Tuesday, October 20, 2020

RSN: FOCUS: Robert Reich | Trump and Barrett's Threat to Abortion and LGBTQ Rights Is Simply Un-American

 

 

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20 October 20


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FOCUS: Robert Reich | Trump and Barrett's Threat to Abortion and LGBTQ Rights Is Simply Un-American
Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich. (photo: Steve Russell/Toronto Star)
Robert Reich, Guardian UK
Reich writes: "Trump and many Republicans insist that whether to wear a mask or to go to work during a pandemic should be personal choices. Yet what a woman does with her own body, or whether same-sex couples can marry, should be decided by government."

Republicans won’t tell Americans to wear masks to beat Covid, but will say what women and gay people can and cannot do

It’s a tortured, upside-down view of freedom. Yet it’s remarkably prevalent even as the pandemic resurges – America is back up to more than 60,000 new cases a day, the highest rate since July, and numbers continue to rise – and as the Senate considers Trump’s pick for the supreme court.

By contrast, Joe Biden has wisely declared he would do “whatever it takes” to stop the pandemic, including mandating masks and locking down the entire economy if scientists recommend it.

“I would shut it down; I would listen to the scientists,” he said.

Biden also wants to protect both abortion and same-sex marriage from government intrusion – in 2012 he memorably declared his support of the latter before even Barack Obama did so.

Trump’s opposite approaches, discouraging masks and other Covid restrictions while seeking government intrusion into the most intimate decisions anyone makes, have become the de facto centerpieces of his campaign.

At his “town hall” on Thursday night, Trump falsely claimed that most people who wear masks contract the virus.

He also criticized governors for ordering lockdowns, adding that the Michigan governor, Gretchen Whitmer, “wants to be a dictator”. He was speaking just one week after state and federal authorities announced they had thwarted an alleged plot to kidnap and possibly kill Whitmer.

The attorney general, William Barr – once again contesting Trump for the most wacky analogy – has called state lockdown orders the “greatest intrusion on civil liberties in American history” since slavery.

Yet at the very same time Trump and his fellow-travelers defend people’s freedom to infect others or become infected with Covid-19, they’re inviting government to intrude into the most intimate aspects of personal life.

Trump has promised that the supreme court’s 1973 Roe v Wade decision, establishing a federal right to abortion, will be reversed “because I am putting pro-life justices on the court”.

Much of the controversy over Trump’s nomination of Amy Coney Barrett hinges on her putative willingness to repeal Roe.

While an appeals court judge, Barrett ruled in favor of a law requiring doctors to inform the parents of any minor seeking an abortion, without exceptions, and also joined a dissent suggesting an Indiana law requiring burial or cremation of fetal remains was constitutional.

A Justice Barrett might also provide the deciding vote for reversing Obergefell v Hodgesthe 2015 supreme court decision protecting same-sex marriage. Only three members of the majority in that case remain on the court.

Barrett says her views are rooted in the “text” of the constitution. That’s a worrisome omen given that earlier this month justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito opined that the right to same-sex marriage “is found nowhere in the text” of the constitution.

What’s public, what’s private and where should government intervene? The question suffuses the impending election and much else in modern American life.

It is nonsensical to argue, as do Trump and his allies, that government cannot mandate masks or close businesses during a pandemic but can prevent women from having abortions and same-sex couples from marrying.

The underlying issue is the common good, what we owe each other as members of the same society.

During wartime, we expect government to intrude on our daily lives for the common good: drafting us into armies, converting our workplaces and businesses, demanding we sacrifice normal pleasures and conveniences. During a pandemic as grave as this one we should expect no less intrusion, in order that we not expose others to the risk of contracting the virus.

But we have no right to impose on others our moral or religious views about when life begins or the nature and meaning of marriage. The common good requires instead that we honor such profoundly personal decisions.

Public or private? We owe it to each other to understand the distinction.

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Dartmouth man says Republican Congressional candidate Rayla Campbell threatened him

 

THIS IS THE REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE RUNNING AGAINST AYANNA PRESSLEY. 
MASSACHUSETTS WOULD BE ILL-SERVED WITH A COMBATIVE CANDIDATE SUCH AS THIS. 

HOW PATHETIC THAT THIS IS THE BEST THE MASS GOP CAN DO!


Dartmouth man says Republican Congressional candidate Rayla Campbell threatened him


By Tim Dunn

Posted Oct 19, 2020


NEW BEDFORD — Republican Congressional candidate Rayla Campbell is in more hot water this week after a police report was filed in Dartmouth by a Republican State Committee member alleging that she physically threatened him.

Running in the 7th Congressional District against incumbent Ayanna Pressley, Campbell has reportedly been asked to cease all activity and involvement with the Trump campaign by RNC National Committeeman from Massachusetts Ron Kaufman and Massachusetts for Trump 2020 Chairman Tom Hodgson, who also serves as Bristol County Sheriff.

Campbell made national headlines after she was involved in a physical altercation with two women following a pro-Trump rally in New Bedford on Oct. 12. A video recording showed Campbell actively engaging the two women after she claimed she was assaulted on social media.

Brock Cordeiro, Republican State Committeeman from the Second Bristol & Plymouth State Senate District, has filed a police report alleging that Campbell physically threatened him in a voicemail to MassGOP Vice-Chairman Tom Mountain. Cordeiro told the Standard-Times on Sunday that Campbell had been asked to step aside from any campaign activity.

“The national Trump campaign never recognized her in that position and she has been removed or has agreed to step back from any Trump campaign activity. Both the Sheriff and Ron Kaufman in their Trump Campaign capacities have spoke with her and it is clear that she should be separated from anything due to both her actions against me and at the New Bedford rally on Monday (Oct. 12),” Cordeiro, a Dartmouth resident, explained.

Cordeiro said Campbell began privately messaging him through Facebook on Oct. 18, demanding that he unblock her from the group he administers: Massachusetts For Trump 2020. The Facebook group serves as an online promotional and organizational tool for President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign in the Bay State.

“I had blocked her (from the group) several days prior to that because after being talked to twice by senior campaign leadership, she continued to post things of no relevance to the group. They were self-serving to her campaign or they were going off on tangents about the governor and masks and vaccines and the COVID polices. So, after rejecting dozens of her posts over many weeks or a month or so that the group has been up I blocked her,” Cordeiro explained, adding that Campbell became increasingly aggressive in her messages to him after he had denied her request to be unblocked.

“She didn’t seem to notice for a few days, until that Friday night when she started messaging me and she began to get a little more belligerent in her demands. I just made it clear that due to her actions and her attitude that she wasn’t going to be unblocked. She was getting worse and worse until I finally blocked her from following me,” he said.

Campbell didn’t stop there, according to Cordeiro, as he said she then called MassGOP Vice Chairman Tom Mountain, leaving him a voicemail where she physically threatened Cordeiro.

Campbell denied nearly all of Cordeiro’s allegations in a phone interview with The Standard-Times on Sunday, saying that she never made any threat toward Cordeiro, calling him a “misogynist pig.”

“I don’t know why he blocked me. I never got a full answer about that, considering he posts about himself all day long on the Trump page. He’s blocked many people that run our Back the Blue and Trump rallies without any inclination as to why,” she said.

“No, that is not accurate at all. I will not [confirm making threats in the voicemail],” Campbell adamantly said of the allegations, adding that she has not heard from Dartmouth Police regarding an investigation into the alleged threats.

The Standard-Times was provided a recording of the voicemail, which Mountain had played for Cordeiro, warning him that Campbell was “on the war path.”

“Hey Tom, it’s Rayla, we’ve got a big problem. Brock, who works with the sheriff, decided that it would be either funny or OK with him to block me from the Massachusetts for Trump 2020 page, which I need access to because I need to post, and also get all the event information. This needs to be fixed now because I will find out where this little mother***** lives and beat him a new a**hole,” Campbell can be heard saying in the voicemail.

Cordeiro cited the voicemail and the armed security that Campbell travels with for the reason he subsequently reported the incident to Dartmouth Police. Campbell said she travels with security because of multiple physical threats made against her on the campaign trail.

Just one day following Cordeiro’s police report, Campbell got involved in a physical altercation with two women in a parking lot following the Trump rally in New Bedford. Video of the incident shows Campbell exchanging blows with the two women, eventually bringing the brawl to the ground before bystanders broke it up.

Campbell also denied Cordeiro’s claim that RNC Committee leadership ordered her to cease any involvement with the campaign.

“I am still Black Voices for Trump [captain], so I don’t know where Brock is getting his information, considering I just did a Black Voices for Trump event in New Hampshire yesterday,” she said.

Cordeiro said that he was also informed of personal attacks Campbell made about him on a podcast with TurtleBoy Sports – a Massachusetts based blog covering the news and culture of the region – where she made fun of Cordeiro’s job working at the annual King Richard’s Faire and that he resides with his mother.

In the phone interview with The Standard-Times, Campbell went back to attacking Cordeiro for his employment with the Renaissance Faire held in Carver each year. She also went on to criticize his effectiveness as a Republican State Committee member.

“Doesn’t Brock work for King Richard’s Faire? And isn’t he a knight in King Richard’s Faire? I don’t know what his full-time job is but I do know that he’s a state committee member for the GOP and he should be trying to get Republicans elected instead of trying to sabotage them because his feelings are hurt because he’s misogynistic pig,” she said.

Hodgson has yet to respond to a request for comment by The Standard-Times. A report of the incident by Dartmouth Police is expected to be made available soon.




MASSterList: T troubles | Out of the park | Where's mine?: Today's sponsor - Massachusetts Agrees: Defend Public Higher Ed Now

 



This email may be cut off by your email provider. To see today's full MASSterList, click "View entire message" at the bottom, or view the online version here.

By Jay Fitzgerald and Keith Regan

10/20/2020

T troubles | Out of the park | Where's mine?

 

Keller at Large

 
 
When politicians play pretend
 

In his latest Keller at Large on MassterList, Jon Keller notes that politicians for decades have been playing “cosplay” roles, or pretending to be who they’re not. But pandemic deniers, led by our president, are contenders for cosplay Oscars for acting as if there’s no science behind COVID-19.


Keller at Large
 
 
Happening Today
 
Health Policy Commission, marijuana delivery rules, higher-ed enrollment
 

-- Health Policy Commission holds a virtual version of its annual cost trends hearing that will last only half a day this year, not two days, as it has in the past, 9 a.m. 

-- Board of Elementary and Secondary Education meets with plans to announce the state's 2021 teacher of the year, discuss a language interpretation services project, and other matters, 9 a.m. 

-- Cannabis Control Commission meets and is expected to consider feedback and hold a final policy discussion around its draft home-delivery regulations, 10 a.m. 

-- Board of Higher Education virtually meets with plans to hear a presentation on fall enrollment at UMass, state universities and community colleges, 10 a.m. 

-- Gov. Charlie Baker participates in a ‘fireside chat’ with JPMorgan Chase President and CEO Jamie Dimon to discuss investments to expand economic opportunity for young people and to prepare them for jobs in the future, 11 a.m. 

For the most comprehensive listing of calendar items, check out State House News Service’s Daily Advances (pay wall – free trial subscriptions available), as well as MassterList’s Beacon Hill Town Square below. 

 
 
K@L Oct 20
 
 
Today's News
 
Reminder to readers: SHNS Coronavirus Tracker available for free
 

A reminder to our readers as the coronavirus crisis unfolds: The paywalled State House News Service, which produces MASSterList, is making its full Coronavirus Tracker available to the community for free on a daily basis each morning via ML. SHNS Coronavirus Tracker. 

 
 
The coronavirus numbers: 15 new deaths, 9,532 total deaths, 827 new cases
 

MassLive has the latest coronavirus numbers for Massachusetts. 

 
 
As the T sees long-term ridership declines due to telecommuting …
 

The Globe’s Adam Vaccaro and CommonWealth’s Bruce Mohl report that MBTA officials are revising downward their already grim ridership and revenue projections. The reason: They see today’s surge in telecommuting, spurred by the pandemic, becoming “standard practice for the foreseeable future” here and elsewhere. Meaning: Budget cuts.

Here's more evidence of telecommuting’s long-term impact on transportation in general, via SHNS’s Chris Lisinski (pay wall): “Study Finds Old Rush Hour Patterns Not Returning Soon.”

 
 
... mayors and others urge T to avert service cuts
 

SHNS’s Chris Lisinski (pay wall) reports that Boston Mayor Martin Walsh and Somerville Mayor Joseph Curtatone are adding their voices to those urging the MBTA to abandon tentative plans to make deep service cuts to balance its pandemic-ravaged operating budget, saying the T should seek new outside funding.  

Meanwhile, SHNS’s Michael Norton (pay wall) reports that a coalition of 30 groups wants the T to wait until the 2020 legislative session concludes before making any cuts. 

 
 
MTA
 
 
Maybe the tsunami hits today?
 

Granted, it’s early. The state’s eviction moratorium only ended over the weekend. Still, the Herald’s Erin Tiernan reports there was little sign of a ‘tsunami’ of eviction filings yesterday, the first work day in which landlords could make filings, or at least there were few signs of a tsunami where Tiernan looked.

We suspect filings will dribble in eventually, followed by waves, particularly if and when federal protections expire. There’s no doubt many people are behind in payments. And there’s no doubt there’s a housing problem out there. See post immediately below.

Boston Herald
 
 
As housing instability grows, Cambridge opens public showers
 

Have we come to this? As Martha Bebinger reports at WBUR, two trailers with showers inside officially opened yesterday in Cambridge, as city officials and others deal with growing housing instability in the region.  

WBUR
 
 
Where’s mine? After court ruling, inmates in Massachusetts want their stimulus checks
 

Sarah Betancourt at CommonWealth Magazine reports there’s now a scramble under way among the nearly 13,000 state and county inmates in Massachusetts to claim stimulus-relief checks, now that a California federal judge has ruled prisoners are entitled to the freebie money from the feds.  

CommonWealth
 
 

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For more information, go to aadcawarenessday.com.
 
 
Calling all hotspots ...
 

Did you get a cell-phone alert last night from the state warning that you live in a high-risk coronavirus community? If so, you probably live in Chelsea, Everett, Lawrence, Lynn, Nantucket, New Bedford, Revere, Framingham, Winthrop or Worcester. The state was planning to send out mobile-device alerts last night to those in designated hotspots, as part of a stepped-up effort to make sure people are following virus-containment guidelines. The Globe’s Martin Finucane and SHNS’s Colin Young and Katie Lannan (pay wall) have more.

 
 
Right direction: Number of new UMass virus cases slow down
 

It’s a start. UMass Amherst is seeing the number of Covid cases being reported on and around campus decline after a spike that was tied to a mid-September off-campus party. Jacquelyn Voghel of the Daily Hampshire Gazette has the details. 

 
 
All too familiar: Celtics’ Marcus Smart details racist Boston incident in essay
 

Again. Boston Celtics guard Marcus Smart has penned a lengthy article for the Players’ Tribune that includes a gut-punch of a racial slur hurled at him outside his workplace, the TD Garden, Hayden Bird of the Globe reports. 

In the piece, Smart writes that despite a lifetime of experience dealing with racism, the incident rattled him because the slur was delivered by a mother holding the hand of her young son.“And in an instant, just like that, I was made to feel less than human.” 

Boston Globe
 
 
Envisioning Equity Part III
 
 
Strong start: 800,000 ballots cast in Mass. already
 

This surge isn’t bad. Tanner Stening of MassLive reports more than 800,000 ballots had been cast as of Monday afternoon in the Bay State, representing a quarter of the total vote from the 2016 presidential election. The ongoing tally includes both mail-in ballots already received and those cast at early voting locations, which opened Saturday across the state.  

Meanwhile, Spencer Buell of Boston Magazine reports on the “most Boston voter ever," to wit: How a Brighton woman gained online fame after showing up to vote early at Fenway Park with her “Dunkie’s” in hand. 

 
 
Lawmakers and local officials: Marijuana home delivery plan goes too far
 

SHNS’s Colin Young and CommonWealth’s Shira Schoenberg report that some Beacon Hill lawmakers and municipal leaders are objecting to the Cannabis Control Commission’s plan to carve out a new niche in the emerging pot industry that would allow companies to buy marijuana directly from wholesalers and deliver it to consumers’ homes. The lawmakers say the law doesn’t allow such operations. Local officials are worried about a loss of tax revenue.

We could be wrong, but we suspect bricks-and-mortar retail pot shops, which oppose the home-delivery plan, are making their presence felt at the State House and in city halls.

 
 
Out of the park: Red Sox owners eye major redevelopment around Fenway
 

Besides rebuilding their poorly performing baseball team, the owners of the Boston Red Sox are moving ahead with plans for a major redevelopment of the neighborhood outside Fenway Park, including possibly new office space, apartment buildings, retail, and a hotel, reports the Globe’s Michael Silverman and Tim Logan

 
 
More free media: GOP congressional candidate accused of threatening fellow Republican
 

She’s certainly keeping her name in the papers. A member of the Massachusetts Republican State Committee says GOP Congressional candidate Rayla Campbell threatened him with physical violence in a phone call to a third party, Tim Dunn at the Standard-Times reports. State Republican leaders want Campbell to stay away from Trump events and even to suspend all her write-in campaign activity. Last week, Campbell--who is challenging U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley--claimed to have been assaulted at a Trump rally before video emerged that suggested she was the aggressor. 

Standard-Times
 
 
Reportal Oct 14
 
 
‘Terrorist and seditious threats’?
 

The Herald’s Rick Sobey reports that two counterprotesters who clashed with police on Sunday in Copley Square are accused of punching and pushing officers, according to police. But here’s what caught our attention: A police report’s description of one of the counterprotesters making “terrorist and seditious threats of violence.” Huh? Threats of violence, true. But ...

We have zero sympathy and patience for either side in these types of street skirmishes. One side (‘Super Happy Fun America’) wants to provoke. The other is more than happy to be provoked. They love this stuff, thinking it’s Berlin-1930s all over again and they’re the heroes, etc. But ‘terrorist and seditious threats’?

Boston Herald
 
 
Poisoned ponds: ‘Toxic cyanobacteria bloom’ is a growing threat across the Cape and islands
 

Eve Zuckoff at WCAI reports on a dangerous natural development now lurking in Cape-and-island waters – and we’re not talking about Great White sharks: Toxic cyanobacteria bloom, a species of algae that’s spreading in the more than 1,000 ponds across the Cape and Islands with only a patchwork of monitoring systems available. The algae can lead to pretty severe human illness, as Zuckoff makes clear.   

WCAI
 
 
Virtual lights, camera, action: Lawmakers to review economic impact of ‘Castle Rock’ TV series shot in Massachusetts
 

Amidst a pandemic, presidential campaign and economic mayhem, you can be sure this will nevertheless attract a lot of attention at the State House on Wednesday, virtually speaking: A hearing on the financial impact the Hulu series “Castle Rock” has had in Massachusetts, where the series was filmed. MassLive’s Ray Kelley and SHNS’s Katie Lannan (pay wall) have more on a hearing that film-production types hope will boost support for the state’s film tax credits.

 
 
Diversity concerns raised over vocational schools’ selective admissions process
 

From SHNS’s Michael Norton: “A coalition of groups plans on Tuesday to publicly challenge the way public vocational-technical high schools rank prospective students, saying the method results in fewer admissions of African-American, Latinx, and English learner students as well as fewer students from low-income and working-class backgrounds.” 

 
 
SHNS Takeout
 
 
Today's Headlines
 
Metro
 

Brigham and Women’s hospital completes investigation into coronavirus outbreak - Boston Globe

Reebok founder’s Brookline manor sells for $23M - Boston Business Journal

 
Massachusetts
 

Worcester parents implore schools to start in-person classes faster - Telegram & Gazette

Former Middlesex Assistant District Attorney remembered following deadly plane crash - Lowell Sun

Gaming Commission sets hearing on Plainridge racing - Sun Chronicle

 
Nation
 

Debate commission to mute Trump, Biden microphones during parts of Thursday’s debate - Washington Post

Justice Department says Trump denial of rape accusation was an official act - New York Times

 

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State House News Service Takeout
 
 
Jobs
 

Reach MASSterList's 22,000 Beacon Hill connected and policy-minded subscribers with your job postings. Have friends interested in one of these positions? Forward the newsletter to them! Contact David Art at dart@massterlist.com or call 617-992-8253 for more information.

 
Recent postings to the MASSterList Job Board:
 

Account Executive - new!, Melwood Global

Director, Government Affairs and Public Policy - new!, Massachusetts League of Community Health Centers

Communications Coordinator, Massachusetts Association for Mental Health (MAMH) and Center for Public Representation (CPR)

Digital Specialist, 617MediaGroup

Director of Public Affairs and Strategic Initiatives, Association for Behavioral Healthcare

Assistant Assessor, City of Everett

Affordable Housing Program Manager, City of Everett

Part-Time Designer, 617MediaGroup

 

To view more events or post an event listing on Beacon Hill Town Square, please visit events.massterlist.com.

Beacon Hill Town Square
 
Oct. 20, 4 p.m.
Navigating the Rapids: Swing State Secretaries and the 2020 Elections
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School
 
As we approach the final weeks of the election campaign, Secretaries of State - particularly in swing states - face tremendous pressures as they fulfill their responsibilities to provide a smooth, inclusive, and safe election that delivers a trusted result. More Information

 
 
Oct. 20, 5 p.m.
City Awake: Empowering Youth to Vote
Hosted by: Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate
 
Join City Awake, in partnership with the Kennedy Institute, for a timely discussion on the importance of civic engagement, empowerment, and how it is imperative that we all vote in the upcoming election, especially the next generation. The conversation will feature Kennedy Institute Board member, and global human rights activist, Martin Luther King, III. More Information
 
 
Oct. 23, 6 p.m.
A Community Conversation: Voting Rights and the Perilous March to Freedom
Hosted by: National Park Service, City of Boston, Friends of the Public Garden, and the Museum of African American History
 
The right to vote is fundamental to our democracy. Since the nation's inception, however, barriers have denied many, especially women and people of color, from exercising this right. Indeed, the history of voting rights in America has been a tug of war among those seeking to expand and others seeking to restrict access to the vote. More Information

 
 
Nov. 5, 1:30 p.m.
Philanthropy and Inequality
Hosted by: Harvard Kennedy School
 
Please join the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy for its signature weekly series this fall, The Fierce Urgency of Now, featuring Black, Indigenous, People of Color scholars, activists, and community leaders, and experts from the Global South. More Information

 
 
Nov. 19, 12 p.m.
The Future of Higher Education
Hosted by: Washington Business Journal
 
As schools around the country plan, react, and adapt during the Covid-19 pandemic, the presidents of Greater Washington's top universities will gather virtually to discuss health and safety, diversity and inclusion, and budgeting and development of the future of higher education. Join the Washington Business Journal for a look behind the scenes with the decision makers. More Information

 
 
SHNS Job
 
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For advertising questions and Beacon Hill Town Square submissions, please email: dart@massterlist.com. For Happening Today calendar and press release submissions, please email: news@statehousenews.com. For editorial matters, please email: editorial@massterlist.com.
 
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The GOP just tried to kick hundreds of students off the voter rolls

    This year, MAGA GOP activists in Georgia attempted to disenfranchise hundreds of students by trying to kick them off the voter rolls. De...