Archive for July, 2017

House to vote again Thursday on tax hike; Meier berated on social media – Belleville News-Democrat


Patriot Post
House to vote again Thursday on tax hike; Meier berated on social media
Belleville News-Democrat
Commenters on his Facebook post called him everything from a traitor to a liar, and suggested he switch to being a Democrat. One commenter wrote: This is just another 'kick the can' exercise. I ain't buying the statement that this was such a difficult ...
Democrat-Controlled States Face Debt CrisisPatriot Post
Two key suburban House Republicans still favor tax hikeChicago Daily Herald

all 693 news articles »

Original post:
House to vote again Thursday on tax hike; Meier berated on social media - Belleville News-Democrat

Controversial House Republican gains national attention after filming Auschwitz video – The Hill

Rep. Clay Higgins (R-La.) has only been in Congress for six months, but hes already establishing himself as a provocateur.

His latest controversy: filming a video inside a former gas chamber in the Auschwitz Nazi concentration camp. The video first appeared online over the weekend.

The backlash grew enough that the freshman lawmaker, who is 55, issued a statement apologizing for the video by the end of the day on Wednesday.

I filmed the Auschwitz message with great humility. My intent was to offer a reverent homage to those who were murdered in Auschwitz and to remind the world that evil exists, that free nations must remember, and stand strong, Higgins said.

In the video posted over the weekend, Higgins explains how the gas chambers worked and says theyre an example of why the U.S. military "must be invincible."

However, my message has caused pain to some whom I love and respect," Higgins continued in the statement retracting the video. "For that, my own heart feels sorrow. Out of respect to any who may feel that my video posting was wrong or caused pain, I have retracted my video.

The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum and the Anne Frank Center for Mutual Respect had condemned Higginss video on Wednesdayas disrespectful and insensitive toward Holocaust victims.

Congressman Higgins, Auschwitz is not a television studio," Steven Goldstein, executive director of the Anne Frank Center for Mutual Respect, said in a statement.

The Auschwitz Memorial pointedly posted a photo on Twitter showing a sign at the entrance of the gas chambers that asks visitors to please maintain silence to remember [the victims] suffering and show respect for their memory.

Higgins concluded the video at Auschwitz by saying: Its hard to walk away from gas chambers and ovens without a very sober feeling of commitment, unwavering commitment, to make damn sure that the United States of America is protected from the evils of the world.

Higginss pin designating him as a member of Congress is visible on his lapel, along with a dual American-Polish flag pin.

Its unclear if Higgins toured the former concentration camp as part of official business. A spokesman did not respond to an inquiry asking precisely when and why Higgins was visiting Poland.

Higgins also drew national headlines a month ago for harsh comments on threats from radicalized Islamic terrorists.

He referred to radicalized Islamic suspects as heathen animals and concluded with a call to hunt them, identify them, and kill them. Kill them all. For the sake of all that is good and righteous. Kill them all.

The post came a day after terrorist attacks in London, for which the Islamic State claimed responsibility.

Three days later, Higginsposted again on Facebook asking his supporters to sign up for his campaign emails.

Higgins has long had a knack for going viral.

Before running for the House last year, Higgins served as captain for the St. Landry Parish Sheriffs Office.

Higgins created a series of Crime Stoppers videos in which he displayed a tough persona commenting on suspects and promising redemption if they admitted to their crimes.

Higginss videos drew millions of views on YouTube and even attracted the attention of late-night comedian Jimmy Fallon in 2015.

Im going to have a cheeseburger here with fries and a Coke, and leave a nice tip for the waitress, Higgins says outside of Stellys Supermarket. Meanwhile, your next meal will be served through a small hole in a cell door.

But last year, Higgins proved to be too controversial in one video that ultimately led to his resignation from the sheriffs office.

The video was not made on behalf of the Crime Stoppers series, but Higgins was shown describing members of a wanted street gang as animals, thugs and heathens while holding a gun.

"You will be hunted, you will be trapped, and if you raise your weapon to a man like me, we'll return fire with superior fire, Higgins said.

Higgins defeated former Louisiana Lieutenant Governor Scott Angelle for the deep-red, safe GOP seat last year.

Fallon joked while playing a clip from Higginss Crime Stoppers segment that the then-captain should consider a higher profile.

Can that guy run for president? Fallon joked.

Little did Fallon know Higgins would be serving in the House two years later. Higgins's attention-getting yet controversial actions have gained a national stage, where the consequences could be greater.

Olivia Beavers contributed.

Visit link:
Controversial House Republican gains national attention after filming Auschwitz video - The Hill

Multnomah County Republican Party Chair Says His Plan to Use Paramilitary Groups for Security Isn’t RadicalIt’s a … – Willamette Week

If all press is good press, June was a banner month for James Buchal.

The chairman of the Multnomah County Republican Party grabbed attention June 4 when he recruited new members at a far-right "free speech" rally in downtown Portland. Buchal soon began promoting the idea that his party could use militia groups like the Three Percenters and the Oath Keepers as security for future marches and events. And on June 28, the county GOP, under Buchal's leadership, formally authorized bringing in paramilitary organizations as armed guards.

The decision to turn to the Oath Keepers and Three Percenters for security immediately drew backlash on Twitter, Facebook and the county GOP's own website. Some called the decision a move toward martial law.

But Buchal sees it very differently: as a cheap way to keep an outnumbered and reviled party safe in enemy territory.

Only 13 percent of county voters are registered as Republicans. The party's volunteer ranks are even smaller: 179 members. And Portland, never a GOP stronghold, has embraced its fiercest Little Beirut reputation since the November election, with antifascist and anarchist groups marching in the streets to battle self-proclaimed neo-Nazis.

An antifascist protester in Portland on June 30. (William Gagan)

But Buchal claims Republicans are antifa's real target. Since he became chairman in 2015, the county GOP has made jarring changesembracing rhetoric that echoes the talking points of "alt-right" extremist groups emboldened by the election of President Donald Trump.

Buchal spoke with WW in his Sunnyside neighborhood office, discussing why he's leading his party to the political fringes.

WW: The Oath Keepers? What's wrong with regular security guards?

James Buchal: Because we are an all-volunteer organization with no money. So if we are going to get security services, we are going to get them from volunteers. And people who volunteer to provide security services to Republicans are generally going to be people who share the view that the government has developed an unconstitutional overreach of power, and that it is a reasonable political objective to attempt to rein government in.

Militia member assists the public at a June 4 right-wing rally. (William Gagan)

These are the same groups that helped seize the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. How are they on the side of the rule of law?

Some reporter told me with respect to the Malheur thing that the Oath Keepers down there were keeping the peace. I don't accept the premise of your question that the groups are inherently lawless. And we're talking about people who are locally based here in Portland. Not people who may have come from Arizona or Idaho or someplace because they like to go from place to place participating in situations of conflict. It's members of the local community.

What threat in Portland is so scary that you need to bring in a paramilitary organization?

It's been a sequence of events. The [volunteers] who were at the street fairs reported incidents that made them feel unsafe. And then we got people threatening to drag us out of the Avenue of Roses Parade, and then there were people threatening on Facebook that they were going to stab us to death if we dared to participate, and so on and so forth. So it's been sort of a continuous escalation. It was at that point that this idea began to take on greater sense, in my mind at least.

Right and left-wing protesters spar in Portland on June 30. (William Gagan)

Other than the one anonymous letter before a parade in April, what threats has the Multnomah County Republican Party received? Were you really kicked out of a restaurant?

I think when people call you up and they have this screaming demonic tone in their voice, it gives you some concern. Especially if it's more than one of them. We used to hold our quarterly larger meetings at Mekong Bistro. And when we went to get the one organized for June 26, we were told that we were no longer allowed to do that. Because it was political. I heard about it all secondhand. I inferred that they had come under pressure.

Do you acknowledge that hate speech and neo-Nazi activity has gone up in Portland?

It's a question of how you define your terms. [At the June 4 rally,] I saw two people carrying signs that said "Diversity equals white genocide," and then I saw them get kicked out. I haven't personally seen hate speech or neo-Nazi activity at all, unless these two people carrying the signs counted.

Antifascist protesters chase a counter-protester who stole a flag they were burning on June 30. (William Gagan)

Do you think the so-called alt-right groups are racist?

The left and the right may have a somewhat different definition of racism. I have the impression that many on the left would regard any defense of American exceptionalism as inherently racist. I think it is possible to defend Western culture without being a racist.

Do you see a difference between defending Western culture and defending whiteness?

I look at an idea entirely independent of the identity of the person who is advancing the idea. Meritocracy is color-blind. Equality of opportunity should be color-blind.

Right-wing protester in Portland on June 30. (William Gagan)

You've argued that the alt-right isn't racist. Let's say you're right. What ideology do they stand for other than antagonizing and provoking people?

I see them as standing for a restoration of constitutional government. And some of them, like Patriot Prayer, I think also have a Christian component to them, which would say that, in addition to getting the government under control, we need a rise in public morality.

How do you explain the accused MAX train killer who attended alt-right protests, then?

You don't know who is going to show up at your event. If someone shows up wearing swastikas, the answer to that is going to be, "You're not standing anywhere near us, asshole." What I know about Jeremy Christian is that he was registered as a Libertarian. There's a lot of crap out there on the internet. Who knows what influenced him? But I can guarantee you that it wasn't a Republican Party website. The conclusion I draw from the evidence I've seen is that he was mentally ill. And so I guess I sort of resent the notion that we're called upon to distance ourselves from some nut who as far as I know has never been to a Republican Party meeting.

You're giving speeches next to men dressed as Captain America. Why should Portlanders take you any more seriously than a teenager with a mask and a stink bomb?

I should prefer that they do not dress up in superhero costumes. I would say that this goes back to the ideal of judging an idea on its merits. If you're in the group of people who thinks there is such a thing as objective reality, then when someone says something, then you evaluate the objective merits of what he said. Is what he said true? Not "he's a member of a different identity group, so I'm going to discount or ignore what he says."

An alt-right protester in Portland on June 30. (William Gagan)

Decades ago, California's Republican Party started appealing to far-right groups and white nationalists, which partly led to the party's decline. Do you worry this will happen to you?

One is always concerned when working for a political party to not take steps to shoot oneself in the foot. But in Portland, we must look at the long game. We are unlikely to be electing a [Republican] mayor anytime soon. So I would give you the counter-analogy of Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan. Barry Goldwater was successfully demonized as an extremist, a perception that he fueled by saying that extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice, and he lost. But the defense of these ideals ultimately gained traction and led to the election of Ronald Reagan. So I think the pendulum will swing. As people begin to get a lower and lower opinion of the leftists and the results of their disastrously counterproductive policies, a good honest defense of fundamental principles like the rule of law and limited government will eventually gain adherence. Even if it is unfashionable at the moment.

Here is the original post:
Multnomah County Republican Party Chair Says His Plan to Use Paramilitary Groups for Security Isn't RadicalIt's a ... - Willamette Week

WATCH VIDEO: Somerset Dems rally against Republican health care plan – TribDem.com

SOMERSET Several dozen locals, organized by theSomerset County Democratic Committee,rallied against the Republican Partys health care plan Wednesday evening on the steps of the Somerset County Courthouse.

In light of the Republican Partys Better Care and Reconciliation Act, Somerset County Democratic Committee volunteer coordinator Todd Holsopple said, and what its looking like thats going to do to the American health care industry and to health care for millions of people across the country, we felt it was really important to show that this area really cares about this issue.

The Better Care and Reconciliation Act of 2017 is the Senates draft version of the Republican-backed bill that would repealthe Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, often nicknamed Obamacare.

Somerset County Democratic Committee's July 5 rally against the Republican health care plan.

Erin McClelland, the 2016 Democratic nominee to represent Pennsylvanias 12th congressional district, headlined the rally. McClelland, who failed to unseat Rep. Keith Rothfus, R-Sewickley, last November and in 2014, has 20 years ofexperience in the health care industry.

Weve been goingin the wrong direction. The (Affordable Care Act) started moving us in the right direction, covering a lot more people, and now were talking about completely going backwards, McClelland said.

McClelland said she worries that the BCRA will overwhelm the nations emergency rooms with newly uninsured patients who have no other way to get medical treatment.

U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey told a television town hall audience on Wednesday he disagrees with a Congressional Budget Office score that estimated 22 million fewer Americans will have health care by 2026 if the Better Care Reconciliation Act he helped design is enacted.

Those 24 million people who will lose their health care theyre going to go right back into the (emergency room) system, which is the most ineffective, most expensive way to get care, she said.

Our ERs are going to get all plugged up, the people that need triage care arent going to get it, and costs are going to continue to explode.

A Congressional Budget Office report dated June 26 stated thatthe BCRA would increase the number of people who are uninsured by 22 million in 2026 relative to the number under current law. An estimated 49 million people would be uninsured, the CBO said, compared with 28 million who would lack insurance that year underthe Affordable Care Act.

The health care industry employs 17 percent of all workers in Americas rural counties, according to a statement posted on the website of Sen. Bob Casey, a Democrat, on June 21. Holsopplecited that figure when he expressed his worries about how the BCRA could affect the local economy.

When you have an industry that employs 17 percent of the jobs in rural areas like this ... its not a way forward that anybody, really, can imagine is going to be positive for the nation and especially for areas just like Somerset County, just like Cambria County, just like Bedford, he said.

The battle over the future of Medicaid in the Republican effort to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act has given little attention to how reduced funding will affect military veterans.

Terra Setzler, an advocacy organizer for Planned Parenthood, spoke about thenegative impact she said the Republican health care plan would have on Planned Parenthood and other womens health care providers. The BCRA wouldprevent federal funds from being made available to Planned Parenthood for one year after its enactment, according to the CBO.

Johnstown resident Larry Blalock said he came to the rally to show his support for Planned Parenthood and for the estimated 22 million people who could lose their health insurance under the BCRA. While hesaid heprefers Obamacare to the Republicans plan, he has his sights set on a further-off goal.

I really think the Affordable Care Act needs to turn into a single-payer national health care plan that were not constantly fighting over, he said, or worrying about whether or not were going to have to pay a deductible that we cant afford.

Holsopple urged rally-goers to contact their representatives in Congress and urge them to oppose the Republican health care plan.

Its not right, he said.

Were not going to sit back and let them do it.

Mark Pesto is a reporter for The Tribune-Democrat. Follow him on Twitter at @MarkPesto.

View post:
WATCH VIDEO: Somerset Dems rally against Republican health care plan - TribDem.com

My friend faces three life sentences in Turkey – The Boston Globe

A demonstration in Taksim Square, Istanbul, against the failed coup attempt on July 17, 2016. Turkey has remained under a state of emergency since, and a constitutional referendum was held and won with a narrow majority to convert the countrys parliamentary system into an executive presidency.

Last week I received a bizarre invitation. A bureaucrat in Istanbul asked me to help the Turkish government celebrate its commitment to democracy. I was invited to be one of about 30 journalists who will contribute articles to a special magazine that is to be distributed in Istanbul and six foreign cities on July 15.

Each article is supposed to be about the benefits of strong democracies.

Advertisement

My friend Sahin Alpay, a veteran Turkish journalist who is also a political science professor, is better qualified than I am to write on that theme. As a young leftist, he was persecuted after both the 1973 and 1980 military coups in Turkey. He spent years in exile, mostly in Sweden. His political views moderated, and by the time he returned home, by his own account, he had gone from disillusioned Marxist to convinced liberal social democrat. He became a newspaper columnist and radio commentator. When Michael Dukakis visited Turkey in 1999, he translated Dukakiss comments for other Turkish reporters. In 2002 he surprised some of his secularist colleagues by announcing that he would vote for the rising political star Recep Tayyip Erdogan, arguing that Erdogans democratic promise outweighed his Islamist impulses.

Unfortunately, my friend is no longer in a position to write articles for anyone. He is one of more than 200 Turkish journalists and other media workers now languishing in jail. His crime was writing columns that are now seen as having expressed subversive opinions. Prosecutors have asked that he be penalized with three consecutive terms of life imprisonment, plus up to 15 years for membership in an armed terror group. He is 73 years-old and the sweetest guy I have ever known.

Get This Week in Opinion in your inbox:

Globe Opinion's must-reads, delivered to you every Sunday.

After his arrest, the German newspaper Die Zeit called him one of the most important liberal voices in Turkey, and concluded that few arrests seem as absurd as that of Sahin Alpay. My friend may or may not be a hero of the Turkish press. After he was dismissed from several newspapers for writing articles that disturbed people in power, he landed at one that was loyal to the exiled Turkish cleric Fetullah Gulen. Several times he called Gulen a supporter of moderate Islam. He did not jump to protest when anti-Gulen journalists were imprisoned. Perhaps he made some misjudgments a sin that many columnists, maybe including me, have occasionally committed. Now, for what he has written, he faces the possibility of spending years in jail. I am not allowed to visit him, but a news report several months after his arrest said that he was confined to a cell with two other prisoners and forbidden even to walk in the jailhouse courtyard. His wife brings him books and anti-depressant medication.

Turkey was progressive and free. Until it wasnt. Will the US take heed?

President Erdogan was once an ally of Gulen. They feuded, parted company, and became enemies. After a failed military coup in Turkey last year, their enmity turned deadly. Erdogan asserted that Gulen was behind the coup attempt. Anyone who ever worked for his newspaper or wrote a good word about him suddenly became the equivalent of a Jew in Nazi Germany: a vile traitor who deserved the nations hatred. I have no way of knowing whether my friend regrets anything he wrote. As a fallible newspaper columnist myself, however, I can only howl in protest at the specter of columnists being given sentences beyond those given to serial killers, simply because of what they published in a newspaper.

Turkey spent more than 80 years marching slowly, with many reversals, toward democracy. Now it is sliding in the opposite direction. President Erdogan, who rode to power partly due to the support of secular democrats like my friend, no longer tolerates the clash of ideas that is democracys essence. More journalists are now in jail in Turkey than in any other country.

Advertisement

Sahin Alpays sad fate reflects more than the collapse of journalism in Turkey. It is part of a larger story: the terrible decline of Turkish democracy. Fifteen years ago the entire Middle East was abuzz with excitement over the Turkish model, a new mix of freedom and Muslim piety. Turkey seemed like the coolest place on earth. Now it is a world leader in repression.

Even bigger than that huge story is the global meaning of President Erdogans turn toward autocratic rule. From Egypt to Hungary to the Philippines, demagogues like him are using the tools of democracy to destroy democracy.

They show how fragile free institutions can be. It is a sobering message for all especially, at this moment, for Americans. Once in a while, after reading too much about the madness enveloping Washington, I catch myself wondering whether my friends in Germany or Costa Rica or Canada will one day be writing columns lamenting my imprisonment because of something I once wrote.

Rather than ignore the invitation I received to write an article celebrating Turkish democracy, I replied. My proposal was to contribute an article asserting that any leader who imprisons journalists for what they have written is a deadly enemy of democracy.

There has been no reply.

The rest is here:
My friend faces three life sentences in Turkey - The Boston Globe