Archive for March, 2017

Editorial: Stand your ground isn’t right for Iowa – Newton Daily News

A bill making its way through the Iowa Legislature to expand gun rights in Iowa packs in an abundance of questionable and unneeded provisions but at the forefront is stand your ground.

House File 517 cleared the Iowa House and advanced to the Iowa Senate Judiciary Committee this week with the inclusion of stand your ground, which would mean a person doesnt have a duty to retreat before using deadly force.

While some Iowa law enforcement officials and county attorneys have taken issue with stand your ground most citing the lessened burden to justify the use of lethal force in self-defense, Jasper County Sheriff John Halferty said he isnt taking a position at this time.

Halferty said most valid permit carriers are law abiding citizens, and we agree.

The sheriff, who has issued more than 4,350 active permits to carry in Jasper County, also says we want to respect the right of a citizen to exercise their Second Amendment right but still be safe in doing so. This includes making good decisions on when to carry, how,and when to use reasonable force.

We believe safety and good decisions come sharply into question under the stand your ground provision. Further, this is not a problem to be fixed. Iowans already have the right to protect themselves with reasonable force. Stand your ground legislation will mean innocent people could be killed senselessly. Many people may believe their lives are threatened in many different scenarios in which violence shouldnt be the first solution. Someone would simply have to feel threatened to fire their weapon whether that threat is real or not would become the burden of our law enforcement officers and county attorneys.

This shoot first and ask questions later philosophy isnt right for Iowa, especially since our state ranks in the ninth-lowest rate of gun violence, according to a recent study.

Meanwhile, according to a 2016 study published by the Journal of the American Medical Association, Floridas monthly homicide rate increased nearly 25 percent after implementation of its stand your ground law.

Other provisions in House File 517 would allow those 21 and under to possess a pistol while under the supervision of a parent or guardian. This falls in line with something we do support gun safety education. People need to know how to handle a gun properly if they are going to have one in their possession. However, simply saying under 21 years of age means some parents might choose to arm children far too young to be handling a pistol. Even Iowas hunter safety and education courses require a child to be at least 11 years old to participate.

These are just two examples from a bill intended to needlessly open gun access in our state. Any gun laws passed this session should support common sense and safety, while keeping in mind that if it isnt broke, dont fix it.

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Editorial: Stand your ground isn't right for Iowa - Newton Daily News

House passes Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act – The Denver Channel

Fire Weather Warningissued March 19 at 8:25AM MDT expiring March 19 at 7:00PM MDT in effect for: Kit Carson

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House passes Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act - The Denver Channel

American citizens may soon be able to exercise their Second Amendment rights even on federal land – Patheos (blog)

Anytime this country takes even one step closer to its founding as a constitutional republic, its time to celebrate.

In 1973, under Richard Nixon the president who considered guns an abomination legislation was passed banning guns on the millions of acres of countryside under the watchful eye of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. This means no one is allowed to carry a gun for protection on that land if theyre just camping or hiking. (This is true even though hunting is allowed on some of those acres!)

However, that may soon change thanks to a 2014 lawsuit, Nesbitt v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which challenged the anti-gun regulation. District Judge B. Lynn Winmill, a Clinton appointee, ruled in favor of the plaintiffs in his decision:

[T]his complete ban goes beyond merely burdening Second Amendment rights but destroys those rights for law-abiding citizens carrying operable firearms for the lawful purpose of self-defense.

Of course, the equally anti-gun Obama administration appealed Winmills ruling. Just as the Court was about to consider it the Corps asked to be taken off the calendar. They are actually reconsidering theirpolicy, according to The Washington Post:

TheArmy Corps of Engineers is reconsidering the firearms policy challenged in this case, as well as plaintiffs requests for permission to carry firearms on Army Corps property. This reconsideration has the potential to fully resolve plaintiffs objections.

This is as it should be. The Second Amendment guarantees American citizens the right to protect their person and property at all times. Any regulation which denies that inalienable right, is in direct violation of our founding document. End of story.

H/T TruthRevolt

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American citizens may soon be able to exercise their Second Amendment rights even on federal land - Patheos (blog)

Child refugees attempting suicide amid increasing desperation among thousands of trapped migrants in Greece – The Independent

Desperate refugees trapped in Greece are self-harming and attempting suicide as a result of disastrous EU policies, aid agencies have warned.

More refugees are dying than ever before while attempting to reach Europe, almost a year after a controversial deal was struck with Turkey in an effort to prevent boat crossings acrossthe Aegean Sea.

The agreement has stranded thousands of asylum seekers in Greece, where aid agencies say children are among rising numbers of migrants trying to kill themselves after months trapped in squalid camps.

Research by Save the Children found more than 5,000 minors are living in appalling conditions that are driving a mounting mental health crisis.

Clothes hung out to dry at the Vial detention centre on the Greek island of Chios (Sacha Myers/Save the Children)

It has recorded children as young as nine self-harming and 12-year-olds attempting suicide, sometimes filming themselves in the act, as well as a spike in drug and alcohol abuse by teenagers who are exploited by dealers in camps.

Violent protests and deaths are traumatising the youngest and most vulnerable refugees, whose families say they are too scared to let their children play out of sight in case they are hurt or abused.

Save the Children staff report that some unaccompanied children live in 24-hour survival mode and sleep in shifts to try to stay safe, while others disappear or pay smugglers to leave the Greek islands.

The EU-Turkey deal was meant to end the flow of irregular migrants to Greece, but at what cost? said Andreas Ring, Save the Childrens humanitarian representative.

Many of these children have escaped war and conflict only to end up in camps many of them call helland where they say they are made to feel more like animals than humans.

Since 20 March 2016, all migrants arriving on Greek islands have been held, under threat of deportation to Turkey,while their asylum applications are processed, but legal blocks have slowed transfers and left refugees in overcrowded tent camps for up to a year.

Reza, a 23-year-old migrant from Afghanistan, arrived on Lesbos the day after the deal came into force and remains on the island, where three men died over just six days in January.

I feel I am nothing and that I dont have control over my life anymore, he told Human Rights Watch (HRW).

Refugees in Greece: Every day you die many times

I cant leave the island and after such a long time here, I feel that nothing has a purpose anymore. You feel like crazy, wandering around without knowing why.

Reza said he received no information about the asylum process for two months and was not told borders had closed across Europe, then watched Syrians be prioritised for asylum interviews.

Eva Coss, the HRW researcher for Greece, said authorities must ensure people have meaningful access to asylum, that is free of discrimination over nationality or religion.

The EU-Turkey deal has been an unmitigated disaster for the very people it is supposed to protect, she added.

Mdecins Sans Frontires (MSF) is working inside designated refugee hotspots across Greece, where charity workers are warning of the human cost of European policy failures.

Its research has shown rocketing rates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, trauma and psychosis.

Louise Roland Gosselin, MSFs humanitarian affairs advisor in Greece, said tent camps on Lesbos, Leros, Samos, Chios and Kos were built as transit areas for stays of a matter of days but some are now at double capacity.

Peoples mental health condition deteriorated as soon as the deal was signed, she told The Independent.

Firstly because of the conditions in the camps crammed in these difficult conditions, with no activities to do at all in the day.

The second thing thats even harder is they dont know whats going to happen to them.

A lot of these people have fled terrible conflicts and are facing a return to Turkey, where their future would be very uncertain.

People over the last year have just been crushed, mentally and physically.

MSF is treating dozens of torture victims at a specialist centre in Athens, with asylum seekers reporting being imprisoned, beaten and raped, and fears many more are not getting the help they need.

Ms Gosselin said between 5 and 30 per cent of refugees have been tortured, including people from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, whose citizens make up almost a third of MSFs patients.

At the moment theres real discrimination with a sense of there being good refugees and bad migrants, and the Africans are usually seen less deserving of international protection, she added. There is a need for fair procedures.

A migrant stands next to a snow-covered tent at the Moria detention camp on the Greek island of Lesbos on 7 January (AFP/Getty)

Arash, a 30-year-old asylum seeker, who was a political prisoner in Iran, said he was tortured and forced through mock executions but was not afforded protection as a vulnerable person by Greek authorities.

Ive attempted three times to kill myself, he told HRW in the EU-sponsored Moria detention centre on Lesbos.

The conditions here remind me of the prison in Iran, the nightmares, the threats and the torture.

Almost 13,000 asylum seekers are trapped on Greek islands according to UN figures far above the 8,700 capacity and a backlog in claims is expected to grow amid legal disputes over whether Turkey can be considered a safe country for deportations.

With many tent camps lacking proper shelter, heating and fuel, several asylum seekers were killed by hypothermia, carbon monoxide poisoning and a gas blast during a period of extreme cold over the winter, with at least 13 dying so far this year on European soil.

A grim record of 5,000 deaths at sea in 2016 is on course to be surpassed this year, with at least 525 migrants being drowned or suffocated on boat journeys over the Mediterranean in 2017.

Most lives are lost on the treacherous crossing between war-torn Libya and Italy, where numbers have increased since the EU-Turkey deal slowed shorter and comparatively safer voyages over the Aegean Sea to a trickle.

The EuropeanUnionvowed to increase cooperation with Libyas fragile government at a summit last week but face opposition from humanitarian agencies as conflict between warring factions worsens in the country.

Opponents warn that any move to prevent refugees from leaving warzones in Libya force them into detention centres where they are being tortured and killed would be a violation of international law.

The British Government has sent millions of pounds in aid to Turkey, Libya and other countries housing migrants but has been criticised for scrapping a programme to resettle child refugees in the UK.

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Child refugees attempting suicide amid increasing desperation among thousands of trapped migrants in Greece - The Independent

Candidates: Illegal immigration burdening Milford – Wicked Local

Zachary Comeau Daily News Staff @zcomeau_MDN

MILFORD - Four candidates for two selectman seats each had slightly different opinions on immigration in town when asked at a forum Wednesday night. Some advocated for education and pushing assimilation while others said the federal government needs to do a better job of immigration enforcement to ease the burdensome local effects of illegal immigration.

In recent years, Milford has seen a steady rise in the number of South American immigrants, most notably from Ecuador and Brazil.

Mike Walsh, the current School Committee chairman running for the unexpired two-year seat against Harold Rhodes, said the town has a long history of welcoming immigrants, citing theEuropean immigrants from Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Poland and other countries that came to Milford several generations ago.

Whats important, though, is we need to make sure theyre here legally, Walsh said of the current wave of immigrants coming to town. According to some estimates of officials, there are a few thousand Ecuadorean and Brazilian immigrants in Milford, with a large percentage of them undocumented.

For those here legally, Walsh said the town has an obligation to take care of them, but undocumented families are placing a large burden on the school system.

There are 88 more English Language Learner students in the school system this year compared to last year, according to officials. The school system doesnt become aware of some of those students until just before the school year begins, Walsh said.

Walsh said to ensure better assimilation, legal immigrants should be educated on American principles and customs. He pointed to what he said is a practice of Ecuadorean parents to carry their children around the rough terrain of Ecuador, which he said is routinely seen around town.

If theyre here legally, we owe it to them to work with them," he said.

He also said the town should be more welcoming to legal immigrants, citing negative comments made about the population in public places.

Rhodes, his opponent, sang a different tune, rather than talking about the burden placed on the town. He referencing the undocumented immigrant population and the practices of the Milford police, which is to detain undocumented immigrants at the request of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. If ICE isnt seeking that person, theyre free to go after release from local custody.

Thats the fair way to do it, Rhodes said.

The other selectman race sees Building Commissioner and School Committee member JohnErickson against incumbent Bill Buckley, and both said recent immigration to Milford is burdening the schools and town financially.

The impact on the school system, particularly the ELL aspect, is by far the biggest impact on this community, Erickson said.

Buckley cited Milfords rich history of accepting immigrants, citing the several European countries from which immigrants settled in Milford, but shifted to focus on illegal immigration in Milford, which he said is effecting not only the schools, but hospitals and housing.

Even landlords are taking advantage of (illegal immigration), Buckley said, citing illegal boarding houses.

Buckley said the town has done a great job in welcoming legal immigrants, but assimilation hasnt come as quickly as citizens would hoped, he said, citing immigrants still living in a shadow economy.

Thats primarily where I hear residents have the biggest concerns, he said.

Erickson advocated for the community to be compassionate toward immigrants with proper documentation, but agreed that assimilation has been slow.

Its a function of human nature that it takes time to assimilate to new cultures to our area, he said.

Zachary Comeau can be reached at 508-634-7556 and zcomeau@wickedlocal.com. Follow him on Twitter @ZComeau_MDN.

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Candidates: Illegal immigration burdening Milford - Wicked Local