Waking Up From Wokeness

Waking Up From Wokeness

Op-Ed Authored by Roger Kimball via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

I cannot identify who exactly popularized the term “woke.”

But I’ve had cause to wheel it out here and elsewhere on and off for the past few years, generally when describing some absurd piece of academic or corporate or government obeisance to political correctness.

Ibram X. Kendi discusses the book “Stamped: Racism, Antiracism and You” at Build Studio in New York City on March 10, 2020. (Michael Loccisano/Getty Images)

Back in the spring of 2019, I discovered the great English satirist Andrew Doyle, the creator of the character Titania McGrath, the “radical intersectionalist poet” who is full of woke showstoppers.

Item: “If you don’t think exactly the same way as me, then you’ve clearly got a lot to learn about diversity.”

Could Ibram X. Kendi, author of the bestselling anti-white diatribe “How to Be an Antiracist,” put the gospel of wokeness any better?

Well, maybe so.

McGrath/Doyle can weigh in deliciously on Jussie Smollett, the actor who staged a racist attack on himself in order to elicit sympathy and boost his sagging career.

“It is absolutely essential,” she/he wrote, “that we believe Jussie Smollett. If we don’t, other people who haven’t been attacked might not have the courage to come forward.”

Ha, ha, ha.

But Kendi puts the claws in the paw with observations such as this: “The only remedy to racist discrimination is antiracist discrimination. The only remedy to past discrimination is present discrimination. The only remedy to present discrimination is future discrimination.”

Race-based discrimination now, race-based discrimination tomorrow, race-based discrimination forever.

Kendi says the quiet part out loud.

Inequitable Treatment

Already a couple of years ago, I wrote that a quick look around the cultural landscape indicated that we were “in the midst of a sort of negative religious revival.”

At the time, I called it “America’s First Great Awokening” and described the phenomenon as “a false awakening sparked by political grievance.”

Terms such as “America’s First Great Awokening” are somewhat jocular, of course. The tongue-half-in-cheek plays upon real historical developments.

But the reality, though absurd, is anything but comic. I offered a brief and incomplete inventory of the absurdities last month in this space in the context of providing an epitaph for the practice of satire.

The more “woke” a culture, the less able it is to practice or appreciate satire.

“So what?” you might be thinking. “So satire is going through a rough patch at the moment. Is that such a big deal?”

To appreciate why it’s a big deal, it’s important to bear two things in mind.

The first is that barbaric viciousness often cohabits seamlessly with an absurdity that, seen from a distance, can seem too preposterous to take seriously.

In the 1930s, I imagine, it might have been difficult to take the new leaders of Italy or Germany entirely seriously.

They were just too over-the-top. Serious men who understood the intricacies of world affairs would soon put the children in their place.

We know how that worked out.

The second thing to bear in mind has to do with reality, with the truth about the way things are.

The headlines these days are full of warnings about “systemic racism” and government-sponsored “critical race theory” in schools.

A few months ago, the President of the United States issued an executive order on “Advancing Racial Equity.”

It called for an “ambitious whole-of-government equity agenda” catering to “historically underserved” groups.

Note the term “equity.”

According to the dictionary, the relevant definition of “equity” is “the quality of being impartial.”

But even a cursory glance at what the administration has in mind shows that the pursuit of “equity” entails the imposition of inequitable treatment. Ibram X. Kendi would approve.

Reversal

Readers shouldn’t be surprised by this semantic sleight of hand.

It’s a staple in the armory of totalitarian enterprise, a sort of political “gain-of-function” intervention applied to the virus of political correctness.

George Orwell gave classic expression to the gambit in “Animal Farm.”

The comrades were used to seeing the slogan “All animals are equal” emblazoned in large white letters on the side of the barn.

But then one day they noticed the addition of a codicil: “All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.”

If you object “But that’s not what ‘equal’ means!” then you have a lot to learn about the logic of leftist redress.

An element of reversal, of things turning into their opposites, is always at the heart of the program.

So it is with affirmative action, the obvious precursor to the administration’s “equity” wheeze.

“Affirmative action” was first announced as an initiative to promote equality, but it wound up enforcing discrimination precisely on the grounds that it was meant to overcome.

The whole history of affirmative action is instinct with that irony.

The original effort to rectify legitimate grievances—grievances embodied, for instance, in the discriminatory practices of Jim Crow—soon mutated into new forms of discrimination.

In 1941, Franklin Delano Roosevelt established the Fair Employment Practices Committee because blacks were openly barred from war factory jobs.

But what began as a presidential Executive Order in 1961 directing government contractors to take “affirmative action” to ensure that people be hired “without regard” for race, creed, color, and so on soon resulted in the creation of vast bureaucracies dedicated to discovering, hiring, and advancing people chiefly on the basis of those very qualities.

War is peace, freedom is slavery, “without regard” comes to mean “with regard for nothing else.”

Transformation

I think the best way to understand the diktat about advancing “equity” is to see it as an extension of Barack Obama’s expectation, announced on the eve of the 2008 election, that he was “five days away from fundamentally transforming the United States of America.”

In his 2004 book “Who Are We?” Samuel Huntington enumerated the core principles of the American Creed: liberty, equality, individualism, representative government, and private property.

The drive for “equity,” understood now as “being partial to this week’s designated victim groups,” is profoundly at odds with that traditional ideal.

Some well-meaning folks have hailed our new political dispensation as the return of “normality” in American politics.

We think it is another step on the road to the destruction (or “fundamental transformation”) of America.

It would be pleasant to think that, having left history’s bloodiest century behind, we also left behind the passions that sparked its unprecedented carnage.

But time and again, history has taught us that the hunger to impose equality from on high is among mankind’s most brutal passions.

As I write, an open letter signed by more than 120 retired American admirals and generals has just been published.

It calls upon citizens to reject racist so-called “antiracism” initiatives like critical race theory.

“Our nation is in deep peril,” the letter warns. “We are in a fight for our survival as a Constitutional Republic like no other time since our founding in 1776. The conflict is between supporters of Socialism and Marxism vs. supporters of Constitutional freedom and liberty.”

I think this is true.

It may seem quite distant from the harlequinade of “wokeness.” In fact, it is all of a piece.

Wokeness, like the Marxism it draws sustenance from, is an exclusionary cult.

A sliver of humanity is its object of worship.

And like Marxism itself, as Leszek Kolakowski noted at the end of his magisterial “Main Currents of Marxism” (1976), it “has revealed itself as the farcical aspect of human bondage.”

*  *  *

This essay is adapted from the June issue of The New Criterion (NewCriterion.com).

Roger Kimball is the editor and publisher of The New Criterion and publisher of Encounter Books. His most recent book is “Who Rules? Sovereignty, Nationalism, and the Fate of Freedom in the 21st Century.”

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 05/25/2021 – 18:05

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3vnW4MT Tyler Durden

Goldman Wins Regulatory Approval To Launch Chinese Wealth Management Business

Goldman Wins Regulatory Approval To Launch Chinese Wealth Management Business

Ever since China started allowing American money managers access to the hundreds of millions of middle class Chinese investors and savers via “joint ventures” with domestic firms, some of the biggest US buy-side firms, including BlackRock and Vanguard, have already launched their Chinese operations.

And now, after months of cajoling local regulators, it appears Goldman Sachs has just won approval to launch a wealth management venture of its own alongside ICBC, one of China’s largest banks, the FT says.

So pretty soon, the Chinese elite will have the opportunity to join their American peers by becoming Goldman clients.

GSAM, Goldman’s asset-management arm, will hold a 51% stake in the venture, while ICBC wealth management, a subsidiary of the bank, will own the rest. Goldman’s move comes just weeks after BlackRock announced that it had received permission to launch a wealth-management venture alongside China Construction Bank and Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund, Temasek.

Typically, wealth management products in China are sold through networks of domestic banks, though tech firms have tried to disrupt this (something the government is now pushing back on).

The industry is regulated by the China banking and insurance regulatory commission, CBIRC, which has given its preliminary approval to the partnership, according to Goldman.

“China’s wealth management industry has grown on the back of increased household wealth and continued financial market reform,” said Tuan Lam, head of the client business for Asia Pacific ex-Japan at Goldman Sachs Asset Management. “This joint venture with China’s pre-eminent financial institution will accelerate our objective of establishing a leadership position in one of the world’s largest, fastest-growing wealth management opportunities,” he added.

Goldman’s global investment research arm estimates that investable assets by Chinese households will exceed $70tn by 2030, more than half of which will be allocated to products such as securities, mutual funds and wealth management products.

A report from Boston Consulting Group and China Everbright Bank showed that China’s wider wealth market was worth Rmb121.6 trillion ($18.9 trillion) in 2020, up 10% from a year earlier.

China has reformed its financial services industry to allow greater foreign involvement, including allowing foreign companies to own mutual fund businesses fully for the first time.

French asset manager Amundi became the first foreign company to launch a majority foreign-owned wealth management business last year when it partnered with the Bank of China, while JPMorgan’s asset management business has unveiled plans to buy out its domestic partner in its mutual fund joint venture.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 05/25/2021 – 17:45

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3fLgXev Tyler Durden

Baton Rouge Cops Strip-Searched a Minor During a Traffic Stop and Entered a Family’s Home Without a Warrant. The City Just Settled for $35,000.


dreamstime_m_5942144

A Baton Rouge, Louisiana, family has settled with the city for $35,000 after officers conducted a pretextual traffic stop, strip-searched a minor in public, and conducted a warrantless home entry that resulted in a man spending five months behind bars. The officers’ actions were so egregious that they attracted the ire of a federal judge.

A civil suit filed by the family of Clarence Green was formally dismissed last week after the Baton Rouge Metropolitan Council agreed to the payout in favor of a jury trial. Such a result is highly unusual and is perhaps a commentary on just how much of a legal loser the city knew this case to be. It’s also a reminder of how difficult it is to get meaningful accountability when the government violates our rights. After all, the modest sum awarded to Green’s family will ultimately be paid by the taxpayers, the criminal charges against Green were only dropped after he spent five months behind bars, and the cop at the center of the scandal already had multiple complaints against him prior to that day.

On January 1, 2020, Baton Rouge Police Department (BRPD) Sergeant Ken Camallo, who had been checking vacant residences while searching for someone suspected of theft, abandoned that mission after seeing a car with out of state plates in front of a “known drug house.” According to BRPD incident reports obtained by Reason, Camallo stopped the car for “suspicious driving.”

Behind the wheel was a woman named Kayleen Butler. Camallo ordered her and her passengers—23-year-old Clarence Green, his 16-year-old brother (whose name is withheld in court documents because he is a minor), another unnamed passenger, and a young female child—to exit the vehicle.

According to the police report, Camallo claimed he “smelled marijuana,” so the officers placed Clarence and his brother in handcuffs. The officers then pulled down their underwear while they stood on the public street, exposing their genitals, and searched for drugs.

According to the initial incident report, the officers found a firearm in Green’s “underware.” Because he was then on probation for possession of Oxycodone, Green was prohibited from possessing a gun. The report also stated that the officers found marijuana on Green’s younger brother.

The cops then paid a visit to the Greens’ home. “Sgt. transported GREEN and his co-defendant juvenile brother to their residence (REDACTED) in an attempt to release the juvenile to his mother,” according to the report. The cops entered the residence with guns brandished and without a warrant.

It wasn’t until after they finished the search that they allowed the mother, Tanya Green, to see her children. At that time, the officers sought to convince Clarence’s 16-year-old brother to consent to a DNA swab.

“Call a lawyer,” said Clarence, his statement captured in the body camera footage, while he sat handcuffed in the back of a police cruiser.

“If you don’t shut the fuck up,” responded Officer Troy Lawrence Jr., “I’m gonna come in and I’m gonna fuck you up…You think I’m playing with you? I will fuck you up.”

Green was ultimately indicted for unlawful possession of a firearm. He would sit in jail for several months—until the government abruptly sought to drop the charges with little explanation.

The federal judge overseeing the case granted the state’s request. Then, in an unorthodox move, he issued a scathing rebuke to the prosecution, noting that the cops involved may very well be guilty of criminal wrongdoing.

“The state agents in this case demonstrated a serious and wanton disregard for Defendant’s constitutional rights, first by initiating a traffic stop on the thinnest of pretext, and then by haphazardly invading Defendant’s home (weapons drawn) to conduct an unjustified, warrantless search,” wrote Judge Brian A. Jackson of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana. “Such an intrusion, in abject violation of the protections afforded by the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution, which protects citizens against unwarranted governmental intrusions in their homes, may justifiably be considered to be a trespass subject to prosecution under” Louisiana law.

And that may not be the extent of the officers’ misdeeds. Thomas Frampton, the lawyer for the Green family, argues that the officers also violated both the Constitution and state law when they strip-searched the brothers on the street. “The Supreme Court has said that officers may conduct a ‘frisk’—meaning a brief pat-down of the outer garments—if the offer has a reasonable suspicion that the individual is armed,” Frampton says. “The reason that’s okay, according to the Court, is because a properly conducted pat down is ostensibly non-invasive. A strip search on a public sidewalk, however, is something else altogether.”

In his opinion, Judge Jackson also noted that Sergeant Camallo “gave multiple conflicting accounts when describing the circumstances leading up to [Green’s] traffic stop, and failed to offer a satisfactory explanation for why the police reports in this investigation were revised nearly one dozen times” after Green was arrested.

A review of a November 2020 hearing transcript, where Camallo testified, shows that his story indeed evolved. Though he mentioned the “drug house,” Camallo centered the traffic stop around “a small child who was in the front passenger seat” sitting in someone’s lap, a traffic infraction that he said he enforced regularly.

The justification for the officers’ entry into the Greens’ home is also under dispute. An updated police report stated that Tanya Green provided “written consent” to search Clarence’s bedroom, where the police found two additional firearms, though the body camera footage does not corroborate any such consent, and Tanya denies providing it. Camallo was not pressed on that inconsistency while under oath.

During that same November 2020 hearing, Judge Jackson did ask the prosecution if there was anything the court needed to know about the officers involved. “The court has the right to test the credibility of the officer,” Jackson said. “And if there are events that occurred with respect to the officer’s credibility, either before the incident or after the incident, the court is certainly entitled to be aware of any such information.”

“I would agree with that judge,” responded Assistant U.S. Attorney Kashan Pathan.

It would appear that there was plenty of material about “the credibility of the officer” for Pathan to share with the court, though the prosecutor did not do so. In 2017, a different federal judge discarded all the evidence in a case against a man who was facing similar illegal weapons and drug charges. The reason? Sergeant Ken Camallo conducted a warrantless search on the man’s trailer and improperly seized materials when there were “no exigent circumstances present.”

“This officer has served on the force for 20 plus years,” Pathan said at the November hearing. “He’s been found to be credible.” Yet it was the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Louisiana, Pathan’s own office, that was forced to drop the 2017 case based on Camallo’s misconduct. When asked under oath, Camallo responded that his record was clean.

Camallo had also racked up a laundry list of complaints reaching back to 2007. He currently has several open actions against him for untruthfulness, according to the internal affairs documentation of his history on the force. The latest disciplinary charge was filed against him on February 21 of this year. (That same internal affairs review shows no pending discipline against Officer Lawrence, who told Green, “I’m gonna fuck you up,” for his actions that day.)

Neither the Baton Rouge Police Department, East Baton Rouge District Attorney Hillar Moore III, nor the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Louisiana replied to multiple requests for comment.

This case is replete with the sort of eyebrow-raising conduct that bleeds into much of modern policing. There was the stop itself, set in motion with minimal pretext and an ever-changing story that Camallo himself never fully nailed down.

What came next—a strip search of a juvenile in public and a man spending months behind bars—was inspired by the supposed stench of marijuana. Remember that Camallo had been looking for someone who was suspected of committing theft, a cause he tossed aside in favor of a traffic stop. Perhaps there is a reason that BRPD’s violent crime clearance rate—the statistic used to evaluate how effectively police are at solving such offenses—is a mere 26.6 percent. That’s 16.7 percent below the national average, which is already dismal.

Perhaps Judge Jackson said it best when he upbraided the prosecutors and police. “It is appropriate to remind the Government,” he wrote, “of its paramount obligation to seek and serve justice, not convictions.”

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/3fkXylx
via IFTTT

Subway Wants To Increase Franchisees’ Fees By 25%

Subway Wants To Increase Franchisees’ Fees By 25%

Authored by Jonathan Maze via RestaurantBusinessOnline.com,

Subway franchisees recently started pushing the company to dramatically reduce the ongoing fees they pay the company in a bid to keep more of them in business.

But Subway is moving in the other direction. The sandwich giant’s newest franchise agreement increases their ongoing royalty payments by 25%, numerous sources told Restaurant Business. The result would send higher what many say is an already unusually high royalty rate at a time when the chain is closing more than 1,000 locations a year.

Currently, the Milford, Conn.-based franchisor charges operators a base royalty of 8% of a store’s revenue—or $8 for every $100 in sales a location generates. That is high for a restaurant franchise system. The company’s rival sub chains charge 5% to 6.5%. Subway also charges operators 4.5% of revenues for a national ad fund. For a franchisee with an average revenue store, those payments come out to $45,625 a year.

In recent weeks, the company has presented operators with a choice: Pay a 10% royalty or keep the old royalty rate but with several new terms that many believe give the franchisor too much power.

“At this point, I am not sure whether jumping to 10% royalty is worse than the potential costs associated with the new agreement,” one operator said. The 10% royalty would increase charges for a typical franchisee by $7,300.

“Our franchise agreement and all its terms are disclosed in the FDD,” Subway said in a statement, referring to the franchise disclosure document. “The terms are competitive with others in the QSR franchising industry.”

According to a document seen by Restaurant Business, franchisees who opt for an 8% royalty would be prevented from speaking out against the brand; could pay steep charges if they close their stores; gives the company power to dictate store hours and pricing and even prevents operators from using the term “Subway.”

The non-disparagement clause would keep anybody associated with an operator or their store from saying anything negative about Subway.

Operators who close their stores before their franchise agreement expires would have to pay three years’ worth of royalty and ad fund payments—or $136,875 for the typical location. Operators could also be terminated if they close for two days during a 12-month period.

The franchisor could also dictate store hours and Subway would own anything in the store with its logo, even if the franchisee has bought the item.

The 8% royalty agreement also gives the company pricing power, requiring operators to comply with promotional programs. That latter part is a huge issue for a brand that has been trying to resurrect the $5 Footlong promotion only to meet intense resistance from franchisees.

The new agreement for 2021 covers new operators, renewed franchise agreements and any store that gets sold to different operators.

The new franchise agreement has only increased frustration on the part of Subway’s franchisees, who have been pushing back on various company strategies with increased intensity in recent years amid their own profit concerns.

The chain’s sales have struggled for years, and franchisees have closed 5,000 locations since Subway peaked in size at 27,000 U.S. locations in 2015. Operators have said they expect thousands of operators will walk away from the brand once their leases run out in the coming years, given the chain’s performance.

A group of Subway operators has started publishing open letters to the company arguing for major changes. Those requests more recently included a reduction in their royalty payments to 4.5% from 8% as a “sign of good faith” to keep more restaurants open.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 05/25/2021 – 17:25

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3ulVE8v Tyler Durden

Baton Rouge Cops Strip-Searched a Minor During a Traffic Stop and Entered a Family’s Home Without a Warrant. The City Just Settled for $35,000.


dreamstime_m_5942144

A Baton Rouge, Louisiana, family has settled with the city for $35,000 after officers conducted a pretextual traffic stop, strip-searched a minor in public, and conducted a warrantless home entry that resulted in a man spending five months behind bars. The officers’ actions were so egregious that they attracted the ire of a federal judge.

A civil suit filed by the family of Clarence Green was formally dismissed last week after the Baton Rouge Metropolitan Council agreed to the payout in favor of a jury trial. Such a result is highly unusual and is perhaps a commentary on just how much of a legal loser the city knew this case to be. It’s also a reminder of how difficult it is to get meaningful accountability when the government violates our rights. After all, the modest sum awarded to Green’s family will ultimately be paid by the taxpayers, the criminal charges against Green were only dropped after he spent five months behind bars, and the cop at the center of the scandal already had multiple complaints against him prior to that day.

On January 1, 2020, Baton Rouge Police Department (BRPD) Sergeant Ken Camallo, who had been checking vacant residences while searching for someone suspected of theft, abandoned that mission after seeing a car with out of state plates in front of a “known drug house.” According to BRPD incident reports obtained by Reason, Camallo stopped the car for “suspicious driving.”

Behind the wheel was a woman named Kayleen Butler. Camallo ordered her and her passengers—23-year-old Clarence Green, his 16-year-old brother (whose name is withheld in court documents because he is a minor), another unnamed passenger, and a young female child—to exit the vehicle.

According to the police report, Camallo claimed he “smelled marijuana,” so the officers placed Clarence and his brother in handcuffs. The officers then pulled down their underwear while they stood on the public street, exposing their genitals, and searched for drugs.

According to the initial incident report, the officers found a firearm in Green’s “underware.” Because he was then on probation for possession of Oxycodone, Green was prohibited from possessing a gun. The report also stated that the officers found marijuana on Green’s younger brother.

The cops then paid a visit to the Greens’ home. “Sgt. transported GREEN and his co-defendant juvenile brother to their residence (REDACTED) in an attempt to release the juvenile to his mother,” according to the report. The cops entered the residence with guns brandished and without a warrant.

It wasn’t until after they finished the search that they allowed the mother, Tanya Green, to see her children. At that time, the officers sought to convince Clarence’s 16-year-old brother to consent to a DNA swab.

“Call a lawyer,” said Clarence, his statement captured in the body camera footage, while he sat handcuffed in the back of a police cruiser.

“If you don’t shut the fuck up,” responded Officer Troy Lawrence Jr., “I’m gonna come in and I’m gonna fuck you up…You think I’m playing with you? I will fuck you up.”

Green was ultimately indicted for unlawful possession of a firearm. He would sit in jail for several months—until the government abruptly sought to drop the charges with little explanation.

The federal judge overseeing the case granted the state’s request. Then, in an unorthodox move, he issued a scathing rebuke to the prosecution, noting that the cops involved may very well be guilty of criminal wrongdoing.

“The state agents in this case demonstrated a serious and wanton disregard for Defendant’s constitutional rights, first by initiating a traffic stop on the thinnest of pretext, and then by haphazardly invading Defendant’s home (weapons drawn) to conduct an unjustified, warrantless search,” wrote Judge Brian A. Jackson of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Louisiana. “Such an intrusion, in abject violation of the protections afforded by the Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution, which protects citizens against unwarranted governmental intrusions in their homes, may justifiably be considered to be a trespass subject to prosecution under” Louisiana law.

And that may not be the extent of the officers’ misdeeds. Thomas Frampton, the lawyer for the Green family, argues that the officers also violated both the Constitution and state law when they strip-searched the brothers on the street. “The Supreme Court has said that officers may conduct a ‘frisk’—meaning a brief pat-down of the outer garments—if the offer has a reasonable suspicion that the individual is armed,” Frampton says. “The reason that’s okay, according to the Court, is because a properly conducted pat down is ostensibly non-invasive. A strip search on a public sidewalk, however, is something else altogether.”

In his opinion, Judge Jackson also noted that Sergeant Camallo “gave multiple conflicting accounts when describing the circumstances leading up to [Green’s] traffic stop, and failed to offer a satisfactory explanation for why the police reports in this investigation were revised nearly one dozen times” after Green was arrested.

A review of a November 2020 hearing transcript, where Camallo testified, shows that his story indeed evolved. Though he mentioned the “drug house,” Camallo centered the traffic stop around “a small child who was in the front passenger seat” sitting in someone’s lap, a traffic infraction that he said he enforced regularly.

The justification for the officers’ entry into the Greens’ home is also under dispute. An updated police report stated that Tanya Green provided “written consent” to search Clarence’s bedroom, where the police found two additional firearms, though the body camera footage does not corroborate any such consent, and Tanya denies providing it. Camallo was not pressed on that inconsistency while under oath.

During that same November 2020 hearing, Judge Jackson did ask the prosecution if there was anything the court needed to know about the officers involved. “The court has the right to test the credibility of the officer,” Jackson said. “And if there are events that occurred with respect to the officer’s credibility, either before the incident or after the incident, the court is certainly entitled to be aware of any such information.”

“I would agree with that judge,” responded Assistant U.S. Attorney Kashan Pathan.

It would appear that there was plenty of material about “the credibility of the officer” for Pathan to share with the court, though the prosecutor did not do so. In 2017, a different federal judge discarded all the evidence in a case against a man who was facing similar illegal weapons and drug charges. The reason? Sergeant Ken Camallo conducted a warrantless search on the man’s trailer and improperly seized materials when there were “no exigent circumstances present.”

“This officer has served on the force for 20 plus years,” Pathan said at the November hearing. “He’s been found to be credible.” Yet it was the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Louisiana, Pathan’s own office, that was forced to drop the 2017 case based on Camallo’s misconduct. When asked under oath, Camallo responded that his record was clean.

Camallo had also racked up a laundry list of complaints reaching back to 2007. He currently has several open actions against him for untruthfulness, according to the internal affairs documentation of his history on the force. The latest disciplinary charge was filed against him on February 21 of this year. (That same internal affairs review shows no pending discipline against Officer Lawrence, who told Green, “I’m gonna fuck you up,” for his actions that day.)

Neither the Baton Rouge Police Department, East Baton Rouge District Attorney Hillar Moore III, nor the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Louisiana replied to multiple requests for comment.

This case is replete with the sort of eyebrow-raising conduct that bleeds into much of modern policing. There was the stop itself, set in motion with minimal pretext and an ever-changing story that Camallo himself never fully nailed down.

What came next—a strip search of a juvenile in public and a man spending months behind bars—was inspired by the supposed stench of marijuana. Remember that Camallo had been looking for someone who was suspected of committing theft, a cause he tossed aside in favor of a traffic stop. Perhaps there is a reason that BRPD’s violent crime clearance rate—the statistic used to evaluate how effectively police are at solving such offenses—is a mere 26.6 percent. That’s 16.7 percent below the national average, which is already dismal.

Perhaps Judge Jackson said it best when he upbraided the prosecutors and police. “It is appropriate to remind the Government,” he wrote, “of its paramount obligation to seek and serve justice, not convictions.”

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/3fkXylx
via IFTTT

Elizabeth Warren Wants To Ban Lawmakers From Trading Individual Stocks

Elizabeth Warren Wants To Ban Lawmakers From Trading Individual Stocks

Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) wants to end what is effectively legalized insider trading by members of Congress by barring them from trading individual stocks ever again.

Warren first attempted to push through similar legislation with the Anti-Corruption and Public Integrity Act she introduced in 2018 and then again in 2020. Both bills unsurprisingly died in the Senate Finance Committee, which Warren sits on.

The renewed push comes as several members of Congress have come under recent scrutiny for profitable stock trades in recent months, according to Business Insider. The include Sens. Richard Burr (R-NC), Tom Malinowski (D-NJ) and former Republican Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler of Georgia.

And who can forget California Democratic Congresswoman Judy Chu, the former East LA Community College teacher who entered congress with a $100,000 – $250,000 net worth – and somehow day traded herself to an estimated net worth of $7 million dollars.

According to Warren, government officials exist “to serve the people, not their personal financial interests,” adding “Congress should pass anti-corruption legislation and restore American’s faith in government by making it work for everyone — not just the rich and powerful.

Warren didn’t offer a specific time table for when she plans to introduce the legislation, while lawmakers continue to trade stocks like hotcakes.

More via Business Insider:

Burr goes bear

Burr, who endured a months-long federal investigation into his personal stock trades, last week reported making several recent stock sales along with his wife, Brooke Burr.

The Burrs sold up to $165,000 worth of stock in Enterprise Products Partners, a natural-gas and crude-oil pipeline company, between April 28 and April 30. The company’s stock price has remained effectively level since then.

Brooke Burr also reported selling up to $100,000 in MetLife Inc. floating-rate noncumulative preferred stock and up to $100,000 in US Bancorp depository preferred shares.

Burr, who wasn’t charged, made a flurry of stock sales on February 13, 2020, six days after cowriting an opinion article on FoxNews.com that sought to ease public concern over the threat COVID-19 posed to the US.

“Thankfully, the United States today is better prepared than ever before to face emerging public health threats, like the coronavirus, in large part due to the work of the Senate Health Committee, Congress, and the Trump Administration,” Burr wrote along with then-Sen. Lamar Alexander, a Tennessee Republican.

But on February 27 of last year, Burr — then chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee — told a more dire story to a small, private luncheon gathering at Washington’s tony Capitol Hill Club.

“There’s one thing that I can tell you about this: It is much more aggressive in its transmission than anything that we have seen in recent history,” Burr said, according to a secret recording obtained by NPR’s Tim Mak. “It is probably more akin to the 1918 pandemic.”

The Justice Department’s investigation of Burr’s February 2020 stock trades, together valued at more than $1.7 million, centered on whether the senator made his trades based on insider information obtained during senators-only briefings about the COVID-19 threat.

Burr says he is not planning to run for reelection in 2022.

Jim Inhofe moves to amend

An aviation enthusiast who announced his 2020 reelection bid by piloting a propeller plane upside down, Sen. Jim Inhofe, a Republican of Oklahoma, has regularly made news over the years for close-call incidents while flying.

More recently, Inhofe sought to remedy another aircraft situation — this time on paper.

In a May 17 letter to the US Senate Secretary Julie Adams, Inhofe acknowledged understating the value of the assets — most notably, airplanes — held by The Padre Company LLC, a limited-liability company that the senator controls.

As of 2019, Inhofe’s LLC held three aircraft together valued at up to $1 million: a 1979 Grumman Tiger, a 1999 RV-8, and a 1979 Cessna 340. It also included real estate.

Inhofe wrote that his letter provided a “total reconciliation of the life of my assets” within The Padre Company LLC, which formed in 1999.

In short, Inhofe had not been previously factoring in the value of the real-estate property as part of his public disclosure of the LLC. Now he is, which is why the reported value of the LLC has increased.

“Ahead of filing his annual disclosures each year, Senator Inhofe discusses it with the Ethics Committee to maximize transparency and ensure he is adhering to the spirit of the law, not just the letter of it,” the spokesperson Leacy Burke told Insider. “Previously, it had been understood that these were considered personal properties and exempt, unreportable assets. This year, in the interest of greater transparency, he was encouraged to file the amendment and include them, as you can see he did.”

Read the rest of the report here.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 05/25/2021 – 17:05

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3ulu4s6 Tyler Durden

De-Woked? Northwestern President Schapiro Changes Tune On Opinion-Diversity In Higher Education

De-Woked? Northwestern President Schapiro Changes Tune On Opinion-Diversity In Higher Education

Authored by Mark Glennon via Wirepoints.org,

“Beliefs aren’t facts.”

That would be an unremarkable title for an unremarkable column except for who wrote it. In a new column in Persuasion, Northwestern University President Morton Schapiro took on the illiberal tyranny that permeates most of higher education.

Schapiro, you may remember, is the one who told his incoming freshmen to “look for safe spaces” and pledged that “if you can’t find them, we will help you find them.” Regarding traumatic ideas, Schapiro said, “If they say that…you shouldn’t be warned to prepare yourself psychologically for that, that somehow that’s coddling, those people are lunatics.” As for microaggression, he told students that those who deny the existence of microaggressions are “idiots.”

During his tenure as president of Northwestern, the school has been consistently regarded as near the bottom on tolerance for diversity of opinion. Law professor Jonathan Turley, a graduate of Northwestern’s law school, wrote in 2016 that “Schapiro has succeeded in not just abandoning principles of free speech but directly assaulting core values of academic freedom. The chilling effect of his words will be most felt by untenured faculty who may think twice about advocating views that Schapiro has not defined as lunacy and idiocy.”

Northwestern President Morton Schapiro

But his new column, which he co-authored, is a reversal. It says what centrists, conservatives and the few remaining true liberals say every day: intolerance has destroyed academic freedom; the left is vastly over-represented in faculties; everyone shouts and no one listens; and, “perhaps worst of all,” the certainty that professors assert makes facts irrelevant.

“No evidence could possibly persuade them that they are mistaken,” he wrote.

Heck, he even quoted John Stuart Mill who isn’t exactly a hero on most campuses today.

What happened to Schapiro?

We can only speculate, but maybe he got fed up with what’s surely a horrible job – trying to manage a university full of the “righteous indignation” and intolerance his new column says is common on campuses across America.

Maybe the final straw was last year when Northwestern students demanding an end to campus police assaulted his home. Schapiro wrote a blistering open letter condemning them — appropriately. “I am disgusted by those who chose to disgrace this University in such a fashion,” he wrote. “I refuse to engage with individuals who continue to use the tactics of intimidation and violence.”

Or maybe he started taking heat from the school’s contributors. That’s the most optimistic possibility because universities won’t be turned around until those who write the checks start demanding change.

Schapiro’s new viewpoint still has some problems. Most faculty, he says, “avoid imposing their own political views on students and strive for impartiality” and he doesn’t think students get brainwashed. “Brainwashing undergraduates is close to impossible,” he wrote.

Sorry, but that’s just not consistent with the constant flow of stories from most schools, where truth has become indistinguishable from satire. Nor is it consistent with the anecdotal experience often told by those who deal with today’s students, and that I’ve seen myself.

Imposing political viewpoints on students is now routine, and it has reached into K-12 schools as well, particularly when it comes to race.

And far too many students (as well as adults) have simply become sheep. Not all students; it’s a bit of a mystery why some seem impervious to propaganda. But something strange has happened in recent years that made far too many unwilling and unable to think critically.

Schapiro’s claim about free-thinking teachers and students is contradicted by what he and his co-author call their “theory,” which is that “interconnected forces in several disciplines have led to a rise in styles of thought that, in our view, are fundamentalist.” A fundamentalist, they wrote, “is absolutely certain that his system of thought gives him access to unvarnished truth, and therefore doesn’t waste time examining contrary evidence or engaging in dialogue with nonbelievers.”

That’s hardly a “theory” that two professors needed to come up with. It’s what critics of the modern left say day in and day out. It’s the primary criticism, for example, of the absolutism in critical race theory. “Agree that you are a racist or your denial will prove your racism,” it says.

The most important challenge to Schapiro’s column should be this: Nice words, but what will be done about it? Schapiro’s new column offers nothing.

Schapiro won’t have long to match his words with actions. He recently announced that he is stepping down as president in August 2022. How delightful it would be if he went out with a bang by insisting on reforms to fix what he now criticizes.

But the challenge goes far beyond Northwestern. Restoring freedom of inquiry and speech to universities will not be easy thanks primarily to tenure and the plain fact that most faculties have no interest in reform.

It will indeed take demands from contributors to force reform. Maybe the next time you get solicited by your alma mater you should respond by sending a link to Schapiro’s new column with a simple note saying “Fix this first or go away.”

Tyler Durden
Tue, 05/25/2021 – 16:45

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3oNgbSr Tyler Durden

WTI Bounces Back Above $66 After Inventory Draws Across Entire Complex

WTI Bounces Back Above $66 After Inventory Draws Across Entire Complex

Oil prices ended marginally lower after a choppy day of investors tempering expectations of an early return of oil exporter Iran to international crude markets (bullish) and US virus cases falling rapidly ahead of Memorial Day travels (bullish) battling with the overall weakness in economic data and slop in US equity markets and lower bond yields (bearish).

“Oil prices… remain at high levels as the high season for oil demand is approaching and as restrictions are lifted in much of Europe and the United States,” said Louise Dickson, oil markets analyst at Rystad Energy.

The swings in crude and product stocks in the last couple of weeks have been noisy thanks to the Colonial Pipeline shutdown. This week we should start to put that behind us, although product stocks may still be impacted.

API

  • Crude -439k (-1mm exp)

  • Cushing -1.153mm

  • Gasoline -1.986mm (-1.1mm exp)

  • Distillates -5.137mm (-2mm exp)

Analysts expected inventory draws across the board this week, and they were right with Gasoline stocks down notably more than expected for the 7th straight week…

Source: Bloomberg

WTI hovered around $65.90 ahead of the API data and pushed back above $66 after the print.

“Crude prices are in wait-and-see mode until the fifth round of negotiations to revive the Iran nuclear deal are done,” said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at OANDA, noting “Energy traders need to know how much Iranian crude is going to hit the market.”

Iran may have some 69 million barrels of oil in floating storage waiting on tankers to travel to buyers when U.S. sanctions on its crude oil exports are removed, estimates from E.A. Gibson Shipbrokers cited by Bloomberg showed on Tuesday.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 05/25/2021 – 16:34

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3bSCssS Tyler Durden

Minnesota Threatens To Fine This Engineer for Calling Himself an Engineer


Copy of grand forks

The head of an urban policy nonprofit is suing Minnesota’s engineering licensing board after they threatened him with fines and other sanctions for calling himself an engineer in speeches and articles while having a temporarily expired engineering license.

Charles Marohn, a licensed civil engineer since 2000 and president of the advocacy group Strong Towns, argues that the board is violating his First Amendment rights by policing his description of himself as a professional engineer in connection to his policy advocacy.

The sanctions he’s being threatened with, he contends, are retaliation against Strong Towns’ activism, which is critical of spending more money on large infrastructure projects typically beloved by professional engineers.

The state’s licensing board “is making findings that I have been dishonest and misrepresented myself to the public, that I made false statements. These things are not only unfounded, they are just deeply, deeply damaging,” says Marohn. “I’m not practicing engineering. This board has no authority to regulate what my speech is and what I’m out saying.”

Marohn’s problems began in February 2020. That’s when a South Dakota engineer, David D. Dixon, submitted a complaint to the Minnesota Board of Architecture, Engineering, Land Surveying, Landscape Architecture, Geoscience, and Interior Design (AELSLAGID) after reading an article authored by Marohn that was critical of traffic engineers on Strong Towns’ website.

Marohn’s website biography said that he was a “Professional Engineer (PE) licensed in the state of Minnesota.” According to Dixon’s complaint, he searched Marohn’s name on the AELSLAGID website only to find that his license had expired in June 2018.

“Based on that, I sought to determine whether this reference on [Strong Towns] was an isolated reference, perhaps an oversight, or part of a deliberate effort to mislead the public,” wrote Dixon in his complaint, which notes that Marohn is also described as an engineer in “about the author” page of his February 2020 book and in materials for a 2019 conference at which Marohn was a speaker.

“Mr. Marohn talks about being a policy expert, the type that reads law and ordinance. It is not reasonable to assume that Mr. Marohn was not aware that use of the term Professional Engineer, PE, or other similar representations while not licensed, is a violation of law,” Dixon says in his complaint. “I urge the board to investigate as it sees fit, and to send a clear message that frauds of this sort are not tolerated.”

Marohn received notice of this complaint from AELSLAGID in July 2020, over a month after he’d already renewed his expired license.

Minnesota engineering licenses expire on June 30 of even-numbered years. Licensees are required to proactively renew them.

AELSLAGID sends out courtesy notices reminding people of their need to renew their licenses. Marohn has been a licensed engineer in the state since 2000. In 2016, however, he moved without informing the board, and thus missed the biennial renewal reminder that was sent to his old address in 2018.

Then in June 2020, a Strong Towns co-worker brought it to Marohn’s attention that his license had lapsed. Screenshots of Slack messages that Marohn submitted to AELSLAGID show him reacting with surprise at the news. He renewed it the same day and also paid a late renewal fee of $120. His lawsuit notes that he’d also completed the required continuing education hours during the time his license was expired.

“It’s kind of silly. I don’t go out and practice as an engineer. I’m a writer. I do public speaking, and I do writing. I do advocacy work. I don’t sign plans; I don’t do construction drawings,” Marohn told Reason in July 2020. He said at the time that he didn’t expect the board to sanction him over an obvious bad-faith complaint.

That prediction has turned out to be wrong. In November 2020, AELSLAGID informed Marohn that their investigation had determined that disciplinary action was warranted.

Specifically, the board demanded he pay a $1,500 fine and sign an order admitting he’d violated Minnesota law by using the title of “professional engineer” in his writings and speeches while his license was expired. They also wanted him to admit he’d lied to AELSLAGID when filling out his license renewal application, part of which requires the applicant to certify they haven’t improperly represented themselves as a licensed professional.

Marohn objected to the idea that he’d engaged in any willful deception. In a written response to AELSLAGID, he also said that under his reading of Minnesota law, the restrictions on the use of the title “professional engineer” only applied in circumstances where people were actually trying to practice engineering.

He thus declined to sign off on the board’s particular sanctions.

That led to a March virtual hearing with AELSLAGID’s five-member Complaint Committee. Here too, Marohn says that the primary concerns of the board were about his use of the term engineer in connection to his advocacy work.

One member of the board, he says, expressed concern that his description of himself as an engineer in talks he gave at Google, The American Conservative, and TEDx might make people more likely to listen to his ideas, thus endangering public health and safety.

That notion “is ridiculous because it’s not like I was any less qualified during the gap in my licensure,” says Marohn. “I was just talking; I’m giving a speech.”

Following the hearing—and in an effort to put the whole thing behind him—Marohn told AELSLAGID that he’d agree to a $500 civil fine and would sign a “stipulated order” admitting that he called himself a professional engineer while his license had lapsed.

In exchange, he wanted the board to acknowledge in writing that he’d renewed his license before being made aware of any complaint against him and that they drop their accusation that he’d made “untruthful” and “false” statements.

In April, AELSLAGID’s Complaint Committee declined that settlement. So last week, Marohn sued AELSLAGID in the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota arguing the board’s sanctions against him violate the First Amendment’s Free Speech protections.

“The board’s enforcement against [Marohn] raises some serious First Amendment concerns,” says Sam Gedge, an attorney at the Institute for Justice.

The government does have the ability to restrict unlicensed people referring to themselves as professional engineers to prevent fraud, Gedge says. But that would only apply to a very narrow set of circumstances like commercial advertising.

“The board is concerned that this gentleman referred to himself as a professional engineer in books, and speeches and communications like that. In that context, the government has no business policing the truth or falsity of speech,” he tells Reason.

The Institute for Justice has litigated similar cases before. In 2017, it sued Oregon’s engineering board after it fined Beaverton man Mats Järlström for referring to himself as an engineer in letters to the board, despite not having a state engineering license.

“The government licensing boards are the new censors in America. They’re aggressive, and time and time again it becomes clear they just don’t believe the First Amendment applies to them,” he says, adding that AELSLAGID “seems to be in need of suing.”

from Latest – Reason.com https://ift.tt/2RCNBqR
via IFTTT

Enough Is Enough – Democratic Governor Courageously Says “No More Taxes”

Enough Is Enough – Democratic Governor Courageously Says “No More Taxes”

Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

Connecticut Governor Ned Lamont is fed up with Progressive tax hikes, and rightfully so.

Connecticut Taxes

  • Capital gains are taxed as regular income, with rates up to 6.99% (Twelfth highest)

  • Sales tax rate is 6.35%(Twelfth highest)

  • Property tax rate averages 2.14%, (fourth highest)

  • Income tax rate varies from 3.00% to 6.99% 

The Tax Foundation rates Connecticut #2 on state and local taxes defined a state’s tax burden paid by a state’s residents divided by that state’s share of net national product.

Different ranking methods will give different results. I would put Connecticut somewhere around #5. 

Connecticut is a high tax state by any realistic measure. The new proposals are truly wild.

Latest Progressive Tax Schemes

  • A “consumption tax” based on income

  • An “Equitable Investment Council” to redistribute the money fairly!

Ned Lamont Says No More Taxes

The Wall Street Journal reports Ned Lamont Says No More Taxes

Connecticut used to be the low-tax haven with a quick ride to Manhattan, but decades of tax-and-spend policies have eroded its comparative advantage. Today the state taxes capital gains as regular income, with rates up to 6.99%. State lawmakers now want to add a “surcharge” on high earners, meaning a combined cap-gains rate of 8.99% on single filers making more than $500,000.

This is double taxation atop corporate taxes, and capital gains are not adjusted for inflation. The federal estate tax is 40%, and then throw in Connecticut’s estate tax up to 12%. Financiers are mobile, and estates in many places are taxed at the ultimate low rate of 0%. Add all this up, and you’d have to be high on nutmeg to stick around Connecticut.

The Legislature also wants to create what it bills as a “consumption tax.” People earning more than $500,000 would pay 0.7% of their adjusted gross income. That rate would rise to 1.4% for those earning $2 million, then 1.5% over $13 million. The money would go into a new Equitable Investment Fund, managed by an Equitable Investment Council, which would use it to reduce income inequality, redistribute to certain groups, and so on.

Progressive Ideas Keep Getting Wilder

Progressive ideas like a “consumption tax” based on income and the “Equitable Investment Fund” keep getting wilder and wilder.

The “Equitable Investment Council” would be an extreme Woke foundation slush fund complete with graft and total waste. 

Quote of the day:You’d have to be high on nutmeg to stick around Connecticut.”

Protesters are out in Force

“It’s not a ‘consumption’ tax. It’s just an income tax by another name,” said Governor Lamont.

In response, protesters staged a “die-in” blocking Lamont’s residence. 

This is despite the fact that Connecticut’s budget surplus this year is projected to be $470 million.

Its rainy-day fund will hit an all-time high of $4.5 billion. Federal coronavirus relief is bringing $6 billion into the state. 

Nonetheless, the legislature demand more taxes. 

Progressives always want to raise taxes. Consumption taxes on incomes and Equitable Investment Councils are just two of the latest schemes.

There will be more. Progressive schemes are endless.

Just Say No

Governor Ned Lamont just said no. 

But Progressive efforts in Congress led by Elizabeth Warren, AOC, Bernie Sanders, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and President Joe Biden are ongoing.

Send a Message!

Send Congress a resounding message in the 2022 midterm elections. Take back the House and send Pelosi and AOC packing.

Enough is enough. 

Tyler Durden
Tue, 05/25/2021 – 16:20

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2QPR8Bt Tyler Durden