Archive for August, 2017

Emails show feds flagged dive-gear sale to Libya – FL Keys News

A shipment of advanced dive equipment sent to Libya in the summer of 2016 was flagged and detained by federal agents who said the transaction violated U.S. trade laws and embargoes against the war-torn nation, according to several emails from a federal agent obtained by The Reporter/Keynoter this week.

The emails are the first official documentation outside of civil court papers that federal law enforcement was concerned about the $100,000 transaction.

The company that sold the equipment is owned by Peter Sotis, the man who supplied and trained famed Canadian filmmaker Rob Stewart on the complex rebreather dive equipment he used when he died off Islamorada in late January. Sotis denies any wrongdoing or that he is the target of an investigation.

If I were under investigation I would have been arrested by now and the very least my passport would have been confiscated. Its clear from my Facebook page and my numerous international trips this year that my passport has not been confiscated, he wrote. Its been over a year since this transaction took place and if the federal government had a problem, we would already know about it.

Until this week, the only mention of the sale was in a lawsuit filed in Broward County Circuit Court last year. In a Dec. 22 filing, attorneys for Sotis disgruntled business partner, Shawn Robotka, said Sotis sold rebreathers and underwater propulsion equipment to a person described in court documents as a Libyan militant.

Robotka argues that the sale violates federal law and subjects him and the company he co-owns with Sotis, Kaizen Solutions, to liability. Robotkas attorneys state in the complaint that the sale in August 2016 was executed after federal agents with the U.S. Department of Commerce, Homeland Security and FBI cautioned the transaction was against the law.

But an Aug. 25, 2016, email sent from an agent with the U.S. Department of Commerces Office of Export Enforcement to an employee of Sotis company, Add Helium LLC, states that $100,000 in proceeds from a sale of equipment to Libya were based on an illegal transaction in violation of U.S. Export Laws and the Export Administration Regulation.

The agent sent the employee another email that day informing her of a subpoena for all shipment made to Libya, either directly or through means of transshipping, from 8/30/2011 to present.

Please note that after this subpoena is completed, I will be issuing another for ALL exports made by Add Helium for the past five years, the agent wrote.

Add Helium is a wholly owned subsidiary of Kaizen Solutions. Robotka, who owns 20 percent of the company, wants a judge to liquidate Kaizens assets and grant an injunction preventing Sotis from continuing to operate the business.

The shipment in question was apparently seized by federal agents some time during the summer of 2016, and according to an email Robotka sent to the Commerce agent, a Virginia man involved in the deal repeatedly contacted Add Helium about getting it released. Its not clear what ended up happening to the shipment. Sotis referred questions about the merchandise to Miami attorney Robert Becerra, who he said is representing the owners of the products. Becerra could not be reached for comment.

The Export Enforcement agent did not return an email or phone call with questions about the shipment and investigation. Robotka also did not respond to an email inquiring about the shipment.

Broward Circuit Judge Barbara McCarthy wrote in a June 30 order denying Sotis access to his companys funds pending the outcome of the litigation brought by Robotka that the shipment to Libya was in contravention to U.S. trade and embargo laws.

Regardless of what became of the shipment, Robotka told the Export Enforcement agent that at least two of the people involved in the deal contacted him repeatedly since it was detained demanding to know the whereabouts of the merchandise. In an Aug. 31, 2016 email, Robotka asked the agent to instruct him what he should say to those people if they contacted him or his employees again.

As you are aware, this type of situation is unsettling and of great concern regarding the personal safety of our personnel, Robotka wrote.

See more here:
Emails show feds flagged dive-gear sale to Libya - FL Keys News

Libya Constitution Chapter Seven – The Libya Observer

Chapter Seven

Independent Constitutional Bodies

Article 154: Independence of Constitutional Bodies

Bodies provided for in this Chapter shall enjoy a legal personality as well as administrative, financial and technical independence. They may be consulted on draft laws relevant to their area of expertise. They shall carry out their work in accordance with the provisions of the constitution and law. Their geographical distribution throughout the country shall be taken into account.

Article 155: Management of Constitutional Bodies

The legislative authority shall elect independent persons of competence and integrity to manage these bodies. Those persons may only be removed from office before the end of their term if they fail to meet any of the conditions of their election or in the cases stipulated by the law.

Article 156: Legislative Authority Oversight over Bodies

The constitutional bodies shall be subject to the monitoring of the House of Representatives and shall submit work reports thereto as regulated by the law. They shall also submit reports to the Council of Ministers. The House of Representatives may publish these reports following their discussion.

Article 157: High National Elections Commission

The High National Elections Commission shall exclusively undertake the management and organization of public referenda as well as all stages of the general and local elections with transparency and credibility, including announcement of the final results. The Commission shall be run by a board of nine members among whom is the chairperson who shall be elected by the legislative authority. They shall carry out their tasks for one term, which shall last six years. The term of one third of the members shall be renewed every two years.

Article 158: Audit Bureau

The Audit Bureau shall be the highest authority for financial control and audit in the State. It shall be competent with comprehensive oversight of State funds, the parties financed by the State, in whole or part, and any other bodies specified by the law. It shall also have the authority to track these funds. The Audit Bureau shall be run by a president with the capacity of public audit and one or more deputies with the capacity of an [agent] who will undertake their duties for a six year term renewable for one time.

Article 159: National Council for Human Rights

The National Council for Human Rights shall strengthen, promote and spread the culture of the values of human rights and public liberties provided for in Islamic Sharia and international conventions. It shall also:

1- Observe human rights conditions and monitor violations thereof. It shall report these violations to the competent national authorities and follow up on this.

2- Support the citizens in gaining their rights endorsed by the Constitution and the law.

3- Support women to obtain their constitutional and legal rights and to ensure that they are not discriminated against.

4- Recommend ratification of, or accession to, international covenants of human rights in a way that is not incompatible with the provisions of the Constitution.

5- Promote cooperation with the national and international human rights organizations.

The Council shall consist of nine members where representation of cultural and linguistic components as well as women and youth shall be taken into account. They shall carry out their duties for one term of six years. The legislative authority shall elect the president with the capacity of a commissioner and a deputy from among those members.

Article 160: National Council for Protection of Cultural and Linguistic Heritage

The Council shall develop and protect the languages such as Arabic, Amazigh, Targhey and Tebu, and shall preserve, document and devote attention to the diverse cultural and linguistic heritage of the Libyan people to ensure the preservation of its originality within the framework of the collective Libyan identity. The Council shall be run by nine members where representation of the cultural and linguistic components of the Libyan people shall be taken into account. The legislative authority shall elect a chairperson from among the members for one term that shall last six years.

Article 161: Sharia Research Council

The Sharia Research Council shall assume the following duties:

1- Express opinions on matters referred to it by State authorities to analyze and form opinions based on Sharia evidence

2- Conduct specialized Sharia research to address current general religious issues, seeking the help of specialists in all fields, and giving recommendations therein

3- Issue individual fatwas on beliefs, acts of worship, and personal transactions, taking into account the dominant jurisprudential heritage in the country.

The Council shall be made up of fifteen members who are specialized in Islamic Sharia selected by the legislative authority for a six-year term renewable for one time. There shall be a president and vice president presiding over the Council for three years term. The Council shall also have a number of specialists in various fields. Geographic distribution shall be taken into consideration when selecting the members of the Council, and it shall have branches in accordance with the regulations of the law.

Article 162: Sustainable Development Authority

The Sustainable Development Authority shall assume the following tasks:

1- Recommend the appropriate measures to achieve balanced and sustainable development.

2- Propose appropriate polices, plans and programs to build and develop human capabilities, diversity of resources and identify national development priorities to ensure convergence of development level among the different regions.

3- Offer technical advice on development plans at the local and national levels.

4- Assess development plans and their implementation in the light of the balanced and sustainable development indicators and the need to maintain the rights of the future generations.

The Authority shall be managed by a council made of six members elected by the legislative authority which shall determine who will be the president and vice-president for a period of six years that can be renewed only once. One third of members shall be renewed every two years.

Article 163: Other Bodies

The law shall establish bodies for administrative oversight, transparency and anti-corruption, statistics, higher council for media and press and a council for science, technology and innovation. The law shall determine their composition, competencies and regulations, and shall guarantee the independence and impartiality of their members in accordance with what is stipulated in this Chapter.

____________________________________________

- - - - -

Go here to see the original:
Libya Constitution Chapter Seven - The Libya Observer

Shaun King, influential in Black Lives Matter movement, announces … – Redlands Daily Facts

REDLANDS >> Shaun King, an influential voice in the Black Lives Matter movement, is scheduled to appear Sept. 27 at University of Redlands.

King was originally scheduled to speak at U of R in February, but an injury sidelined his plans. He was expected to discuss The New Civil Rights Movement.

Kings appearance next month is part of the Associated Students Convocation and Lecture Series, which brings newsmakers to campus to share their perspectives with U of R students and the public. Past speakers have included retired soccer superstar and Redlands native Landon Donovan and former U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer.

Kings visit begins at 7 p.m. at the universitys Memorial Chapel, 1200 E. Colton Ave.

Shaun King is clear that he is only one voice articulating unease with the current state of civil and human rights in the United States, said Leela MadhavaRau, associate dean for campus diversity and inclusion. His ability to tell micro-stories of injustice in his terminology through prolific use of all forms of social media has extended his message beyond that of many activists.

King announced the new date on Facebook. The university confirmed the date by email on Monday.

Advertisement

Read the original here:
Shaun King, influential in Black Lives Matter movement, announces ... - Redlands Daily Facts

Whiting Out Black Lives Matter – Truthdig

By Dr. Melina Abdullah

Until Nov. 9, 2016, the night of the presidential election, Black Lives Matter (BLM) was a force that not only demonstrated in the streets, disrupted business as usual and organized in black communities. It also was constantly on the air of virtually every media outlet in the nation. Brown faces, with the Black Lives Matter activist title chyroned beneath their names, regularly occupied at least one of the four quadrants filled by talking heads on MSNBC, CNN and local news shows, and any reference to policing or race in this nation was thought to be invalid without comment from Black Lives Matter.

The voices of BLM co-founders Patrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza and Opal Tometi were in high demand, and on-the-ground BLM organizers were regularly pulled into conversations about local efforts that had garnered national attention. We said the names of blacks killed by police and hashtagged them on social media so they reverberated through intense echo chambers, humanizing the victims and pushing back against police attempts to posthumously assassinate their characters.

Then, like the turning of a page, the changing of a channel, the dropping of a curtain, Black Lives Matter disappeared from the public sphere. The day after Donald Trump was named the newest occupant of the White House, Black Lives Matter no longer mattered to the mainstream press. And it must be framed that way: Black Lives Matter has been whited out of the national media, even as the work intensifies and the movement continues to grow. Media has either been duped by Trumps weapons of mass distraction or is actually complicit in shifting public attention away from what is arguably the most significant movement of this generation.

Of course, the initial singular focus was to be expected. There was the shock of it all. No one expected President Trump to be an actual titlemaybe an interesting hypothetical laughter-filled conversation over cocktails, but not the current frightening reality. Many believed the nation had evolved further than it had and could not fathom that blatant racismfar beyond polite anti-blacknesscould strike a chord with the majority of white voters.

Somehow, liberals and progressives missed, or chose to ignore, the suppressed yet seething vitriol of a huge swath of white Americans who traded their grandfathers white sheets for their own red caps. For these white people, Make America Great Again was like holding up a noose, reminding black people of the targets seared onto their backs and affirming the disposability of indigenous people and brown folks. MAGA meant that (white) women knew to keep themselves pretty with blonde hair, red lipstick and closed mouths; that queer and trans folks were swept back into closets; and that the disabled were nuisances, not people. Under Trumps America, poor people are poor because they deserve to be, and religious freedom means the right to recite Christian prayers in the Oval Office and lock Muslims out of the country while bombing their homelands. All this was jarringespecially to whites who see themselves as open and liberal.

For the Trump regime, the constant media attention is a second victory. Trump thrives off continual coverage of his agenda. The larger impact of this shift is the way power is being redirected away from the people and growing mass movements and monopolized by the white-supremacist-patriarchal-heteronormative capitalism as embodied by Trump and his regime. Trumps tweets, shake-ups and meltdowns are weapons of mass distraction meant to draw attention, diverting it from the resistance movements he loathes. They are an attempt to quash any viable alternatives to his intention to swiftly sweep virtually all resources and power into the hands of his own class. For Trump, Black Lives Matter must be brought down because it not only directly challenges his agenda but also calls for the end of a system of policing that protects his class interests.

Media is not without agency in this. If media is truly free (and that is questionable given the corporate ownership of mainstream media), it must challenge the Trump agenda in two important ways. First, those who would be most impacted by the new regimes agenda must be asked for perspective on what all this means to them. Next, at some point (like now), the shock of the Trump presidency must subside and we must engage in real discussions about the future of this nation, with movement organizers talking about agendas and positions those agendas define.The media is vital to resistance movementsand to black resistance movements in particular. Media has been a tool since the antislavery movement. David Walkers Appeal, published in 1829, was distributed to black free and enslaved people. It encouraged them to rise up against chattel slavery, possibly serving as an impetus for the 1831 Nat Turner rebellion. During the first anti-lynching era in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, black independent papersbest represented by Ida B. Wells Memphis Free Speech and Headlightcalled for black outmigration, armament and economic independence.

As television news entered the homes of 90 percent of Americans by 1960, so, too, did the civil rights movement. The rise of television and coverage by print news and radio were a constant consideration for strategists like Martin Luther King Jr. who used images of black pure nonviolence to elicit emotion, grow the movement and appeal to the morality of the masses. Images of strong young black people wearing black berets and leather jackets and carrying guns into the California State Capitol helped push the Black Power movement into full swing. And the haunting image of 12-year-old Hector Pietersons lifeless body being frantically carried away from a South African police force that had opened fire on schoolchildren took the anti-apartheid movement global.

Most recently, we saw the innocence that danced out of the eyes of Tamir Rice; the sobs of Lezley McSpadden crying out for her murdered son, Mike Brown; the attempt of Diamond Reynolds 4-year-old to soothe her as they both witnessed the murder of Philando Castille; and the way Korryn Gaines attempted to mother and comfort her 5-year-old soneven as she died from bullets fired by Baltimore police. And there were so many more heartbreaking, enraging images, words and phraseslike Eric Garners I cant breathethat poured life into the Black Lives Matter movement.

Media, when done responsibly, amplifies voices and perspectives that might not otherwise be heard. It is a check on power, a balancing of moneyed interests with those who have fewer resources. For resistance and other transformative movements, demonstration and mass action are meant to disrupt systems of oppression and raise public awareness. Resistance has a theatrical component that meets its fullest potential when there is an audience. When organized actions are not covered by media, when voices are muted and perspectives are drowned out, it severely limits the reach of movements. Demonstrations might disrupt the status quo and get messages out to immediate circles, but the ability to elicit mass support is significantly thwarted.

In the little more than six months since Trump has taken office, 594 people have been killed by police, 22 percent of those people black (double the proportion of the black population) and an additional 19 percent of unknown race. These are almost identical numbers to those of 2016, when news coverage of these killings was at a high.

Black Lives Matter has responded to new killings and continuing cases through mass demonstrations and constant pressure at public meetings. It bird-dogs elected and appointed officials, calls for the firing of police chiefs (like LAPDs Charlie Beck, who leads the most murderous department in the nation), demands the prosecution of officers who kill and brutalize our people and provides support to families most impacted by state violence. BLM also engages in acts of nonviolent direct action, doing policy work, conducting community canvasses, making budget demands, proposing community-based solutions, making independent media (like the clapback against the National Rifle Association), engaging in spiritual work (like the national #SacredResistance effort launched in April), participating in political artistry and much more. Since its founding just four years ago, the ranks of Black Lives Matter has swelled globally to 40 chapters and upward of 10,000 members.

Black Lives Matter is moving from its infancy to its institution-building stage, with a sophisticated platform and abolitionist agenda that calls for the dismantling of prisons and policing as we know them and intense investment in the resources that make communities safe, peaceful and healthylike permanent housing, mental health services, quality education, youth programs, good jobs with good wages, and arts and culture programs. The method is called disrupt and build: At the same time hundreds of folks pour into the streets and successfully demand the firing of the officers who killed Kisha Michael and Marquintan Sandlin in Inglewood, Calif., BLM is also preparing the next generation for leadership with Youth Activist Camps and Freedom Schools offered worldwide this summer. There is plenty for mainstream media to cover.Instead, though, the faces that occupy television screens have faded back to pre-Obama-era monochrome, with the occasional media person of color incestuously plucked from other network news programs and one or two network contributors peppered in. The talking heads now speak exclusively to the latest Trump anticswith no mention of Charleena Lyles who was killed by Seattle police in front of three of her children after she called for help with a suspected burglary, or of the in policy rulings in the separate deaths of 14-year-old Jesse Romero and 18-year-old scholar-athlete Kenny Watkins, both killed by Los Angeles police. Networks say news-show ratings are at an all-time high, but public opinion surveys show there is a public desire to shift away from the singular focus on Donald Trump.

Public Black Lives Matter forums continue to draw capacity crowds, like the recent standing-room-only crowd at Politicon. There is no shortage of items that require a Black Lives Matter perspectiveeven within the Trump agenda: the recent call for increased police brutality by Donald Trump (and the giddy laughter and applause of police receiving the message); the deploying of federal troops to Chicago, making black communities literally occupied territories; calls for an end to affirmative action and the erosion of public education; and the contrast between the swift action taken against Minneapolis police officers when they killed Justine Damonda white bride-to-beand the closing of ranks when members of the same department killed Jamar Clark and Philando Castille. If media is to be a check on institutional power, then mainstream media must be challenged to not become the public relations arm of the Trump regime, either intentionally or tacitly.

While coverage by mainstream media has been a useful tool, mainstream media is also corporate media and essentially shares the class interests of the regime we seek to topple. As movements grow and evolve, it is imperative that we recognize, support, utilize and invest in independent media that is more willing to offer alternative perspectives that challenge the existing hegemony.

Black Lives Matter must refuse to give power to Trump or complicit media to white out our movement. We cannot become demoralized and actually believe the movement is dead stories in the media. We must commit ourselves more fully to the movement and on-the-ground efforts, and we must apply the disrupt-and-build model to our media strategybuilding alternative outlets and disrupting media that advances oppressive propaganda and attempts to mute our voices. Black Lives still Matter, whether it makes news headlines or not.

Dr. Melina Abdullah is a California State University professor at the forefront of the Black Lives Matter movement in Los Angeles.

More:
Whiting Out Black Lives Matter - Truthdig

Black Lives Matter and the Women’s March movements, lauded by Democratic leaders, are discrediting themselves … – National Review

A recent Harvard-Harris poll reveals that 57 percent of Americans have an unfavorable opinion of Black Lives Matters protests and protesters. Broken down further, the results only get worse for the Democratic party, which has made support for the movement a litmus test for its candidates.

Over 60 percent of whites, suburbanites, rural voters, and people aged 35 and over share the unfavorable opinion of Black Lives Matters, according to the poll. Most strikingly, 60 percent of self-described independents and 55 percent of moderates join them. Hispanics, who tend to vote Democratic in large numbers, are evenly split.

This means that opposition to the Black Lives Matter movement is not just for Fox News viewers, right-wingers, or racists, as the Left likes to imply. It is a widespread view shared by voters whom Democrats need to win.

But the problems do not end there. The Democratic partys support for the Womens March Chuck Schumer, Nancy Pelosi, Cory Booker, and many others publicly praised and endorsed it may prove just as damaging. Conservative media have long criticized the outrageous views and associations of the Marchs organizers, especially those of Linda Sarsour, its most visible leader. But the New York Times has lately joined in.

Last week, Times staff editor Bari Weiss wrote that the solidarity of the Womens March had moved her. In that, she definitely is not alone. One poll from February showed that 60 percent of Americans supported the March. But after finding out about the Marchs leadership, Weiss could no longer support it. What I stand against, Weiss wrote, is embracing terrorists, disdaining independent feminist voices, hating on democracies and celebrating dictatorships. If that puts me beyond the pale of the progressive feminist movement in America right now, so be it.

But this is about more than the progressive feminist movement. The question is: What if opposing the Womens March movement may put moderates beyond the pale of the Democratic party itself? So be it, many might say.

Weisss article in the New York Times will help spread the word about the organizers of the Womens March. Soon, and with help from other moderates in the mainstream media, Americans of all stripes will realize that they were swindled by the Womens March.

That is what happened with Black Lives Matter. Originally, it was a fairly popular movement. But over time, the movement discredited itself with its actions and support for cop killers, Fidel Castro, and a boycott of Israel. What seemed to be a movement protesting the polices seemingly disproportionate use of force against black people which the American people still believe to be true, according to the Harvard-Harris poll came to be associated with violence and hatred of police.

The Womens March, if it does not quickly change direction and leadership, may also come to be associated with disreputable radicalism. But all the evidence suggests that its leaders are choosing to double down instead.

In response to Weisss criticisms, Womens March co-president Bob Bland wrote a long, self-discrediting letter to the New York Times. Bland offered no defense of her organizations support for cop killers, anti-Semites, and racists. Instead, she excused it as a feature of the inclusive and intersectional movement, and made wild accusations: Ms. Weiss is endorsing a sensational alt-right attack, she wrote. But Bland would go even farther: Critics like Ms. Weiss, she concluded, remain apologists for the status quo, racist ideology, and white nationalists.

Did you catch that? If you are a liberal who thinks that, in 2017, enthusiastic support for Fidel Castro and Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan is a bit much, a co-president of the Womens March will call you an apologist for racism and white nationalism. Hows that for a campaign pitch to undecided voters and winnable independents?

But this is the Womens Marchs modus operandi. In response to Jake Tappers criticism of her support for Assata Shakur, a cop-killer and one of Americas most-wanted fugitives, co-president Linda Sarsour accused Tapper, a CNN anchor, of join[ing] the ranks of the alt-right to target me online.

Her false victimization was as transparent as her accusation was ridiculous. But no more ridiculous than when the official Womens March Twitter account repeatedly and incoherently defended Assata Shakur in the face of strong criticism.

These two movements are not going to shape up anytime soon. Nor are they likely to lose the support of progressives. These two facts combine to leave Democrats with a difficult choice. When they are pushed, will they stand with Black Lives Matters? Will they stand with Sarsour, Bland, and the rest of the Womens March radicals?

Abandoning them would incur the wrath of the party faithful. Not abandoning them could incur the wrath of nearly everyone else. Either way, Republicans will exploit the issue, and Democrats will embarrass themselves.

Astonishingly, the Democratic party may have found a way to squander the moral high ground and scare off the moderates gifted to them by President Trump.

READ MORE: A Detailed Evisceration of the Womens March from the New York Times The Lefts Love Affair with Radical Extremism The Jihad-Loving Left Loves Linda Sarsour

Elliot Kaufman is an editorial intern at National Review.

View post:
Black Lives Matter and the Women's March movements, lauded by Democratic leaders, are discrediting themselves ... - National Review