Archive for June, 2017

Forex backtesting software free – Madison County Courier

Top Story OPL art workshop moves outdoors in July

Oneida Public Library has engaged the intrepid artist and teacher Carol Cotten to follow the trail of the French Impressionists in a free weekly Art Workshop en plein air for adults on Wednesday mornings, 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon, July 5, 12, 19 and 26.

Cotten will be meeting students in scenic spots in the Greater Oneida area and guiding them in observing, sketching and painting in pastels and watercolors. In case of rain, the class will meet in the library.

Cotten, who retired from teaching art in the Camden Central School District in 2004, has been conducting art workshops for children and adults at the OPL since 2005. She has exhibited her own art, especially her watercolors, at many small regional galleries and libraries, including the OPL.

Interested adults must register at the Oneida Library, 220 Broad St., for the class. Registered students will receive a list of Workshop en plein air locations, directions and a list of recommended art supplies and accessories for outdoor painting.

For more information, call the OPL at (315) 363-3050.

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Forex backtesting software free - Madison County Courier

Texas: Governor Abbott Signs Remaining Pro-Second Amendment Bills from 2017 Regular Session – NRA ILA

Your NRA-ILApreviously reported that Governor Greg Abbott signed two important pro-Second Amendment measurespassed by the Texas Legislature during the recent 140-day session into law:Senate Bill 16, priority legislation of Lt. Governor Dan Patrickthat slashes the cost of an original License To Carry from $140 to $40 and reduces the price of a renewal LTC from $70 to $40 to bring fees down to among the lowest in the nation; andHouse Bill 1819which revises Texas statutes to track federal law regarding ownership and possession of firearm sound suppressors. [The Texas Penal Code currently requires these devices to be registered with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives. If the Hearing Protection Act that eliminates this federal requirement were to pass Congress before the Texas Legislature meets again in 2019, suppressor owners would have no way of complying with state law and could be guilty of a felony offense without this important change.] An amendment was added to HB 1819 in the Senate to clarify that non-NFA, short-barreled firearms with a pistol grip -- such as the Mossberg 590 Shockwave -- are not unlawful to sell or own in Texas. The Lone Star State is one of just two states where this particular gun cannot currently besold lawfully. Bothlaws take effect on September 1, 2017.

Governor Abbott has nowalso signed the following bills into law, which also have an effective date of September 1:

Senate Bill 263repeals the minimum caliber requirement (.32) for demonstrating handgun proficiency during the range instruction portion of the License To Carry course. This unnecessary provision negatively impacts LTC applicants with hand injuries or arthritis who would benefit from being able to use a smaller caliber handgun.

Senate Bill 1566contains provisions fromHB 1692 andSB 1942 to allow employees of school districts, open-enrollment charter schools and private elementary or secondary schools who possess valid LTCs to transport and store firearms out of sight in their locked cars and trucks. These employees had been left out of the 2011 law banning employer policies restricting the lawful possession of firearms in private motor vehicles.

Senate Bill 2065includes language fromHB 421 andHB 981 to allow volunteers providing security at places of worship to be exempt from the requirements of the Private Security Act. This could include License To Carry holders approved by congregation leaders, since the prohibition on possession of firearms by LTCs at places of worship is only enforceable if the location is posted or verbal notice is given.

House Bill 1935repeals the prohibition on the possession or carrying of knives such as daggers, dirks, stilettos and Bowies, by eliminating them from the prohibited weapons section of the Texas Penal Code. Restrictions remain in place for possession or carrying of knives with a blade over 5 inches long in public places and penalties are enhanced for carrying those in the same locations where the possession of firearms is prohibited, generally.

House Bill 3784allowspersons approved by the Texas Department of Public Safety to offer an online course to cover the classroom portion of the required training for a License To Carry. The measure alsoexempts active military personnel and veterans who have received firearm instruction as part of their service within the last 10 years to be exempt from the range instruction portion of the LTC course.

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Texas: Governor Abbott Signs Remaining Pro-Second Amendment Bills from 2017 Regular Session - NRA ILA

Profs mock Scalise support for Second Amendment after shooting – Campus Reform

Several college professors took advantage of Wednesdays shooting of House Majority Whip Steve Scalise to mock his support for gun ownership and the Second Amendment.

Daniel Blair, a physics professor from Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., tweeted that he hopes Scalise will rethink his A+ rating from the National Rifle Association (NRA) following the shooting.

"My tweet was a gut reaction and pretty insensitive. I'm sorry I posted it."

I wonder if #SteveScalise will rethink his A+ NRA rating. #thoughtsandprayers do nothing, Blair tweeted.

Blair eventually expressed remorse for the tweet, telling Campus Reform in an email Friday that it was a gut reaction that he now regrets.

I think what happened to the Representative was a terrible and reprehensible act, he explained. My tweet was a gut reaction and pretty insensitive. I'm sorry I posted it.

Similarly, Merve Emre, an assistant professor at McGill University in Quebec, retweeted a post offering thoughts and prayers for the GOP lawmaker before snidely remarking that Scalise accepted $18,500 from the NRA and wants more guns on the streets.

Karl Qualls, a History professor at Dickinson College in Pennsylvania, contended that the incident was a direct result of easy access to guns and little regulation, even throwing the shooters race into the mix for good measure.

Another angry white man w easy access to guns (and state w almost no reg). Gabby Giffords, Steve Scalise. It isnt politics; Its guns, he wrote, referencing the shooting of former Democratic Rep. Gabby Giffords.

In a follow-up tweet, Qualls said that although he doesnt condone the shooting, he is wondering whether it is too much to ask our legislators to AT LEAST work 9-5. Especially since no real legislation passed this term.

[RELATED: Anti-gun prof calls for shooting up NRA, ensuring no survivors]

When contacted by Campus Reform, Qualls said that he tweeted as a concerned citizen, not a professor.

I think all citizens can agree that we would like to see our elected officials do something (tax or healthcare reform, a budget, rational gun reform....anything), he told Campus Reform. Not a single piece of legislation has passed Congress and made it to the president's pen. Both parties need to do their jobs on a daily basis like the citizens they represent. That is why we send them to DC.

Meanwhile, Robin Morris, a professor from Agnes Scott College, tweeted that she wishes Steve Scalise a full recoveryexcept for the part of him that thinks a good guy with a gun can stop a bad guy with a gun.

In an email to Campus Reform, Morris explained that she hopes the Republican lawmaker will revisit his beliefs on gun control, adding that she was saddened, but not shocked by the shooting.

My tweet regarding Rep. Scalise meant to express that I hope he recovers fully, and that he will revisit his beliefs on gun control as so many of us who have been touched by gun violence have done, she explained, while noting that she herself has lost two friends to gun violence and even witnessed a shooting when she was a teenager.

[RELATED: College rejects gun club because NRA opposes gun control]

Morris went on to explain that while she is not anti-gun, she is pro-gun sense, saying she believes that people have a right to guns for hunting and for protectionwith proper background checks, licensing, and training.

Notably, Morris later deleted one of her tweets in which she claimed that the shooter was still alive because of his race.

Well we already knew it was a white guy who did the shooting. They got him into custody instead of killing him, the tweet read, with Morris telling Campus Reform that she made the mistake historians hate to doI tweeted without enough evidence.

I have deleted that tweet. It was also insensitive to the family of James Hodgkinson who are experiencing their own grief, I am sure on many levels, today. I pray for all the families, she added.

While several professors used Wednesdays shooting as an opportunity to advocate for gun legislation, there was one professor, Mike Plugh, who did not, instead tweeting that as a radical leftist college professor, I feel its important to hope that Steve Scalise gets a standing ovation if/when he returns for work.

Plugh explained to Campus Reform that while he is not necessarily "against" professors speaking out on issues "when the situation is hot," he would opt to discuss such issues with his students "in a closed classroom setting."

"I think some people feel strongly about gun violence and gun control and feel that it's important to discuss it when the situation is hot. I'm not against that at all. I think uncomfortable times are important times for discourse too," he stated. "I would probably talk to my own students, in a closed classroom setting, about the tragedy of the event and raise questions about policy priorities, political lobbying, and cultural values."

Campus Reform also reached out to Emre, but did not receive a responsein time for publication.

Follow the author of this article on Twitter: @spaduhhh

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Profs mock Scalise support for Second Amendment after shooting - Campus Reform

Australia’s solution to migrant crisis: "Stop the Boats" – The Rebel

It seems to me we used to fight wars to protect ourselves. Now we are nothing more than doormats. (must be the soy beans).

While some Muslims are white, most are black,brown, or yellow, its just a fact. While some migrants are white, most are black,brown,or yellow. While some migrants are from non Muslim countries (Mexico, South America) most migrants these days are. So while I admit to an Islam problem, I am all for a little racial and cultural diversity but this is going to be eventual genocide. The result of this mass migration will result in the European white race being wiped out (mostly) by Muslims of colour from many countries around the world.

All of these people will always have their own country they left, full of their own people. If our country is assimilated by migrants of races and cultures that are mostly from Islamic countries it will mean we no longer have a country. Why would any people want to do that to themselves, or allow it? Truth be told the world is not white. We are actually the minority.

Jihad by population.

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Australia's solution to migrant crisis: "Stop the Boats" - The Rebel

The European Migrant Crisis And Historical Amnesia: A Personal Testament From Austria – The Liberty Conservative

The migrant crisis has, like an uncontrolled blaze tumbling through a dense forest, left few parts of Europe untouched. Stories of refugees abounded even in the part of Austria known as Burgenland, where I resided for a week during my travels on the Continent back in January.

I was staying with the great-granddaughter of my great-great-grandmothers sister, who happened to live in the small town of Breitenbrunn. This was the same town from which my great-great-grandparents emigrated in the later half of the nineteenth century to the United States in search of a better life. Burgenland, as with much of Austria and Bavaria, is quaint and idyllic. Neuseidl Lake, a popular tourist attraction in the summer, lies not far from Brietenbrunn. The region is known for its wine, and the birthplaces and residences of many a famous composer and their patrons Haydn, Liszt, Hummel, and the Esterhazy family foremost among them dot the countryside. Burgenland is well-connected to the hubs of central Europe: Vienna and Bratislava are only forty minutes away, Budapest two-and-a-half hours.

Of all the memories I amassed during my travels in Central Europe, the most poignant relate to the effects of the migrant crisis on my ancestral homeland. My uncle (the wife of my cousin with whom I was staying) apprised me of a story regarding an abandoned lorry found on the highway to Vienna: 60 migrants were found dead, having needlessly suffocated during illegal transport through the country. What is more, there was to my mind a singular irony in discovering the housing of a recently-arrived family of five Syrians directly across from Breitenbrunns towered church, which was destroyed by the Turks in the eighteenth century not long after its construction. (It was swiftly rebuilt. I made a point of standing inside, in the same spot my great-great grandparents were married well over a century ago.)

These two incidents the latter in particular colored the whole of my experience in Central Europe. I cannot think of my time among my Austrian relatives without tasting the bitterness that goes along with the most delicious sort of historical irony, where Europeans, instead of fighting their conquerors as before, have now welcomed them with open arms.

Consider the Ottoman invaders in more detail.

As I passed numerous towns and villages of sizes comparable to that of Breitenbrunn, my uncle informed me of their respective histories: most were bloody. Because Burgenland lay at the border of Austria and Hungary, it was subject to the tender mercies of the Turks as they made their way to Vienna not once but twice. Villages such as Breitenbrunn and Purbach saw nearly their entire populations murdered en masse survivors had to seek refuge in nearby forests.

This is not to say the Ottomans exercised a solely destructive influence on Austria. For one, their historical exploits explain Austrians mania for coffee (my relatives and I drank cups of the stuff with nearly every meal). In Purbach a yearly festival is held, where the populace dresses la turque for days on end, while the rest of Burgenland sojourns forth to view their revelries with much amusement. Even to the south, pasta is said to have been brought to Italy by the invaders.

Now turn your attention to the modern-day migrants.

Although the family was Syrian in origin and not Turkish, one cannot help but make this connection between the Muslim conquerors of the past, and the Muslim migrants of the present. Europe does not face the threat of extirpation as it did centuries ago at the hands of the Ottomans, but the mass movement of Middle Eastern and African peoples to European nations does indeed constitute a form of religious, cultural, and demographic conquest.

The injurious results of unrestrained Islamic immigration require mention. Crime in Vienna has skyrocketed, as have Austrian gun sales (presumably for self-defense). The current governing coalition, including the center-right party, has deemed it necessary to pass legislation banning the burqa and initiating integration and community service programs for refugees. These measures only highlight the difficulties of integrating persons and families lacking the necessary language and job skills no less from Islamist countries into a post-Enlightenment European society such as Austria.

What could possibly induce a people so proud of their culture to concede so much ground and offer such hospitality to recent arrivals, arrivals who strike a concordant note with the faith of the violent conquerors of earlier centuries?

One answer might lie in the multicultural nature of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in the nineteenth century: Kaiser Franz Joseph and the beloved Empress Sisi presided over an ethnically diverse realm whose power was concentrated in the overwhelmingly liberal and cosmopolitan Vienna the Vienna of the Strausses, Freud, Klimt, Trotsky, Stalin, Hitler, Wittgenstein. Maybe the Austria of the twentieth century, anti-Semitic and nationalist, was but an aberration from an inherent Austrian predilection for getting along with Hungarians, Serbs, Croats and yes, now Middle Eastern peoples.

Having spoken with my uncle, I got the vague sense that some Austrians compare the plight of the refugees to those Eastern Europeans who fled communist oppression in favor of the freedom offered by capitalist Europe. My uncle recalled a bridge not far from Breitenbrunn on the Austro-Hungarian border where Hungarians were shot in the back as they attempted to enter Austria, a country once united to theirs under one crown. Later, he makes a point of driving me, in the dead of night, past the location of a picnic jointly held by Austrians and East Germans in an expression of solidarity. But this begs the question: are Muslim migrants from the Third World analogous to the Europeans who suffered behind the Iron Curtain?

I must reject this as a pretty poor analogy, or even a disanology. This Syrian family, that group of 60 migrants who suffocated in the lorry they did not necessarily flee a totalitarian regime bent on impoverishing them and controlling their lives. They were far more likely to have been motivated for economic reasons to make the trek far into the heart of Europe than the atrocities of the Assad rgime. And even if Assads murderous actions or those of the brutal Islamist rebels prompted their escape from Syria, the danger nipping at their heels stopped at the border of their own country. Refugee camps choke nations of goodwill such as Lebanon, and although they are crowded and less-than-ideal, they provide immediate shelter from the woes of war. These young men and the occasional family passed through these camps and Turkey as well as Slovakia, Slovenia, Hungary, and yes, even Austria to get to Germany or some Scandinavian country such as Sweden, where they would receive the most generous support in the form of welfare benefits. And I have yet to speak of those many hundreds of thousands of North Africans, who are purely motivated by economic opportunity to board ships at the risk of drowning to travel to Italy and other nations. What is more, the vast majority of the migrants I have just described are not European, neither culturally nor ethnically, unlike the refugees of Eastern Europe. Both in point of fact and morally, refugees from communism and migrants from the Third World are not equivalent.

On the way to Budapest an accident forces my uncle and I to sit in the morning sun, which has yet to melt the patches of alabaster snow off the swarthy countryside. We exit our car and converse with fellow travelers. A native of Budapest, without prompting, launches into something of a tirade concerning the migrant crisis. It sounds rehearsed but only because it has been the subject of common conversation. He laments the fact that the majority of migrants are young men who readily commit crime. He also decries what he calls lies: he emphatically states he and his fellow Hungarians were told the people fleeing terror and bloodshed in the Middle East were families and children, not these young men. He feels cheated. My uncle keeps mum on the subject.

As an American I must admit not without irony the situation of many of these migrants is closer to that of the Eastern Europeans who sailed to the New World beginning in the 1870s. My great-great-grandfather and his family left Breitenbrunn, along with many thousands of other Europeans, looking for superior economic conditions rather than rgime change.

As I left the very church where my great-great-grandparents were wed, I could not help but ponder one of either two possibilities: that Burgenlanders are either blind to the historical irony of housing Muslim migrants across from a church Turks once burned to the ground, or that historical guilt weighs so heavily on their psyches that they swallow this irony as just another bitter pill. I hope it is the former.

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The European Migrant Crisis And Historical Amnesia: A Personal Testament From Austria - The Liberty Conservative