Daily Archives: July 7, 2022

Supreme Court is wrong privacy is in the Constitution – Southgate News Herald

Posted: July 7, 2022 at 9:26 am

The emphasis must be not on the right to abortion but on the right to privacy

Ruth Bader Ginsburg, late Supreme Court justice

Hello Downriver,

In the context of whats been happening in our country these past several years and more importantly, these last several weeks, two themes continue to resonate with me.

A right to privacy and minority rule.

Now, Ive written about both in the past, but current developments call for a revisit.

In its most recent rulings, the conservative-dominated Supreme Court has determined that theres no such thing because the phrase doesnt exist in the Constitution.

Their argument is that as supposed originalists if something doesnt appear in the document, it doesnt exist.

That if the Founders didnt include it when writing the Constitution, then we cant add it later.

Except.

Except that the right to privacy is found throughout the Bill of Rights; indeed, its the very foundation of those first 10 Amendments.

So, to ignore that is to either be blind or simply refuse to accept the obvious.

And if I get it, why cant they?

Answer: Its not convenient nor conducive to supporting their conservative agenda of rolling back the rights of Americans.

Think Im off base?

Well, consider the words found in the Bill of Rights (the first 10 Amendments).

In the First Amendment, the Constitution establishes the concepts of freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of the press, the right to assemble and the right to complain.

Whats important here is that freedom of religion and speech inherently imply a personal right; a right to have private beliefs that may not be infringed.

That a person has the right to have a private relationship with her/his faith; a right to personal, private thoughts that can be spoken aloud.

Neither right has to do with the collective mind; only the individual whereas the rights of the press and assembly in fact do deal with collective acts.

This means that Founders understood the concept of privacy and the need to protect private thoughts and beliefs.

The Second Amendment has long been construed to mean that individuals have a right to bear arms.

(Even though the Amendment doesnt say that at all.)

So, this is also a privacy issue.

The Third Amendment is specific to the time of the Constitutions enactment which came on the heels of British occupation of the colonies.

No soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in any house, without the consent of the owner, nor in time of war, but in a manner to be prescribed by law.

This Amendment clearly intends that a persons home is a private dwelling that cant just be invaded by an invading army.

The Fourth Amendment is by far the most revealing of the 10 in that it specifically says the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated unless theres a search warrant.

This right simply wouldnt apply if we didnt have a right to privacy; a right that cant be circumvented without the issuance of a court-ordered search warrant.

The Fifth Amendment says a lot, but it is most well-known for its protections against self-incrimination. But equally important, it also says we cant be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.

This clearly means we enjoy private lives and possess private things that cant just be taken away without due process.

Private equals privacy, doesnt it?

Skipping ahead to the Ninth Amendment (six, seven and eight have to do with criminal and civil trials and the issuance of bail and imposition of punishment), we find that the enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

In other words, just because every possible right isnt spelled out in the Constitution doesnt mean that right doesnt exist which is exactly contrary to the recent ruling by the Supreme Court in overturning Roe.

In its majority opinion, the conservative justices said the opposite; that if a right wasnt spelled out 234 years ago then it doesnt exist.

Yet the 1oth Amendment reinforces the Ninth in refuting that point: The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.

In short, the ultimate right of each of us to live as Americans resides within each of us as personal, private individuals.

It resides in those unalienable rights Jefferson wrote about in the Declaration of Independence we celebrated on Monday.

It means we inherently possess a right to be private individuals, with private, personal beliefs, a private right to self-determination and therefore an accompanying right to privacy.

Self-determination.

Thats a phrase some may not be familiar with, but Id argue youre very familiar with its usage in everyday life.

For example, how many times have you heard a parent, teacher and even politicians encourage young people to be all they can be?

Heck, it even became a recruitment pitch for the U.S. Army.

Likewise, how many women have told girls that theres no limit to their futures?

How many adults have insisted that a child could one day grow up to be president of the United States?

Each of those is an example of how our society routinely inspires our young to pursue careers of their choice, to follow their dreams.

In short, invoke the very idea of self-determination.

Yet, in overturning Roe, the Supreme Court has now placed a limit on that pursuit; that once a girl reaches child-bearing age, certain goals and dreams may no longer be an option.

That should a girl as young as 12 become pregnant, there are no choices anymore; self-determination has been corrupted into a state-ordered determination.

Its as if Platos Republic has come to pass, with each young girl and woman now slotted into a role dictated by government fiat.

Goodbye self-determination.

Yes, yes, Im no constitutional scholar, but I do have a working, rational brain and can read English and decipher common word usage.

So, whats the problem with the six majority members of the Supreme Court when it comes to privacy and a right to self-determination?

Oh, thats right, its not about language and law and the Constitution for them its about ideology and partisan politics.

No wonder the high court has such low ratings, and is skirting with becoming illegitimate and ignored.

Next: Minority rule how it went from a Founders compromise to todays abomination.

Craig Farrand is a former managing editor of The News-Herald Newspapers. He can be reached at cfarrandudm@yahoo.com.

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Supreme Court is wrong privacy is in the Constitution - Southgate News Herald

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Its a sham: fears over Trump loyalists election integrity drive – The Guardian US

Posted: at 9:26 am

A conservative group called the America Project that boasts Donald Trump loyalists and big lie pushers Roger Stone and Michael Flynn as key advisers, has begun a self-styled election integrity drive to train activists in election canvassing and poll-watching, sparking fears from voting rights watchdogs about voter intimidation.

Patrick Byrne, the multimillionaire co-founder of the America Project, has said he has donated almost $3m to launch the drive, dubbed Operation Eagles Wings, with a focus on eight states including Arizona, Michigan and Pennsylvania, which Trump lost, plus Texas and Florida, which he won.

The drive was unveiled in late February at a press event where Byrne touted plans to educate election reform activists to handle election canvassing, grassroots work and fundraising to expose shenanigans at the ballot box in what has echoes of Trumps false claims that the 2020 election was rigged, and could become a sequel to those charges.

Byrne, for instance, has said the operations mission is to make sure that there are no repeats of the errors that happened in the 2020 election, and stressed the need to protect the voting process from election meddlers who care only about serving crooked special interest groups that neither respect nor value the rule of law.

But voting rights advocates have voiced sharp criticism of Operation Eagles Wings, calling it a sham, given the roles of Stone, Flynn, Byrne and others, and warning that it could lead to voter harassment at the polls and suppress legitimate votes.

To lead the fledgling operation, the America Project recruited Tim Meisburger, an ex-Trump official in the US Agency for International Development: Meisburger left the agency abruptly under a cloud in mid-January 2021 after a video surfaced of him falsely informing staffers that the Capitol attack was mostly peaceful except for a few violent people, and that several million people were demonstrating peacefully for election reforms.

Overall, the America Project has boasted that its total funding is greater than $8m, including donations from Byrne, the ex-chief executive of Overstock.

Byrne declined to respond to queries from the Guardian about what roles election canvassers were being trained to take on, and what the operation had done to date in its targeted states.

Voting rights watchdogs say the new election integrity operation has an Orwellian quality, and poses dangers to voting rights and fair elections given the people who are so prominently associated with it.

Michael Flynn and Roger Stone have repeatedly proven themselves to be enemies of democracy, Sean Morales-Doyle, the acting director of the voting rights and elections program at the Brennan Center, told the Guardian.

He added: While it is not clear what exactly they will ask their election reform activists to do, their claimed pursuit of election integrity is a sham, aimed instead at undermining public faith in our elections and setting the stage for future attempts to subvert the will of the people. The conspiracy theories they espouse would be laughable if they werent so dangerous.

Flynn, a retired army lieutenant general who served briefly as Trumps national security adviser, and Stone, a longtime Trump confidant and self-proclaimed master of political dirty tricks, were in the vanguard of Trump loyalists promoting falsehoods about Joe Bidens 2020 win.

In mid-December 2020, for instance, Flynn suggested on the conservative network Newsmax that Trump could use the military to rerun the elections in several key states that Trump falsely claimed were rigged, and a few days later he attended a White House meeting with Trump, Byrne and other allies, where more wild schemes were discussed.

Stone spoke at a pro-Trump rally on 5 January and the next morning was at the Willard hotel, which Trump loyalists had used as a base for plotting ways to overturn the election, accompanied by several Oath Keeper bodyguards, some of whom participated in the Capitol assault and now face criminal charges.

At the rally on 5 January, Stone lavished praise on Trumps allies who were there protesting, calling it a historic occasion, because were mad as hell and we arent going to take it.

Flynn and Stone received pardons from Trump after they were convicted as part of the Russian 2016 election meddling investigations, including charges of lying to the FBI in Flynns case, and obstruction of a congressional committee in Stones.

Not surprisingly, the Trump loyalists were subpoenaed by the House panel investigating the January 6 assault on the Capitol by hundreds of Trump supporters, but according to reports Stone and Flynn each repeatedly invoked their fifth amendment right against self-incrimination.

In a video clip of a Flynn deposition that the House panel played last week, Flynn was even seen pleading the fifth when asked if he supported the lawful transfer of presidential power, and if he thought the Capitol violence was wrong.

When Byrne first announced Operation Eagles Wings, Flynn and Stone were introduced as special advisers. If I didnt think this had a chance to succeed I wouldnt have gotten involved, Stone said.

Theres little doubt Byrnes checkbook can bolster the fledgling election operation.

Byrne, who falsely claimed that the 2020 election was rigged, and wrote a book entitled The Deep Rig, was the lead financier in tandem with the America Project to the tune of $3.25m of a controversial audit last year of Arizonas largest county that Trump was banking on to prove fraud but that confirmed Biden won.

The Byrne-backed Eagles Wings operation has touted plans to offer commentary on current election policies to ensure Americans have access to fact-based truths about the election process.

Before launching its new operation, the America Project boasted that last year it recruited 4,500 volunteers to monitor polling stations during the gubernatorial race in Virginia where Republican Glenn Youngkin defeated Democrat Terry McAuliffe, a former governor.

In Virginia, the America Project has forged ties with Virginians for America First, a local group started by Leon Benjamin, a black pastor who in 2020 lost a race for a House seat by a whopping 23 points. Benjamin, who is running for a House seat again this fall, would not concede, citing potential voter fraud, in an echo of Trumps bogus fraud claims.

Last fall, Byrne and Flynns brother Joe, the president of the America Project, attended a fundraiser in Richmond, Virginia, for Benjamins group, to coincide with its release of a report calling for new curbs on voting, including ending early voting and absentee voting, and requiring voter IDs.

Besides their roles with Eagles Wings, Flynn and Stone have been featured speakers along with rightwing pastors at ReAwaken America, which involves revival-style rallies in many states that have spread falsehoods that Trump lost due to fraud, and a distorted view of Americas separation of church and state.

At a ReAwaken rally last November in Texas, Flynn claimed America should have just one religion prompting heavy criticism from religious leaders and others.

If we are going to have one nation under God, which we must, we have to have one religion, Flynn said. One nation under God, and one religion under God, right?

Adam Taylor, the president of the Christian social justice group Sojourners, told the Guardian that Flynn has a warped understanding of religion and American history.

Similarly, criticism is mounting in Republican quarters about the roles of Stone and Flynn with their latest election integrity drive.

Veteran Republican operative Charlie Black, who once was a lobbying partner of Stones, noted that Flynn used to have one of the highest intelligence jobs in the government, but now he spouts conspiracy theories with no evidence to back them up. So does Roger, but he has done this for a while. Read his books for examples.

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Its a sham: fears over Trump loyalists election integrity drive - The Guardian US

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Why Are the Police So Bad at Solving Murders? – The Atlantic

Posted: at 9:26 am

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American violence is resurgent. Gun murders rose to their highest figure on record in 2020, the last year for which we have complete data. While violent crime is rising, Americas police departments are struggling more than ever to bring the perpetrators to justice.

In the 1960s, more than 90 percent of all homicides were cleared by police, with an arrest or the identification of a dead suspect. But the clearance rate has declined in each of the past six decades. In the most recent data available from the FBI, the clearance rate hit an all-time low of just over 50 percent. That means that about half of all murders in the United States today go unsolved.

On the latest episode of my podcast, Plain English, I spoke with the crime analyst Jeff Asher to understand whats driving the long-term decline in the clearance rate and why the police seem so bad at solving new murders. This conversation has been edited for clarity and brevity.

Derek Thompson: What is the clearance rate?

Jeff Asher: When the FBI calculates clearance rate, the denominator is murders in a given year. The numerator is the number of murders that were solved either by arrest or by exception. Exception means theyve identified the murderer but for whatever reason, they cant arrest that person, because its murder suicide, or the person died a decade ago, or the killer is already in prison in another state.

Thompson: Youd agree that the fact this number has declined from 90 percent in the 1960s to 50 percent today is a trend thats worth paying attention to, right?

Asher: Absolutely. In the last two decades, when we have no reason to suspect that theres been any change in how the datas reported, we still see a decline. Its a real trend that police agencies are reporting fewer and fewer murders being cleared each year.

Thompson: Lets get into the reasons. Was the clearance rate in the 1960s so high because mid-century police were so good at their jobs? Or was it because of something else?

Asher: Most people agree that you should not rely on the 1960s dataor, really, much of the 1970s data. Hundreds of cities were reporting a 90 to 100 percent clearance rate, but these places probably werent solving anywhere close to this many murders.

Thompson: Ive seen statistics showing that before the 1970s, it was very common for police agencies dealing with lots of murders to claim theyd solved practically all of them. Today, the number of agencies claiming that is basically zero. Were the 1960s numbers a total fabrication because police were throwing innocent people in jail, or because they were making up statistics to report to the FBI?

Asher: Its probably both. In the pre-Miranda erathe 60s, 50s, 40spolice departments had a lot less scrutiny. It's hard to say what percentage of their arrests were bad arrests, or what percentage of them were bad exceptions. But those numbers are just so implausible.

Thompson: You just mentioned a second factor, which is the 1966 U.S. Supreme Court case Miranda vs Arizona. The Supreme Court ruled that the Fifth Amendment guarantees citizens certain rights when theyre being questioned by police. This led to the famous norm of Miranda rights: You have the right to remain silent. How important is Miranda in explaining the declining clearance rate?

Asher: Miranda improved the rights of many people who may or may not be innocent. You can see that if you look at the years before Miranda, you have a 90 percent murder clearance rate, and then after Miranda, theres a 20 percent decline in the national clearance rates. So it was clearly an important factor. But if it were the only factor, you wouldve expected the clearance rate to fall off a cliff and stay very low. Instead, we saw a gradual decline over 60 years.

Thompson: I think a lot of people who learn that police solve fewer and fewer murders every decade will say that police are simply bad at their jobs. But when we put your first two explanations together, it suggests, again, that a lot of these mid-century convictions were bogus, or attained by unethical practices, and the decline in clearance conceals an increase in police ethics. Is that a fair interpretation?

Asher: I think thats fair. I think that when we talk about this problem, we really have to look at it in two ways. One is the 60-year decline in clearance since the 1960s. That has a lot to do with false statistics and Miranda. The second is the 30-year decline from the 1990s that were currently experiencing. Thats more complicated.

Thompson: This brings us to explanation No. 3: How much of this is about guns?

Asher: In the 1960s, about 50 percent of murders were committed with guns. Today, almost 80 percent of murders are committed with guns. And the share of murders committed by firearms has crept up at a nearly identical rate to the steady decline of murder clearances. Correlation does not equal causation, but if you plot the two together, you see a very strong correlation in the last 40 years.

And the reason is that firearm murders are much harder to solve. They take place from farther away. You often have fewer witnesses. Theres less physical evidence. Theres a great retired LAPD detective, John Skaggs, a character from the terrific book Ghettoside, who describes ground-ball murders. Like an easy ground ball in baseball, these are self-solvers. The police walk in and they find the husband with the bloody knife in his hand, and the spouses body is below him. The police dont do anything to solve this; the case solves itself. Most of these self-solvers are non-firearm murders. So a higher share of gun violence can lead to a lower clearance rate.

Thompson: I want to move on to explanation No. 4, which is higher standards from district attorneys and juries. Is it possible that in an age of DNA evidence and true-crime podcasts and CSI shows, juries expect more physical evidence, which raises the bar for detectives? Has the evidence standard increased in the last few decades?

Asher: I think this theory makes sense. I want to be clear that the clearance rate has nothing to do with whether the DA accepts the charges. But prosecutors want to win. And if theyve been refuted by jurors because the bar is higher, it would make sense that [their reluctance gets passed down to] the police. Cops are less likely to make an arrest if they dont think they have the evidentiary base that the DA will accept. That said, we dont have great data to know for sure if this is a big deal.

Thompson: Explanation No. 5 is racism. Ive seen evidence that the clearance rate for Black victims in the last few decades has gone down while the clearance rate for white victims has gone up. That is, the cops are better at solving crimes when the victim is white, and as Black Americans make up a larger share of murder victims, the police solve fewer crimes.

Asher: There is obviously racism in the criminal-justice system and in policing. But are police getting more racist every decade, for 60 years? I dont know. We dont have clearance rates broken down by race as clearly as you suggest. Its true that there has been a huge surge in Black shooting victims since 2020. That might help explain some of the decline last year. But it doesnt explain decades worth of declines.

Thompson: How do you feel about this explanation: As Black victims of gun murders have increased as a share of all gun-murder victims, the poor relations between Black Americans and police officers have made it harder for the police to get evidence about who might have committed these murders. And therefore, the impression, often accurate, of police being racist feeds into Black Americans being less responsive to and less cooperative with police, which then feeds into a lower clearance rate for Black victims of gun homicides.

Asher: Thats the entire thesis of Jill Leovys Ghettoside. I think that its certainly plausible. There are certain neighborhoods where the police just dont solve murders. In New Orleans, 90 percent of murders in the French Quarter are going to be solved. A mile away in the Seventh Ward, maybe 15 percent of those cases are being solved. The geography of murder is very important. Certain communities dont trust the police. They dont trust the state. They take things into their own hands. And it sort of creates a cycle of violence thats very difficult to interrupt, because you dont have that initial layer of trust in the police to have a monopoly on violence.

Thompson: I wonder if some police are just not doing their jobs. Is it possible the quality of detective work is just much worse than it used to be? Police today spend much of their time clearing homelessness or responding to mental-health crises in downtown areas. Thats not being a detective. Thats being a social worker with a gun in your pocket.

Asher: This isnt something we can measure in a satisfying way. But something weve seen is police numbers dwindling or flatlining while violence has increased. Lets say you have 30 detectives who are investigating 150 murders. Thats five murders per detective, which is the standard. But if violence doubles and some officers leave to retire or go work in the suburbs, 250 murders among 25 officers is 10 cases per person. Now youre going to have a harder time solving murders. And I think that youre probably seeing some of that, especially since 2020.

Thompson: I count six possible explanations for the decline in the clearance rate. One: The 1960s numbers were bunk. Two: The effects of Miranda. Three: Guns. Four: Higher standards from juries and DAs. Five: Racism and distrust between police and Black communities. Six: Fewer and overextended police officers. With the understanding that crime data is imperfect and that these are all hypotheses, which one explains most of the decline in clearance over the last 30 years?

Asher: Its the guns. The nature of murder in America is changing in ways that we dont really talk about enough. Youve got a bunch of cities where firearms make up 80 to 90 percent of murders today. That is the main driver. Guns makes murders much harder to solve, and it leads to lower clearance rates everywhere.

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Why Are the Police So Bad at Solving Murders? - The Atlantic

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Texas police destroy home, then try to leave without paying – Washington Examiner

Posted: at 9:26 am

Police took no chances when an armed intruder barricaded himself in the home of an innocent bystander in McKinney, Texas. Following a seven-hour standoff, officers launched a shock-and-awe raid that ended with the suspects suicide. Then they closed the case without paying for property damage.

The city told homeowner Vicki Baker that she was out of luck. So did her insurance company, which covers natural disasters but not deliberate police actions. The broken windows, smashed doors, punctured walls, tear gas-stained fabrics, and flattened backyard fence were her problem even though Baker had nothing to do with the crime and no connection to the intruder other than hiring him in the past as a handyman.

Normally the judicial system sanctions such shirking of responsibility. Federal courts have said for decades that forcing law enforcement agencies to pay for what they break in the course of their duties was legally impossible. But Baker tried anyway. She filed a constitutional lawsuit with representation from our public interest law firm, the Institute for Justice, and scored an underdog victory on June 22.

For the first time in U.S. history, a jury awarded a property owner damages under the Fifth Amendment's takings clause, which requires the government to provide just compensation when it takes property for public use. Now, in at least one jurisdiction, the government will have to follow the same rule as schoolchildren: Clean up your own mess.

Author Robert Fulghum imagines the implications in his classic essay, All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten: Think what a better world it would be if all governments had a basic policy to always put things back where they found them and to clean up their own mess. The courtesy seems obvious to Baker, who gave the police permission to enter her home but not to destroy it.

The ordeal started on July 25, 2020, when a former handyman showed up with a 15-year-old hostage and took control of the property as a hideout. Baker was not inside. She had moved to Montana and was in the process of selling the home. But her adult daughter, who was helping to get the property ready, found herself caught in the middle.

After getting permission to leave under the pretext of needing groceries, the daughter called Baker, and together, they called the police. The intruder later released his hostage unharmed, but Bakers house sustained nearly $60,000 in damages. After hearing the facts, the jury said she was entitled to the full amount.

The decision followed a favorable ruling in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, where Judge Amos Mazzant III picked apart the citys arguments for why it should not have to compensate Baker. Essentially, the judge ruled that when a city enforces its laws in the public interest, then the public should share the costs of intentional, foreseeable damage. The full burden should not fall on one unlucky bystander.

The courts were not so kind to Leo and Alfonsina Lech when an armed shoplifter randomly chose their Colorado home for a police standoff in 2015. A SWAT team left the property uninhabitable. But when the Lechs sued for damages, the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals invented a special Fifth Amendment exemption for the police, and the Supreme Court declined to consider the case.

Shaniz West also got nothing in Idaho after officers bombarded her empty house in 2014 during a search for her fugitive ex-boyfriend. And the Jacksonville Sheriffs Office initially told Robert Vansickle no in Florida when he sought compensation for property damage following a 2021 police standoff in his neighborhood.

Vansickle shamed the police in the media until local officials relented and paid for repairs. Baker needed a lawsuit and two years of legal wrangling to get the same result. Yet payment for intentional, foreseeable damage should be automatic.

The Fifth Amendment is clear: Private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation. Even a kindergartner can understand the logic.

JeffreyRedfernis an attorney, and Daryl James is a writer at the Institute for Justice in Arlington, Virginia.

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Texas police destroy home, then try to leave without paying - Washington Examiner

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The US Supreme Court: what is its role and its powers? – The Conversation

Posted: at 9:26 am

The US Supreme Court is in the news around the world. The reason: a series of decisions which are already having and will continue to have a massive impact on the lives of ordinary Americans.

The Dobbs v Jackson Womens Health Organization ruling gathered the most coverage, hardly surprising for a decision which overturned Roe v Wade and ended national protection for accessing abortion services after 49 years. But the day before, on June 23, the court also expanded the right to publicly carry weapons (in the aftermath of two mass shooting events and the passage of the first federal gun control legislation since the 1990s).

It has also fundamentally reinterpreted the relationship between church and state, by lowering what has for decades been described as the wall of separation between the institutions of government and those of the church. Holding that excluding religion from government consideration discriminates against people of faith. The ruling makes even more religion in public life possible.

And the court also restricted the power of federal agencies to take actions not explicitly handed to them by Congress. It held that the Environmental Protection Agency, a national government body, cannot regulate carbon emissions from coal-fired power plants. This could severely restrict US president Joe Bidens climate change agenda if states are no longer bound by strict carbon emissions limits.

In all of these cases the three conservative justices appointed by former president Donald Trump (Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, Amy Coney Barrett) were in the majority, with the courts three liberals (Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan) in the minority.

The court sits at the top of the nations legal system. On the lower level are the trial courts, those that initially hear cases, often with a jury. Then there are a level of appeals courts which hear challenges to the result or the procedure followed by the trial court. Each state then has its own supreme court responsible for interpreting state laws and constitutions. If, however, a case involves federal law or the US constitution, the document which created and governs the system of government, the parties may appeal to the supreme court.

The chances of cases reaching the supreme court are small. It is asked to review more than 8,000 cases every year and only generally accepts around 60-70 of those. The cases that do make it, though, are usually important. Since 1925 the nine justices who make up the court have held the power to decide which cases they hear. Since then, cases must meet certain criteria to be heard by the court. They must pose a substantial question of federal (national) law; there must be a genuine dispute; and there must be a legal remedy that falls within the power of the court. Understanding the court often means understanding why it took a particular case at a particular moment in time.

Judicial review is the term given to the courts power to review legislation that potentially conflicts with either federal law or the constitution, including any of the 27 amendments made since it was originally written. Among the most significant of these are the rights to freedom of religion, speech, and press (first amendment), the right to bear arms (second amendment), and the right to silence (fifth amendment).

Article III of the constitution implies the power of judicial review, since it states the powers of a supreme court shall extend to disputes under the constitution and the laws of the nation.

Those who wrote the constitution hoped to ensure the court could act as a check and a balance on the other government branches. They were fearful of creating an overly powerful central government similar to that of Britain, against which they had just fought a revolution.

Read more: The Supreme Court has curtailed EPA's power to regulate carbon pollution and sent a warning to other regulators

Judicial review was firmly established in an 1803 case, Marbury v Madison. There, the then chief justice, John Marshall, declared that not only was the constitution superior to all other ordinary legislation, but that when there was doubt about whether laws were in conflict with constitutional provisions it was the courts role to adjudicate. It is emphatically the province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is, Marshall wrote.

The modern power of the court dates from this decision. And, although deciding the meaning of the constitution makes up a small proportion of the courts work, the principles involved are often so crucial and so divisive that these are the cases which most often make the headlines.

The court has never been far from the major political issues of the day. Marshall pushed the court towards support of greater federal power at the expense of the states, one of the fundamental questions shaping the new nation. In the middle of the 19th century, when the nation was riven by the question of slavery, a court dominated by southern slave-holding justices ruled in Dred Scott v Sandford that the constitution never intended to extend citizenship to people of African descent. The ruling deepened the tensions that led to the American Civil War.

Half a century later, in another decision widely condemned today, the court ruled that it did not violate the constitution to have separate but equal public services based on race, in this instance railroad carriages. This effectively gave legal sanction to the Jim Crow laws that would keep the southern states segregated until the court reversed itself in Brown v Board of Education in 1954. And, in the mid-1930s, as Congress and the then president, Franklin Roosevelt, sought to address the economic crisis of the Great Depression with a legislative programme known as the New Deal, a conservative court repeatedly struck down core programmes until a shift in 1936 saw the justices reverse this course. Shortly afterwards a series of retirements allowed Roosevelt to make a series of new appointments who were more sympathetic to his legislative program.

But especially in the period known as the rights revolution from the late 1950s through to the early 1970s, the court extended constitutional protections to unpopular and marginalised minorities otherwise ignored or hurt by legislatures. Jehovahs Witnesses, Seventh-Day Adventists and other religious minorities benefited from the courts broad readings of the first amendments protections for free exercise of religion.

The court also expanded protections for those in the criminal justice system, including the right to silence and the right to a lawyer, both considered basic in todays society. It ensured access to contraception for married and then single women, protected many of the gains won by the civil rights movement, and ensured fair practices in voting.

In more recent years the court has also found a constitutional right to same-sex marriage and held that the 1964 Civil Rights Act protects LGBTQ+ workers from discrimination.

The supreme court is not inherently liberal or conservative, progressive or dogmatic. As an appeals court it can only respond to the cases brought before it, and those reflect the politics, culture and temperament of the times.

The court is the product of its time and the people who constitute it at any given moment. It is shaped by individuals, usually lawyers, appointed by the sitting president when a justice retires, or dies. As such, it is never entirely removed from the political process. It has been both benefit and hindrance to the US. It has protected and trampled the rights of minorities, expanded and limited the power of the federal government, resisted and encouraged social change.

The current controversies are not new. The court has been at or near the centre of national debates since its founding. Its role as a branch of government and the power of judicial review ensure it will continue to be part of controversies large and small for decades to come.

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The US Supreme Court: what is its role and its powers? - The Conversation

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Big lie harassment continues to take its toll in Nevada The Nevada Independent – The Nevada Independent

Posted: at 9:26 am

You may have missed the recent story on the resignation of Washoe County Registrar of Voters Deanna Spikula, who departed after 15 years on the job.

Prior to her announcement, Spikula had taken a leave of absence after receiving threats at her office from promoters of baseless claims of voter fraud. The pressure faced by Spikula and other county registrars and clerks responsible for election security in Nevada has been intense and continues even as Donald Trumps big lie continues to collapse in scandal.

In a week that saw a former White House insider calmly tell the House Jan. 6 committee that former President Trump knew many of his supporters were armed on the day they stormed the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to disrupt the peaceful transfer of power, the departure of a respected protector of one Nevada countys election didnt rate as a top-line news event.

Maybe it should have.

It was one more troubling reminder that Trumps big lie about widespread voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election continues to take a toll in Nevada. Its a fever that shows little sign of breaking as the 2022 campaign grinds on.

Not when sour grapes also-ran candidates can still attract crowds for their angry laments about how the primary vote was tainted. Not when Republican Party candidates for Nevadas top offices continue to tout their Trump endorsements and fail to distance themselves from a parade conspiracy of enablers.

Nor can we expect a better day when Nevadas role in Trumps fake electors scandal continues to hit close to home. Beyond Republican State Party Chairman Michael McDonald recently having his cell phone confiscated by federal investigators in connection with the Jan. 6 investigation, fellow phony elector signatory Durward James Hindle III managed to get elected clerk-treasurer in Storey County. That means one of the promoters of Trumps voter fraud scheme will be in charge of that countys election security.

Other imbibers of potent conspiracy swill include Jim Marchant, who sees a ghost in every Dominion voting machine and yet easily prevailed in his partys primary for secretary of state. He continues to campaign on the big lie throughout the rurals.

Say that Hindle represents a county populated by fewer voters than fit into a busy Walmart, that nearly empty Esmeralda Countys recent ballot hand count was kind of quaint, and that Marchant has canaries circling his head, but admit these numbers are adding up.

Its easy to laugh at super Trumper gubernatorial candidate and former boxer Joey Gilbert declaring I wuz robbed due to voter fraud and demanding a self-funded recount in the recent Republican primary. He lost to Joe Lombardo by only 26,000 votes!

Democrats seem confident its a sign that Lombardo is struggling to rally the partisans. Nevada Democratic Victory spokesperson Mallory Payne: With Joey Gilbert dead set on overturning the election, Lombardos own party is ensuring he faces a brutal general election.

That makes sense. But just remember Gilberts continued whimpering about fraud also keeps the fires of conspiracy stoked in the GOPs big lie base. And when candidates are constantly jawing about rigged elections, it erodes faith in the system and as weve seen makes grievance litigation no matter how specious a lot more likely.

Perhaps it was all to be expected from a party that ate one of its own when it censured Republican Secretary of State Barbara Cegavske for displaying the courage of her convictions by not going along with the GOPs voter fraud charade. Surely Cegavske feels Spikulas pain.

Maybe this shouldnt be surprising at a time Nevadas top-of-the-ticket Republicans continue to trumpet their Trump endorsements even as his criminal behavior comes into sharp relief.

As if U.S. Senate candidate Adam Laxalts unwavering fealty toward Trump werent enough, the state GOPs super star doesnt appear to have distanced himself from the endorsement of big lie soldier Mike Flynn. Thanks to the efforts of the Jan. 6 committee, weve learned Flynn repeatedly invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination in connection with the failed coup attempt.

Flynns endorsement of Laxalt was a dog whistle to all those who still imagine the election was stolen and that the violent attempted insurrection was a price paid in the name of liberty. Or some such hogwash.

Somewhat perplexing is the political holding pattern of gubernatorial nominee Lombardo, who is in the awkward position of being endorsed by Trump and embraced by former cop McDonald, the walking ethics scandal. So far top lawman Lombardo has, politically speaking, invoked his own right to remain silent. Well see how long he can keep smiling while holding his nose.

Deanna Spikula will move on, and I hope enjoy brighter days when right-wing extremists and gutless social media trolls tire of menacing her.

We owe her and others who professionally secure our elections a debt of gratitude and a promise to stand up for them.

John L. Smith is an author and longtime columnist. He was born in Henderson and his familys Nevada roots go back to 1881. His stories have appeared in Time, Readers Digest, The Daily Beast, Reuters, Ruralite and Desert Companion, among others. He also offers weekly commentary on Nevada Public Radio station KNPR.

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BLONDER TONGUE LABORATORIES INC : Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement, Creation of a Direct Financial Obligation or an Obligation under an…

Posted: at 9:26 am

Item 1.01 Entry into a Material Definitive Agreement.

As previously disclosed, on October 25, 2019, Blonder Tongue Laboratories, Inc.(the "Company"), R. L. Drake Holdings, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of theCompany, Blonder Tongue Far East, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Companyand MidCap Business Credit LLC ("MidCap") entered into a Loan and SecurityAgreement (All Assets) (the "Original Agreement"), which was subsequentlyamended by a Consent and Amendment to Loan Agreement and Loan Documents dated asof April 7, 2020 (the "First Amendment"), a Second Amendment to Loan Agreementdated as of January 8, 2021 (the "Second Amendment"), a Third Amendment to LoanAgreement dated as of June 14, 2021 (the "Third Amendment"), a Fourth Amendmentto Loan Agreement dated as of July 30, 2021 (the "Fourth Amendment"), a FifthAmendment to Loan Agreement dated as of August 26, 2021 (the "Fifth Amendment"),a Sixth Amendment to Loan Agreement dated as of December 16, 2021 (the "SixthAmendment," a Seventh Amendment to Loan Agreement dated as of February 11, 2022(the "Seventh Amendment"), an Eighth Amendment to Loan Agreement dated as ofMarch 3, 2022 (the "Eighth Amendment"), a Ninth Amendment to Loan Agreementdated as of April 5, 2022 (the "Ninth Amendment"), a Tenth Amendment to LoanAgreement dated as of May 5, 2022 (the "Tenth Amendment") and an EleventhAmendment to Loan Agreement dated as of June 14, 2022 (the "Eleventh Amendment")together with the Original Agreement, the First Amendment, the Second Amendment,the Third Amendment, the Fourth Amendment, the Fifth Amendment, the SixthAmendment, the Seventh Amendment, the Eighth Amendment, the Ninth Amendment, theTenth Amendment and the Eleventh Amendment, (the "Loan Agreement").

The parties have entered into a Twelfth Amendment to Loan Agreement, dated as ofJuly 1, 2022 ("Twelfth Amendment"), to, among other things, modify the LoanAgreement's definition of "Borrowing Base" to extend the Company's WIP advanceand the amortization of the Company's overadvance facility until July 15, 2022.All other substantive terms of the Loan Agreement continue in full force andeffect.

The foregoing summary of the Twelfth Amendment is not complete and is qualifiedin its entirety by reference to the full text of the Twelfth Amendment, which isattached as Exhibit 10.1 to this Current Report on Form 8-K and is incorporatedherein by reference. In addition, the Original Agreement is attached as anexhibit to our Current Report on Form 8-K filed on October 30, 2019, the FirstAmendment is attached as an exhibit to our Current Report on Form 8-K filed onApril 9, 2020, the Second Amendment is attached as an exhibit to our CurrentReport on Form 8-K filed on January 11, 2021, the Third Amendment is attached asan exhibit to our Current Report on Form 8-K filed on June 15, 2021 the FourthAmendment is attached as an exhibit to our Current Report on Form 8-K filed onAugust 2, 2021, the Fifth Amendment is attached as an exhibit to our CurrentReport on Form 8-K filed on August 30, 2021, the Sixth Amendment is attached asan exhibit to our Current Report on Form 8-K filed on December 17, 2021, theSeventh Amendment is attached as an exhibit to our Current Report on Form 8-Kfiled on February 15, 2022, the Eighth Amendment is attached as an exhibit toour Current Report on Form 8-K filed on March 4, 2022, the Ninth Amendment isattached as an exhibit to our Current Report on Form 8-K filed on April 8, 2022,the Tenth Amendment is attached as an exhibit to our Current Report on Form 8-Kfiled on May 5, 2022 and the Eleventh Amendment is attached as an exhibit to ourCurrent Report on Form 8-K filed on June 15, 2022. We encourage you to read eachof the Original Agreement, the First Amendment, the Second Amendment, the ThirdAmendment, the Fourth Amendment, the Fifth Amendment, the Sixth Amendment, theSeventh Amendment, the Eighth Amendment, the Ninth Amendment, the TenthAmendment, the Eleventh Amendment and the Twelfth Amendment in its entirety.

Item 2.03 Creation of a Direct Financial Obligation or an Obligation under an

The information contained in Item 1.01 above with respect to the TwelfthAmendment is hereby incorporated by reference into this Item 2.03. Upon adefault under the Loan Agreement, as amended, including the non-payment ofprincipal or interest, the obligations of the borrower may be accelerated andMidCap may pursue its rights under the Loan Agreement, as amended, and therelated pledge agreement, security agreement and guaranty agreement, and underthe Uniform Commercial Code and/or any other applicable law or in equity.

Edgar Online, source Glimpses

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Henry Kyereme: Could advances in technology undermine the future of humans? – Myjoyonline

Posted: at 9:24 am

One critical concern over technology is the fear that it could unleash severe havoc on humanity if misused.

Technology misuse alongside ecological disruption and the possibility of nukes misuse are viewed as the most potent existential (immediate and remote) threats to humanity.

Whilst all three threats are highly disruptive, technology misuse is receiving attention in recent times owing to technologys accessibility, speed of growth in knowledge in technological tools and, finally, the high degree of vulnerability in technology.

The evolution of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and its high application could soon change humans algorithms. Already, we are witnessing an advanced form of AI with gene therapy and bionic implants; these advances may quickly change the biological makeup of humans. Moreover, their pace of evolution is advancing at a rate never seen before in biotechnological engineering.

Ultimately, these advanced AIs aim to create superior humans with additional functionalities above those of ordinary humans. This notion of human upgrade or gravitating toward the robotic status is a difficult concept to look at from a religious perspective.

However, from a scientific and sociological point of view, significant developments lend credence to the idea that humans may be tilting gradually to a robotic or somewhat unknown status.

Unsurprisingly, transhumanists have long yearned for any attempt that could alter human DNA. For instance, Stalin is on record to have immensely pursued an agenda of creating a genetically engineered army with capabilities superior to ordinary citizens.

What, however, is unclear is whether the enhancement of humans guarantees superior capacity or could end up debasing humanity.

Need I mention that this revolutionary AI advances, should they go wrong, could spell doom for humanity perpetually as there are no known full-proof standards and protocols currently in place to govern such a situation.

Indeed, all the prominent actors in the AI space, including Elon Musk, have shared their concern over AI producing significant adverse effects on humanity. It is one thing to innovate, but it takes a great deal of grit to predict accurately and put in place mitigating protocols for possible future externalities to come from todays innovation.

Undoubtedly, the human way of life in society building relationship, work, and socialization, among others have markedly changed over the last several epochs, mainly influenced by advances in technological know-how.

Technology now has become an enabler of life and, in some instances, replacing chores originally preserved for humans. The cognitive capabilities of robots and technologically engineered machines have improved so much that some robots are even alleged to be sentient.

As robots improve in cognitive capacity and assume the characteristics of humans, humans are, on the other hand shifting gradually to robotic status. The shift in humans is in two-fold: inventors of robots who control the rest of society and those controlled by robots.

The first reason humans are becoming more of robots is that in the era of increased automation, no meaningful and unique thinking apart from following processes is required to perform any particular work. Automation is seen as optimal and desirable in the world of work today, driven by efficiency and profit.

Robots are more efficient in performing some specific tasks, and if profit is the underlining consideration, it makes sense to automate to maximize such gains. In such an environment, humans require very little thinking, as robots do all the thinking for us. Beyond human enslavement to machines, the unprecedented technological advances also exacerbate the division between humans those who control us (creators of robots) and those who are controlled.

Secondly, humanitys social construct, defined based on communalism and interdependence, has fast disappeared. The social support mechanism no longer relies on broader community support but is now based on the individuals traits. Individualism freedom of action for individuals over collective or state control appears to have been embraced as a modern way of life and taken hold of us humans.

The meaning of a community where people live together and share in each others joy and pain has drastically faded. Human social bond has been damaged, and people have less sense of group identity resulting in less and less feeling toward their community or people in their community.

It is not uncommon to have individuals live in a particular community for years and yet not notice or identify as neighbours. The proliferation of internet and new media have exacerbated individualism as people now prefer and can build a virtual community of their own without support from their locality.

The unintended consequences of technology could be addressed if regulation is brought to the front burner of policy discourse. Without such deliberate action, the world may struggle if artificial intelligence goes wrong.

In the same vein, the world could be surprised by the exploits of the bad guys who constantly seek to take advantage of cyber-systems vulnerabilities to harm innocent users. Undeniably, there are many vulnerabilities in technology.

These vulnerabilities have always been the conduit for bad geeks to either advance their interest or sometimes that of a sponsored State[s]. As a result, cyber-attacks on national, regional, corporations networks and sometimes on individuals have become common. The pain often inflicted on technology users by these bad guys becomes unmeasurable and often results in the loss of lives and property of those attacked.

Another critical concern is that as humans become more robotized, thereby seeking unending bliss and superiority, isnt there a possibility that they may become more powerful such that they too will begin to exploit cyberspace vulnerabilities and afflict more misery on unassuming technology users?

Moreover, what will be the faith of those already enslaved by technology in such space? Indeed, these questions are possibilities one cannot overlook since the desires of transhumanists to have an unending bliss of life will come at a cost and who must bear that cost?

Therefore, one must be careful with technology as its misuse could spell doom for humanity and possibly extinguish humankind forever.

****

Henry Kyeremeh

Kyeremeh@gmail.com

Co-Founder, iWatch Africa

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Iris Van Herpen Explores Life Beyond the Physical Realm for A/W 22 Couture – vmagazine.com

Posted: at 9:24 am

The groundbreaking designer continued to push the mold forward with a transcendent show for couture week in Paris.

The groundbreaking designer continued to push the mold forward with a transcendent show for couture week in Paris.

Iris Van Herpen, fashions most future-forward designer, looked to the past for her Autumn/Winter 2022 couture show. Inspired by the many identities from OvidsMetamorphoses, from Arachne, to Narcissus, to Apollo, to Daphne, the collection explores oscillating identities and life beyond our physical bodies.

Of course, Herpen didnt forget the future, crafting the collection with eye on the metaverse. As such, the collection, which explores both hyperreality in the digital realm and expands upon introspection in fashion, is called Meta Morphosis (emphasis on the meta.)

Though the meta component of the collection couldnt be showcased in Paris, Herpen worked with a team from Microsoft to create a mixed runway experience, where digital avatars as seen through HoloLens 2 technologywere set to walk alongside models, coexisting in their multiple realities.

Despite the technical difficulties (the Microsoft team got sick) the Meta Morphosis show still paid homage to Ovids centuries-old theme of transhumanism, and the modern theme of blurred lines between physical and digital.

The collection, which was the brands 15th anniversary showcase, included 16 couture looks, built upon Herpens prior technological innovations, like the 3-D printed dresses from 2009. With gradient dyes, unspun laces, and translucent layers, the collection reimagines some of the brands most iconic looks from years past. As is traditional for Herpen, the collection mostly stuck with a general color scheme of light and dark, though there were some unusual shades of amethyst and metallic copper.

Herpen worked with Dutch designers Eric Klarenbeek and Maartje Dro to create the 3-D printed Singularity jumpsuit, using sustainable materials like cocoa shell beans. Other sustainable elements include a biodegradable silk from a species of banana called Abaca, native to the Philippines, created by ForWeavers, and 100 percent recycled Mylar from Solaris.

The use of upcycled materials works to further eliminate the distinctions between man and nature, physical and digital. Herpen also worked with sculptor Casey Curran to create a statue of a future Daphne, bursting from the center of the runway.

By continuing to push the limits of fashion, Herpen has cemented herself as a designer of the future - the Meta Morphosis collection is merely proof of that.

Credits: Images courtesy of Iris Van Herpen.

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Virtual Beauty, Virtual Freedom, Virtual Love: Is the Metaverse Our Future? – PRESSENZA International News Agency

Posted: at 9:24 am

When is the last time you were outside in the morning to experience a glorious dawn? Or sat watching the sun set across the ocean horizon?

How do you feel when you touch the skin of someone you love? A grandparent, parent, lover or child?

Have you ever seen a spiders web full of morning dew, or after the rain, when the sun is shining through the droplets in the web to reveal the flashing diamonds, sapphires, rubies and emeralds hidden within?

Have you ever stood in a natural environment a beach, desert, rainforest far from a city and noticed that strange and subtle feeling of freedom tremor through your body?

Have you ever marveled at the breath of wind that cools your face on a hot Summers day? Or been intoxicated by the smell of blossom in Spring?

Have you gaped in wonder at the birth of new life: a chick pecking out of its shell, a seed germinating or a baby being born?

Or paused to ponder the sheer magic of being alive yourself?

Or do you find life in the real physical world too constricting, painful, frightening and demanding: something from which you seek to escape, with some distraction or another (work, television, sport, a novel, a drug), as often as you can?

Well, very soon now, we are promised, you will be able to escape reality far more effectively than those primitive means of distraction made possible previously. And far more effectively than even the outcomes promised in those dystopian novels.

So the fundamental questions we must ask ourselves are simple: Do you want real life, with all of the pains, sorrows, fear and fury that go along with beauty, freedom and love? Or do you believe what they tell us and want everything unpleasant to go away? Permanently. And to live in delusion thereafter, given synthetic versions of all of the pleasant feelings and experiences described above?

Remember the dialogue between the Savage and Mustapha Mond during the closing stages of Aldous Huxleys dystopian novel Brave New World?

But I dont want comfort. I want God, I want poetry, I want real danger, I want freedom, I want goodness. I want sin.

In fact, said Mustapha Mond, youre claiming the right to be unhappy.

All right then, said the Savage defiantly, Im claiming the right to be unhappy.

Not to mention the right to grow old and ugly and impotent; the right to have syphilis and cancer; the right to have too little to eat; the right to be lousy; the right to live in constant apprehension of what may happen tomorrow; the right to catch typhoid; the right to be tortured by unspeakable pains of every kind.

There was a long silence.

I claim them all, said the Savage at last.

Well, after nearly one hundred years, the dystopian future described by Huxley is almost upon us and, if we are to defeat it, we need a lot more savages willing to forego the promised comforts.

Because if those who see themselves as our global masters get their way, we are about to enter a virtual world that will become more complete by the day and from which there will be no escape.

The Metaverse

Based on many years of effort, the World Economic Forum (WEF) has recently launched its plan to create our new all-digital world, called the metaverse. See Defining and Building the Metaverse.

So if you find natural phenomena ranging from rainforests, beaches and weather variations to ill-health, danger and unhappiness annoying, you will soon be able to escape them, compliments of the metaverse. Or so we are promised. And you wont be troubled by anything resembling what might be called free will either. You will be content to do as you are told, even more than you are content to do already. See Terrified of Freedom: Why Most Human Beings are Embracing the Global Elites Technotyranny.

After all, your mind will no longer be your own. And while the usual descriptions, written by elite agents, fail to mention it, a quick flash of metaverse-induced fear will make sure that you comply, whatever you are required to do. The point is this: You wont be escaping all of those unpleasant feelings after all. They can just be used to control you more directly, to fulfill an elite-determined purpose. But that is a fact they are not advertising.

In their iconic hit song In the Year 2525, written in 1964 by Rick Evans and later recorded by he and Denny Zager to become a No.1. hit around the world in 1969, Evans captured key elements of what is already upon us somewhat ahead of the schedule mapped out in the song.

[Chorus 2]

In the year 3535

Aint gonna need to tell the truth, tell no lies

Everything you think, do, and say

Is in the pills you took today

[Chorus 3]

In the year 4545

Aint gonna need your teeth, wont need your eyes

You wont find a thing to chew

Nobodys gonna look at you

[Chorus 4]

In the year 5555

Your arms are hanging limp at your sides

Your legs got nothing to do

Some machines doing that for you

[Chorus 5]

In the year 6565

Aint gonna need no husband, wont need no wife

Youll pick your sons, pick your daughters too

From the bottom of a long glass tube

Whoa-oh-oh

So what is the Metaverse?

According to the WEF: The metaverse is a future persistent and interconnected virtual environment where social and economic elements mirror reality. Users can interact with it and each other simultaneously across devices and immersive technologies while engaging with digital assets and property. See Defining and Building the Metaverse.

Moreover, if technologists are right that 2022 will separate thinkers from builders, then last years technical advances will produce this years first steps towards making the metaverse a reality.

But from the perspective of the human experience, one development stands out above all others: extended reality (XR) technologies. These include virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), and brain-computer interfaces (BCI), which together position themselves as the next computing platforms in their own right.

Nevertheless, it is clear that a precise definition of the term metaverse (for a start: is it a product, service, place or moment in time?), upon which there is broad agreement even among those who routinely use the term, is yet to emerge. See 3 technologies that will shape the future of the metaverse and the human experience.

Having written that, here is one definition elaborated in the article above that reveals just how far some of those heavily involved in this work have become disconnected from any sense of themselves and, hence, reality: Specifically, the metaverse is the moment at which our digital lives our online identities, experiences, relationships, and assets become more meaningful to us than our physical lives. The original quotation can be read here: Spheres of Self: Performativity and Parasociality in the Metaverse.

And, as Cathy Li describes it, the metaverse is most useful as a lens through which to view ongoing digital transformation. The belief is that virtual worlds, incorporating connected devices, blockchain and other tech, will be so commonplace that the metaverse will become an extension of reality itself. See Who will govern the metaverse?

Let me reiterate two points from the paragraphs immediately above: our digital lives become more meaningful to us than our physical lives. And the metaverse will become an extension of reality itself.

Really?

While statements such as these reveal the breathtaking level of insanity that underpins this entire enterprise see The Global Elite is Insane Revisited it does not mean that we are not under enormous threat. Just as vast arsenals of nuclear weapons, by some insane logic, are supposed to provide us with security while actually threatening the existence of all life on Earth, the metaverse is part of a substantial package of measures that will reduce human life to one not worth living.

Why? Well, as noted by authors such as Tom Valovic: The metaverse is one element in the path to implementing technocratic governance over all of humanity.

As Planet Earth and our physical world continue to experience massive biospheric degradation and disruption, the elites that are now in many cases pulling the strings of governance at the country level are heading for the exit doors. Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos are exploring the realm of space and Musk has a Mars mission planned. Globally oriented elites looked out for themselves which is what they do best.

Paralleling the notion of space flight as a form of existential escapism is the metaverse. So what if our cities are crumbling, infrastructures falling apart, and the biosphere is seriously degrading? So what if our wasteful consumer-driven lifestyle has created unprecedented levels of pollution so extensive that its now the number one cause of health problems globally? No problem well just kick back and don our Meta headsets (or worse get a brain implant) and escape into an artificially fabricated world that lets us turn our back on the massive ecological and environmental problems we now face. See Why We Should Reject Mark Zuckerbergs Dehumanizing Vision of a Metaverse.

Education in the Metaverse

Of course, the metaverse is deeply interwoven with other components of their plan, such as those in relation to what they call education, which is more accurately described as the process by which young transhuman slaves are programmed to perform their function in the technocratic economy that is being imposed upon us. Of course, education sounds better than virtual programming of young transhuman slaves so, in the interests of not raising obvious concerns, the word education has been used.

As noted by Dr. Michael Nevradakis, discussions on this subject at the recent gathering of the World Economic Forum emphasized the importance of virtual reality (VR) and artificial intelligence (AI) technologies with participants touting the purported educational and economic benefits that would derive from use of these technologies in the classroom by helping, according to Dr. Ali Saeed Bin Harmal Al Dhaheri & Dr. Mohamad Ali Hamade, to increase accessibility, enhance quality and improve the affordability of education globally. See Experiential learning and VR will reshape the future of education.

However, as Nevradakisalso noted, these discussions had little to say about the need to protect childrens data or digital identities or, for that matter, providing the types of early-life experiences children require as part of their socialization. See Future of Education? WEFs Vision Heavy on Virtual Reality and AI Technologies, Light on Privacy Concerns.

Of course, there is no need for concern about the early-life experiences of those young transhumans who are being programmed for decades of servitude prior to being terminated when they are no longer functional.

Beyond claimed educational and economic benefits, however, some authors argue that digitalizing education can play a role in easing pressures on the environment and climate. How so? Nevradakis again: Indeed, the WEF said the use of textbooks, notebooks and pencils as critical learning tools is on the way out, due to environmental pressures and COP26 goals (from the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference), which will drive the digitalizing of education streams. See Future of Education? WEFs Vision Heavy on Virtual Reality and AI Technologies, Light on Privacy Concerns

But it is clearly delusional to suggest that the use of textbooks, notebooks and pencils has greater adverse impact on the environment and climate than the environmental cost and climate impact of producing sophisticated technology for each student. And despite claims of improved affordability it is equally delusional to ignore the economic and social cost, for example, to the child laborers in the Congo working in appalling conditions to extract strategic minerals to produce this technology. See Humanitys Dirty Little Secret: Starving, Enslaving, Raping, Torturing and Killing our Children.

Besides, as touched on below, education is already a monstrous experience, destroying the Selfhood of the child so that they become submissively obedient. Removing the bulk of educationsremaining social component by technologizing it can only make it even worse.

Babies in the Metaverse

Then again, maybe children will no longer be put through school. It simply wont be necessary because children, for transhuman slaves at least, will no longer exist.

By 2070, the metaverse will offer you virtual babies, environmentally-friendly digital children, according to UK artificial intelligence (AI) expert Catriona Campbell. Parents will see and interact with their offspring through next-generation AR [augmented reality] glasses and haptic gloves. The latter devices enable users to experience a realistic sense of touch when handling virtual or holographic objects. As a bonus, these children take up no space, cost nothing to feed and remain healthy, if that is what you want, for as long as they are programmed to live. A subscription might cost as little as $25 each month.

And if this seems like a monumental leap out of reality to you, Campbell also believes that within 50 years technology will have advanced to such an extent that babies which exist in the metaverse are indistinct from those in the real world. As the metaverse evolves, I can see virtual children becoming an accepted and fully embraced part of society in much of the developed world.See Virtual babies who grow up in real time will be commonplace by 2070, expert predicts.

Thats right, Campbell is claiming that within 50 yearsbabies which exist in the metaverse are indistinct from those in the real world! Pause a moment. How does that sound to you?

Just in case you cannot wait, you are welcome to start using early versions now. See, for example, Virtual Baby, Adopt a Virtual Baby and My Virtual Child.

Oh, and by the way, you wont be having sex either, whether for reproductive purposes or otherwise. You will prefer virtual sex. See Sex And Pornography Aim To Strike Gold In The Metaverse.

Critiquing the Metaverse

Beyond the criticisms already noted above, there area great many other criticisms of the metaverse and the role it will play in the overall elite program being implemented under what the WEF callsits Great Reset. This comprehensive program will transform human society and human life for those people left alive after the eugenics component has been fully implemented. See The Final Battle for Humanity: It is Now or Never in the Long War Against Homo Sapiens.

If you like, you can read a little more about what the masters of this metaverse intend for us, as well as critiques of it, by authors such as these.

Derrick Broze: While some people may not intend for The Metaverse to become an all encompassing reality that supersedes physical reality, for the Zuckerbergs, Microsofts, and WEFs of the world, that is exactly what they intend for The Metaverse. For the billionaire class and their puppet organizations, such as the WEF and the United Nations, the Metaverse offers up the potential to commandeer all life into digital prisons where the people can be charged for services and products in the digital realm. With the people of the world safely tucked into their digital beds, the Technocrats could complete their total takeover of natural resources, the economy, and humanity itself. See The Great Narrative And The Metaverse, Part 2: Will The Metaverse End Human Freedom?

Dr. Michael Nevradakis: Who will govern the metaverse? According to the WEF, real-world governance models represent one possible option for metaverse governance. However, far from referring to constitutionally defined institutions of governance, with checks and balances, the WEF cites Facebooks Oversight Board as an example of such a real-world governance model. See WEF Launches Metaverse Initiative, Predicts Digital Lives Will Become More Meaningful to Us Than Our Physical Lives.

But an earlier World Economic Forum report from its Global Redesign Initiative was more blunt: The report postulates that a globalized world is best managed by a coalition of multinational corporations, governments (including through the UN system) and select civil society organizations (CSOs). See Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights p. 209, citing Everybodys Business: Strengthening International Cooperation in a More Interdependent World.

So if you believe that you and I are destined to have a say in the metaverse that is unfolding, you would be wise to keep investigating. Elite proposals are invariably very distant from the type of governance models usually considered by ordinary people in a multiplicity of contexts, where the emphasis is on facilitating widespread grassroots participation, not rule by technocrats.

You can read considerably more about what our technocratic overlords have in mind including the existing trade in such things as virtual real estate, virtual clothing and virtual art and what is wrong with it, in the articles on the metaverse published by Patrick Wood on Technocracy News & Trends: Metaverse. And there is more in articles such as these: The Top 10 Creepiest and Most Dystopian Things Pushed by the World Economic Forum (WEF) and How Our Lives Could Soon Look: The World Economic Forum Posts An Insane Dystopian Video.

And heres another simple issue to ponder. Remember how I mentioned above that a quick flash of metaverse-induced fear would ensure that you complied with an elite-determined directive, how does the idea of eating bugs, processed sewage and human flesh appeal? Well, given that your mind will no longer be your own, what appeals now, or doesnt, will be irrelevant once the metaverse is determining how you perceive things. See Canadian Company Pledges To Produce TWO BILLION BUGS Per Year For Human Consumption and Will You Eat Cultured Meat Grown From Human Cells?

You will eat Soylent Green because that is what the program tells you.

So why are people embracing the Metaverse?

In a recent article in which he described taking his son to watch a film through 3D glasses, Charles Eisenstein noted The on-screen reality was so vivid, stimulating and intense that it made the real world seem boring by comparison. See Transhumanism and the Metaverse.

How can this happen?

Because we terrorize our children into submissive obedience, devoid of the unique and powerful individual Self they were gifted by evolution at birth. See Why Violence?,Fearless Psychology and Fearful Psychology: Principles and Practiceand Do We Want School or Education? Why? Essentially to keep them performing tasks that bore them senseless throughout their school and working life.

Fundamentally, this terrorization works because it compels our children into suppressing awareness of how they feel. As a result, only the most intense experiences register emotionally: The capacity to experience a subtle feeling has been lost. And without this capacity, they cannot develop into the powerful, courageous Self-willed individuals that evolution intended. They are human relics. Ready and willing to be turned into a transhuman slave in the unconscious hope they will be finally able to experience, in the metaverse, what was taken from them in the real world as a child.

But they wont get that experience, even in the metaverse. It is not what the elite has in mind for us.

Resisting the Metaverse

Of course, the metaverse is just one feature of the Global Elite agenda that is being imposed upon us. And it is not enough to resist individual features of the Great Reset program. We must strategically resist its most fundamental elements so that the entire agenda is defeated.

If you are inclined to join those strategically resisting the Great Reset and its related agendas, you are welcome to participate in the We Are Human, We Are Free campaign which identifies a list of 30 strategic goals for doing so.

In addition and more simply, you can download a one-page flyer that identifies a short series of crucial nonviolent actions that anyone can take. This flyer, now available in 16 languages (Czech, Danish, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Spanish & Slovak) with more languages in the pipeline, can be downloaded from here: The 7 Days Campaign to Resist the Great Reset.

If strategically resisting the Great Reset (and related agendas) appeals to you, consider joining the We Are Human, We Are Free Telegram group (with a link accessible from the website).

And if you want a child who is powerfully able to perceive the dysfunctional lure of the metaverse, and is able to join you in resisting it, consider making My Promise to Children.

CONCLUSION

So, for just a little longer, the choice is yours.

Read more here:
Virtual Beauty, Virtual Freedom, Virtual Love: Is the Metaverse Our Future? - PRESSENZA International News Agency

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