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Showing posts with label CORNEL WEST. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CORNEL WEST. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

RSN: Cornel West | My Letter of Resignation From Harvard

 

 

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July 14 21

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WE HAVE A FUNDING CRISIS ON OUR HANDS: We have donors, many good ones in fact. But the the overall response rate — at a fraction of one percent — is just too low. It is absolutely causing a crisis. If we did not need the funding we would not spend this much time raising money — it would not happen. What we need really are a few good donors. See what you can do.
Marc Ash • Founder, Reader Supported News

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Cornel West. (photo: Gage Skidmoore/MPR)
Cornel West | My Letter of Resignation From Harvard
Cornel West, Cornel West's Facebook Page
West writes: "How sad it is to see our beloved Harvard Divinity School in such decline and decay."
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Biden Denounces "21st Century Jim Crow Assault" on Voting Rights in Philadelphia Speech
Kathryn Watson, CBS News
Watson writes: "President Biden denounced efforts by lawmakers in Republican-led states to impose new restrictions on voting, decrying their efforts as a '21st century Jim Crow assault' and urging Congress to pass federal laws to protect voting access."
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Sanders, Biden Meet as Infrastructure Bill Swells Past $3.5 Trillion
Lisa Mascaro and Jonathan Lemire, Associated Press
Excerpt: "Emerging from a private meeting at the White House, Sen. Bernie Sanders said Monday that he and President Joe Biden are on the same page as Democrats draft a 'transformative' infrastructure package unleashing more than 3.5 trillion in domestic investments on par with the New Deal of the 1930s."
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Notorious Ransomware Gang REvil Mysteriously Disappears After Causing Global Havoc
Lucas Ropek, Gizmodo
Ropek writes: "The Russian-speaking cybercriminal group REvil has gone dark. Its websites were taken offline early Tuesday morning, and nobody is sure why."
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COVID-19 Accelerated the Corporate Takeover of the Economy
Grace Blakeley, Jacobin
Blakeley writes: "Unless working people organize to resist it, the legacy of the pandemic, like the legacy of the financial crisis, will be a permanent shift in power in favor of capital."
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"Fly So Far": New Film Tells Stories of Women in El Salvador Jailed for Decades Under Abortion Ban
Democracy Now!
Excerpt: "The award-winning documentary 'Fly So Far' looks at the criminalization of abortion in El Salvador through the incredible story of Teodora Vásquez, a woman who in 2008 was sentenced to 30 years in prison after she had a stillbirth at nine months pregnant."
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American West Stuck in Cycle of "Heat, Drought and Fire," Experts Warn
Maanvi Singh, Guardian UK
Singh writes: "As fires propagate throughout the US west on the heels of record heatwaves, experts are warning that the region is caught in a vicious feedback cycle of extreme heat, drought and fire, all amplified by the climate crisis."
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POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: The hunt for SANTIAGO’S SUPPORTERS — FUTURE of WORK — MassGOP FALLOUT

 



 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY

THE HUNT FOR SANTIAGO’S SUPPORT(ERS) — State Rep. Jon Santiago may have taken himself out of the Boston mayor‘s race, but the scramble for his voters, donors and endorsers is now very much on with just two months to go until the preliminary election and plenty of undecided voters up for grabs.

There’s hope among the campaigns that Santiago’s exit will shift some state legislators who were in his camp — and maybe even prompt some new ones off the sidelines, particularly among the Boston delegation. State politicians often bring larger fundraising networks, which will come in handy down the line as candidates look to go up on the air. Yet some legislators indicated to me they’re in no rush to endorse given the importance of the race — it’ll decide who leads the state’s largest city and economic driver, possibly for years to come — and the tough choice between several contenders who are familiar faces.

Santiago’s also taking his time on this one. He spoke to each of the five remaining major candidates on Tuesday and plans to meet with them over the coming weeks before deciding on possible endorsements “in due time,” an advisor said. But Santiago made one thing clear in a video announcing his departure from the race: “I look forward to supporting the first elected woman of color to lead Boston.”

That’s a not-so-subtle jab at John Barros, the city’s former economic development chief who’s now literally the last man standing among the five major contenders. People in Barros’s camp say it’s full steam ahead. But he’s got a lot of ground to make up from where he currently sits at the back of the pack in polling and fundraising. His position is similar to where Santiago was situated — trailing four women who’ve got built-in networks from running and winning district or citywide council races multiple times before.

Santiago’s base was not well-defined. His support is likely to scatter across a field in which everyone is a candidate of color and City Councilor Michelle Wu and Acting Mayor Kim Janey have emerged as frontrunners, with City Councilors Annissa Essaibi George and Andrea Campbell not far behind.

Santiago hewed more moderate in this progressive-leaning field, which could stand to benefit Essaibi George or Barros. An emergency room doctor, Santiago was a public-safety-friendly candidate, like Essaibi George. Wu and Janey both speak Spanish, which could help them appeal to some of the Latino voters Santiago was courting. Santiago also prioritized — and says he’ll continue to work on — tackling the opioid crisis at Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard, which Campbell has called the most pressing issue facing the city.

GOOD MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. The growing calls to oust Jim Lyons as chair of the state GOP aren’t working — at least not yet.

The latest attempt comes from a group of 16 Republican donors that’s offering to raise $1 million — if the state committee shakes up its leadership.

It’s a tantalizing proposition for a cash-strapped party after weeks of very public drama. GOP Gov. Charlie Baker said Tuesday he hopes the state committee will address some of the “serious concerns” raised by the “loyal, generous donors” — several of whom are Baker-aligned.

Republican sources say a few people may be swayed by the offer. But they also acknowledge that’s not enough to reach the two-thirds majority of state committee members needed to remove Lyons before the next chair election in 2023.

And with each knock on Lyons, the chair and his core of supporters are growing increasingly defiant. The donors had barely put their offer on the table when Lyons’ allies hit back in emails and on social media, saying that most of the signatories hadn’t given to the state GOP since Lyons took over in 2019 and that some had even donated to Democrats. Some Lyons supporters told me they see the pushback against him, which they regularly dismiss as coming from Baker supporters, as more of a rallying cry than a rebuke.

TODAY — Baker, Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs Kathleen Theoharides and Department of Conservation and Recreation Commissioner Jim Montgomery celebrate $6.5 million in funding for the Greylock Glen Outdoor Recreation and Nature Center in Adams at 11 a.m. Baker and Polito make a Destination Development Capital Program Grant Announcement at the Clark Art Institute in Williamstown at 12:30 p.m.

Rep. Katherine Clark tours several local sites beginning at the future Wonderland Multimodal Connector in Revere at 9 a.m. and wrapping up at Wellington Station in Medford at 11 a.m. Rep. Seth Moulton tours infrastructure projects at 10 a.m. in Ipswich and 1 p.m. in Manchester-by-the-Sea. Janey, City Councilor Lydia Edwards, state Sen. Joe Boncore, and state Rep. Aaron Michlewitz attend the North Meadow on The Greenway groundbreaking ceremony at 10 a.m. Campbell hosts a press conference on housing affordability at 982 Blue Hill Ave., Dorchester, at 11 a.m. Janey celebrates the re-dedication of the Boston Fire Department’s District 10 at 11:15 a.m. Rep. Lori Trahan and state Rep. Danielle Gregoire highlight American Rescue Plan relief for Marlborough residents with local stops. Rep. Ayanna Pressley and IBEW Local 103 members host a roundtable and press conference on worker-centered recovery at 1:45 p.m. in Dorchester. Rep. Jim McGovern and state Sen. Jo Comerford host a briefing on PFAS at 3:30 p.m. on Comerford’s Facebook pageRep. Jake Auchincloss attends the St. Mary of Carmen Society 86th Annual Festival at 7 p.m.

Have a tip, story, suggestion, birthday, anniversary, new job, or any other nugget for the Playbook? Get in touch: lkashinsky@politico.com.

 

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THE LATEST NUMBERS

– “Massachusetts reports zero new coronavirus deaths for second time in less than a week,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “Health officials on Tuesday reported zero new coronavirus deaths for the second time in less than a week ... the state Department of Public Health on Tuesday reported 191 new cases as the average percent positivity also ticked up.

DATELINE BEACON HILL

– State Sen. Joe Boncore is in negotiations with lobbying group MassBio, according to ethics and financial interest disclosures he filed with the state this week. Boncore referred to himself as a “prospective employee” who’s in “discussions with a search committee concerning a position at” MassBio, according to documents reviewed by POLITICO.

The paperwork confirms at least part of what Boncore has yet to say publicly — that he’s likely to become the next leader of MassBio. Boncore again did not return a call for comment.

Boncore’s possible departure from the Senate would trigger a special election. The timeline of it all remains unclear, but one prospective candidate, Revere School Committee member Anthony D’Ambrosio, has already filed paperwork with the state to run for the 1st Suffolk and Middlesex seat.

– “Baker Pushes Housing And Training Spending As 'Future of Work' Report Predicts Big Shifts,” by Mike Deehan, GBH News: “Gov. Charlie Baker is warning that the Massachusetts workforce may never be the same after the pandemic — and he wants lawmakers to authorize his spending plans to retrain workers and boost homeownership in the post-COVID era. A new report on the ‘future of work’ that Baker commissioned says the reduced demand for office real estate, along with an increase in activity in residential areas, will reshape how Massachusetts does business and could threaten the state's standing as an innovation and economic leader without government intervention.

– More: Boston and Cambridge could see major changes as some workers never return, McKinsey report says,” by Jon Chesto, Boston Globe: “…From its surveys of hundreds of businesses and residents in April, McKinsey found that more than one-third of local employers plan to pare back their real estate footprints over the next two years. As a result, demand for office space could drop by up to 20 percent, and commuter rail usage could fall between 15 and 50 percent from pre-pandemic levels, the report said.

– “How should Massachusetts spend ARPA funds? Lawmakers schedule 2 public hearings in July on where federal aid should go,” by Steph Solis, MassLive.com: “Massachusetts lawmakers scheduled two public hearings in July so the public — and the Baker administration — can weigh in on how they should spend close to $5 billion from the American Rescue Plan Act. The Legislature’s budget chiefs scheduled the first virtual hearing for July 20, a Tuesday, to review Gov. Charlie Baker’s proposed $2.9 billion spending plan. The second virtual hearing is set for July 27..."

– “State urged to set rules on college sports pay,” by Christian M. Wade, CNHI/Eagle-Tribune: “Lawmakers are urging rules that allow college athletes to get paid, following a decision by the NCAA to suspend a policy keeping athletes from making money from the use of their names, images or likenesses. … [State Sen. Barry Finegold said] the state should pass a law protecting athletes and giving clarity to colleges as they figure out how to comply with the NCAA’s guidelines.

– “Public Employees Press Right-to-Strike Legislation,” by Matt Murphy, State House News Service (paywall): “Two of the leading progressive Democrats in the House joined with union officials, teachers and other public employees on Tuesday to push for the repeal of a state law that bans public sector workers from going on strike."

VAX-ACHUSETTS

– “Massachusetts breakthrough coronavirus cases: 71 fully vaccinated people have died, 268 hospitalizations,” by Rick Sobey, Boston Herald: “At least 71 people who have been fully vaccinated in Massachusetts have died after testing positive for a breakthrough COVID-19 case, the Herald has learned. … As of June 19, a total of 3,907 breakthrough cases had been reported to DPH. On that date, nearly 4.1 million Bay State residents were fully vaccinated. Out of the 3,907 breakthrough infections, a total of 71 people died and 268 people were hospitalized.

FROM THE HUB

– “Boston changes up lawyers in Dennis White case,” by Sean Philip Cotter, Boston Herald: “Boston has swapped out its litigation team in the Dennis White case, bringing on a veteran former federal prosecutor as it gears up for a hearing later this month. The city and Acting Mayor Kim Janey have enlisted the services of Brian T. Kelly, a big name in Boston legal circles who’s most famous for prosecuting the mobster James ‘Whitey’ Bulger a decade ago.

THE RACE FOR CITY HALL

– “Jon Santiago says he is ending his mayoral campaign, tightening historic field,” by Matt Stout, Boston Globe: “An emergency room physician at Boston Medical Center, captain in the US Army Reserve, and a second-term state lawmaker, Santiago pitched himself as an experienced crisis manager well-suited to guide the city out of the pandemic as its first Latino mayor. But the 39-year-old struggled to break through a historically diverse field and beyond the South End and Roxbury neighborhoods he represents on Beacon Hill. He is the first major candidate to leave the race ahead of the Sept. 14 preliminary election, departing a field that is currently led by four women of color. ... Santiago said in a phone interview Tuesday … ‘I’m a pretty pragmatic individual. It was clear that the writing was on the wall.’

PARTY POLITICS

– “Decrying Bigotry, Donors Threaten to Cut Off Mass. GOP Without New Leadership,” by Alison King, NBC 10 Boston: “‘There is no room for bigotry in the Republican party of Massachusetts,' Jessica Tocco says. She is one of the 16 Massachusetts Republicans who recently signed a letter to the state committee saying they will stop contributing to the party -- they have donated $1 million combined -- unless major changes are made. … [Chair Jim Lyons], a self-described proud, pro-life conservative, said he is trying to grow the party from the grassroots and that he would like to sit down and talk to the Republicans who signed that letter, but they have not reached out to him.

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

– “Massachusetts kicks off northern tier passenger rail study as economy recovers from COVID,” by Jim Kinney, Springfield Republican: “Work is beginning on a study that could return east-west passenger service between Boston and Greenfield, North Adams and other cities on Massachusetts’ northern tier. It comes as ownership of much of the railroad track and the nature of travel are in flux following COVID-19.

DAY IN COURT

– “Supreme Court Schedules Arguments On Death Penalty For Boston Marathon Bomber,” by Hafsa Quraishi, WBUR: “The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on whether to reinstate the death penalty for Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev on Oct. 13."

DATELINE D.C.

– The White House has sent Easton Democrat and state House Majority Leader Claire Cronin’s nomination as the next U.S. ambassador to Ireland to the Senate. President Joe Biden also nominated Atul Gawande , a surgeon affiliated with Harvard and Brigham and Women’s Hospital who co-founded state vaccine partner CIC Health, as assistant ambassador for the Bureau of Global Health.

– The U.S. Conference of Mayors sent a letter to congressional leaders urging them to take “immediate action” on the bipartisan infrastructure framework backed by Biden, POLITICO first reported. See the Massachusetts mayors who signed on. Several mayors here also signed a letter pushing climate-specific infrastructure action, POLITICO's Matthew Choi reports.

FROM THE 413

– “Police chief: Gun violence surge in Pittsfield tracked national trend; federal help hard to find,” by Amanda Burke, Berkshire Eagle: “The spate of gun violence that rattled the city this spring tracked with a larger, national trend in cities across the country, Police Chief Michael Wynn said Tuesday … given its location on the outer reaches of the westernmost part of the state, it struggles to gain assistance from federal agencies.

– “‘I don’t want the police involved in my kids’ education’: A fight brews over video surveillance of students in Western Mass.,” by Pranshu Verma, Boston Globe: “...the Springfield School Committee’s decision — which gave police real-time access to internal and external school video starting last month — is facing pushback from privacy advocates and angry parents, whose faith in law enforcement has been eroded by a history of brutality and corruption."

THE LOCAL ELECTIONS ROUNDUP

– “Sciarra leads pack in campaign donations in Northampton mayor’s race,” by Brian Steele, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “City Council President Gina-Louise Sciarra is in a dominant financial position over seven other candidates who have either announced their candidacies or taken out nomination papers for mayor in November’s election. Sciarra has received $20,430 in donations and has $12,016 on hand, according to the latest fundraising report from the state Office of Campaign and Political Finance. To date, none of her opponents have raised a comparable amount, and several have raised nothing."

– “Sullivan’s fundraising ahead of mayoral field in Holyoke,” by Dusty Christensen, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “In total, Holyoke mayoral candidates have raked in $152,311 since the start of the year, according to figures from the state’s Office of Campaign and Political Finance. ... At the top of that list is At-large City Councilor Michael Sullivan, who between Jan. 1 and June 30 raised $55,278, of which $20,000 came from his previous campaign account. Fellow At-large Councilor Rebecca Lisi raised $31,986 in the same time period, $7,916 of which came from her previous election fundraising. William Glidden, a writer and former aide to previous mayor Alex Morse, pulled in $31,929, all of which was raised since Feb. 5.

– “Incumbent, newcomer vie for Haverhill mayor's office,” by Mike LaBella, Eagle-Tribune: “Mayor James Fiorentini has announced his plans to seek a record 10th term in office. Fiorentini is expected to face challenger Guy Cooper, a U.S. Marine veteran who has served on the Haverhill Police Department as a police patrolman since 1997.

THE LOCAL ANGLE

– “Pressure from state officials builds for Lowell woman to kill her pet goats,” by Stefan Geller and Aaron Curtis, Lowell Sun: “Crouched on the gravel driveway of Oliveira Farm as she brushed the fur of her three 6-month-old pet goats, Vilmaria Maldonado let out a deep sigh of relief. The goats that she has owned since February — named George Washington, Republican and Democrat — would live another day. … Animal Control Officers and officials from the state Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR) visited the Tewksbury farm on Tuesday to pressure Maldonado, of Lowell, to kill her goats, due to their classification as ‘slaughter-only’ livestock.

– “‘Critical Staffing Shortage' Causes Shakeup at Mass. State Police,” by Ryan Kath, NBC 10 Boston: “A staffing shortage is causing a shakeup inside the Massachusetts State Police, according to an email the NBC10 Boston Investigators obtained from the leader of the agency. According to the memo, 46 veteran troopers are being pulled from their specialty units and temporarily reassigned to barracks, where they'll help patrol the streets.

– "Cornel West releases ‘candid’ resignation letter to Harvard dean," by Travis Andersen, Boston Globe: "Cornel West, the public intellectual and activist who resigned from his teaching position at Harvard in March following what he said was the denial of his request to be considered for tenure, released the letter he sent to his dean that made the move official."

SPOTTED – Sen. Ed. MarkeyFatih Birol, Jake Levine, Varun Sivaram, Paula Stern and Dick Morningstar on Tuesday night having dinner together at Cafe Milano in Washington.

TRANSITIONS – MassLive reporter Steph Solis will join Boston Business Journal as digital editor. Tweet. Meredith A. Bailey is the 58th president of the Massachusetts Dental Society. Aisha Francis is the Benjamin Franklin Institute of Technology’s new president, adding to her existing role as CEO.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY – to Rick Jakious, Rep. Seth Moulton’s district director, former state Attorney General Martha Coakley, who is 68, former Rep. Patrick Kennedy, who is 54, Nate Bermel and David Emil Reich.

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com.

 

SUBSCRIBE TO "THE RECAST" TODAY: Power is shifting in Washington and in communities across the country. More people are demanding a seat at the table, insisting that politics is personal and not all policy is equitable. The Recast is a twice-weekly newsletter that explores the changing power dynamics in Washington and breaks down how race and identity are recasting politics and policy in America. Get fresh insights, scoops and dispatches on this crucial intersection from across the country and hear critical new voices that challenge business as usual. Don't miss out, SUBSCRIBE . Thank you to our sponsor, Intel.

 
 


 

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Monday, July 5, 2021

RSN: Cornel West Says Sen. Manchin Is 'Gonna Have to Get Off His Symbolic Crackpipe'

 

 

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04 July 21

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Dr. Cornel West (left) told CNN West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin (right) he is 'gonna have to get off his symbolic crackpipe' and help do away with the filibuster. (photo: Win McNamee/Getty Images)
Cornel West Says Sen. Manchin Is 'Gonna Have to Get Off His Symbolic Crackpipe'
Biba Adams, The Grio
Adams writes: "Dr. Cornel West believes Democratic West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin must support the For the People Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act, the noted Black intellectual maintaining that Manchin needs to recognize Senate Republicans will never support legislation for voter rights with a colorful description."

Moderates like Sen. Joe Manchin "have to do away with the filibuster in order to get any work done," Dr. Cornel West said, due to "a right-wing party that's authoritarian."

r. Cornel West believes Democratic West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin must support the For the People Act and the John Lewis Voting Rights Act, the noted Black intellectual maintaining that Manchin needs to recognize Senate Republicans will never support legislation for voter rights with a colorful description.

“Okay, what do you think?” Don Lemon asked West Thursday on his eponymous CNN show after showing Manchin in an earlier clip, the pair in discussion about President Joe Biden‘s effort to support Democrats’ legislative efforts.

“He’s saying he still wants to work with Republicans to get it done. Is the choice now between the filibuster and democracy?”

“Yeah,” Cornel West said in response. “I think Brother Joe coming out of West Virginia — some of my favorite folk I know [are] from West Virginia — but I must say that he’s gonna have to get off his symbolic crackpipe too, that you [are] gonna have to do away with the filibuster in order to get any work done because you’ve got a right-wing party that’s authoritarian, with deep neo-fascist sensibilities, that has no commitment to democratic processes, no commitment to democratic values.”

The philosophy professor added, ”And then, at the same time, you’ve got Democrats who run around talking about being bipartisan, but for the most part, they lack a backbone. They don’t have enough fight.”

Earlier this month, Manchin presented a voters’ bill he thought of as a compromise to his Republican colleagues, and it was quickly rejected.

As previously reported, the compromise, which was supported by Georgia voting rights advocate Stacey Abrams, was dead upon arrival. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell offered at the time: “Senate Democrats seem to have reached a so-called ‘compromise’ election takeover among themselves. In reality, the plan endorsed by Stacey Abrams is no compromise.”

“McConnell has the right to do whatever he thinks he can do,” Manchin said at the time. “I would hope there are enough good Republicans that understand the bedrock of our society is having accessible, open, fair and secure elections.”

An opinion piece from David A. Love published last month by theGrio said Manchin and Arizona Democrat Kyrsten Sinema “stand in the way of justice, freedom and democracy, and pose a threat to the lives of Black people.”

"Staying In Business" Episode 1 : Beauty

"Will I still have clients?" This is a growing concern among Black-owned beauty salons and barbershops that have been forced to shut down due to the coronavirus pandemic. On Episode 1 of "Staying In Business," Black hairstylists and barbers share their fight to keep their businesses alive.

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A Special Operations unit arrives after state police announced they were conducting a search for armed persons following a traffic stop in Wakefield, Massachusetts on July 3, 2021. (photo: Faith Ninivaggi/Reuters)
A Special Operations unit arrives after state police announced they were conducting a search for armed persons following a traffic stop in Wakefield, Massachusetts on July 3, 2021. (photo: Faith Ninivaggi/Reuters)

ALSO SEE: What to Know About Rise of the Moors,
an Armed Group That Says It's Not Subject to US Law

Massachusetts Police Arrest 11 Heavily Armed Militia Members After Bizarre Hours-Long Standoff
Daniel Politi, Slate
Politi writes: "Police in Massachusetts arrested 11 men Saturday after a bizarre hours-long standoff that led to a partial shutdown of Interstate 95 and a stay-at-home order for the surrounding area. "

olice in Massachusetts arrested 11 men Saturday after a bizarre hours-long standoff that led to a partial shutdown of Interstate 95 and a stay-at-home order for the surrounding area. The standoff with the men in tactical gear who claimed to be part of a Moorish American group ended up lasting almost nine hours. In the end, it was resolved “through a combination of negotiation and tactical measures,” Massachusetts State Police Col. Christopher Mason said.

The bizarre series of events started at around 1:30 a.m. on Saturday, when a state trooper saw two cars pulled over on I-95 with their hazard lights on in Wakefield. The officer saw men refilling their gas tanks with their own fuel and stopped to see if they needed help. The officer quickly realized the men were all wearing military-style uniforms and were armed with long rifles and pistols. The men refused to provide identification and their firearm licenses so the state trooper asked for backup and the men fled into nearby woods.

The men claimed to be part of a group called Rise of the Moors that “does not recognize our laws,” police said. The group describes its members as “Moorish Americans dedicated to educating new Moors and influencing our Elders,” according to its website. Officials said they were headed from Rhode Island to Maine for training. “Their self-professed leader wanted very much known their ideology is not anti-government,” Mason said. “Our investigation will provide us more insight into what their motivation, what their ideology is.”

The scene, from a distance, looking northbound on Rt 95/128. https://t.co/WXEWjCvmdk pic.twitter.com/kkY3nHkJbt

— Mass State Police (@MassStatePolice) July 3, 2021

While the standoff was going on a member of the militia hosted a livestream on the group’s YouTube page, insisting they had not been violated any laws and were not trying to cause any trouble. “We do not intend to be hostile, we do not intend to be aggressive,” he said. “We’re not anti-government, we’re not anti-police and we’re willing to give them any information they need so that way we can continue with our peaceful journey.” The man said they made the stop in the middle of the highway to avoid “making any unnecessary stops” while carrying weapons and they were traveling to their “private land.” Another member of the group says in the video that they are “foreign nationals.” The group was carrying a Moroccan flag.

Experts were quick to say that the men appear to adhere to the “Moorish Sovereign Citizens,” a movement that emerged in the early 1990s. The Southern Poverty Law Center describes it as an offshoot of the sovereign citizens movement, which has broad anti-government beliefs. Adherents see themselves as part of a sovereign nation and claim they aren’t subject to U.S. law. Both the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center have characterized it as an extremist movement. “It was very fortunate that no one got hurt today,” Mark Pitcavage, senior research fellow at the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism, tells the Washington Post.

Law enforcement refused to get to go into a lot of detail about the group and its beliefs. “I’m not going to talk about what their forum is, and what their ideology is—I think they’ve been pretty vocal on social media about who they are and what they espouse. I’m not going to propagate that—they can define that for themselves,” Mason said. Some wondered whether the standoff was part of a plan for the group to make itself better known. “These guys have hijacked social media and mainstream media in Massachusetts, to get their word out,” former Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis told a local CBS affiliate. “It’s very unusual – unless the group has a plan; unless the group has been thoughtful about merging on the public scene. If that was their plan today, they’re achieving that goal.”

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'It is highly unlikely that Cosby, 83, will ever see the inside of a prison cell again.' (photo: Matt Slocum/AP)
'It is highly unlikely that Cosby, 83, will ever see the inside of a prison cell again.' (photo: Matt Slocum/AP)

Bill Cosby, Britney, and a Tale of Two American Justice Systems
Arwa Mahdawi, Guardian UK
Mahdawi writes: "It is a truth universally acknowledged that a man in possession of a good fortune and an expensive lawyer can get away with almost anything."
READ MORE


Signs opposing critical race theory line the entrance to the Loudoun County school board headquarters in Ashburn, Va., on June 22. (photo: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters)
Signs opposing critical race theory line the entrance to the Loudoun County school board headquarters in Ashburn, Va., on June 22. (photo: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters)


Critical Race Theory's Opponents Are Sure It's Bad. Whatever It Is.
Samuel Hoadley-Brill, The Washington Post
Hoadley-Brill writes: "Attacks on critical race theory are everywhere these days: Its detractors claim that the academic movement is 'planting hatred of America in the minds of the next generation' and 'advocating the abhorrent viewpoint that Blacks should forever be regarded as helpless victims,' and say that it might even qualify as 'child abuse.'"

The movement’s critics demonize it, then dismiss it.

ttacks on critical race theory are everywhere these days: Its detractors claim that the academic movement is “planting hatred of America in the minds of the next generation” and “advocating the abhorrent viewpoint that Blacks should forever be regarded as helpless victims,” and say that it might even qualify as “child abuse.”

Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) held up the Senate confirmation of one of President Biden’s nominees “because of her history promoting radical critical race theorists,” Hawley’s spokeswoman said. Delivering a speech in June pretty clearly aimed at bolstering his political prospects, former vice president Mike Pence said that “critical race theory teaches children as young as kindergarten to be ashamed of their skin color.”

Wrong.

“The critical race theory (CRT) movement,” explain legal scholars Richard Delgado and Jean Stefancic, “is a collection of activists and scholars interested in studying and transforming the relationship among race, racism, and power.” Its most direct academic origins can be found in the work of the late Harvard law professor Derrick Bell, who rigorously challenged mainstream liberal narratives of steady racial progress, illustrating how landmark legislation — the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and the Fair Housing Act of 1968 — failed to deliver liberty and justice for Black Americans.

The concept is certainly left-leaning, and it shakes up the traditional story of America as the unalloyed land of the free. But its central contention isn’t particularly radical or difficult to grasp. Far from preaching anti-Whiteness or Black victimhood, or rejecting individual rights, critical race theorists seek to explain how our laws and institutions — colorblind in theory — continue to circumscribe the rights of racial minorities. In the post-Jim Crow, post-Brown v. Board era, they ask, why and how do race and racism continue to play a constitutive role in America?

What developed as a framework for interrogating racial dynamics in American legal institutions influenced academics in neighboring disciplines, notably including sociologist Eduardo Bonilla-Silva’s conceptualization of “color-blind racism,” philosopher Charles W. Mills’s notion of a “racial contract” and education scholar Gloria Ladson-Billings’s analysis of the racial achievement gap. These works helped reinforce the insight that our country’s severe racial inequities are deeply embedded in social structures, so any serious attempts to rectify our racist history will necessarily involve structural reform; diversity seminars are not reparations.

Today, elite law schools across the country offer courses in critical race theory. Yale Law regularly hosts a critical race theory conference, and UCLA Law’s critical race studies program organizes an annual symposium with speakers from various disciplines. Contrary to critics who’ve portrayed the idea as mere leftist folderol, these are scholarly efforts to assess the impact of race in the law and society. As an academic school of thought, you can take critical race theory or leave it — and many do.

For some, the idea that American justice isn’t completely colorblind, or that “racism” can mean more than explicit, individual hatred, is simply a bridge too far. But often, rather than constructively engaging critical race theorists’ core argument, many conservatives have preferred to contort the theory in order to claim that it is itself racist, applying their trumped-up definition to nearly any kind of discussion of racial injustice in America. And then they attack that as un-American — or worse.

On Newsmax TV, former Bill Clinton adviser Dick Morris suggested that for biracial kids with a White father and a Black mother, critical race theory might “reinforce the Oedipal notion all kids have of wanting to kill their father and marry their mother.” Televangelist Pat Robertson asserted that CRT declares “people of color have to rise up and overtake their oppressors” and “instruct their White neighbors how to behave.” Rep. Mark Green (R-Tenn.) tweeted, “Critical Race Theory destroys unit cohesion necessary to win in combat and defend this nation.”

Some of this traces back to the work of the Manhattan Institute’s Christopher Rufo, whose influence on the right has waxed as he pursues a self-declared “one-man war against critical race theory,” publishing a raft of articles this year alone. In May, Rufo boasted of his new influence, tweeting that his D.C. trip itinerary included a speech to House Republicans and meetings with the staffs of GOP Sens. Mitch McConnell, Tom Cotton and Hawley. He has suggested that the ideology of the Ku Klux Klan is “a simple transposition of critical race theory’s basic tenets.”

The goal seems to be to banish, if not to ban, all critical discussion of the impact of race in American life today. Consider Rufo’s insistence in a recent tweet that any school district material invoking the concepts of “Whiteness, White privilege, White fragility, Oppressor/oppressed, Intersectionality, Systemic racism, Spirit murder, Equity, Antiracism, Collective guilt [or] Affinity spaces” is guilty of teaching critical race theory.

He’s among the culture warriors whose vilifications of critical race theory rarely make an effort to grapple with a straightforward proposition: that our facially neutral system of laws can and does produce unjust racial disparities, such as those we see in sentencing and in police violence. And his crusade has trickled down. In December, Turning Point USA’s Charlie Kirk, an activist who once toured with Donald Trump Jr., defined critical race theory as the belief that “racism is in the air, it’s in our bones, it’s in our DNA”; the idea, in his words, that “no progress has been made whatsoever” on race; one that is taking “the racism that once existed in the American South, and now weaponizing it against people that looked like the people that used to be the terrorists,” pushing the “belief that there are no individuals” and “trying to destroy” Western civilization; and “the most racist thing that is being spread in popular life in America — it is no different than the teaching of the KKK.”

For most, the moral panic around critical race theory isn’t that intense, but the phrase can still be a stand-in for those who chafe at even the notion of systemic racism. Think of the aggrieved letter written by a parent at New York’s Brearley School, and published by polemicist Bari Weiss, ripping the school for “adopting critical race theory” and shrinking systemic racism to this definition: “Systemic racism, properly understood, is segregated schools and separate lunch counters. It is the interning of Japanese and the exterminating of Jews. . . . We have not had systemic racism against Blacks in this country since the civil rights reforms of the 1960s.”

No critical race theorist denies that there is a debate to be had about the contours of systemic racism; none would dispute that debates about systemic or institutional racism have moved beyond law school classrooms. But having those discussions isn’t planting anti-White hatred or resigning people of color to perpetual status as victims of it. And teaching the history of racial movements, tensions and atrocities — and why their impact is still felt today — isn’t indoctrination; it’s part of a basic introduction to American history, which should take place before a fruitful conversation about the strengths and weaknesses of critical race theory can get off the ground.

No one on the right can credibly say “racism is a thing of the past” or “America is a colorblind society” because that kind of blanket statement rings hollow when the last hundred years have been bookended by the Tulsa massacre and the murder of George Floyd. Nor can they flatly submit that difficult conversations about race are out of bounds. Instead, they aim their objections at an academic-sounding theory that connotes patriotically incorrect elitism.

“Critical race theory” has become familiar enough for figures on the right to use it as an almost comically broad catchall: In a two-minute span on the Senate floor, Hawley said the theory “appears to have become the animating ideology” of Biden’s administration and that anti-racist scholar Ibram X. Kendi advocates “state sanctioned racism.” But the phrase remains just unfamiliar enough to excuse most of its critics from articulating their specific objections: When Kendi says, “The heartbeat of racism is denial,” instead of offering good-faith counterarguments, many of his skeptics write him off as an anti-White race hustler. They’re less apt to point out that he devotes a chapter of his book “How to Be an Antiracist” to criticizing anti-White racism. Or to note that Kendi, who acknowledges critical race theory’s influence, doesn’t identify as a critical race theorist.

Arguably the greatest success of this disinformation campaign has been its ability to convince parents across the country that critical race theory poses a real threat in the classroom. (As if grade-schoolers nationwide are suddenly unpacking the relationship between redlining and today’s racial wealth gap.) Loudoun County, Va., parent Shawntel Cooper’s characterization of the theory as “a tactic that was used by Hitler and the Ku Klux Klan” secured her an interview with Fox News’s Tucker Carlson. Tatiana Ibrahim, a parent in Carmel, N.Y., accused the school district there of implementing “Black Panther indoctrination,” “teaching our children to go out and murder our police officers,” and “demoralizing” students “by teaching them communist values.” She, too, landed a Fox interview.

Some people see it as their duty to defend a stock American narrative against the complicating realities of racism and inequality — fair enough. But there’s a difference between rejecting an analytical framework and wholly misrepresenting it. And between intellectual criticism and race-baiting demagoguery.

By this point, the campaign against the theory, and the phrase, isn’t even camouflaged. In March, Rufo tweeted: “We have successfully frozen their brand — ‘critical race theory’ — into the public conversation and are steadily driving up negative perceptions. We will eventually turn it toxic, as we put all of the various cultural insanities under that brand category.” “To win the war against wokeness,” he wrote in April, “we have to create persuasive language. From now on, we should refer to critical race theory in education as ‘state-sanctioned racism.’ That’s the new weapon in the language war.” (This past week, he dialed the idea back in a Wall Street Journal op-ed, making the narrower case that the “Battle Over Critical Race Theory” isn’t about some “exercise in promoting racial sensitivity or understanding history,” but rather, he says, about shunning a “radical ideology.”)

It’s plain. Today’s attacks on critical race theory aren’t meant to rebut its main arguments. They’re meant to paint it with such broad brushstrokes that any basic effort to reckon with the causes and impact of racism in our society can be demonized and dismissed.

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Democratic socialists on the march. (photo: Alice Bacon/DSA)
Democratic socialists on the march. (photo: Alice Bacon/DSA)


Americans Are More Open to Socialism Than Ever
Luke Savage, Jacobin
Savage writes: "The formation of political identity is ultimately a lot more complicated than what's implied by the oft-assumed trajectory from youthful idealism to hardheaded maturity."

Socialism is now a real part of the political landscape — while “capitalism” has never been more unpopular.

f you’re not a liberal when you’re twenty-five, you have no heart. If you’re not a conservative by the time you’re thirty-five, you have no brain.” Winston Churchill never actually said these words. But, if they continue to live on as a popular slogan, it’s probably because they capture a common attitude about the correlation between political idealism and age. The young, or so this story goes, are invariably drawn to the novelty and transgression of progressive or even radical ideas — a disposition that usually dissipates with age. There’s a decidedly unsubtle, patronizing implication here, the idea being that conservatism is arrived at through experience and is thus synonymous with maturity.

Anecdotally, at least, there are real reasons for people to assume politicization works this way — among them the trajectory of the generation that began to come of age in the 1960s. The actual empirical evidence, however, suggests a lot more variation in the political values (and voting habits) of the young, old, and middle-aged alike. In 1980, Ronald Reagan basically drew even with Jimmy Carter when it came to voters between the ages of eighteen and twenty-nine — winning the same demographic in a landslide upon reflection four years later. Margaret Thatcher actually got more support in her 1983 electoral rout from those between thirty-five and forty-four than from people over sixty-five and also won more than 40 percent of first-time voters.

The formation of political identity is ultimately a lot more complicated than what’s implied by the oft-assumed trajectory from youthful idealism to hardheaded maturity. The collective experiences of particular generations and groups of people can make them more or less radical or conservative depending on the circumstances. In this respect, the findings of a new Axios/Momentive survey are striking but in many ways unsurprising.

Conducted in mid-June among more than two thousand adults over the age of eighteen, the poll’s topline finding is that just half of Americans (49 percent) ages eighteen to thirty-four now hold a positive view of capitalism — a precipitous drop from only two years ago, when the figure was some 20 points higher. Among those eighteen to twenty-four, only 42 percent now have a positive view of capitalism, while 54 percent hold a negative view. Even Republicans in the same age bracket exhibited a similar trend: the share who currently view capitalism in a favorable light is now 66 percent (down from 81 percent in January 2019).

Overall, there has been a small uptick in the percentage of Americans with a favorable view of socialism — one powered, according to Axios’s survey, primarily by black Americans and women. Here, the picture is a bit more textured and ambiguous:

While perceptions of capitalism have changed rapidly among young adults, perceptions of socialism have changed more incrementally among all age groups. Slightly fewer young adults now than in 2019 say they have a positive view of socialism (51% now vs. 55% in 2019). But that dip is offset by slight increases in the number of adults ages 35-64 and 65+ who say they have a favorable view of socialism.

Despite an overall increase, favorable perceptions of socialism remain in the minority (41 percent positive versus 52 percent negative). However, the picture again gets more complicated when broken down into specific questions. This should come as no surprise, given the stigma successfully attached to the word during the Cold War. For example, 66 percent of Americans agree that the federal government should legislate policies that aim to reduce the gap between the poor and the wealthy (once again, there’s been a startling shift among younger Republicans here: two years ago, only 40 percent favored such policies. Today, the figure is 56 percent.) This is consistent with other polls showing majority levels of support for policies like Medicare for All and various new taxes on the rich — even those not inclined toward “socialism” as a broad signifier are perfectly amenable to many of the things socialists these days advocate.

Across every age group, but especially among the young, it’s easy to see why Americans’ general views of capitalism have been deteriorating amid a renewed interest in both social democratic policies and socialism as a broad alternative. The coronavirus pandemic, much like the 2008–9 financial crisis, has underscored yet again how hierarchical, unfair, and often brutal the current political and economic consensus really is. Millions are drowning in student debt while facing bleak job prospects. Rents are soaring. As millions more face a brutal and precarious job market, billionaire wealth has spiked dramatically.

When the system around them is so obviously dysfunctional, people intuitively look for alternatives. The bottom line, according to Axios’s Felix Salmon: “Politicians looking to attack opponents to their left can no longer use the word ‘socialist’ as an all-purpose pejorative. Increasingly, it’s worn as a badge of pride.”

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In this file photo from November 2017, Palestinian human rights activist Farid al-Atrash gives a press conference as part of Amnesty International's 'Human rights day.' (photo: Eric Feferberg/AFP)
In this file photo from November 2017, Palestinian human rights activist Farid al-Atrash gives a press conference as part of Amnesty International's 'Human rights day.' (photo: Eric Feferberg/AFP)

Israel Arrests Palestinian Rights Lawyer After Anti-Abbas Protest
Al Jazeera
Excerpt: "A Palestinian human rights lawyer has been arrested by Israeli forces after taking part in a protest in the occupied West Bank against Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, his rights group said."

Independent Commission for Human Rights says Farid al-Atrash was arrested at an Israeli checkpoint east of Jerusalem.


 Palestinian human rights lawyer has been arrested by Israeli forces after taking part in a protest in the occupied West Bank against Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, his rights group said.

The Independent Commission for Human Rights (ICHR) said in a statement that Farid al-Atrash was arrested early on Sunday at an Israeli checkpoint east of Jerusalem while returning from a protest against the Palestinian Authority (PA) in Ramallah, where the PA is based.

It said al-Atrash was transferred to Israel’s Hadassah Hospital and called for his immediate release from Israeli police custody.

According to the commission, al-Atrash was on his way to Bethlehem from Ramallah when the arrest took place.

Issa Amro, a prominent Palestinian activist and friend of al-Atrash, said he was released from hospital hours later and was still being questioned by Israeli authorities. It is unclear why he was admitted to hospital.

Neither the Israeli military nor the police made immediate comments.

Both Amro and al-Atrash have been arrested by Israel in the past for organising and taking part in protests against its military occupation of the West Bank.

But Amro said al-Atrash had recently focused his efforts on protesting against the PA over Nizar Banat, an activist who died shortly after being violently arrested by Palestinian security forces last month.

He said another rights lawyer, Mohannad Karajah, who is defending protesters arrested by the PA, was briefly detained by Palestinian authorities on Sunday.

Amro himself was arrested by the PA last month and held overnight, days before Banat died in custody. The PA does not comment publicly on arrests.

Israel and the PA coordinate security in the West Bank in order to suppress the Palestinian group, Hamas, and other groups that both view as a threat.

That policy is deeply unpopular among Palestinians and is one of several longstanding grievances fuelling the recent protests.

Thousands of Palestinians have joined demonstrations in recent weeks against the PA, which governs parts of the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

The PA has grown increasingly unpopular and dictatorial in recent years, even as Western countries continue to see it as a key partner in the moribund peace process.

This arrest comes amid a violent crackdown on Palestinians by Israeli forces, including arbitrary arrests and the targeting of demonstrations and rallies against discriminatory Israeli policies and the establishment of illegal Israeli settlements.

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A coal-fired power plant. (photo: Getty Images)
A coal-fired power plant. (photo: Getty Images)


UK Says Cheerio to Coal Power
Alexandria Herr, Grist
Herr writes: "The United Kingdom is planning to end all coal-fired electricity generation by October 2024, moving up the country's previous target by a full year."

It’s Friday, July 2, and the U.K. is accelerating its deadline for quitting coal.

he United Kingdom is planning to end all coal-fired electricity generation by October 2024, moving up the country’s previous target by a full year. The new timeline is designed to “send a clear signal around the world that the U.K. is leading the way in consigning coal power to the history books,” said Anne-Marie Trevelyan, the country’s energy and climate change minister, in a statement on Wednesday. The announcement comes months before the United Nations’ annual climate change summit, COP26, which will be hosted in November in Glasgow.

Ending coal-fired electricity does not mean ending coal extraction. The U.K. will still be mining coal for export and using it in industrial processes like steel production, and a heavily protested brand-new coal mine is still under consideration in Northern England.

Despite these caveats, any move to reduce coal consumption is good for the climate. Coal-fired electricity is extremely carbon-intensive, accounting for 30 percent of energy-related CO2 emissions globally. It’s also a major source of fine particulate matter, a deadly air pollutant; fine particulate pollution from fossil fuels killed 8.7 million people globally in 2018.

Sam Fankhauser, a professor of climate change economics and policy at the University of Oxford, told Forbes that the target “merely formalizes a development that has all but been secured already through a combination of market forces, renewable subsidies, and climate and environmental policies.” Nonetheless, Fankhauser called the accelerated timeline “a welcome milestone of big symbolic value.”

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