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How to Visit The Obama Portraits | The Art Institute of Chicago – Art Institute of Chicago

Included in Your General Admission TicketAccess to The Obama Portraits is included in a general admission ticket; it does not require a separate exhibition ticket.However, we are predicting this exhibition will reach capacity on a daily basis, so while we will do our best to get everyone in, entry will be first-come, first-served.

Free Week for Illinois ResidentsDuring the first week of The Obama Portraits, June 1825, general admission will be free to Illinois residentsbut tickets must be reserved online in advance. Tickets for this week will be available June 4 (learn more below). Youll receive your ticket via email and can show it on your phone or as a printout when you arrive at the museum.

Ticket ReleaseGeneral admission tickets for the eight-week period the portraits are on view will be released in batches to provide multiple opportunities for visitors to get tickets.

Sign up for our emails at the bottom of this page or follow us on social media to learn the exact date and time of the release.

A small number of tickets will be available on-site for those groups who qualify for unreserved free admissionChicago teens under 18, LINK/WIC card holders, military members and their families, and Illinois educators, as well as families who have a free family pass or a Kids Museum Passport from the Chicago Public Library. Please check our free admission page to be sure you bring your qualifying identification, and stop by an admissions counter when you arrive to receive your free ticket(s).

Virtual LinesThe exhibition has a virtual line in order to manage capacity and promote physical distancing. Please join the line as soon as you arrive by scanning the QR code posted on signs throughout the museum. Museum staff will be available to assist you in joining the virtual line.

Wait Times and Best Days to VisitWe also encourage you to check live wait times on the exhibition page and consider visiting on a weekday when the galleries tend to be less busy.

While you wait, pick up our special Obama self-guided tours pamphlet, which uses the portraits as a starting point to explore the rest of the museum.

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How to Visit The Obama Portraits | The Art Institute of Chicago - Art Institute of Chicago

Libertarian lawmaker sits out House work for the week after violating the mask mandate | 1019por.com – 101.9 WPOR

According to the Bangor Daily News, Rep. John Andrews of Paris, Maine agreed to sit out House work after he violated the mask mandate on Wednesday.

Tensions are high in the Maine Statehouse because masks are still required, but Gov. Janet Mills lifted the mandate in most of the state. Over the past week, the mask requirement has been criticized by many Republican lawmakers, along with Andrews who is the only Libertarian lawmaker in the state.

Democratic House Speaker, Ryan Fecteau asked that Andrews put a mask on after the opening ceremonies started, but Andrews told lawmakers that he was planning to defy the request. Fecteau consulted with the House ethics panel, and together they decided to bar Andrews from being able to vote the rest of the week. However, it was decided that if he chose to wear a mask, he may resume working.

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Libertarian lawmaker sits out House work for the week after violating the mask mandate | 1019por.com - 101.9 WPOR

Announcing A Tri-Journal Note Exchange Between the NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, the Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy, and the Texas…

Throughout my career, I have been proud to associate with three journals that promote conservative, libertarian, textualist, originalist, and classical liberal scholarship: the NYU Journal of Law & Liberty (on whose Board I sit), the Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy, and the Texas Review of Law & Politics. These outlets provide critical outlets for right-of-center authors. I've approached each of these journals to publish works that would not find a home in most progressive mainstream law journals. As law reviews continue to pursue inclusive policies, they will inevitably exclude conservative legal thought. Moreover, conservative law students will find it more difficult to join law journals, get their notes published, and become editors. Look no further than the Georgetown Law Journal.

The editors of the NYU JLL, the Georgetown JLPP, and TROLP have recognized this creeping problem. And they have adopted an important, forward-looking solution: a Tri-Journal Notes Exchange.

Earlier today, we, as Editors-in-Chief of the NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, the Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy, and the Texas Review of Law & Politics, formally announced the launch of a Tri-Journal Notes Exchange to our Members. As Editors-in-Chief of three of the country's student-edited law journals committed to publishing conservative, libertarian, textualist, originalist, and classical liberal scholarship, we believe this project is vitally important to not only our respective publications, but to the legal community at large.

The establishment of the Exchange is part of our cross-journal commitment to promoting a cross- campus culture of collaboration, marked by an emphasis on intellectual cross-pollination and the advancement of student scholarship. At this time, the Notes Exchange is only open to current student editors at the NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, the Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy, and the Texas Review of Law & Politics.

For now, the policy is only open to student editors at the three journals. But the editors extend an invitation to other schools to participate:

Our long-term ambition is to open this Notes Exchange up to current law students at all other law schools and dramatically expand our capacity to publish student scholarship. To this end, we look forward to welcoming journals that share our vision for advancing conservative, libertarian, textualist, originalist, classical liberal, and heterodox scholarship to the Exchange in the future. We strongly encourage motivated students and faculty members at institutions around the country to follow on the path the founders of our journals set out on decades ago and work to establish editorially and culturally independent publications on your own campuses.

I hope other schools can participate in this consortium. The Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, the flagship Federalist Society Journal, should join this movement. And other law schools with a critical mass of conservative students should establish new journals. The most likely candidates are Yale, Stanford, Columbia, Chicago, Penn, Virginia, Michigan, Northwestern, and Duke.

In the future, flagship law journals will become inhospitable to scholarship that challenges progressive orthodoxies. Savvy action today can build the institutions that maintain homes for conservative legal thought well into the future. Interested students should reach out to me with any questions. I am happy to help facilitate discussions.

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Announcing A Tri-Journal Note Exchange Between the NYU Journal of Law & Liberty, the Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy, and the Texas...

Liberal Media Coverage Is Boosting Conservative Nationalists – Reason

Big-government conservatives gain from liberal media bias. Much of the U.S. media is accustomed to accepting left-leaning framing of economic policies and argumentsand it's impacting coverage of the conservative civil war over economic principles.

A significant portion of the rightfrom legislators like Sen. Josh Hawley (RMo.) to Fox News hosts like Tucker Carlson, traditionally right-leaning magazines like The American Conservative, and all sorts of rank-and-file Republicanshas started to sound very similar to the far left when it comes to private business and government regulation. "In the current environment, when you see somebody railing against how the system is rigged to benefit the rich and powerful at the expense of the working class, you have to double-check to see whether it's coming from somebody on the far left or the populist right," notes Philip Klein at National Review.

They're part of a "growing movement on the right challenging the longstanding commitment of conservatives to limited government and free enterprise"one that presents "a potentially fatal threat to the conservative movement as it has existed for decades as well as to the cause of limited government," adds Klein. (For more on this, see Stephanie Slade's "Is There a Future for Fusionism?")

And an American press already biased against libertarian views of markets and economic liberty seems more than happy to indulge the narrative of this being a more enlightened, populist, or politically compromising form of conservatism.

Take, for instance, this recent article on antitrust law in Washington Monthly. Republicans who want to join Democrats in expanding antitrust law and using it to punish large or politically disfavored companies are framed as folks wanting "to combat the monopolist corporations that have gained a precarious level of market power as the American economy has become more concentrated than at any other time since the Gilded Age." Those who want to see antitrust law stick to its current strategy of using consumer welfare as a lodestar are framed as "pro-monopoly."

The article is partially a profile of The Alliance on Antitrust, founded by Ashley Baker. The group aims "to align conservatives on the narrow and limited view of antitrust that Robert Bork popularized in the 1970s, called the 'consumer welfare standard,'" notes Washington Monthly. This standard says consumer interestsnot breaking up companies just for being big or inducing artificial competition just for the sake of competitionshould be the primary concern of antitrust law enforcement. It is not a "pro-monopoly" argument but an argument against excessive government intervention in private industry and for a conception of antitrust enforcement that puts protecting consumersnot any particular economic ideologyfirst.

"Under the consumer welfare standard, which has anchored U.S. antitrust law for over four decades, consumer harm is measured through tangible economic effects and empirical evidence," notes Tom Herbert, federal affairs manager at Americans for Tax Reform, in a recent opinion piece in The Hill. "Antitrust law under the consumer welfare standard allows business conduct that benefits Americans through lower prices, better quality products and greater access to goods and services."

Just a few years ago, the fact that Republicans would turn against such a standard in favor of a leftist vision of antitrust enforcement would be weird, to put it mildly. But antitrust law is now seen as another tool in fighting the culture war. "Large businesses [are] increasingly viewed as the enforcement arm of the cultural Left," notes Klein, and "the cancel culture and anti-PC debates have become more animating for a lot of conservatives than traditional social issues."

The funny/sad/terrifying thing about all of this is the notion that the right joining the left's pushes for more aggressive antitrust enforcement makes these fights "bipartisan." Both Republicans and Democrats may want to expand government control over internet companies and private business more generally, but they have drastically different ideas of what would happen when they do.

Sure, the Republican/conservative wing that advocates against free markets nods to making big corporations serve the people. And to Democrats/progressivesand media used to their framingthis means increasing taxes and regulations to make businesses cover things like Medicare for All, student loan forgiveness, "infrastructure" spending, and expanded health care benefits. But the Trumpists and others railing against "woke capitalism" and calling for less free markets aren't focused on these things at all; they're focused on making companies seen as too socially liberal pay for their perceived transgressions and side-taking in the culture wars. Their goal is enacting a socially conservative idea of the "common good" through economic sanctions against companies that won't play by their rules.

Neither the right nor the left will be happy when the other side has control of these regulations. But either way, businesses, consumers, and economic liberty will suffer.

A big religious freedom ruling is expected from the Supreme Court this week:

The case, known as Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, No. 19-123, is a fight over a city policy that bars discrimination based on sexual orientation. Citing the policy, Philadelphia dropped a contract with a Roman Catholic foster agency that said its beliefs didn't allow it to certify same-sex couples for adoption. The agency, Catholic Social Services, brought a lawsuit alleging that Philadelphia violated its First Amendment religious rights.

The court's opinion will likely be released today.

Tech industry associations NetChoice and the Computer & Communications Industry Association are suing over Florida's new law that bans some social media companies from banning politicians. The new lawwhich has a carveout for platforms owned by Disney and other operators of entertainment complexes or theme parkssays citizens can sue tech companies who "deplatform" any politician for any reason, and allows the Florida Elections Commission to fine companies that do so up to $250,000 per day.

"No one, not even someone who has paid a filing fee to run for office, has a First Amendment right to compel a private actor to carry speech on their private property," says the new suit, filed in the U.S. District for the Northern District of Florida.

"We cannot stand idly by as Florida's lawmakers push unconstitutional bills into law that bring us closer to state-run media and a state-run internet," Carl Szabo, vice president and general counsel of NetChoice, said in a statement. "The law is crony capitalism masquerading as consumer protection. Our lawsuit will stop an attempt by the state of Florida to undermine the First Amendment and force social media sites to carry offensive and harmful political messages."

Biden has promised that his tax crackdown won't mean more audits for people making under $400,000 per year and that it's only intended to catch ultra-rich tax scofflaws, not middle-class folks who make a little cash under the table. But at the same time, his new budget pledges to fund massive new spending initiatives with $717 billion in tax enforcement revenue over the next 10 years.

New COVID variants are proving more transmissible, threatening to make the pandemic even more catastrophic in parts of the world without widespread vaccination and upping the chances of a new mutation that will not be thwarted by current vaccines.

The World Health Organization is reclassifying location-based COVID-19 variants by greek letters, reports USA Today. "The United Kingdom variant, called by scientists B.1.1.7, will now be Alpha. B.1.351, the South Africa variant, will now be Beta and the B.1.617.2 variant discovered in India will now be known as Delta."

Will the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approve a promising new Alzheimer's drug? "By June 7, the FDA is expected to make one of its most important decisions in years: whether to approve the drug for mild cognitive impairment or early-stage dementia caused by Alzheimer's," notesThe Washington Post. "It would be the first treatment ever sold to slow the deterioration in brain function caused by the disease, not just to ease symptoms. And it would be the first new Alzheimer's treatment since 2003."

Will the Supreme Court consider a case on affirmative action in higher education?

A former state prison in New York may become "a bustling regional hub for growing and processing cannabis."

Illinois is trying to ban police from lying to child suspects during questioning.

A bill on its way to Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak, a Democrat, "calls for making the state the first to hold a presidential primary in the 2024 election," reports The Hill. "If signed into law, it would switch Nevada's contest from a caucus to a primary and move the state up in the nation's election calendar, passing the Iowa caucus and New Hampshire primary for the first slot."

More than two dozen Cleveland police officers are being sued for allegedly violating the rights of antipolice brutality protesters.

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Liberal Media Coverage Is Boosting Conservative Nationalists - Reason

Elected CPS board supposed to be about democracy, but thats not what happened in Springfield, Mayor Ligh – Chicago Sun-Times

An elected Chicago Public Schools board is supposed to be about democracy, but what happened in Springfield had nothing to do with democracy, Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Wednesday.

One day after the Illinois Senate overwhelmingly voted to phase in what the mayor has long viewed as an unwieldy 21-member elected school board, Lightfoot said that vote her latest in a string of legislative defeats was only temporary.

Were gonna keep our fight where it should be: making sure that our children are heard. That their educational futures are secured. That parents have a seat at the table. Why that sense of urgency around those core values is something that some folks in Springfield dont get, I dont know. But there has to be accountability for ignoring the people, she said.

This is supposed to be about democracy, but what happened in Springfield had nothing to do with democracy. But democracy mark my word will prevail.

Lightfoot called the switch from an appointed to an elected school board the most consequential change in governance in decades, if not ever for the Chicago Public Schools.

As such, It cant be about the politics. Its got to be about the people, meaning the students and their parents, she said.

But the mayor argued the Senate version would virtually exclude parents from competing in school board seats because there are no controls around how much money gets spent on those races.

Pointing to a $1 million school board race in Los Angeles, Lightfoot said: We dont need that here in Chicago.

It is critically important that there is a negotiated resolution that puts our children and our parents first. I do not believe what came out of the Senate does any of those things. Im gonna keep fighting ... to get a negotiated resolution that reflects the realities and necessities of CPS. But weve got a lot of work to do.

A 21-member elected board could affect Lightfoots ability to find a replacement for retiring Chicago Public Schools CEO Janice Jackson, she said.

It could have a negative impact if a CEO doesnt believe that he or she is actually gonna have the ability to make a meaningful difference in the quality of education in the lives of our children, Lightfoot said.

Weve made that argument over and over again. Thats something that clearly fell on way too many deaf ears.

Yet another concern is the built-in moratorium on school closings, consolidations or phase-outs until the new board members take office in early 2025.

Its a mistake that we would foreclose parents ability to come together with a plan and offer up consolidation or some other reshaping of schools, Lightfoot said.

For example, theres a group of parents in North Lawndale that have been trying for years to consolidate three schools [to] get one school that is a STEM program. The language that is in that bill right now would cut that off at the pass and not allow it to happen. Thats a mistake. We made that argument. But it fell on deaf ears in the Senate.

Lightfoot campaigned as a staunch proponent of an elected school board, only to repeatedly block what she calls an unwieldy bill that would triple the size of the board to 21 members: 20 members elected from local districts, headed by a president elected by citywide vote, beginning in 2023.

Earlier this year, she fueled speculation about whether she will ever deliver on that pivotal campaign promise by telling the New York Times CPS would never have opened without mayoral control.

The Senate bill would create a 21-member board in January 2025, initially split between 11 mayoral appointees including the board president and 10 elected members.

The first elected members would run in the November 2024 general election for four-year terms. Though the mayor would continue picking the board president, City Council confirmation would become necessary. The mayor currently appoints a seven-member board, including the president, without an approval process.

The seats of the board president and the 10 appointees would become elected ones in January 2027 through a November 2026 election. Those members would also serve four-year terms.

The city would be divided into 10 districts for the 2024 school board elections and 20 districts for the 2026 ballot. That map would need to be drawn by February 2022.

All elected board members would run in a particular district other than the board president, who would run at large.

After one teachers strike and the threat of another before schools were finally reopened after the pandemic, the mayors office has been particularly interested in preventing Chicago Teachers Union leaders from running for school board seats. Lightfoot conspicuously did not mention that objection.

The Senate voted 36 to 15 to advance the bill, which must head back to the House where it needs a three-fifths majority to take effect within the next year. Assuming all 118 House members vote on the measure, it would require 71 votes to pass.

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Elected CPS board supposed to be about democracy, but thats not what happened in Springfield, Mayor Ligh - Chicago Sun-Times