Sunday, April 11, 2021

What's the problem with requiring voter ID? Cynthia Stead's SLIP SHOD REPORTING!

 On April 8, 2021, The Cape Cod Times that no longer offers the caliber of reporting that it previously had offered the misguided and uninformed article at the bottom. 


On April 8, Cynthia Stead offered her misguided opinion about the GEORGIA ELECTION PROTESTS.

Others have labelled the new law JIM CROW and one must wonder why Ms. Stead didn't travel beyond her
 superficial assessment. 

In simple terms, she seems to pretend the outrage is solely about VOTE ID and the BUFFER ZONE at polling places and drawing a simplistic parallel between beach permits and voting rights. 

Beach Permits on the Cape are problematic because many 'residents' are affluent and own second 
homes on the Cape. That is not the issue of low income voters in GEORGIA. 


GEORGIA has a lengthy history of rigged elections that have been adjudicated in the courts. 
Brian Kemp might be called the KING OF VOTER PURGES for the numbers of voters he has 
disenfranchised. And isn't it interesting that those voters are largely BLACK VOTERS? 

GEORGIA employed “Interstate Crosscheck” to purge voters, a flawed system employed by Kris Kobach known for his voter purges that has been employed in other Republican controlled states to purge voters. 

198,000 GEORGIA VOTERS were purged from the VOTING LIST in 2020. 
That's VOTER SUPPRESSION. 

When Brian Kemp ran for Governor of Georgia, he remained Secretary of State, the office that 
oversees elections. 

Regarding VOTER ID: In Massachusetts, it is unconstitutional in federal elections. 
The MASS GOP has attempted to pass local statutes requiring IDs for local elections, with false 
accusations of fraud and has failed.   To date, there has been no evidence of voter fraud. And don't most voters know their Poll Workers? 

In GEORGIA: Acquiring a VOTER ID frequently requires TRAVEL, frequently problematic for low wage workers, sometimes forcing them to take time off from work. 

The new law limits BALLOT DROP BOXES to ONE per county. So if you lack a car and have to travel, you are limited.



Guaranteed — but also limited — drop boxes

The new law requires each Georgia county to have a minimum of one drop box for absentee ballots. In 2020, when drop boxes were used for the first time in Georgia, the boxes were authorized by special pandemic-related rules rather than by long-term legislation.

However, the new law also limits how many drop boxes each county can have, how many hours and days the boxes can be open, and where they can be located.

The law says that each county can’t have more than one drop box per early voting site or per 100,000 active registered voters, whichever number is smaller. This provision will dramatically reduce the number of drop boxes available in some large counties. Fulton County, for example, says it would go from 38 drop boxes in the November election to eight in the future.

In addition, the law says that drop boxes need to be located at elections offices or inside early voting locations. And it says the boxes can only be available during the hours that early voting is available. (If the governor declares an emergency, the boxes can be located outdoors.) In 2020, drop boxes could be located outside, available 24 hours a day, and open until the evening of Election Day.

Early voting was curtailed. 


Another early voting day in primaries and general elections

There was extensive media coverage of initial Republican proposals to eliminate or sharply reduce early voting on Sundays, when some Black churchgoers participate in “souls to the polls” voting drives. However, these proposals did not make it into the final bill Kemp signed — which actually ends up expanding early voting in many counties for primaries and general elections. Runoffs are a different story, which we’ll get to in a moment.



FOOD & DRINK is restricted, not as Cynthia Stead stated.

GEORGIA closed polling places, forcing voters to stand in line for hours, BY DESIGN. 

Volunteers brought FOOD & WATER. Republicans seek to destroy those volunteer efforts to further restrict the vote. 

How many WHITE VOTERS in Massachusetts would stand in line for 6 hours to vote?  

A food and drink restriction

Another section of the law, which has generated criticism from Biden and others, limits how voters can be provided food and drink in the vicinity of a voting location.

The law makes it a misdemeanor for “any person” to give or offer “any money or gifts,” including “food and drink,” to any voter within a polling place, within 150 feet of the building housing a polling place, or “within 25 feet of any voter standing in line to vote at any polling place.”

This provision is located in the same paragraph as a provision banning campaign activity in these locations, but the provision doesn’t prohibit only people who are campaigning from giving out food and drink. It says “any person,” not just campaigners.

There is, however, one exception: poll officers are allowed to make available “self-service water from an unattended receptacle to an elector waiting in line to vote.” And it’s perhaps worth noting that there is not a prohibition on voters in line buying food and drink for themselves; the provision is about other people providing “money or gifts” including food and drink.


There are other issues included with the GEORGIA VOTING LAW that Cynthia Stead ignored. I've read the legislation and that's the least Ms. Stead could have done.

This is slip-shod reporting and you need to report FACTS based on the legislation and not whim.  





















What's the problem with requiring voter ID?


Cynthia Stead

Published Apr 8, 2021 


An event with a major financial impact was moved from a city with a 51% black population to one with a 9% black population in the name of racial equity. That’ll teach ‘em.

Major League Baseball moved the annual All Star Game from Atlanta to Denver in order to protest the Georgia reforms in the state voting process. A particular source of anger was that the law required presentation of an ID to vote. Of course, Colorado law already requires a photo ID to vote.

But Colorado is a blue state.

Another controversial clause was the creation of a 150 foot buffer zone to allow voters a respite from electioneering as they wait in line. The law also forbids giving water or food to those waiting inside the 150 perimeter. People having to wait in line would be deprived of sustenance as they wait to cast their ballots. Massachusetts has had the same 150 foot buffer zone law for decades. Our law does not explicitly ban water, but Secretary of State William Galvin’s directive on enforcing the zone is very clear – the only permitted activity inside the zone is exit polling. All other approaches to voters waiting are strictly forbidden.

But Massachusetts is a blue state.

Equity activists are continuing to seize their moment to make additional demands, even though their candidate actually did win the election. In the wake of the Georgia law, they have also called for boycotts of businesses there like Delta Airlines and Coca-Cola. They also expect companies to fund their legal appeals to overturn the law, which might actually violate campaign finance law given the Citizens United court decision, which allows businesses to make political donations. Businesses are terrified that they will become the next target of the Two Minutes Hate and want to comply, but the demands seem to suggest that you have a nice little business here, and it’d be a shame if something happened to it, rather than a request for help in a just cause.

There were without question problems in the 2020 Georgia election. Georgia was one of nine states entirely covered by Sec. 5 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act because of its long history of racial voter suppression, giving Federal authorities oversight of election procedures and "preclearance" to any changes. This was ended by the Shelby County Supreme Court decision in 2013. There is litigation regarding the siting of polling places, the consolidation of polling places and the timing of their relocation. The lines were abominable. But the trajectory of full voting rights is improving. Election officials and advocates both agree that the 2020 election was an improvement. In 2020, 1.2 million Black voters cast ballots, an increase of 500,000 over 2016, according to statistics cited by the Georgia Legislative Black Caucus.

The requirement to present an ID is a progressive flash point, but most average voters do not see why this is a problem. The attitude seems to be that verification and confirmation of those attempting to vote protects the franchise of those who are legally registered voters, regardless of their color. Nationwide, there are more than 200 bills regarding voting procedures in the wake of the 2020 election, almost uniformly referred to as "limiting access to voting." The Georgia bill provides free voter ID, and allows a voter who forgot to bring ID with them to cast a provisional ballot which can be verified later. But these provisions are described as an attempt to prevent voters of color to cast a ballot. Nikki Haley put it well when she said that she found it racist to assume that people of color cannot get an ID even though they are able to produce one every time they get on a plane or buy Sudafed.

Right now, town halls across the Cape are struggling to determine the qualifications of applicants to get resident beach stickers, especially in my town of Dennis. The residential qualification, the methods of identification proving residence, the right to have a sticker and what constitutes a resident are endlessly debated. It would be nice to see this kind of engagement and enforcement surrounding voting, which I think is at least as important as being able to park your car at the beach.







FLORIDA: WHITE REPUBLICAN PERVERT: ERIC M. LIPMAN

WHITE REPUBLICAN PERVERT!
Read the article - widely involved with CHILDREN!
VOTER RECORDS:
Eric M Lipman (age 59) is listed at 4385 Benchmark Trce Tallahassee, Fl 32317 and is affiliated with the Republican Party. He is a white, non hispanic male registered to vote in Leon County, Florida.

(Massachusetts does not include race or ethnicity in voter records. What is this?) 


Top Attorney for Florida Elections Commission Charged With 11 Counts of Possessing Child Pornography




Top Attorney for Florida Elections Commission Charged With 11 Counts of Possessing Child Pornography

Deputies with the Leon County Sheriff’s Office (LCSO) on Wednesday arrested the general counsel for the Florida Elections Commission on charges that he possessed child pornography.

According to a press release from the sheriff’s office, Eric M. Lipman, 59, was taken into custody following a six-week investigation by detectives with the Internet Crimes Against Children Unit (ICAC). The unit had received a tip from the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children in February concerning possible child pornography being emailed to a local resident.

While the LCSO press release did not state Lipman’s occupation, the commission’s executive director confirmed Lipman’s identity in an emailed statement to the Tallahassee Democrat Thursday morning.

“The commission is fully cooperating with law enforcement’s investigation,” Vaccaro said. “The employee has been placed on administrative leave pending further information.”

Prior to joining the Florida Election Commission in 2001, Lipman was a senior attorney with the Florida Department of Children and Families in Leon, Wakulla, and Franklin counties and was an officer with the Capital Soccer Association, a non-profit league for children ages 4-17.

According to court records obtained by the Tallahassee Democrat, LCSO deputies and members of the ICAC task force partnered with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and Homeland Security Investigations executed a residential search warrant on Lipman’s home.

“Investigators obtained 19 files allegedly sent by Lipman’s email account and confirmed that each one contained child sexual abuse material,” the report stated. “They also found a number of internet searches on his work laptop involving child sexual abuse, pedophiles and children between the ages of 3 and 5.”

The report further stated Lipman acknowledged that he understood his right to remain silent but agreed to speak with detectives anyway. During the interview, Lipman confirmed that the email account in question belonged to him at the time the illegal materials were transmitted, however, he would not answer any questions about the particular emails or their content.

Lipman was taken to the Leon County Detention Center and placed on pretrial release Thursday by County Judge Augustus Aikens Jr., the Tallahassee Democrat reported. His mugshot was not released by the sheriff’s office due to a state statute exempting arrest information of current and former state-employed attorneys and law enforcement personnel from public records requests.

The sheriff’s office said the investigation “is still open and active with additional charges pending.”

https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/top-attorney-for-florida-election-commission-charged-with-11-counts-of-possessing-child-pornography/?fbclid=IwAR1h9yv398zuZYkfa0VkhuPnM9pziHWnlm5nLtaCzDuDRisSLmDp1p0yoho


Eric Lipman, general counsel for the Florida Elections Commission, speaks during a 2019 meeting of the board.


RSN: Juan Cole | Tucker Carlson Touts 'Replacement' Conspiracy Theory; but His Own Ancestor Could Have Been Lynched

 

 

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Juan Cole | Tucker Carlson Touts 'Replacement' Conspiracy Theory; but His Own Ancestor Could Have Been Lynched
Tucker Carlson on Fox News. (photo: Richard Drew/AP)
Juan Cole, Informed Comment
Cole writes: "Grand Dragon Tucker Carlson went on another Fox News show to push his streaming program, and while there was struck with diarrhea of the larynx, oozing amid loud excretions a hateful farrago of antisemitic white supremacy."
READ MORE


A woman holds her malnourished son at a feeding center in Sanaa, Yemen, in 2019. (photo: Hani Mohammed/AP)
A woman holds her malnourished son at a feeding center in Sanaa, Yemen, in 2019. (photo: Hani Mohammed/AP)


Iman Saleh | I'm on Hunger Strike Until the US Ends All Support for the Saudi-Led Blockade Against Yemen
Iman Saleh, The Washington Post
Saleh writes: "My name is Iman, and I am entering the 11th day of my hunger strike in Washington, D.C."
READ MORE


Sen. Bernie Sanders, left, and Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, right. (photo: Getty)
Sen. Bernie Sanders, left, and Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, right. (photo: Getty)

ALSO SEE: Amazon Can Only Claim Their Jobs Are
Decent Because American Work Has Gotten So Miserable


Bernie Sanders Applauds the 'Courage' of Amazon Workers, Says Failed Alabama Vote Will Inspire Other Unionization Efforts
Natasha Dailey, Business Insider
Excerpt: "'The willingness of Amazon workers in Bessemer to take on the wealthiest man in the world and a powerful company in an anti-union state is an inspiration,' Sanders said on Twitter."
READ MORE


Philonise Floyd, brother of George Floyd, in Minneapolis on Friday. (photo: Brandon Bell/Getty)
Philonise Floyd, brother of George Floyd, in Minneapolis on Friday. (photo: Brandon Bell/Getty)


Chauvin Trial: Police Testify Against Former Colleague in Dramatic
Chris McGreal and Joanna Walters, Guardian UK
Excerpt: "The second week was very different from the first but no less dramatic."

hief says Chauvin ‘in no way, shape or form’ followed training as key witnesses form striking bookends to week

The trial of Derek Chauvin, the white former police officer charged with murdering George Floyd in Minneapolis last May, completed its 10th day of witness testimony on Friday.

The second week was very different from the first but no less dramatic. The opening days of prosecution witness testimony last week focused on viral, harrowing bystander video and newly released footage of Floyd’s agonizing death, then on the accounts of some traumatized bystanders.

In the second week, two key witnesses formed striking bookends. The Minneapolis police chief, Medaria Arradondo, testified against Chauvin on Monday. On Friday Andrew Baker, who performed the autopsy, took the stand. He classified the death as a homicide, which he said in a medical context meant that it resulted from the actions of a person or persons but did not imply any criminal action.

Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, died after Chauvin, 45, kneeled on his neck for more than nine minutes.

The killing galvanised the Black Lives Matter movement and triggered the biggest civil rights protests since the 1960s in a reckoning on police brutality and entrenched racism.

Chauvin denies all charges.

Key points from the second week

Police chief says Chauvin violated department policy, training and ethics

Arradondo, the first Black police chief in Minneapolis , told the jury he “vehemently disagreed” that there had been any justification for Chauvin to restrain Floyd the way he had.

Chauvin (who was fired the day after Floyd’s death) breached regulations, in “no way, shape or form” followed training and showed a disregard for police principles to respect “the sanctity of life”, the chief said.

Cracks in the ‘blue wall of silence’

Arradondo was the biggest name in a succession of serving officers who testified against Chauvin, their former colleague of 19 years.

The civil rights lawyer David Henderson told MSNBC he had never seen multiple police officers cross the “blue line” and testify against one of their own, as the Minnesota Spokesman-Recorder related it.

He added: “I think George Floyd is going to continue to transform the world … There’s going to be a clear line drawn between how these cases are tried prior to George Floyd’s death … and after.”

But “at the same time”, he said, “police problems are systemic”.

The CNN commentator Van Jones described Arradondo’s transparent approach as “what we want from modern policing … This is the professionalism people have been begging for for 20 to 30 years.”

Experts cite George Floyd’s inability to breathe under Chauvin’s pressure

Martin Tobin, a pulmonary and critical care specialist for 40 years, told the jury on Thursday Floyd had been caught in a “vice” between Chauvin and the street.

“Mr Floyd died from a low level of oxygen and this caused damage to his brain,” he said, adding that in turn caused Floyd’s heart to stop. Tobin said: “A healthy person subjected to what Mr Floyd was subjected to would have died.”

A challenging Friday for the prosecution

The forensic pathologist Lindsey Thomas testified: “The activities of the law enforcement officers resulted in Mr Floyd’s death.”

The defense lawyer Eric Nelson wants to show that Floyd died of heart problems combined with drug use. Thomas agreed that Floyd’s underlying heart condition “was a potential cause of death”.

The week concluded with testimony from Baker, the Hennepin county chief medical examiner whom Thomas helped to train. He stopped short of backing expert witnesses who testified that Floyd was asphyxiated by Chauvin’s knee.

Baker told the court the officer pinning the man to the ground was “just more than Mr Floyd could take” by making it hard for him to breathe, causing stress hormones that worsened a heart condition and led to his death.

It was a subtle point, but the defense will look to exploit any sense of doubt.

The trial continues.

READ MORE


Police in Windsor, Virginia, held Caron Nazario, left, at gunpoint and pepper-sprayed him during a routine traffic stop last December, according to a new federal lawsuit. (photo: Twitter)
Police in Windsor, Virginia, held Caron Nazario, left, at gunpoint and pepper-sprayed him during a routine traffic stop last December, according to a new federal lawsuit. (photo: Twitter)


Virginia Police Held a Black Lieutenant at Gunpoint and Pepper Sprayed Him Over a Traffic Stop, Bodycam Shows
Blake Montgomery, The Daily Beast
Montgomery writes: "Police in Windsor, Virginia, pulled their guns on a Black and Latino man immediately after pulling him over at a gas station for a traffic stop."

olice in Windsor, Virginia, pulled their guns on a Black and Latino man immediately after pulling him over at a gas station for a traffic stop, according to body camera footage of the December 2020 incident. Second Lieutenant Caron Nazario, a member of the U.S. Army Medical Corps, was still wearing his full uniform en route home from work in his Chevy Tahoe when he asked, “I’m serving this country, and this is how I’m treated?” The officers later pepper-sprayed him, kneed him in the legs, handcuffed him, and threatened to bring charges against him if he complained about their conduct, according to the footage and Nazario’s lawsuit.

He has sued the officers, accusing them of racially profiling him. They say they pulled him over because he was driving without a license plate, though he had temporary plates taped to his window. They said they used force because he would not exit the vehicle. When Nazario said he was afraid to exit the vehicle, an officer responded, “Yeah, you should be,” according to video of the encounter.


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ADDED: 






Soldiers cross a bridge in Shan state in 2019 after it was attacked by ethnic rebel groups. (photo: AFP)
Soldiers cross a bridge in Shan state in 2019 after it was attacked by ethnic rebel groups. (photo: AFP)


10 Myanmar Police Killed in Attack by Ethnic Armies: Reports
Al Jazeera
Excerpt: "An alliance of ethnic armies in Myanmar that has opposed the general's crackdown on anti-coup protests attacked a police station in the east on Saturday and killed at least 10 policemen, local media said."

Fighters from an alliance of rebel groups reportedly attack a police station in a new escalation after the military coup.


The police station at Naungmon in Shan state was attacked early in the morning by fighters from an alliance that includes the Arakan Army, the Ta’ang National Liberation Army, and the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army, media reported.

Shan News said at least 10 policemen were killed, while the Shwe Phee Myay news outlet put the death toll at 14.

A spokesman for the military did not return calls asking for comment.

Al Jazeera’s Tony Cheng, reporting from neighbouring Thailand, noted the ethnic armies are some of the oldest in the world, having battled central government forces for decades.

“Since the coup, there has been a lot of talk about armed groups operating together but we have not actually seen it before. Today it’s claimed three acted together, joined forces, attacked this outpost manned by Myanmar police, killing a number of policemen,” said Cheng, adding the assault occurred over two hours early on Saturday.

More than 600 people have been killed by the military in the crackdown on protests against the February 1 coup, according to a monitoring group. As violence has escalated, about a dozen armed groups have condemned the coup-makers as illegitimate and pledged to stand with the protesters.

Civilian lawmakers, most of whom are in hiding after their removal, have announced plans to form a “national unity government” – with key roles for ethnic leaders – and are holding online talks about joint resistance to the generals.

Dozens of bodies

Meanwhile, reports from Myanmar say dozens of people may have been killed in a military assault on anti-coup protesters in the city of Bago. About 60 people may have died in the clashes in the city, about 60km (32 miles) northeast of Yangon, according to Radio Free Asia citing witnesses.

News site Myanmar Now cited a protest leader as saying dozens of bodies had been brought inside a pagoda compound where the military was based. Witnesses cited by both media outlets reported hours of gunfire that started early on Friday.

Protests against the February coup continued on Saturday in Yangon, Mandalay, Bagan, Sagaing, Myeik and many other cities.

The military crackdown has also included reports of protesters being tortured in detention and harsh sentences.

The military issued death sentences on 19 people from Yangon’s North Okkalapa township on Friday. They were charged with beating an army captain, according to Radio Free Asia.

The military coup dismissed the elected government led by Aung San Suu Kyi, who is currently under house arrest.

READ MORE


Pump jacks draw crude oil from the Inglewood Oil Field near Los Angeles, California, on March 9, 2020. (photo: David McNew/Getty)
Pump jacks draw crude oil from the Inglewood Oil Field near Los Angeles, California, on March 9, 2020. (photo: David McNew/Getty)


Pipeline Spills Over 1,600 Gallons of Oil Near Los Angeles Communities
Emily Denny, EcoWatch
Denny writes: "More than 1,600 gallons of oil have spilled in the Inglewood Oil Field - the largest urban oil field in the country, where more than a million people live within five miles of its boundaries."


ore than 1,600 gallons of oil have spilled in the Inglewood Oil Field — the largest urban oil field in the country, where more than a million people live within five miles of its boundaries, the Sierra Club wrote in a statement on Wednesday.

The spill was caused by a human error when a valve was left open, the Los Angeles Times reported. It was also not the field's first spill. Past spills at the Inglewood Oil Field, located in Culver City and Los Angeles County, have occurred in 2019, 2018, 2010, 2006 and 2005, exposing residents in the area to toxins and carcinogens, the Sierra Club added.

After a history of community organizing, Tuesday's spill arms activists with further momentum to fight against this major public health and environmental crisis in California's largest county.

"Yesterday's oil spill is a deadly reminder that the environmental racism that's shaped and harmed Black, Indigenous, and people of color continues to put our health at risk," Martha Dina Argüello, of the STAND-LA Coalition, an environmental justice coalition, and Physicians for Social Responsibility-Los Angeles, said in a Sierra Club statement.

Of the people living in the area, 52 percent are Black, which is a much higher percentage than the countywide eight percent, the Sierra Club reported. The oil field is also located alongside homes and schools, putting families at risk for health outcomes from air pollution like lung disease, leukemia, lymphoma, lung cancer and asthma. In Baldwin Hills, asthma related ER visits are 4.4 times higher than the Los Angeles County average.

"A pattern of oil spills and the daily and 'authorized' toxic emissions both demonstrate that oil extraction is [an] inherently dangerous practice that has no place in our region. We look forward to working with Los Angeles County to take immediate steps to phase out oil and gas production," Argüello added, according to the Sierra Club.

Last fall, Culver City approved a resolution to take initial steps to phase out oil in the area, the NRDC wrote in a statement. Similar actions are also occurring citywide in Los Angeles.

In December, the Los Angeles City Council's Energy, Climate Change, and Environmental Justice Committee voted unanimously to pass a motion to begin a citywide phase-out of oil drilling, the NRDC wrote in a statement. "We're not over the finish line, but we're closer than ever," Argüello added, according to the Courthouse News Service.

Currently, there are 1,071 active oil wells in the city — 759 of which are located less than 1,500 feet from homes, schools, churches and hospitals, STAND-LA, which has been leading the fight against oil in the city of Los Angeles, wrote.

Although no injuries were reported at the Inglewood oil spill on Tuesday, environmental groups have expressed concerns about toxins released in the air from the spill that could harm nearby communities, the Los Angeles Times reported, adding to the often unknown and unreported health impacts of oil spills.

"What's terrifying about health dangers like this is that the average person living nearby rarely has any way of knowing it even happened," Ethan Senser, Southern California Organizer with Food & Water Watch told the Sierra Club. "This is an ongoing crisis we can't keep sweeping under the rug - it's time that the County commits to partnering with frontline communities and supporting the real solutions they are putting forward."

READ MORE


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BREAKING: Elon Musk’s gamble BLOWS UP in his face PAY ATTENTION! ELECT CLOWNS EXPECT A CIRCUS!

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