own money in her dream.

How will the rest of the votes recompose into votes for Macron, Le Pen, or abstention on the 24th? It would seem to depend on how many voted Mlenchon as a blockade against both of the main candidates and therefore may abstain, or simply against Le Pen and therefore will vote Macron, how many believe in the protectionism of his program and are unbothered by the racism of Le Pen and will vote for her national preference socialism. How many voters will have really had enough of Macron and will give up, therefore allowing the far-right candidate to pass

The conversations in Paris: In any case, she has no chance of winning (not true); If she passes, she wouldnt have a majority in the National Assembly and shell be less able to pass laws than Macron (she wants to change the constitution for this reason); At least there will be better street mobilizations (at what cost, and then the afterthought); the Constitution; and then: It isnt a choice, between the aggressive neoliberalism of Macron and the fascism of Le Pen, Macron is just fascism by another name; All this falls a little flat now that the choice between the two candidates is upon France once again. There are those who sacralize abstention, and those who sacralize the vote. There are those who say, grit your teeth, its not a choice but you can choose the enemy you want to fight with. There are those who point out that although its a bad choice, there must be a strong street movement.

Monday, April 11, about 400 students occupied a wing of lUniversit de la Sorbonne following an antifascist general assembly called in response to the results of the first round of the elections. Elsewhere in Paris, a building of lcole Normale Suprieure (ENS, one of the grandes colesthe French equivalent of the Ivy league or Oxbridge) was also occupied. Paris 8, the university in the northern suburb of St Denis, was blockaded to demand the regularization of students without documents (whether from Ukraine or from other countries), against student precarity, the exploitation of workers at the university, and the inaction of the administration in the face of sexual and sexist violence. Both the communiqu of the Sorbonne and of the ENS, explained Our mobilization isnt about advising people to vote or to abstain, but about bringing to light the hatred of, and the current obfuscation of the stakes by, the two programs (Le Pen/Macron). The absence of what we want, and the danger our rights are put in, our fear of the future and of racist, sexist, sexual, classist, and queerphobic violence, omnipresent in the presidential campaign and in the programs of both candidates, have obliged us to react.

Many of the student communiqus outline the non-choice, but also emphasize that they dont endorse either voting (for Macron), or abstaining. These students see the situation as so dire that its understandable that people would want to build a dam against Le Pen, and also that they have trouble doing so since so many of Macrons policies have instituted harsh austerity and institutional racism.

Monday night, police surrounded the occupied Sorbonne and made it difficult for others to come and go freely. The occupation continued impressively throughout the week, however, further securing its place with general assemblies and public demonstrations in front of the building, and in the neighborhood, in support of the occupation. Students also sent out Subcommandante Marcos-esque video communiqus1 in which masked students explain their choice to protect their anonymity in view of the repressive strategies of the university administration. These students are very young, they have spent the last two years inside in springtime due to COVID measures which closed high schools and universities and moved classes online; for many it was their first experience of a student occupation, as a third-year philosophy student who had taken part explained to me.

On Thursday morning, students at Sciences Po, another grande cole, blockaded the university in the interests of visibilizing and affirming student demands, absent from the presidential campaign, and even more so from the second round.2 They highlighted that neither candidate responded to their worries about social justice, the environment, feminism, disability, racism, antifascism, the precariousness of student life and income, discrimination against non-European students; they wanted to reinsert these worries into public discourse. Thirty or so identitarian (far right) militants kicked these blockaders out, wearing balaclavas and screaming, Were at home here. According to a student witness, the left-wing students began running. The group La Cocarde tudiante, alongside some members of Generation Zemmour and lUNI (the nationalist student union, created in 1968 against the uprising, to reinstate order in the universities) dismantled the barricade aggressively, tweeting In the face of the inaction of the authorities we took things into our own hands. Everyone ran off. They should accept the verdict of the ballot box: their defeat!.

A 6pm demonstration of several hundred people demanding the regularization of students without French nationality at the Panthon tried to join the occupiers at the Sorbonne, just a few streets away. The police tear-gassed the place and there were a few fights, arrests, and injured. Police used the opportunity to evict the occupation, at the request of the university rectorate, and some of the occupiers did leave. The choice of the rectorate to close the university ahead of the holidays was understood as a choice to stop students from having spaces to organize in and to repress their mobilization against the elections. About fifty people remained inside, the police having conditioned their leaving with an identity check.

By 11 Thursday night, there was little trace of the occupation except for the police presence, which cordoned off rue St Jacques and rue Victor Cousin from the sparse presence of tourists, businessmen, and whoever the hell else would go drink in the Latin Quarter. Four young women were arguing with police on the Place de la Sorbonne, and a sadly draped banner clung to the bars on a high-up window. The splendid square was desolate and even the fountains were switched off. The police were obviously finding the experience of being harangued by four beautiful young zoomers perversely pleasurable. Unmanned police barricades cordoned off the square from the street. Behind these, heavily equipped riot police were dismantling a barricade made of chairs on rue Victor Cousin. Imagine that you wanted to be a cop for the fantasy of fighting crime, rescuing young women from peril, being a brutal and violent hero, and your job is to tidy up some school chairs? In violent retaliation against such humiliation, the cops sat down on the chairs and started taking selfies.

Around the back of the Sorbonne, on rue Toullier, a crowd of sweet- seeming zoomers remained until about midnight, waiting for their friends to leave the occupation, which was by now entirely over. Excuse me, a very responsible-seeming young person wearing a surgical mask asked us. Are any of the legal guardians of those still inside still here? Some of the people inside were, as the philosophy student I talked to had confirmed, very young16 and 17. They all wore surgical masks. Under the pressure of their presence, the few left inside were able to leave without being arrested or having their identities checked. Eventually they all came out, walked three meters down to the end of this small ruelle chanting, On est l! Mme si Macron le veut pas, nous on est l! Pour lhonneur des travailleurs et pour un monde meilleur, mme si Macron le veut pas, on est l (Were here! Even if Macron doesnt like it, we are here!). A fringe group tried Grve, blocage, manif sauvage! (Strike, blockade, illegal demo!) but it didnt really catch on. The liberated students seemed tired and happy to see their friends, they had very little air of defeat about them.

A very bourgeois looking young man with a shiny face and lips stained with red wine like a vampire came up and asked me if Im a demonstrator. I said, No. But theres a demonstration, he presses. I say, Yes, the Sorbonne was occupied and it looks like everyone will go home. But you were in the demonstration. Sadly, Noits the truthbesides theres an undertone to his question that I dont like. Who will you vote for? he asks aggressively, still trying to categorize me somewhere amongst the answers hes already made up for himself. He has a less aggressive friend with him. A pair of drunk 19-year-olds. I dont know if youve caught on to my accent, I say, but I cant vote.

He says, Yeah, you seem like youre from Eastern Europe. I dont know what he means by this; its something thats always been coded, and is currently coded differently. So I say, still using the formal vous, with a big smile but irritated by his mauvaise foi, You know what, you can go fuck yourself. I must have hurt his national pride somewhere deep, for he spit out: This country doesnt want you. Perhaps hes just a 19-year-old, perhaps hes a Macronist, or perhaps hes a budding far-right militantafter all, the 5th Arrondissement is their stomping ground. A few weeks ago Loik le Priol, former leader of the Groupe Union Defense, hunted down and shot the Argentinian rugby player Martin Aramburu dead in front of his hotel, after a bar fight which began with the rugby player intervening when Loik and his friends verbally abused a non-French homeless person asking for money in a bar. There are constant spats over territory between Paris Antifa and groups of fascists whove been trying to claim the neighborhood since 68. So, you know, you have to be wary. His friend persuades the guy bothering me to leave and he, still not having understood that none of us foreigners can vote, threatens, Youll choose, youll choose, on election day youll choose between Le Pen. Its not a choice! screams a young student, exhausted.

There was a demonstration against the extreme right on Saturday the 16th, starting at Nation, in which various positionssyndical and autonomous, for abstention and for voting for a strategic blockade against Le Penwere all represented. The demonstration was huge, calm, boring, lined with policea kind of moving kettle. As it reached its end at Rpublique, not much happened either. The spirit of anti-fascism was generalized beyond Antifaeveryone was chanting siamo tutti antifascist,i for exampleto the extent that the Antifa themselves were invisible. At the demonstration ran confusingly into a Pakistani pro-Imran Khan rally. The statue of La Rpublique was adorned in blue and yellow (for Ukraine) several weeks ago in a semi-environmentalist, semi anti-war protest. Some determined young black bloc people tried to amass bottles from recycling bins and were reproached by some moderate seeming demonstrators. Some people lit a fire. The absence of much of the habitual spectacular property damage made for a loud silence. It is the first spring that weve been outside without sworn declarations or curfews that confiscate the night, and I get the feeling that the normal spring movement in Paris is only just waking up.

Despite the administrative closure of the Sorbonne, the students had called for other universities and high schools to mobilize, starting from Tuesday 19. Lyces (high schools) Louis le Grand, Fenelon, Lamartine, Jean Jaurs, Henri IV, Monet, and Victor Hugo were all blockaded. On the way to the library I happened upon Lyce Lamartine which was joyfully blocked by a hundred or so high-school students, who had arranged themselves in a stunning tableau on top of bins that had been repurposed to block the doors of the school. They had signs reflecting the concerns of the last few years and about the election: Sorbonne everywhere, Paris Antifa, Black lives matter, along with banners articulating the problems raised for young people by both electoral programs. They were joining in on all kinds of rhythmic chants against Macron and Le Pen, but especially Le Pen. At one point they were yelling the words to Brurier noirs iconic 1985 punk song Porcherie: La Jeunesse Emmerde Le Front National.3 They were joyful and a beautiful presence, some masked, some with the retro goth makeup characteristic of zoomers and doomers. On the other side of the road from the students explicitly holding the fort, another fifty or so students stood looking on shyly yet proudly. Cars honked for them frequently, and several wandering high-schoolers did a good job of charming cars and trucks into honking as well: Klaxonne sil te plat!

I try to lock up my bike but concerned young girls in hijabs tell me that my bike will be in danger despite how peaceful the protest is. A young man comes up to me: Madame, would you like to lend me your bicycle so I can go buy fumignes (flares). I hesitate for two seconds, but he and his entourage have a mini assembly, and decide they should do this using Lime scooters since they need to take cash out first. I ask another boy with braces on his lower teeth how long hes been up. Since 6:30. I went and distributed leaflets at two lyces, and then I came here. How did they organize this? On Instagram, a call from the Sorbonne went out on Instagram so we decided to blockade. Was he, or others, in the Sorbonne occupation too? Not him, but he moves off when I tell him Im writing an article. I ask another with a backpack how long hes been here. Since 10am. I had no idea it was happening, no one told me. Its cool, though. Another tells me its the first time hes blockaded his high school, hes in seconde, he was too young to participate in blockades the last time. There are no police, just the school security guard or janitor standing idly by. A sympathetic teacher with long hair and a hoodie congratulates them on their efforts. A man who looks like a gilet jaune motorcyclist, wearing a RIC (Citizens' Initiative Referendum, promoted by Mlenchons party) button, looks on sentimentally. Its difficult to get hold of students to ask them more about it, and I dont want to kill their vibe, so cool and complete. Im less involved than the pair of Trotskyists with red scarves who have come to turn this tableau into permanent revolution.

A cross-university general assembly was planned that morning at University Paris 8. The university followed the example of the Sorbonne rectorate to stop it from happening, and closed the university. This was also the case at University Paris 4 at Clignancourt. Students called for a last-minute assembly at University Paris 7 Grand Moulins at midday and the CROUS (the body which takes care of student welfare, benefits, accommodation, and things like food stamps) was occupied by 200 students. Whereas administrative closures following blockades have in previously been seen as a victory of sorts, the shutdown of the post-COVID university infrastructure means that exams will nonetheless be held online.

On Wednesday April 20, students barricaded the Condorcet campus in the suburb of Aubervilliers, and held general assemblies or hung out on the roof. The police did not come to break up the occupation and it continued into the weekend. Although a security guard patrolled the front of the campus, he also opened the gate for visitors so that they would only have to climb one of the barricades, and not the fence. That night was the presidential debate.

Its very longtwo and a half hoursand timers in front of the candidates show how long theyve spoken. Marine Le Pen, too afraid to use the words gilets jaunes since shed publicly opposed them in 2018, nonetheless gestured at them: Monsieur Macron is afraid of the People. She positioned herself as the Peoples candidate, bringing out well-rehearsed statistics about buying power and inflation and pensions. Macron failed throughout the debate to point out how extreme is the side of the spectrum she occupies. It was like watching two technicians pick over the bureaucratic details of laws and policies. There were very few of the grand ideas, takings of positions, talk about literature and philosophy, or romanticisms that usually characterize the French presidential debate.

Marine Le Pen had had good media training; she smiled a lot and kept to her allotted time slot. Macron was aggressive and cut her off. Were you an alien who didnt understand anything of what was going on youd mainly notice that hes a very condescending person, you might want to throw your drink at him. Someone on Twitter called him a mansplainer. A sticky moment came over the war in Ukraine and Le Pens relationship with Putin.

Towards the end they spoke about immigration and Islam, where Marine Le Pen really revealed her true racism, and Macron presented himself as the most tolerant person in the world, obscuring the racist laws his government has passed. Its just a scarf, he said of the hijab; we arent going to send police officers after people for a scarf. You did for masks, Marine Le Pen quipped, referring to the COVID measures. Macron managed to incorporate this new burst of tolerance into a republican discourse: Its unconstitutional to deny people access to public space, and then tilted toward an extreme right-wing, clash of civilizations idea of Muslims as a violent underclass: If you went into the projects and took peoples scarves off, it would be a civil war.

70% of France's Muslims voted Mlenchon in the first tour so Macron would have been more than invested in publicly defending the image of himself as a tolerant centrist at this point in time. Under his rule Darmanin passed the Islamophobic separatism law and there has been all kinds of public hysteria about the headscarf, so this seemed disingenuous. That said, the move he made in his speech echoes the strategy of the law: it splits the community, creating an inner enemy out of Islamists as a way of assimilating, and gaining popularity in, the Muslim community. Hes nonetheless a safer president for foreigners and Muslims. Almost foaming at the mouth as Macron told her she was in contradiction with what it means to be French, wide-eyed, Le Pen lost the cool shed unnervingly managed to maintain throughout. At the end Macron actually thanked her, and said something about them not being so different, and something vague about the children being the future.

On election night, the polling stations close at 8pm, but the Belgian radio station RBTF, not bound by French law, releases exit polls and fairly accurate projected results long before, to the horror of French journalists and ministers, who say that this is undemocratic. Its true that voters who didnt want to vote for Macron might have depended on this information in deciding on whether to vote or not at all. By 5pm, it seemed he had won. He had a strong majority: 58.5%. The abstention rate, however, hasnt been so high since the elections after 1968. Marine Le Pen did a lot better in the Outre-Mer, which might be informed by the politics of the health pass: in Martinique (60.87%), Guadeloupe (69.60%) and Guyane (60.70%). The restrictions in the Outre-Mer were harsher, and there have been huge uprisings and general strikes, particularly in Guadeloupe, protests which amplified and were amplified by struggles against the (post-) colonial form of governance employed by metropolitan France, and by struggles against the use of poisonous pesticides such as Chlordcone in agriculture (in Martinique and Guadeloupe).

Demonstrations had been called in many cities, irrespective of the result. In Paris there were three: at the Panthon, Chatlet and Rpublique. The election fell on a holiday, Parisians were out of the city, and it felt like a non-event. La place de la Rpublique was deserted at 8pm. Thats to say, there were no protesters, just some drunk people yelling that they were from Cameroon and liked Macron, and hapless persons from Le Quotidien, wandering around and trying to find something to film. A man with a bicycle came up to us as we sat by the statue of the Republic trying to work out what to do next and said, So hes won. It was all planned from the beginning, do you find it normal? I ask if he means the exit polls, but no, he means the political blackmail people have been subjected to, about having to vote for Macron against Le Pen. He means the exceptional power that the president has in the constitutional structure of the 5th Republic, which Mlenchon had pledged to change. What do they talk about in the debate? Muslims, immigrants, do you find that normal? I say, no. I dont really know what his point is, hes preaching to the converted, and anyway I cant vote. Youre welcome here in France young lady, he says with great conviction.

We move to Chatlet, where there are the materials for a riotthat is, enough people and police amidst the shopping crowd that it looks like onebut it never quite materializes. The demonstrators are being chased in all directions by hordes of BRAV (Mad-max-esque police mounted double on motorbikes, one to chase you and one to hit you), and shiny new metallic grey police trucks (a present to the force?) which swirl around the Boulevard Sebastopol-Les Halles axis, as confused but more violent than the demonstrators. A crowd manages to gather on the boulevard Sebastopol, about 500 people, very young, yelling A-Anti-Anti-capitaliste, Ni Macron ni Macron ni Macron. Seemingly bourgeois Parisians from their windows even joined in chanting Siamo tutti antifascisti. Has the demonstration been forbidden? None of us know, in any case it feels impossible and dangerous to demonstrate, because of the increasingly militarized and belligerent character of the police under Macron. The demonstration runs without knowing why its running, cuts down side streets, and tries to make its way to Rpublique.

Initially there are violent charges and the BRAV circle the place. Everyone assumes their roles and places. The police, after these initial charges stay back and are unprovocative. The demonstration assembles slowly over several hours, a few hundred people chanting around the statue. I dont recognize anyone from other demonstrations Ive been to. From what I can make out, there is a presence of Paris Antifa Banlieue, groups of gilets jaunes, young students, lycens, some people (Trotskyists?) who have been singing the Internationale for several hours (they were singing it on Sebastopol as well), but there arent that many people. It feels rather despairing and confused; people certainly know why they are there, but there are no witnesses to their political understanding and conviction. At one point the demonstration makes a valiant attempt to break out, wild demo, to go somewhere as crowds often did from the same starting point years ago during Nuit Debout, but is pushed back by a violent police charge. Absolutely nothing feels possible.

Whispers in the crowd tell us it might want to go to the Champ de Mars, to the Eiffel tower where Macron is already celebrating. The last time he celebrated, a friend points out, it was at the Louvre, right in the center of Paris, and now hes acknowledged his distance from the People (or the paintings, or the patrimony, or the public character of the museum) and is way off in the more bourgeois reaches of the city. That evening a friend went through the Marais, and the people on the trrasses popped open champagne when the results came in, in complacent victory. The police semi-kettled the place and reinforced their ranks, their aim being a minimal amount of conflict, to get the largest number of people to go home through the still open Metro out of sheer boredom. The cops themselves are bored;they mock a few Italians for their accents as they try to leave, probably needled because their candidate didnt win. And as it gets later they begin to throw gas and grenades as the crowd gets smaller. Everyone eventually does go home.

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Between a Rock and a Hard Place The Brooklyn Rail - Brooklyn Rail

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