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Local NSDAR chapter to mark Constitution Week – The Daily Advance

EDENTON The Edenton Tea Party Chapter of the National Society of Daughters of the Revolution will celebrate Constitution Week with an event Saturday at the Historic 1767 Chowan County Courthouse in Edenton.

The program, which gets underway at 10 a.m., will include a welcome by Edenton Tea Party Chapter Regent Sandra Sperry, the posting of the colors by the John A. Holmes JROTC, the Pledge of Allegiance by chapter member Virginia Wood, and the singing of the national anthem by Sidney Lassiter.

Prayers will be given by the Rev. Junior White of Ballards Bridge Baptist Church, and patriotic music will be offered by members of Kimberley Dunlows music class from the Chowan Middle School.

Annette Wright, the Edenton Tea Party Chapters 2020 Community Service Award Winner, will be the guest speaker. Wright will provide biographical information about North Carolinas three signers of the U.S. Constitution: William Blount, Richard Dobbs Spaight and Hugh Williamson. Her focus, however, will be Williamson, who was a resident of Edenton at the time.

The Junior White family will provide additional patriotic music, which will be followed by Edenton Tea Party Chapter members Deborah Spence who will talk about the history of the Hugh Williamson Monument.

The Rev. White will provide the benediction, which will be followed by Johnny Cashs rendition of The Ragged Old Flag. Music by the Junior White family will precede the JROTC retiring of the colors. There will then be a wreath laying ceremony at the Hugh Williamson Monument.

This year marks the 66th anniversary of Constitution Week. NSDAR Past President General Gertrude S. Carraway, who is also an Honorary NC State Regent, was responsible for the annual designation of Sept. 17-23 as Constitution Week. The DAR made its own resolution for Constitution Week, which was adopted April 21, 1955.

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Local NSDAR chapter to mark Constitution Week - The Daily Advance

Idaho has Fallen Behind in Vaccination Rates – Argonaut

In a press statement Tuesday, Gov. Brad Little once again encouraged Idahoans to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Despite this, Idaho is currently tied for last in the nation for percentage vaccinated, tied with Montana and Alabama.

The statement from Gov. Little came after the North Central and Panhandle Public Health Districts activated the Crisis standards of care in their districts. The Crisis Standards of Care are a set of rules and guidelines to help healthcare providers make decisions when there is a health crisis or similar public disaster. The move was requested by Kootenai Heath in Coeur dAlene.

Currently, 40% of Idaho residents are fully vaccinated, according to information from the Center for Disease Control, being one of the lowest in the nation. Idaho is far behind the other states in the Northwest. Washington has a 61% vaccination rate across the state, and Oregon has a 59% vaccination rate. Both states are above the national average of 53%.

Gritman Medical Center is also urging Moscow residents to get vaccinated. Currently, 46% of Latah County residents are vaccinated, making the county the fifth in the state by percentage. Blaine County is currently the highest vaccinated county in Idaho, being 65% vaccinated. Blaine County is the only Idaho county with over a 50% vaccination rate.

According to Brianna Bodily, the public information officer for South Central Public Health, the district in which Blaine County resides, the effort to vaccinate was largely motivated by the members of the community.

Blaine county has a large population of retired individuals, as well as highly-educated individuals, Bodily said, Because of the high-risk population, Blaine County got access to the vaccine earlier this year, and the vaccination rates stayed high because of a highly educated population who is reading the science on the vaccines.

This was also compounded by how hard Blaine County was hit at the beginning of the Pandemic. Back in April 2020, Blaine County experienced an average of 44 new cases a day, which severely impacted the small community, and made them more open to the new vaccine.

People in Latah county, however, are more hesitant of the vaccine and its effects. Tia Wiese, a junior at the University of Idaho, is one of those people.

Theres not many years that its been out and available, and it is newly produced, Wiese said. She also has been looking at a lot of other sources for vaccine information.

One of the organizations publishing that information has been Americas Frontline Doctors, a group of doctors who claim that their rights are being taken from them. The independence to care for their patients without interference from government, media, and the medical establishment, as stated on their website. Many of their pieces support not getting vaccinated, and instead developing a natural immunity through exposure, as well as combating the virus with various supplements.

The organization has roots with the Council for National Policy and the Tea Party Patriots, both being far-right organizations with heavy ties to the Trump family, as seen when both former President Trump and his son Donald Trump Jr. shared a press conference by the organization on social media.

Together, many Idahoans are left unsure if they should take the vaccine amongst overwhelming and conflicting information. Yet the CDC as well as Idaho Public Health still recommends vaccination for all Idahoans 12 and older. The CDC states that the COVID vaccines are safe, effective and have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration.

For students who are looking to get vaccinated or have further questions, please consult the University COVID-19 Dashboard at https://www.uidaho.edu/vandal-health-clinic/coronavirus/dashboard.

Abigail Spencer can be reached at [emailprotected] or on twitter at @SeaSnake31

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Idaho has Fallen Behind in Vaccination Rates - Argonaut

Taylor: A fun book about taxes? Yep, and it prompted a flood of ideas about citizenship and fairness – San Antonio Express-News

Among the joys of reading a history of taxes: learning that todays fights over taxes are not new. Civilizations 20 years ago, 200 years ago and 2,000 years ago all struggled with how best to replenish public coffers. Many of the topics in this book also relate to debates in 2021 debates. Fairness. Enforcement and collection. The linkage between taxes, government debt and inflation.

Im weird and want to talk about taxes, like, all the time.

The key to any tax plan and any regime, for that matter is fairness.

Keen and Slemrod highlight one form of fairness known as vertical equity, which compares how taxes affect both the rich and the poor. Theres also horizontal equity, which is fairness among taxpayers in similar economic situations. Throughout history, the legitimacy of a government rests on whether the governed feel both types of equity exist.

President Joe Biden staked his campaign, and now stakes his presidency, on two big tax ideas: First, that a tax hike for households making more than $400,000 is fair the latest test of vertical equity in the United States. Second, that a flat 15 percent corporate tax globally is horizontally fair across countries. If the Biden administration cannot convince Congress to raise taxes on household incomes above $400,000, everything else becomes harder.

On ExpressNews.com: Taylor: Biden's bold plans and the laws of financial physics

Previous post-World War generations of Americans swallowed high income tax rates. Between 1942 and 1954, the top income tax rate fluctuated between 82 percent and 94 percent, hitting incomes between $200,000 and $400,000. In the shared national sacrifice of that era, baseline notions of horizontal and vertical equity were different.

The British Peoples Budget of 1909 a kind of Green New Deal of a previous century explicitly embraced a redistributive income tax. Then-Prime Minister Lloyd George compared the cost of a nobleman to the cost of building the British navy with a memorable argument: A fully equipped duke costs as much to keep up as two Dreadnoughts and they are just as great a terror and they last longer. He had a way with words, as well as a willingness to weaponize class resentments.

My theory on taxes is that people will tolerate a lot as long as they think its fair, both vertically and horizontally. Keen and Slemrods analysis very much supports this view. Taxes perceived to be fair can be on almost anything, and in any amount. Unfair taxes, by contrast, bring down regimes.

Of course, the fairest tax is always the one paid by someone else. Thats why foreign tariffs are popular. Its why hotel occupancy taxes are so popular because only visitors pay. Its why speed traps targeting nonresidents work so well. Keen and Slemrod offer the example of Palmer, outside Dallas on the route to Houston a city with a population of 2,023 whose police wrote 1,080 speeding tickets in 2015.

Tax collection and enforcement is another theme from Keen and Slemrods history. The English Peasants Revolt of 1381. French King Louis XIVs exemption for the French nobility from wealth taxes. The Boston Tea Party of 1773. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatchers disastrous poll tax of 1990.

Tax enforcement has a way of bringing down governments when it goes poorly. Its also a big story in 2021.

The Biden administration has proposed investing $80 billion in the IRS over the next 10 years. To bolster its case, the Treasury Department argued that Americans underpay their taxes by $600 billion per year, or approximately $7 trillion over the next decade.

One very 2021 aspect of this story is the rise of untracked financial transactions, from cryptocurrencies to nonbank payment apps such as Venmo, to offshore entities. If history is any guide, the IRS and other tax authorities will, over time, figure out how to aggressively shut down the tax gap these unreported cash flows allow.

The Treasury notes that for ordinary wage earners getting a W-2, very little income goes unreported. As a result, noncompliance stands at about 1 percent. For high income earners with a more complex set of investments, including private partnership and professional tax preparation help noncompliance can reach 55 percent. These are fighting words. They obviously link quite closely with the issue of vertical equity.

If the Treasury report is correct, a beefed-up IRS could improve tax collection by $1.7 trillion in the next decade. That would have obvious benefits for tackling the growing federal debt.

In the broad sweep of history, a most obvious pattern explored by Keen and Slemrod is the problem of indebted governments, which, over and over again, get that way through war. The authors dig into British, French and American histories, which establish this pattern most strongly. So, if you dont like paying taxes, you should probably start by opposing the wars that make taxation necessary.

On ExpressNews.com: Taylor: Applying a Smart Money analysis to the costly failure in Afghanistan

At the conclusion of the 20-year Afghanistan War, weve got some accumulated government debt.

While criticizing it as overly simple, Keen and Slemrod point to the concept of Ricardian Equivalence, which says accumulated government debt is simply all our future taxes that need to be paid. This isnt quite true, in part because other people may pay our debt. Its also not true in the sense that future inflation changes the value of what we will need to pay.

And with this insight, we get the dirty secret of the relationship between heavily indebted countries, taxes and inflation. Future inflation acts as a semi-visible tax on savers and people on fixed incomes. Tax enough savers through the mechanism of inflation, and the government debt melts away through the years.

This tax via inflation will fall on savers and people on a fixed income, to the benefit of both owners of hard assets and borrowers. It can either seem fair or unfair, depending on how you are situated.

Michael Taylor is a columnist for the San Antonio Express-News and author of The Financial Rules for New College Graduates.

michael@michaelthesmart

money.com |twitter.com/michael_taylor

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Taylor: A fun book about taxes? Yep, and it prompted a flood of ideas about citizenship and fairness - San Antonio Express-News

REVIEW: ‘The Haunting of Hill House’ Themed Food Booth Serves Savory Sandwiches at Universal Orlando’s Halloween Horror Nights 30 – wdwnt.com

In addition to the haunted house based on the Netflix series The Haunting of Hill House, there is also a themed food booth for Halloween Horror Nights 30 at Universal Studios Florida.

Grilled Cheese brisket, pepper jack cheese, onions, tomatoes on country loaf

These sandwiches are all really good. Theyre very greasy and buttery, but thats probably why theyre so good. You can smell the melted cheese in the air as you get close to this tent.

They are panini-pressed-style sandwiches with nice bread.

The brisket is awesome. Again, its pretty greasy but good. The sauce added a nice flavor, although were not sure if it was pepper jack cheese or not. We didnt really taste that.

bacon-wrapped stuffed jalapeo poppers with cheddar cheese on country loaf

We loved the creaminess of the jalapeo cream cheese. The smooth cream cheese with the slice of cheddar made this extra cheesy and perfect, and the bacon stood out more with each bite. We recommend this one.

tempeh, Swiss cheese, sauerkraut, 1000 Island dressing on rye bread

This is vegan, but non-vegans will enjoy it too.

We couldnt find any sauerkraut, but that was okay.

There wasnt much of the dressing; we just got a taste of it in our first few bites.

Mostly we just tasted the tempeh and cheese, but they were delicious.

traditional grilled cheese

This sandwich was very greasy/buttery, but again, thats probably why its so delicious. Its a crispy, panini-style grilled cheese. Not too cheesy, just right. A little overpriced for a basic grilled cheese, but wed eat it again.

Stuffed Brisket paired with Poison Tea Party

Myers Original Dark Rum with Honest Tea half tea & half lemonade, blue curaao, huckleberry, lemon, a dash of allspice bitters topped with a dehydrated orange, served chilled

Poison Tea Party, along with Ghoul Juice, is available at all of the bar tents.

We werent fans of the Poison Tea Party. We would skip it and go for the Ghoul Juice from another tent, or the Texas heat margarita from the Texas Chainsaw booth.

The Haunting of Hill House themed food booth can be found in Woody Woodpecker KidZone, as indicated by the orange star on the map below.

For more Universal Studios news from around the world, follow Universal Parks News Today on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

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REVIEW: 'The Haunting of Hill House' Themed Food Booth Serves Savory Sandwiches at Universal Orlando's Halloween Horror Nights 30 - wdwnt.com

The fight over the "Ground Zero Mosque" was a grim preview of the Trump era – Mother Jones

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Theres no one moment that gave us Donald Trump, because his rise was the sum of many afflictions: a susceptibility to fraudsters, a broken media ecosystem, a failing ruling class, white grievance politics, the arbitrariness of state boundaries in the Midwest. The man himself may be extraordinarily shallow, but the forces that brought him to power are historically complex. Still, theres one incident I always circle back to when I think about not just the last few years of American politics, but the last two decadesthe 2010 fight over the construction of an Islamic center in lower Manhattan.

First things first: The Cordoba House, as the project was initially called (it later took on the more innocuous name of Park51), was never just a mosque, and it was never actually being built at Ground Zero. When Sharif El-Gamal, a New York City real-estate developer, went scouting for space in Lower Manhattan, he settled on a spot two long blocks away, in an old Burlington Coat Factory on Park Place. El-Gamal, the son of a Catholic mother and Muslim father, envisioned a community spacewith a mosque, sure, but also a fitness center, a food court, a day care, and an auditorium, spread out over more than a dozen floors. It would even include a memorial to 9/11.

But in August 2010, the details of the project werent the point. As the white rage of the tea party boiled over that summer, conservative activists and politicians simply saw an opportunity. And so the Ground Zero Mosque was born. Glenn Beck connected it to the specter of Shariah law. Other opponents, after perhaps a cursory amount of Googling, concluded that naming the project the Cordoba House was an homage to the Muslim conquest of Spain more than a millenium earlierin other words, this that was a way of declaring 9/11 a great Islamic victory. (The organization El-Gamal was working with on the center, the Cordoba Initiative, considers the name an homage to the history of religious intermingling in that city.)

The usual suspects fanned the flames. Fox News host Greg Gutfeld said he was going to open a gay bar next door to the site to troll the Muslims who would come to worship. The New York Post, which covered the whole saga with glee, allowed at one point that it was possiblemaybe even likely that the project was entirely peaceful.

Possiblemaybe even likely! And some of them, Im sure, are good people.

A reporter for Foxs New York affiliate chased El-Gamal through the street, asking, Sharif El-Gamal, why wont you talk to us, sir, why are you running? Local outlets reported on El-Gamals previous arrests and delinquent property taxesdelinquent property taxes suddenly becoming a subject of national political importance.

But with Congress in recess and the ascendant tea party in the news, other mainstream outlets piled on, too, allowingnot for the first or last timethe anger of conservative activists to serve as a sort of assignment editor. For a time that August, in the heat of the congressional Midterms, the Cordoba House was the biggest story in America. Republicans used it as a bludgeon against everyone else. And plenty of Democrats found it easier to fall in line than to fight back. Harry Reid came out against the project. So did Howard Dean. So did Joe Lieberman. Several New York Democratic congressmen opposed it.

Polls showed a majority of Manhattanites supported the project, but nationally, it faced overwhelming bipartisan opposition. Then, as ever, people in other parts of the country were eager to use New York as a prop for their political agendas but cared little for the people who actually lived there. Sarah Palin, at the time the most prominent Republican politician in America, tweeted out her own call to action: Peaceful Muslims, pls refudiate.

Pls refudiate was an easy term to mock, but Palins message was potent. In North Carolina, a tea party nurse named Renee Ellmers accused her opponent, seven-term Democratic incumbent Bob Etheridge, of refusing to take a stand against the victory mosque. After footage of Cordoba (the Spanish one) flashed across the screen, she addressed the camera: We should tell them in plain English: No, there will never be a mosque at Ground Zero. Ellmers would go on to win in November, as Republicans across the country channeled the tea partys rage (against this, against President Barack Obama, against everything) into a landslide the nation is still digging itself out from.

By the middle of August, the project had become an issue of national importance so profound that Obama himself felt compelled to weigh in. Speaking at the White Houses Ramadan dinner, he defended the project. It was a simple matter of freedom of worship, he explained. And that was really the issue here. Because the Park51 controversy was not just the story of one development in Manhattan. Park51 got the biggest headlines, but there were efforts to block the opening of mosques and Islamic centers in Tennessee, in California, in Kentucky, in Wisconsin, and elsewhere. There were incidents of vandalism and arson. In cities and towns across the country, the freedom of Muslims to worship was treated not as something enshrined in the Constitution, but as a matter of legitimate political debatethe kind of thing citizens could simply decide to stop, if they were loud enough. And they were really fucking loud.

You shouldnt be surprised to learn that Trump managed to fit himself into the story that summer, leaking to the press a letter hed written offering to buy the Park51 property from El-Gamal.

I am making this offer as a resident of New York and citizen of the United States, not because I think the location is a spectacular one (because it is not), but because it will end a very serious, inflammatory, and highly divisive situation that is destined, in my opinion, to only get worse, he wrote.

The kind of hostility to religious liberty on display during the Park51 controversy was considered simply ordinary in Republican politics. Antagonism toward a major religion, or at least this major religion, wouldnt stop you from getting feted in the national press or booked on Sunday shows, and it certainly wouldnt cost you many votes in a primary. Trump, who in 2015 would propose blocking Muslims from entering the United States entirely, understood that the professions of support for people of faith that undergirded his party did not apply to everyone. Quite the oppositethe opposition to specific groups was a powerful unifying force.

The Ground Zero Mosque was the story we really didnt need in 2010, but a decade later, it provides essential context for where we are today, not just for what it said about where the Right was headed, but for what it said about other people and institutions, too. The development continued, but the Islamic center hasnt materializedits mostly just condos now. On Sunday, Jonathan Greenblatt, the national director of the Anti-Defamation League, formally apologized for his groups prior position that the proposed development should be relocated somewhere else.

As the leading anti-hate organization in the US, with experts tracking extremism of all sorts, ADL is committed to help our Muslim allies counter Islamophobia, Greenblatt wrote on CNNs website. But as a dear Muslim friend told me recently, ADLs stance on the Cordoba House project was a punch in the gut to the Muslim community. I hope that by righting this wrong, we can be better allies in the fight against the rise in anti-Muslim hate that is comingand it is coming.

It was a notable statement, freely offered. But I couldnt help but notice the forum it was published in. CNN, after all, was also a driver of the controversy. Heres a CNN segment in which reporter Deborah Feyerick interviewed El-Gamal:

FEYERICK: Plans include a performing arts center, swimming pool, child care facilities, and, yes, a Muslim prayer space two blocks from the worst terror attack in U.S. history. Why not have a prayer space for Buddhists or Jews or Christians or why must it be Muslim? It cant be just a business decision.

EL-GAMAL: There are Jewish community centers all over the country.

FEYERICK: But the Jews didnt take down two towers.

EL-GAMAL: There are YMCAs all over the country.

FEYERICK: But the Christians didnt take down the towers.

EL-GAMAL: And this is a need that exists.

FEYERICK: For those still sensitive and so raw to this, their questiontheir overriding question is, why here? Why so close? Its two blocks but it was close enough that landing gear ended up on the roof. Why?

This was emblematic of the way this real estate project played out in so many news segments. Feyerick was just asking the question, you knowfor those still sensitive and so raw to this.

In an in-studio appearance on Joy Behars HLN show, Pamela Geller, an anti-Islam activist, proposed turning the site instead into a center dedicated to the victims of hundreds of millions of years of Jihadi wars. Behar pushed back, but these were the kinds of voices mainstream outlets elevated.

There was some real trauma there in some of the reactions from victims families, but that didnt explain the totality of what was happening, and why it ballooned like it did. The national debate was an assertion of who counted and who didnt, a show of strength and power, wrapped up not just in the physical opposition to one groups religious liberty, but in the actions of the people and institutions who, when asked to pick a side, joined in the mob. Ill always think of the summer of 2010, and the weaponization of a construction project in Manhattan, as a flickering glimpse of things to comenot just the political potency of foaming prejudice against Muslims, but also the readiness with which those pushing the story were accommodated.

There really was a victory symbol in all of thisthere were proponents of a political ideology using a construction project to demonstrate their power. It just wasnt the people Fox News warned you about.

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The fight over the "Ground Zero Mosque" was a grim preview of the Trump era - Mother Jones