Archive for May, 2020

Fallout 76 Update 19 Arrives, Nerfing Communism Bot and Bolstering the Bourgeoisie – PlayStation LifeStyle

A blog post from Bethesda in the past few days made mention that an update to celebrate the one year anniversary of the Fallout 76 battle royale mode Nuclear Winter was on the way. Little did we know that today would be that day, as Update 19 makes its way to all versions of the game and brings a lot more than just cattle prods and good times in squads of three. While the major highlights include ally customization, seasonal events, and crafting upgrades, theres only one real change that needs to be noted. If you remember our reporting as of late on everyones dear comrade Communism Bot, then youll be sad to know that his work for the Proletariat is now that much more difficult, with the patch notes stating Collectron Station: The Communist Collectron will now find Propaganda Flyers less often while scavenging. The Bourgeoisie has won. Communism is quelled.

Regardless, heres some other major changes making it into this 8GB (for PS4 users, 10GB for Xbox One) update for Fallout 76.

Ally Customization:Give your Allies stylish new looks by sharing your wardrobe with them using the new option to customize their outfits.

Hunt for the Treasure Hunter:Mole Miners have discovered treasure in the Ash Heap! Starting May 21, hunt them down to claim their loot for yourself during a new limited-time event.

Fasnacht Parade:By popular demand, this Seasonal Event is returning for a full week starting May 25, and there are plenty of new Fasnacht Masks up for grabs.

Item Naming Updates:Weve made improvements to the way your weapons and armors are automatically named when you apply new mods and skins.

Backpack Updates:Changing your Backpacks appearance is now as simple as applying a skin, and you can now apply them to Small Backpacks, too!

(NW) Limited Time Challenges:Unlock new cosmetic rewards by completing limited-time Challenges in Nuclear Winter, from May 19 June 11.

Weve improved Backpack customization so that you can now apply different appearances to your Backpacks as skinsno more crafting required!

Head to an Armor Workbench and use the modify menu to swap the appearance of your existing Backpack with any skins youve unlocked through quests, events, or the Atomic Shop.

Skins can now be applied to Small Backpacks, as well for those who have not yet unlocked the normal Backpack Plan by completing the Order of the Tadpole quest.

You can apply skins to your existing Backpacks, as well as any new ones you craft.

Limited Time Survivors Challenges Unlock Themed Cosmetics!

Weve added 8 Nuclear Winter Challenges that you can complete to earn new Survivors themed cosmetic rewardsstarting today, and lasting until 7:00 p.m. ET on June 11.

One new challenge will appear in the Character Challenge menu each day until all 8 are available, and they will remain available until the end of the event.

You can earn the first reward with 150 Overseer XP, and the last with 2,500 Overseer XP. All others will each require 2,000 Overseer XP.

Overseer XP you earn will roll over from one Challenge to the next, but they must be completed one at a time and in order.

As you complete each Challenge, youll be able to claim new themed rewards, like new furniture for your C.A.M.P., Survivors Denim and Ghillie Suit outfits, as well as skins for Nuclear Winters newest weapons: The Bow, Cattle Prod, and Gauss Shotgun.

You can learn more about this event directly from ZAX and preview the rewards by reading our latestZAX Transmission article on Fallout.com.

New Items

New Weapons:The Bow, Cattle Prod, and Gauss Shotgun have been added and tuned for combat in Nuclear Winter matches. Find them in Supply Crates as you scavenge for gear.

Theres far more going on in the update, including a list of bug fixes far too long to put here but can be checked out on the patch notes. Regardless, this is yet another step in the right direction for a game that has much ground to make up in regards to consumer good faith and fixing a broken product.

But, still: Pour one out for Communism Bot. He was just doing his job.

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Fallout 76 Update 19 Arrives, Nerfing Communism Bot and Bolstering the Bourgeoisie - PlayStation LifeStyle

Slavoj Zizek on coronavirus: We need some form of communism, the world we know has disappeared! (E880) – RT

On this episode of Going Underground, we speak to world-famous communist philosopher and author of Pandemic!: Covid-19 shakes the world, Slavoj Zizek. He discusses different coronavirus responses from governments around the world, from the capitalist barbarism of Donald Trump and Jair Bolsonaro, to the responses of governors like Andrew Cuomo, why the world as we know it no longer exists, the discovery of a new working class of nurses, caretakers and essential staff, class warfare in the pandemic world, why capitalism and free markets cannot be relied on for handling future crises, why he believes some form of communism is needed in the post-coronavirus world, the need for increased international health collaboration and more!

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Slavoj Zizek on coronavirus: We need some form of communism, the world we know has disappeared! (E880) - RT

How McCarthyism and the Red Scare Hurt the Black Freedom Struggle – Jacobin magazine

The line between race and class is one of the most potent fault lines in left politics today. Theres a sense that a contradiction exists between fighting class inequality and fighting racial inequality. Among liberals, this has become almost an article of faith. Even among leftists, theres a sense that these are dangerous waters, and that special theoretical acumen is necessary to navigate them successfully.

It wasnt always like this. In fact, the split between race and class can be traced to a specific moment in American history, when the causes of racial and class equality were sundered. That moment was the Red Scare in the middle of the twentieth century.

Before the Red Scare, there was a potent movement for black equality that included the Left, most centrally the Communist Party. Based in the new industrial unions, this movement fought for black equality in housing, employment, and at the ballot box, and linked that fight to the broader struggle against capitalist domination. The anticommunist campaign of the late 1940s, however, beginning under the Truman administration, crippled this movement, delaying the fall of Jim Crow by a decade or more and narrowing the movements focus to legal equality, leaving its larger ambitions unfulfilled.

In the 1940s, the movement for black equality made its biggest strides since Reconstruction. In 1941, prodded by socialist A. Philip Randolphs March on Washington Movement, Franklin Roosevelt issued executive order 8802, banning discrimination in the defense industry and establishing a Fair Employment Practices Committee. It was the first substantive federal commitment to civil rights since the 1870s. In the courts, the NAACPs legal team won rulings against the white primary system and against racially restrictive housing covenants. In just six years, the NAACP went from 50,000 members to 450,000. One result of this ferment was a narrowing of the black-white wage gap at a speed not approached since.

At the heart of all of this activity was the militancy of the black working class. Two processes had come together to enable this militancy. First, technological change in Southern agriculture had pushed black Americans out of the cotton fields and into the cities, creating a black proletariat on a scale never seen before. Second, the formation of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) created a union movement that broke, however incompletely, with American labors historic embrace of white supremacy.

Black Americans streamed into the CIO unions, whether in Detroit in the United Autoworkers, Alabama in the Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers, Chicago in the United Packinghouse Workers, or at sea in the National Maritime Union. While most CIO unions were to the left of the more conservative American Federation of Labor when it came to race, the leftmost were the unions in which Communist Party (CP) members played a leading role. Known as the left-led unions, these organizations were ferocious in their assault on racial inequality, whether on the factory floor or in the community more broadly.

In North Carolina, Local 22 of the Food, Tobacco, Agricultural and Allied Workers of America-CIO (FTA) was emblematic of this kind of unionism. When Local 22 won its first contract from RJ Reynolds in 1944, it created a network of black shop stewards who became leaders in the fight to democratize Jim Crow North Carolina. Local 22 activists fought against police abuse of black Americans, conducted voter registration drives, and even revitalized the local NAACP, turning it into the largest in North Carolina. Led by CP cadres who were committed to training worker militants, the local even maintained its own library of black and working class history. As one black worker remembered, at that little [city] library you couldnt find any books on Negro history They didnt have books by [Herbert] Aptheker, [W.E.B.] Du Bois, or Frederick Douglass. But we had them at our library.

At the same time, in New York City, the United Public Workers of America (UPWA), another left-led union, fought for the rights of black public-sector workers. Though black public workers were subject to discrimination and segregation, institutions like the Post Office and the Internal Revenue Service were nonetheless engines of class mobility, allowing black workers to access levels of job security and compensation that were unheard of in the private sector.

In New York in the 1940s, they were led by black militants like Ewart Guinier, who ran for Manhattan Borough President on the American Labor Party ticket, and Eleanor Goding, who headed the local for Department of Welfare workers, and was the first black woman to head a union local in New York City. The union fought discrimination in government hiring, and was a key force in pushing for the FEPC. It also had an internationalist vision, organizing workers on the Panama Canal and fighting against the discriminatory wage system the US government used.

The UPWA wasnt alone in linking the fight for civil rights with international solidarity. Inspired by antifascist mobilization and anticolonial revolt, black organizations and intellectuals advanced a critique of white imperialism that identified colonialism with the power of capital. Figures like George Padmore and Henry Lee Moon sought to link black organizations in the United States with unions of black workers in the colonial world. Activists around the Communist Party founded the Council on African Affairs to promote African independence. The Council especially prioritized the struggle of black workers in South Africa, acting as the vanguard for an internationalist black political consciousness that extended well beyond the Marxist left.

In the years immediately following the end of World War II, organizers had good reason to think that Jim Crow and the larger American caste system were on their last legs. A movement that spanned from liberal organizations like the NAACP to the Communist Party, and based on the militancy of black workers, was mounting a challenge to racial inequality that recognized the need to completely remake American society. Pillars of white supremacy, like the white primary, were falling, and the federal government was dragged, inch-by-inch, into open opposition to Jim Crow. Within a few years, however, many of the organizations leading this charge would be destroyed, their activists scattered and demoralized, while the surviving elements of the struggle adopted a far more cautious stance.

Though anticommunism in the United States stretches back to at least the American response to the Paris Commune, a distinct wave gathered strength in the years following World War II. The United States and the Soviet Union had been allies in the fight against fascism, putting a temporary cooler on red-hunting passions. But after 1945, as the Cold War set in, attacks on American supporters (or even insufficiently hostile opponents) of the USSR came into fashion.

Moreover, the end of the war witnessed a massive strike wave by workers whose demands had been suppressed during the war years. 1946 saw the largest strike wave in American history, with more than five million workers involved. Employers were eager to regain the upper hand, and anticommunism was a key part of their arsenal.

The anticommunist push began in earnest in 1947, when Harry Truman signed Executive Order 9835, establishing a loyalty oath program for federal employees. It subjected all two million federal workers to investigation into their political beliefs, in order to determine whether they were members of, or even sympathetic to, subversive organizations, which were determined by the Attorney Generals List of Subversive Organizations, and included the National Negro Congress and the Council on African Affairs.

Trumans anticommunist initiatives gave the signal that red-hunting was now an official American pastime. In the House of Representatives, the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC), which had existed since the late 1930s, turned its attention to Hollywood, seeking to root out subversive influences in the film industry. FBI head J. Edgar Hoover, who had been hunting communists since his days as a young operative in the War Emergency Divisions Alien Enemy Bureau during World War I, designed and carried out Trumans loyalty oath program, used the program to double the size of the FBI, and routinely passed information from his investigations to HUAC. Joe McCarthy, the man who would give this moment its name, was actually a late-comer to the party, getting involved only in 1950.

The black left was a major target for this anticommunist network, composed heavily of Southerners for whom segregation was part of the American way of life. The CAA and the Civil Rights Congress (the successor to the National Negro Congress) were both the targets of investigation, and ultimately collapsed under the weight of repression. W.E.B. Du Bois himself, in his eighties, was arrested and appeared in court in chains for his activism in the global peace movement.

Yet the investigations launched by the anticommunist network went far beyond defiant radicals like Du Bois. Because the Communist Party and its fellow travelers had been so central to the movement for racial equality in these years, there were few black activists who had not rubbed shoulders with communists in the course of their work. This was all the pretext needed for the FBI or HUAC to launch an investigation. Even black liberals who couldnt possibly have been construed as communists, like friend of the Roosevelts Mary MacLeod Bethune or congressman Adam Clayton Powell, were subject to investigation.

This wide net of repression had a chilling effect on black activism. Liberal organizations like the NAACP raced to distance themselves from anyone tainted by communism, which in local branches often meant expelling some of the most dedicated activists. Though liberal black intellectuals and activists had been a vital part of the anticolonial push before and during World War II, they now retreated from anything that could be construed as opposing American geopolitical aims. While the CAA fought to bring attention to the United Kingdoms brutal counterinsurgency in Kenya, the NAACP confined itself to opposing the far less geopolitically explosive efforts of Italy to hold on to its African colonies.

Even more destructive, however, was the Cold War in the union movement. HUAC and Hoover, of course, paid special attention to the left-led unions. They were joined in this effort by Congress, which in 1947 passed the Taft Hartley act, requiring, among other things, that union officers sign affidavits swearing that they were not supporters of the CP and had no relations with organizations advocating the overthrow of the government.

Inside the union movement, the liberal labor bureaucracy was also moving against Communists. The CIO leadership had always had an ambivalent relationship with communists in the unions, recognizing that they were often the most talented and committed organizers, while also fearing them as a political challenge. During World War II, the CP had endeared itself to the union leadership with its militant defense of the no strike pledge as necessary for the defeat of fascism. After the war, however, as the USSRs geopolitical interests diverged from the United States, the CIO leaders who had tied their fate to the Democratic Party viewed the CP as at best a liability, and at worst as traitors.

In the CIO, these tensions were sharpest between the left-led unions, whose leadership supported the CP, and the liberal union leaders. In 1948, the CIO leadership got its chance to take decisive action when the left-led unions endorsed Henry Wallaces left-wing third party run for president. Over the next two years, eleven unions were forced out of the CIO, representing about a quarter of a million workers, or a fifth of its total membership. Over the next few years, these unions would be subject to thousands of raids by CIO unions intent on destroying them.

The left-led unions were the ones most committed to civil-rights unionism. Isolated from the CIO and the rest of American liberalism, they were an easy target for the investigators. Ferdinand Smith, a Caribbean-born leader in the National Maritime Union in New York, was deported back to Jamaica in 1951 after the NMU purged its communists. After the UPWA was expelled from the CIO, New York City refused to recognize the contracts it had won protecting black workers, and Eleanor Goding was fired from her job with the Department of Welfare.

In North Carolina, Local 22 went on strike against RJ Reynolds in 1947, but was crippled by anticommunism. Its leaders refused to sign the Taft Hartley affidavits, disqualifying the union from NLRB protection. At the same time, CIO unions began raiding Local 22s members, fanning the anticommunist flames on which RJ Reynolds was already pouring gasoline. By 1950, Local 22 had been destroyed, and its militant black leaders blacklisted.

This story was repeated across the country. In unions that remained in the CIO, like the UAW, black militants were marginalized and pushed out of leadership. In the expelled unions, organizers tried to maintain the movement they had built over the previous decade, but, caught between state repression and the opportunistic offensive by the liberal unions, were quickly overwhelmed. Most of the left-led unions either disappeared or merged back into other CIO unions over the next decade.

Under the anticommunist assault from the reactionary right and liberal Democrats alike, the black left buckled. A generation of activists, intellectuals, and shop-floor militants was politically dismembered. Investigated, jailed, fired, blacklisted, and deported, the people who made up that movement for racial equality that had cohered in the first half of the 1940s were isolated from one another. The progress towards dismantling the American system of racial domination that had seemed so dramatic just a few years earlier ground to an abrupt halt.

When civil rights insurgency broke out once more, most dramatically in the Montgomery Bus Boycott in 1955, the politics animating it were different from those of the earlier wave. Old Left veterans were everywhere in the Civil Rights Movement, from Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters organizer E.D. Nixon in Montgomery, to the Southern Christian Leadership Conferences Jack ODell, who came out of the CP. But their old commitment to remaking the American political economy was no longer a defining characteristic of the movement.

The nature of racial oppression itself had been redefined at the height of the Cold War. While even many liberals in the 1930s and 40s had agreed that racial inequality was intimately bound up with the structure of economic power in American life, the anticommunist crusade had made these sorts of critiques politically radioactive. Instead, liberal intellectuals like Gunnar Myrdal and Harry S. Ashmore redefined racial inequality as a kind of ugly atavism, an exception to the American creed that only held the country back from its mission of global leadership.

For much of the classic phase of the Civil Rights Movement (195565), this was the understanding of racism that most directly informed the movements political vision. The fight against discrimination became severed from the fight for a more equal country overall.

To be sure, there were those who tried to resist this separation. At the grassroots, organizers like Ella Baker or Bayard Rustin came out of the Old Left, and knew full well that legal equality without redistribution would be a hollow victory. The 1963 March on Washington was built with crucial assistance from the United Autoworkers, and the marchs full title was The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. The policy objectives of this tendency in the movement were summed up in the Freedom Budget, a proposal that attempted to translate the Civil Rights Movement into a campaign for full employment and public works.

Yet it is precisely here that the destruction of the first civil-rights movement was felt most acutely. While the Freedom Budget put forward an ambitious agenda, it was markedly different from the kind of transformation sought by the organizers of the 1940s. Its ideological vision was constrained from the start, as its authors described its ambitions as, No doles. No skimping on national defense. No tampering with private supply and demand. Just an enlightened self-interest, using what we have in the best possible way. For these exponents of racial liberalism, egalitarianism required no major political conflict, and became a technocratic project of social modernization.

Moreover, the strategy for achieving the Freedom Budget was one forged in intimate alliance with the liberal wing of the Democratic Party. Whereas figures like Du Bois or Padmore understood that militant struggle would be necessary to force reform, the proponents of the Freedom Budget convinced themselves that their stature within the Democratic Party would be sufficient to win their agenda. They were mistaken.

In the second half of the 1960s, as the movement searched for a way forward after the consummation of its victory over Jim Crow, some wings began moving towards the kind of politics that had animated the movements first wave. Martin Luther King, Jr was a key figure who pursued more and more radical confrontations with the American power structure. In doing so, however, he was largely isolated and alone, without comrades.

Instead, the increasing militancy of the movement more often led away from class politics. Figures like Roy Innis and Floyd McKissick of the Congress of Racial Inequality embraced a cultural radicalism before signing on to Richard Nixons black capitalism. At the other end of the spectrum, many movement activists turned to municipal politics, electing black mayors and city councillors. This strategy reached its nadir in the early 1970s, as the urban fiscal crisis led the new black city governments to be the agents of austerity against black public workers. Some of the more serious New Left formations, like the Black Panthers or various New Communist Movement groupings, attempted to provide an alternative, but their efforts were insufficient to replace the movement destroyed by anticommunism.

Racial equality and class equality had been divorced as political visions. The repression of class radicalism during McCarthyism created a void that has defined American politics since. This repression combined with the limits of racial liberalism to create a predictable dynamic in American politics, whereby dissatisfaction with the anemic vision of racial liberalism gave rise to movements of rebellion. However, those movements, detached from class politics and the kinds of social forces that could give them weight, either dissipated into the ether of marginal militancy, or were reabsorbed into a renewed racial liberalism.

The anticommunist purges of the late 1940s and early 1950s dealt a hammer blow to the movement for racial equality. The growing strength of a movement that linked remaking the countrys racial order with remaking its economic order was a direct threat to plans for the American century. Though the Left as a whole suffered grievously in these years, much of the fiercest repression was reserved for black leftists.

In recent years, however, much of the emphasis in American historiography has suggested precisely the opposite. This interpretation, articulated most directly in legal historian Mary Dudziaks book Cold War Civil Rights, has argued that the Cold War actually benefited the movement. Because the United States was competing with the USSR for the allegiance of the decolonizing world, movement organizers were able to portray racism as an obstacle to American hegemony, and secure the states support in the project of demolishing Jim Crow. The Justice Departments amicus curiae brief in Brown v. Board of Education arguing segregation had an adverse effect upon our relations with other countries exemplifies the way the Cold War allowed the movement to turn up the heat on the American state.

Yet as the above history should indicate, such a narrative succeeds only by retrospectively treating what the movement did actually achieve as all it ever sought to achieve. In the 1940s, it is plain that the movement had a more far-reaching vision for equality. This vision was precisely what the onset of the Cold War made impossible. Similarly, even the etiolated vision of the Freedom Budget, so carefully constructed to remain within the bounds of Cold War liberalism, never came to fruition, despite the best efforts of its backers like King and Rustin. If the Cold War enabled a certain kind of civil rights agenda, it only did so by greatly curtailing that agendas ambitions.

The ambition of civil-rights unionism is precisely what is needed to give substance to antiracist politics today. For all the lip service paid to intersectionality in contemporary discourse, too many visions of black advance are all too happy to see that advance occur within a society whose fundamental structure remains unchanged. Often, it seems that antiracism is defined simply as the equal distribution of inequality. An earlier generation of civil rights struggle saw things differently. They, and their opponents, understood that black equality required a fundamental transformation of American society.

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How McCarthyism and the Red Scare Hurt the Black Freedom Struggle - Jacobin magazine

Guest commentary: Open or close? The messy parts of living in a free country – Your Valley

By Vickilyn Alvey

When I was in nursing school, I was surprised to learn that patients have a right to fall.

The concept, then, and now, was based upon a persons right to choose due to informed and voluntary consents. Patients have a right to understand treatments, the purposes of them, potential risks and benefits, etc. Patients also have the right to be free from coercion, constraint and force. If a patient chooses not to participate in a procedure that can cure him/her, that right is upheld. People have the right and freedom to direct their own lives.

Although those initial lessons in patient rights occurred over 20 years ago, the COVID-19 pandemic raises similar issues. Do people have the right to catch COVID-19, or is it more a question of whether people have the right to possibly spread COVID-19? Perception defines responses.

People have been in lock-down for the past two months due to a virus that we still know little about. After months of researching, scientists definitively know that COVID-19 is a virus. Beyond that, the data is conflicting. That which is unknown is infinitely greater than that which is known. Every other week, information changes. Vague, incomplete and terrifying data is reported daily. It is scary.

Just as scary to millions is watching businesses, some that have existed for generations, disintegrate, day by day. That fact, unlike COVID-19, is clear to those business owners and to their employees. It is more terrifying to them than possibly catching COVID-19 and dying.

Most business owners are risk-takers, so reopening is not as much a matter of life and death as it is an innate need to provide for their families, employees and communities.

The Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution states, No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. The 14th Amendment also states, [N]or shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law. Those rights exist and were created to protect the individual from governmental oppression.

Despite those rights, states have a fundamental duty to protect the publics health and safety. In doing so, they may exercise a latent police power.

States must take action to assure that the publics general welfare is protected. However, determining proportionality of those actions and the overall benefit to the public has become a matter of heated debate. Each position holds valid and weighted arguments. When the scale of legitimacy moves in either direction, outbursts from the opposition occur.

As a nurse, I am aware of physical issues, treatments, etc. related to the body.

COVID-19 is real. It is a virus that has and will continue to spread. Some will tragically die. Some will recover. Some will not experience it at all. Those who were critical and have recovered have horror stories to tell about the experience. Sparing others from the disease is a priority to many who have lived through it.

But the body also includes the mind. The psychological make-up of a person is just as significant, if not more so. Failing to include the psychology of people into the equation of an economic-freeze is also failing to consider the general welfare of the public.

Removing a persons livelihood does more to the individual than just take away his/her income; It takes away purpose from his/her life. Having no reason to get out of bed each morning has an extreme effect upon a person. We live in a country that is based upon being productive. Removing a persons ability to do so renders feelings of worthlessness. Floundering, even if only for a few of months, can have long-term psychological impacts.

Having no purpose, no meaning in life, creates an inner void. The awareness of this emptiness leads people into states of depression and self-destructive behaviors. When ones purpose in life is pulled out from under him/her, rebounding is more than challenging. Worthlessness consumes the individual.

Contributing to society, to ones family, or to oneself by working, provides purpose. People have said that their jobs do not define them; They shouldnt. What their jobs do for them is validate their existence. Going to work each day, no matter what the job, provides people with a means to substantiate their purposes.

I personally believe that the life of one individual, regardless of position or status in life, is the most valuable gift each of us is given. Whether homeless, or serving in the House, that individual has worth. Loss of a persons life due to a horrible virus, or from ones own hand, yields the same result: Death. No one wins, least of all, society.

In Henry David Thoreaus essay, Civil Disobedience, he states, But where there is one, there is a majority of one, and, when the rights of the majority take away from the rights of the one, then the many will themselves suffer (Aesthetic Papers, 1849). Each person has rights and each person can exercise those rights. In this country, they are not temporary rights. Every person has rights that are equal to every other persons. Your rights have no more power than mine, nor are mine greater than yours.

Every day, people are protesting closures across the country. Others argue that things are re-opening before they should. Each state has different circumstances, so each governor is directing the situation for his/her state. Some argue that this governor, or that governor, is making the wrong decisions, one way or another. Maybe they are, but this is one of the messy parts of living in a free country based on a Constitution that gives rights to the people. At some point, Constitutional interpretation fades and the recognition of what is, is.

Instead of politicizing wearing masks vs. not, opening vs. remaining closed, eating out vs. staying in, maybe it is time to exercise some of that tolerance that those from both sides of the argument speak of when convenient.

Awareness is limited to ones reality. You, nor I, can identify with it because we are not the other person. That which is destroying my neighbor may not be a blip on your radar. That which is psychologically controlling you may not be a drop of water in my pool.

Medically, will there be cases of COVID-19 that otherwise would not have occurred if businesses remained closed? Absolutely. Will there be extreme harm if businesses do not open? Absolutely. There will be pain, suffering and loss of life regardless of position held.

Every day one gets out of bed, he/she takes a chance. People slip in showers, fall, hit their heads and die. A person could be driving on the interstate and a tire from the street above could dislodge from a semi-truck, bounce onto the interstate and land on top of someones vehicle. A person could experience a cardiac arrest, fall to the ground and breathe his/her last breath. We never know what is going to happen each day, which is why we should appreciate every moment.

In January, did you anticipate that your spring would involve teaching your kids from home, standing in line for hours outside Costco hoping to buy some toilet paper, or wearing a mask on a day other than Halloween? We do not know what will occur in the hours to come.

Making the effort to understand anothers position on COVID-19 issues may not solve the current ills of society, but hopefully, it will extend a bit of compassion to ones opposition.

Diverse perceptions have enabled this country to create and transform the world. It is a good thing. So, choose to live life as you believe to be the best for you, and dont hinder others from doing likewise.

And, also, be mindful that it may not be safe to open restaurants, gyms or retail stores, but here, where we live, patients have a right to fall.

Editors note: Vickilyn Alvey, RN, MSN, MC, grew up Litchfield Park. She is a graduate of Agua Fria High School and has worked as a nurse for 24 years. She holds a masters degree in counseling, paralegal certification and has been a licensed real estate agent for more than 30 years.

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Guest commentary: Open or close? The messy parts of living in a free country - Your Valley

Angela Davis and Ayanna Pressley join dozens of iconic leaders for today’s Malcolm X livestream – Mother Jones

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Today marks 95 years since Malcolm X first touched the planet and did all he could to reimagine and strengthen it, and a daylong tribute is livestreaming right now with Angela Davisreason alone to scrap any plans youd made and tune inRep. Ayanna Pressley, Ilyasah Shabazz (Malcolms daughter), Al Sharpton, and music from Robert Glasper (here with Mos Def for a boost), Common, Stevie Wonder, and Pete Rock.

Stamina and solidarity-building are on the lineup, but however you view Malcolms impact, dont overlook that of Yuri Kochiyama, also born today, 99 years ago, a Japanese American civil rights pioneer and close friend of Malcolms; she was at his side the moment his life was taken. A life that continues here in A Tribute in Word and Sound, streaming from the Shabazz Center. After the celebration, let me know how you see Malcolms and Yuris legacies at recharge@motherjones.com.

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Angela Davis and Ayanna Pressley join dozens of iconic leaders for today's Malcolm X livestream - Mother Jones