Cato Institute lauds New Hampshire as one of freest states, points to ways to get even better

“less-skilled workers priced out of the market by minimum wage laws”
Cato Institute lauds New Hampshire as one of freest states, points to ways to get even better | New Hampshire | watchdog.org

Oh come on Cato crew, that is fucking ridiculous. How about minimum wage workers priced out of the housing market by decades out of date wages?

Double speaking, duplicitous, simpletons.

Billionaire Sackler Family, Blamed for Opioid Addiction Epidemic, Secretly Owned Second Drug Company

Rhodes Pharma is of one of the largest creators of off-patent generic opioids. The company produces several opioid-based painkillers that contain addictive drugs including oxycodone, hydrocodone and morphine.

Billionaire Sackler Family, Blamed for Opioid Addiction Epidemic, Secretly Owned Second Drug Company: Report

sigh….

Serena Williams Penalized for Showing Rage at U.S. Open

Rules written for a sport that, until Williams and her sister came along, was dominated by white players, a sport in which white men have violated those rules in frequently spectacular fashion and rarely faced the kind of repercussions that Williams — and Osaka — did on Saturday night.

…Because in making the coaching call, in the midst of a match she was playing against a newcomer who looked likely to beat her fair and square, the umpire insinuated that Serena was herself not playing fair and square. That made her livid. And one thing black women are never allowed to be without consequence is livid.

…A male umpire prodded Serena Williams to anger and then punished her for expressing it. …She was punished for showing emotion, for defiance, for being the player she has always been — driven, passionate, proud, and fully human.

…Connors’s contemporary, John McEnroe, famously shattered a thousand rackets and uttered a thousand expletives at umpires. His anger was his calling card, a trademark.

…If they do permit themselves to rage, even if that rage pales in comparison to the rage of their male peers, their white predecessors, that they will face reprimand. Women are made to understand, all the time, how their reasonable expression of vexation might cost them the game. Women’s challenge to male authority, and especially black women’s challenge to authority, is automatically understood as a threat, a form of defiance that must be quashed. 

As Sally Jenkins put it about Ramos, writing in the Washington Post on Saturday night, “He couldn’t take it. He wasn’t going to let a woman talk to him that way. A man, sure. Ramos has put up with worse from a man.” Recalling that just last year, Rafael Nadal had told off Ramos without it costing him a match, Jenkins went on, “But he wasn’t going to take it from a woman pointing a finger at him and speaking in a tone of aggression.”

…The point isn’t about the catsuit or the shirt or the broken racket or even the U.S. Open title. It’s about the ways in which women’s — and especially nonwhite women’s — dress and bodies and behavior and expression and tone are still deemed unruly if they do not conform to the limited view of femininity established by men, especially if that unruliness suggests a direct threat to male authority.

…Take the diminution and injustice and don’t get mad about it; if you get mad, you will get punished for it, and then you will be expected to fix it, to make sure everyone is comfortable again.

Serena Williams Penalized for Showing Rage at U.S. Open

Yup.

Billie Jean King: Serena is still treated differently than male athletes

The ceiling that women of color face on their path to leadership never felt more impenetrable than it did at the women’s U.S. Open final on Saturday.

…What was supposed to be a memorable moment for tennis, with Serena Williams, perhaps the greatest player of all time, facing off against Naomi Osaka, the future of our sport, turned into another example of people in positions of power abusing that power.

…Did Ramos treat Williams differently than male players have been treated? I think he did. Women are treated differently in most arenas of life. This is especially true for women of color. And what played out on the court yesterday happens far too often. It happens in sports, in the office and in public service. Ultimately, a woman was penalized for standing up for herself.

…Women have a right, though, to speak out against injustice — as much right as a man. …I understand what motivated Williams to do what she did. And I hope every single girl and woman watching yesterday’s match realizes they should always stand up for themselves and for what they believe is right. Nothing will ever change if they don’t.

…Women are taught to be perfect. We aren’t perfect, of course, and so we shouldn’t be held to that standard. We have a voice. We have emotions. When we react adversely to a heated professional situation, far too often, we’re labeled hysterical. …Yes, Williams was heated during the match, because she felt Ramos wasn’t just penalizing her, but also attacking her character and professionalism.

…Serena’s a champion. She has done and continues to do the hard work. She was right to speak her mind, to put a voice to the injustice, and she was right to know when to call for the controversy to end.

Billie Jean King: Serena is still treated differently than male athletes – The Washington Post

n/t

Kellyanne Conway Says Anti-Trump Op-Ed Is Illegal, But That She Has ‘No Idea’ Why

When pushed by Tapper to explain precisely what criminal action could be investigated, Conway said: “I have no idea.”

Kellyanne Conway Says Anti-Trump Op-Ed Is Illegal, But That She Has ‘No Idea’ Why

Oh, Kellyanne…. Either you support the office of President because transformed into a dictatorship which squelches dissent with all the force of the its resources or you don’t. What are you doing opening the door if you don’t have the spine to go through it.

Dallas cop who, after braking and entering, killed innocent man in his own home should be charged

The fact that she remains free days after the shooting shows she’s receiving favorable treatment.

…”If it was a white man, would it have been different? Would she have reacted differently?” Allison Jean said Friday.

Lawyer: Dallas cop who killed man at home should be charged | Fox News

Well, the only people she’s shot and killed were not white.

I wonder how many Caucasians have resisted arrest or struggled and she hose not to shoot them…

That is a side issue to the fact that she broke and entered this man’s apartment and then murdered him. The fact that she is not in jail is proof the Sheriff’s department is either corrupt or inept. More than likely both.

If law enforcement cannot enforce the law when it concerns one of their own , they are not in the business of preserving law and order.

Federal Judge Has Blocked Texas Fetal Burial Law

A federal judge in Texas blocked a law mandating the burial or cremation of fetal tissue from abortions, miscarriages or ectopic pregnancy surgery in a decision on Wednesday.

U.S. District Court Judge David Ezra issued a permanent injunction prohibiting enforcement of the 2017 law, saying that it imposed “significant burdens on women seeking an abortion or experiencing pregnancy loss” and that it conveyed “minimal, if any, benefits.”

,,,”At worst,” he continued, “the challenged laws intrude into the realm of constitutional protection afforded to ‘personal decisions concerning not only the meaning of procreation but also human responsibility and respect for it.’ “

Federal Judge Has Blocked Texas Fetal Burial Law : NPR

hmmm

Serena Williams’s U.S. Open Loss Was Humiliating—But Not For Her – The Atlantic

The U.S. Open final is the latest in a series of recent moments that have left fans of women’s tennis outraged. Just last week at the U.S. Open, Alize Cornet was penalized for briefly taking her shirt off in order to turn it around, after realizing that it was backwards. Many tennis fans ridiculed the call, noting that male tennis players take their shirts off frequently without getting in trouble.

And only a few weeks ago, the French Open said it would introduce a dress code that would ban outfits like the catsuit worn by Williams during the French Open—a suit she wears to prevent blood clots, after a pulmonary embolism in 2011 left her “on her death bed,” Williams said at the time.

…Taking a game away from Williams for using the word “thief” during such a high-stakes match is unlikely to do much to quash the notion that a double standard exists between men and women in today’s competitive tennis field. And the stakes of that double standard can feel even higher for women of color.

Serena Williams’s U.S. Open Loss Was Humiliating—But Not For Her – The Atlantic

the tennis world is not only unfair to women, it’s racist AF. Cheers to Serena for handling it with such class and grace.

OxyContin Maker Given Patent for Opioid Addiction Treatment

Purdue Pharma has long been criticized for aggressively marketing opioid painkiller OxyContin, which many believe has lead to the current opioid addiction epidemic. And now it seems the company is looking to get in on profits from treatment, too. Richard Sackler, whose family that owns and operates privately held Purdue Pharma, has been granted a patent for opioid painkiller addiction treatment.

OxyContin Maker Given Patent for Opioid Addiction Treatment | Fortune

Perdue Pharma get an endless source of money, treating a problem they created and the American public gets even more lifetime prescriptions/doctor induced addiction to opioids.

Why the hell treating opiod dependence with more opioids makes sense to anyone other than the douchbag who stands to make twice profit off all of the misery they’ve caused is beyond me.

Agggggggggggggghhhhhhhhhhhhh

CNN Op-Ed: How dare a senior Trump official arrogantly subvert an elected President

To the political left, these people are heroes, doing what must be done “to preserve our democratic institutions while thwarting Mr. Trump’s more misguided impulses until he is out of office,”

How dare a senior Trump official arrogantly subvert an elected President (opinion) – CNN

Newsflash dipshit: No one on the the political left thinks the author or their compatriots are heroes. They are spineless assholes who helped create this situation and now would rather hide in the shadows to save face and their own jobs than come clean and help our Democracy rights its ship.

Thinking coups have no business inside a Democratically elected government is an American stance, not a political one.

I know you are a CNN person and that’s how they roll but baseless statements like that have no business under the umbrella of a “news” organization.

Man standing behind Trump at Montana campaign rally stole the show before he was moved away

Man standing behind Trump at Montana campaign rally stole the show before he was moved away – AOL News

bahahahahahah!

Jocelyn Bell Burnell’s 1967 Nobel work finally gets Breakthrough Prize

Jocelyn Bell Burnell’s male colleagues were given a Nobel in 1974 for her discovery of radio pulsars. 

…Decades ago, Bell Burnell discovered pulsars as a graduate student at the University of Cambridge as she gathered data on a new radio telescope. Anthony Hewish, who was working with Bell Burnell at the time, and Sir Martin Ryle, who was told about the discovery, were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1974. Hewish was credited with “his decisive role in the discovery of pulsars,” even though Bell Burnell first discovered the regular pulses of radio waves.

…She’s being given the award for her “fundamental contributions to the discovery of pulsars, and a lifetime of inspiring leadership in the scientific community,” according to a statement from the prize board.

…Women and minorities are underrepresented in astronomy and science leadership, and she’d like to change that. 

“If you have a diverse group of people, it’s more robust and more successful and more flexible,” she said. 

Jocelyn Bell Burnell’s 1967 Nobel work finally gets Breakthrough Prize

cool

Deep in the Swamps, Archaeologists Are Finding How Fugitive Slaves Kept Their Freedom

…Wherever Africans were enslaved in the world, there were runaways who escaped permanently and lived in free independent settlements. These people and their descendants are known as “maroons.” The term probably comes from the Spanish cimarrón, meaning feral livestock, fugitive slave or something wild and defiant.

…By downplaying American marronage, and valorizing white involvement in the Underground Railroad, historians have shown a racial bias, in Sayers’ opinion, a reluctance to acknowledge the strength of black resistance and initiative. They’ve also revealed the shortcomings of their methods: “Historians are limited to source documents. When it comes to maroons, there isn’t that much on paper. But that doesn’t mean their story should be ignored or overlooked. As archaeologists, we can read it in the ground.”

…The Dismal Swamp covered great tracts of southeast Virginia and northeast North Carolina, and its vegetation was far too thick for horses or canoes. In the early 1600s, Native Americans fleeing the colonial frontier took refuge here, and they were soon joined by fugitive slaves, and probably some whites escaping indentured servitude or hiding from the law. From about 1680 to the Civil War, it appears that the swamp communities were dominated by Africans and African-Americans.

…British traveler J.F.D. Smyth, writing in 1784, gleaned this description: “Runaway negroes have resided in these places for twelve, twenty, or thirty years and upwards, subsisting themselves in the swamp upon corn, hogs, and fowls….[On higher ground] they have erected habitations, and cleared small fields around them.”

…The Great Dismal Swamp, now reduced by draining and development, is managed as a federal wildlife refuge. The once-notorious panthers are gone, but bears, birds, deer and amphibians are still abundant. So are venomous snakes and biting insects. …The swamp teems with water moccasins and rattlesnakes. The mosquitoes get so thick that they can blur the outlines of a person standing 12 feet away. 

…We step onto the shore of a large, flat, sun-dappled island carpeted with fallen leaves. Walking toward its center, the underbrush disappears, and we enter a parklike clearing shaded by a few hardwoods and pines.

…Apart from some water catchment pits with fire-hardened floors, there’s not much he can show me. But Sayers is an expressive talker and gesticulator, and as he walks me around the island, he conjures up clusters of log cabins, some with raised floors and porches. He points to invisible fields and gardens in the middle distance, children playing, people fishing, small groups off hunting. Charlie, the ex-maroon interviewed in Canada, described people making furniture and musical instruments.

…Before 1660, most people at the nameless site were Native Americans. The first maroons were there within a few years of the arrival of African slaves in nearby Jamestown in 1619. After 1680, Native American materials become scarce; what he identifies as maroon artifacts begin to dominate.

…“Everything we’ve found would fit into a single shoe box,” he says. “And it makes sense. They were using organic materials from the swamp. Except for the big stuff like cabins, it decomposes without leaving a trace.”

…Sayers has evidence of a thriving community at the nameless site all the way up to the Civil War. “That’s when they came out,” he says. “We’ve found almost nothing after the Civil War. They probably worked themselves back into society as free people.”

Deep in the Swamps, Archaeologists Are Finding How Fugitive Slaves Kept Their Freedom | History | Smithsonian

Wild.

President Trump blasted as erratic, amoral in anonymous Times op-ed

“It may be cold comfort in this chaotic era, but Americans should know that there are adults in the room. We fully recognize what is happening. And we are trying to do what’s right even when Donald Trump won’t,” the unnamed official wrote.

…”We believe our first duty is to this country, and the president continues to act in a manner that is detrimental to the health of our republic,” the piece states. “That is why many Trump appointees have vowed to do what we can to preserve our democratic institutions while thwarting Mr. Trump’s more misguided impulses until he is out of office.”

…””The erratic behavior would be more concerning if it weren’t for unsung heroes in and around the White House,” the author wrote. “Some of his aides have been cast as villains by the media. But in private, they have gone to great lengths to keep bad decisions contained to the West Wing, though they are clearly not always successful.”

…”We will do what we can to steer the administration in the right direction until – one way or another – it’s over.”

President Trump blasted as erratic, amoral in anonymous Times op-ed

hmmmm

A year later, no details on where Trump’s surplus inaugural funds went

Nearly a year after President Trump’s inauguration, the committee that raised a record $106.7 million for the event has not disclosed how much surplus money it still has or provided a final accounting of its finances.

…Presidential inaugural committees are private fundraising vehicles that pay for the concerts, balls and other festivities that surround the swearing-in.

…Adelson was among an array of wealthy individuals and corporate giants contributing to the celebrations, including the Bank of America, AT&T, Dow Chemical, Boeing and Quicken Loans.

…Fred Wertheimer, of the Democracy 21 watchdog group, said the committee, as a nonprofit, can’t legally convert any of the funds to personal use, such as paying legal expenses for Trump aides caught up in the special counsel and congressional probes into Russian involvement in the 2016 election.

…“It is alarming that you would potentially have at least $50 million left over and no sense of how it was spent.”

A year later, no details on where Trump’s surplus inaugural funds went

hmmmm