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The virtues and pitfalls of former IDF chiefs of staff entering politics – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on August 8, 2020

In Israels 72-year history, it has had 22 IDF chiefs of staff, including the current one, Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kochavi.

And that short list might soon get even shorter, as over the last week there has been abundant banter regarding Eisenkot, which could be summed up in three words: Run, Gadi, run.

A number of high-profile journalists, such as Channel 13s Raviv Drucker, have extolled his virtues and encouraged him to run, and a Channel 12 poll last week indicated that were Eisenkot to head a party list, that list would win 16 seats in the next election.

And that is before most people in the country have any idea where he stands on the marquee political issues or could identify his voice if they heard it on the radio.

Sound familiar? It should.

In October 2018, as elections were in the air and a couple months before the Knesset dissolved itself and sent the country spiraling into the seemingly endless election loop of 2019/2020, Israel Television conducted a poll that found that Benny Gantz, at the time the countrys freshest former chief of staff, would win 12 Knesset seats. And neither his voice nor his positions were recognizable to most Israelis at the time. Today Gantz is the alternate prime minister and defense minister.

This is all indicative of a well-known Israeli phenomenon: a romance a good part of the country has with its chief of staff, a love affair the former generals then leverage into springboards into politics.

In Israel there is a need to over-idealize generals just like a kid who has to over-idealize his parents because in the security stress in which we live, we do not have the luxury to see them objectively, said Udi Lebel, a professor specializing in political psychology and civil-military relations at Bar-Ilan Universitys School of Communication.

If people did look at the countrys security elite objectively, he added, we would not sleep at night. There is a cognitive need to feel that we are in good hands.

The population, for the most part, does not look at those who rise to the pinnacle of the military establishment as regular folk who decided to make a career in the army instead of selecting another career path, but, rather, as people who stand out because they are head and shoulders above the rest.

From the start we have a tendency to think that they are wow, and by definition they enjoy a benefit that, for instance, an engineer from the Technion [interested in politics] would not enjoy, even if the engineer may be much more intelligent.

Lebel said this phenomenon has come out clearly in studies he has done with high school and college students. In a recent study, pictures of Eisenkot, Gantz and a third former chief of staff, Gabi Ashkenazi, in full IDF uniform, were placed in front of a group, and the students were asked if those in the pictures have what it takes to be prime minister. About 84% answered that they did, even if some could not name the people in the pictures.

When I pushed a button and changed his uniform to that of a police officer, and asked if then he was worthy of being a prime minister, the number dropped to around 60%, Lebel said. Dressing the men in civilian clothes dropped the figures even lower, to around 40%.

What this shows, he said, is simple: Its the uniform that makes the person, not the person who makes the uniform.

INTERESTINGLY, SAID Lebel, who is also affiliated with the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies, an attraction to the military elites and the former chiefs of staff has traditionally been stronger on the Center-Left than it has been on the Right.

Of the eight former chiefs of staff who have gone into politics since 1987 Dan Shomron, Ehud Barak, Amnon Lipkin-Shahak, Shaul Mofaz, Moshe Yaalon, Dan Halutz, Ashkenazi and Gantz six went to center or left-wing parties initially, and two, Mofaz and Yaalon, drifted there after first joining the Likud.

According to Lebel, most of the parties considered to be on the Right except for the religious-Zionist parties have moved on from a love affair with military leaders as politicians.

On an emotional level, the ex-generals do not hold an appeal for haredim, and also do not have the same luster for middle-class Mizrahim (descendants of local Jewish communities in the Middle East and North Africa) or for voters attracted to Avigdor Libermans Yisrael Beytenu Party, he said.

Which is not to say that in the past the Right did not see members of the military elite as important assets to their parties.

When the Likuds Menachem Begin in the 1970s wanted to wrest control of the country from Mapai, Lebel said, he looked to military leaders such as Ariel Sharon and Yigal Yadin who he knew were people who gave his party legitimacy and would make it possible for people who were not squarely in his camp to vote for him nonetheless, because as military leaders they were people of the consensus, and represented Israeli-ness.

With time, he said, the Right has mostly matured past its fascination with ex-generals as politicians.

But where the rank still does carry weight is with the Left, with Lebel arguing that this camp has long believed those who have reached top positions in the army are endowed with leadership capital that others simply dont possess. This tendency, he said, has long been a dominant component of the Labor Partys DNA, more than any other party in Israel.

The Labor Party was the natural habitat of both the political and the military elite during the early years of the state, creating a security-political complex that was inseparable so long as it remained in power, he wrote in 2016 in a study coauthored with Guy Hatuka from Ariel University. The phenomenon of former senior army officers in the Knesset list of the Labor Party was far more extensive than in any other political party.

Interestingly, the steep decline of the Labor Party in current polls it does not even pass the electoral threshold corresponds with that period when security figures did not figure prominently in the partys leadership or on its Knesset list.

For instance, in the 2013 and 2015 elections when social issues, following the 2011 social justice protests, were a key part of the partys campaigns the number of ex-generals on the Labor list dropped precipitously.

While in the 2009 elections members of the military elite known in Hebrew as bithonistim made up 30% of Labors top 10 Knesset seats, that number dropped to 10% in the 2013 election, and to zero in the 2015 elections.

Avi Gabbay brought a former general, Tal Russo, to fill the No. 2 position in 2019, but with little success. In that election the party won only six seats. Labors gradual demilitarization, according to this study, has been a factor in its marginalization.

The Blue and White Party, on the other hand, is a case study in the other direction. That party was packed with ex-military elites when it was founded in 2019, featuring three former chiefs of staff in its top four positions. This strategy was guided partly by the belief that since one of the reasons Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu continues to win is his image of being Mr. Security, the surest way to beat him is to out-security Mr. Security.

And the strategy did well, with the party winning 35 seats in April 2019, 33 in September of that year, and 33 in March 2020, before falling apart after Gantzs decision to join the government with Netanyahu in May.

And now that Blue and White has self-destructed recent polls show it will get crushed in the next election the eyes of the Center-Left are cast in the direction of the freshest ex-chief of staff: Eisenkot.

This camp, Lebel said, still believes that those who can return it to relevance and political dominance are the military leaders.

And Lebel has a word of advice to those military leaders: If you want to get into politics, declare it a minute before the elections. That way, he said, the public will still remember them in uniform. Otherwise you will just be seen as another regular guy who says things that are not that impressive. You have to run as a poster. Dont say a word, because it is the poster that has the wow.

This advice echoes an old saying: Better to keep your mouth closed and let people think you are unwise, than to open it and remove all doubt. Former generals benefit, as Lebel puts it, from a wow factor that evaporates when the publics memory of their uniform fades as they begin to actually start to speak and express opinions.

Sound familiar?

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The virtues and pitfalls of former IDF chiefs of staff entering politics - The Jerusalem Post

Toronto Liberal MP calling it quits – The Bay Observer – Providing a Fresh Perspective for Hamilton and Burlington

Posted By on August 6, 2020

Toronto MP Michael Levitt is resigning his seat as a Liberal backbencher to become the president and CEO of the Canadian Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Centre for Holocaust Studies after representing the riding of York Centre since 2015.

For those of us serving in elected office, political life can be incredibly intense, and it often becomes all-encompassing, Levitt said in a note to his constituents.

It hasnt been without consequence to those I love most, and while it is an incredible privilege to serve the people of York Centre, I know deep down that now is the time for me to put family first and come back home, both physically and mentally.

Levitt, is currently chair of the foreign affairs and international development committee. He co-sponsored legislation in 2018 that designated May as Canadian Jewish Heritage Month.

He defeated Conservative Mark Adler in 2015 when the Trudeau Liberals rode a wave of support to a majority government and was re-elected in 2019.

Levitt said he has informed the Speaker of the House that his last day will be on Sept. 1.

His resignation will trigger a byelection that will be the first to take place since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

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Toronto Liberal MP calling it quits - The Bay Observer - Providing a Fresh Perspective for Hamilton and Burlington

YouTube removes rapper Wileys channel over repeated violations – Forward

Posted By on August 6, 2020

Image by Getty/Tabatha Fireman/Str...

The artist Wiley prompted a Twitter walkout of British Jews after an anti-Semitic tirade posted on the platform.

(JTA) YouTube is the latest media platform to remove Wiley over what it termed the British rappers repeated violations.

The decision to remove his channel comes after pressure by groups in the United Kingdom, including the Campaign Against Antisemitism.

Wiley was removed late last month from Facebook, Twitter and Instagram following a series of tweets widely regarded as anti-Semitic and other social media posts.

Last week YouTube, which is owned by Google, suspended monetization on Wileys videos. But on Wednesday, reports noted that Wileys YouTube channel had disappeared from the media platform.

Heres what a YouTube spokesman told The Jerusalem Post: Following repeated violations, YouTube has terminated Wileys channels from our platform.

In one video posted by the rapper in recent days, he reads the name of a Twitter user and demands to know whether she is a Jew. In another, Wiley calls on you, appearing to mean Jews, to try to take his passport away so he can see quite how much power this you has, according to the Campaign Against Antisemitism.

The post YouTube removes rapper Wileys channel over repeated violations appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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YouTube removes rapper Wileys channel over repeated violations - Forward

QUIGLEY: State Senator Kasser, Give The Money You Raised To The Anti Defamation League – Greenwich Free Press

Posted By on August 6, 2020

Letter to the editor from Dan Quigley, Greenwich RTC chair

It is a rare occasion that I would feel compelled to issue two Letters-To-The-Editor in such a short time frame, (Quigley: Erroneous Twitter Feed Prompts State Senator Kasser To Act Before Thinking Aug 3, 2020), but I believe that this is a unique case and that it is important enough to warrant doing so.

As some of you may know, over the weekend Tweets by a fake Twitter account posing as a PAC supporting Republican State Senate candidate Ryan Fazio were wrongly exploited by State Senator Alex Kasser in an attempt to associate the comments with Mr Fazio. Ms Kasser decided not to contact Mr Fazio or his campaign so as to determine the source of the Tweets despite their clearly being unhelpful to Mr Fazio. Instead, she impetuously fired off a message via email and social media to thousands of supporters and used the malicious and fake Tweets as an opportunity to ask the public to contribute to her campaign.

In her plea for funds, she stated; This is what Im up against. As we now know, this was a lie.

Today, at candidate Fazios request, the Anti Defamation League reached out to Twitter and the fraudulent Twitter account was removed. The Fazio Campaign and the RTC are extremely grateful that the Anti Defamation League was willing to intervene to help resolve this matter.

Although this resolves the problem of the false Twitter account, it does not excuse Ms Kassers impulsive and wrongheaded behavior in using a false premise as an opportunity to raise money for her campaign. That action shows bad faith. Ms Kassers decision not to first ask the Fazio Campaign about the Tweets leaves her open to the valid criticism that she saw in this an opportunity to raise funds from an unwitting public.

With this in mind, the Greenwich, Stamford and New Canaan RTCs call on Ms. Kasser to donate all campaign funds received as a result of this incident to the Anti Defamation League.

The ADL is an organization dedicated to fighting real cases of anti-semitism, racism and discrimination. This would be the right thing to do considering that Ms Kasser exploited a fake narrative as the basis for asking for public campaign donations.

As for us and Mr Fazio, we dont need an apology. But anyone who donated to the Kasser Campaign because of this sure does.

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QUIGLEY: State Senator Kasser, Give The Money You Raised To The Anti Defamation League - Greenwich Free Press

Report: Facebook Announces Increased Ad Revenue Even as ADL-led Boycott Reduced Spending – Jewish Exponent

Posted By on August 6, 2020

Facebook logo is displayed on a mobile phone screen photographed for illustration photo in Krakow, Poland. (Photo by Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto, via JTA.org)

By Marcy Oster

The advertiser boycott that the Anti-Defamation League helped spearhead against Facebook last month was in some ways successful: More than 1,000 companies declined to pay for advertising on the social media platform.

But measured against the companys profits, the #StopHateForProfit campaign which the ADL led with other civil rights groups, including the NAACP had only limited effect, according to a report in the New York Times. The company reported a year-over-year increase in advertising revenue in July.

Revenue from Facebooks top 100 advertisers dropped some 12% this July over last year, the New York Timesreported, citing estimates from the advertising analytics platform Pathmatics. Nine of the 100 top advertisers had publicly announced that they would withhold paid advertising over the month, reducing their advertising dollars on Facebook to $507,500 from $26.2 million. (Several companies also reduced their advertising spending because of the coronavirus pandemic.)

The ADL worked with Facebook for years on strategies to curb hate speech online butlost patience with the companyafter Zuckerberg said he would allow Holocaust denial on the platform.

Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg said on an earnings call Thursday that the company agreed with the goal of the boycott, to have Facebook be hate-free, according to the New York Times. CEO Mark Zuckerberg said on the call that many of the companies that boycotted Facebook during June plan to return.

One that does not isBen & Jerrys, which announced Thursday that it would continue to withhold advertising dollars through the end of the year. The decision was made to send a message, according to the report

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Report: Facebook Announces Increased Ad Revenue Even as ADL-led Boycott Reduced Spending - Jewish Exponent

Study: Facebook Allows And Recommends White Supremacist, Anti-Semitic And QAnon Groups With Thousands Of Members – Forbes

Posted By on August 6, 2020

TOPLINE

Despite efforts to curb hate speech and misinformation, Facebook still hosts a number of hateful and conspiratorial groups, including anti-Semitic and white supremacist groups with hundreds of thousands of members, and regularly recommends users join them, according to a study published Tuesday by the Anti-Defamation League.

Facebook's logo on a smartphone.

Though Facebook groups can be banned for repeatedly posting items flagged as false news, its possible to circumvent the regulations, leaving Facebook groups as largely self-moderated spaces ripe for bigotry and misinformation.

Among the groups profiled in the study are QAnon News & Updates and Official Q / QAnon Public Group, whose over 200,000 combined members believe the conspiracy theory that a deep state of federal bureaucrats, Democrats and celebrities are plotting against President Trump and his supporters, while running an international sex-trafficking ring.

In the groups, members frequently make anti-Semitic posts, theorize that the coronavirus pandemic is a hoax and speculate that the Black Lives Matter protests following George Floyds death were paid for by outside actors like China, the Democrats or George Soros.

White supremacist and racist groups also continue to run rampant on Facebook, according to the study, where racist memes and calls to preserve our Race are commonplace and over 20 groups are using the name White Lives Matterthough only some are full of racist or white supremacist content.

Neo-Confederate and anti-Semitic groups with tens of thousands of members also remain uncensored on the platform, such as an anti-Semitic and broadly hateful private group entitled Exposing the Rothschilds, which has over 130,000 members.

Moreover, the study notes Facebooks recommendation feature often drives individuals toward hateful and conspiratorial groups, with 2016 internal research finding 64% of all individuals in extremist groups joined based on a suggestion from Facebook.

Facebook did not respond to a request for comment.

The Anti-Defamation League was one of several organizations involved in launching an advertising boycott against Facebook last month. The #StopHateForProfit campaign, encouraging the tech giant to address hate, bigotry, racism, antisemitism and violence that remains prevalent on the platform, quickly drew support from over 1,000 companies, including Disney, Coca-Cola, Starbucks and McDonalds. Though the boycott was originally for the month of July, a handful of major brands opted to continue for the rest of the year pending action from Facebook.

We have talked to Facebook repeatedly about the problem of hateful and conspiratorial groups, and we have pointed out their particular dereliction when it comes to these types of groups, an ADL spokesperson told Forbes. In fact, addressing groups is one of the core recommendations of Stop Hate for Profit. We need them to take a systematic approach to address hateful and conspiratorial groups.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg addressed misinformation and bigotry on the platform at a House Judiciary Committee antitrust hearing last week. Pressed on a viral video circulating misleading claims about the coronavirus, Zuckerberg said Facebook identifies and takes down 89% of hate speech before users even see it. If your product is only 89% effective thats a failure, ADL CEO and Director Jonathan Greenblatt told Forbes. Facebook did institute several changes as the boycott gained traction, announcing a new team to study algorithmic bias, the release of a civil rights audit, the removal of content from hateful movements (including a number of QAnon conspiracy pages) and problematic groups and an independent audit of hate content. Nonetheless, Greenblatt said Facebook remains a cesspool of bigotry.

Facebook Ad Boycott Extends Beyond July: Everyone Agrees Facebook Has Got To Change (Forbes)

Facebook Continues Missteps On Hate Speech And Misinformation(Forbes)

Internal Audit Slams Facebooks Inadequate Civil Rights Approach As Companies Boycott(Forbes)

Facebook Responds As LEGO, Dunkin Donuts Join Over 500 Companies In Growing Boycott(Forbes)

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Study: Facebook Allows And Recommends White Supremacist, Anti-Semitic And QAnon Groups With Thousands Of Members - Forbes

Advocates Call on Congress to Fund Elections Immediately – Civilrights.org

Posted By on August 6, 2020

Rep. Sewell, Calif. Secretary of State Padilla join civil rights leaders to mark the 55th anniversary of Voting Rights Act

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEContact: Kiren Marshall,The Leadership Conference, [emailprotected], 202.780.9835Jackie McGuinness, U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell (AL-07), [emailprotected], 202.480.3459Sam Mahood, California Secretary of State Padilla, [emailprotected], 916.653.6575Marc Banks, NAACP, [emailprotected], 443.608.4073Keri Gray, American Association of People with Disabilities, [emailprotected], 202.521.4310Helen Butler, Georgia Coalition for the Peoples Agenda, [emailprotected], 404.314.8982

WASHINGTON Civil rights advocates hosted a press briefing call today to outline the need for immediate election funding in the new COVID-19 relief package to protect the integrity of the general election. Speakers included Rep. Terri Sewell and Calif. Secretary of State Alex Padilla, as well as leaders from The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, NAACP, American Association of People with Disabilities, and the Georgia Coalition for the Peoples Agenda.

To hear a recording of the call, click here.

The Senate must immediately include $3.6 billion in the next COVID-19 package to ensure safeguards for our democracy during the pandemic and beyond. That includes mandating that states establish vital protections for voters and a range of options to ensure every person can safely cast a ballot in a way that works for them. Without a functional democracy in which everyone is included, heard, and represented, we cannot make real progress on civil and human rights issues like affordable health care, fair wages, educational equity, and justice reform, said Vanita Gupta, president and CEO, The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights.

Congresswoman Terri Sewell said, It would be impossible to commemorate the 55th anniversary of the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 without acknowledging the passing of my dear friend and voting rights hero, John Lewis. Not only must Mitch McConnell take up and pass the John Robert Lewis Voting Rights Act of 2020 which has been sitting on his desk since December 2019 he ought to support the VoteSafe Act that requires states to permit no-excuse mail-in absentee voting for the 2020 elections and an early in-person voting period of at least 20 days for the 2020 elections. Ensuring free and fair elections is the cornerstone of our democracy and, right now, too many Americans are being left behind.We must recommit ourselves to John Lewis vision of America, and restore the promise of voter equality!

CongressmanJohn Lewis and many others marchedand bledso that every citizen could exercise their right to vote.This November, wemustnotforce American citizens intohaving to choose between exercising their right to vote or protectingtheir health and that of their loved ones. We must honor the spirit of Congressman Lewis and the spirit of the Voting Rights Act by offering voterssafe options for casting their ballot, beginning with no-excusevote-by-mail. AndCongress must act to provide thefunding necessary for state and local elections officials to administeraccessible, secure, and safe elections, said Alex Padilla, California secretary of state.

The onslaught against protections for voters of color continues to intensify as we move closer to November, said Derrick Johnson, president and CEO, NAACP. Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic and civil unrest across the country, it has been made abundantly clear that the peoples voice and vote require immediate restoration. The disintegration of voting rights has disproportionately affected Black voters; we must work diligently to curtail the consequences and place the power back in the hands of the electorate.

Maria Town, president and CEO, American Association of People with Disabilities, said, People with disabilities frequently encounter barriers to our participation in the democratic process from inaccessible polling places to inoperable accessible voting machines to discriminatory voter ID laws. During the pandemic, a shift to vote by mail presents additional barriers and will not be accessible to many in the disability community. States need funding to ensure they can execute accessible vote by mail programs and maintain safe, accessible and fair in person early and election day voting.

As evidenced by the many problems with vote by mail, lack of poll workers, insufficient polling locations, equipment problems, and long lines that happened in the June 9 primary in Georgia, it is imperative that Congress provide funding for elections in November so that both voters and election officialshave sufficient personal protective equipment and voting can be conducted in a safe, accessible, and secure manner. A few of the critical needs for funding are drop boxes,recruitment of poll workers, scanners that can handle large numbers of paper ballots,postage for vote by mail ballots,increased funding for the postal service to be able to deliver voters ballots in a timely manner, and security of voting systems, said Helen Butler, executive director, the Georgia Coalition for the Peoples Agenda.

In addition, to commemorate the 55th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act, the following groups are joining The Leadership Conference in engaging in a day of action tomorrow, August 6, as they continue advocating for congressional funding to ensure safe and accessible elections this year:

ACLUAction Group NetworkADL (Anti-Defamation League)Alaskans Take A StandAmerican Federation of TeachersAmericans for Democratic Action (ADA)Andrew Goodman FoundationArab American InstituteBlack Women RisingBlue FutureBradyCampus Vote ProjectCenter for American ProgressCenter for Disability RightsClean Elections TexasClimate Reality Action FundColor Of ChangeCommon CauseCommunications Workers of AmericaDaily KosDeclaration for American DemocracyDemcast USADemocracy 21Democracy InitiativeEnd Citizens United / Let America Vote Action FundFranciscan Action NetworkGeneration ProgressGreenpeace USAHAZMAT AmericaImpact FundIn Our Own Voice: Black Womens Reproductive Justice AgendaIndivisibleLawyers for Good GovernmentLet Nevadans VoteLittle LobbyistsMALDEFMissouri Voter Protection CoalitionMovement Advancement ProjectNAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc.National Association of Social WorkersNational Council of Jewish WomenNational Urban League Young ProfessionalsNETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social JusticeOxfam AmericaPFAWPlanned Parenthood Action FundPoligon Education FundProgressive Turnout ProjectPublic CitizenReligious Action Center of Reform JudaismService Employees International Union (SEIU)Stand Up AmericaTexas Progressive Action NetworkUnidosUSUnion of Concerned ScientistsUnited Methodist Church General Board of Church and SocietyWhen We All VoteYWCA USA

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The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights is a coalition charged by its diverse membership of more than 220 national organizations to promote and protect the rights of all persons in the United States. The Leadership Conference works toward an America as good as its ideals.For more information on The Leadership Conference and its member organizations, visitwww.civilrights.org.

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Advocates Call on Congress to Fund Elections Immediately - Civilrights.org

Sandy Backs the Blue flag wave sees several out-of-towners – Pamplin Media Group

Posted By on August 6, 2020

Proud Boys Alan Swinney, Andrew Duncomb make appearance at the pro-police rally.

Dozens of people lined Highway 26 in Sandy Tuesday evening, Aug. 4, waving flags while shouting support for local police and the re-election of President Donald Trump.

The event was originally promoted as a show of support for local enforcement, meant to honor Sandy Police and other local officers on what would have been National Night Out.

While the majority of the 50 to 60 people who attended brought signs saying they "back the blue" or displayed American and thin blue line flags, there also was a large presence in support for President Trump, either waving Trump flags, wearing Trump 2020 hats and/or chanting their support.

Several motorists traveling on Highway 26 honked in support.

Sandy Backs the Blue co-organizer Dixie Bailey said two minor incidents occurred during the event. One person in a passing car mooned the demonstrators and another man showed up in his underwear to "try and make us look bad," Bailey said.

Some passersby made crude hand gestures or shouted "F*** Trump!" or "Black Lives Matter," while those in attendance responded with "Four more years," "Trump, Trump, Trump," "He's your president, snowflake" or "All Lives Matter."

"I felt like the (flag) wave went really well," Bailey said. "We all really enjoyed supporting our local (law enforcement officers). I was extremely grateful to see so much community support."

Two men came from out of state Texas and California and showed support of the pro-police group Sandy Backs the Blue.

One was Andrew "Black Rebel" Duncomb, who was reportedly filming the unrest in downtown Portland on July 25 at the Mark O. Hatfield United States Courthouse and Multnomah County Justice Center when he was allegedly stabbed by a protestor who Duncomb said identifies as being part of the "antifa" movement, a loose coalition of left-leaning protesters who oppose fascism.

Duncomb said activists had alerted others to his presence and identity before he confronted one of the men who'd been following his group. He said he was stabbed in the back during that incident.

After that experience in Portland, Duncomb said he feels more welcome in Sandy. He followed his "fellow patriot" Alan Swinney to a previous Sandy flag wave.

"I think in small communities like this, (these events) encourage people to fight back and take this country back," Duncomb said. "We are under attack. I can't even walk downtown Portland without being attacked."

Swinney expressed similar sentiment, saying "America is under attack and we need to try to do something to stand up for it."

Both men have been linked to the Proud Boys, a far-right organization described as a hate group by members of the Southern Poverty Law Center and the Anti-Defamation League.

According to the ADL's website:

"The Proud Boys represent an unconventional strain of American right-wing extremism. While the group can be described as violent, nationalistic, Islamophobic, transphobic and misogynistic, its members represent a range of ethnic backgrounds, and its leaders vehemently protest any allegations of racism.

"Their founder, Gavin McInnes, went so far as to file a defamation lawsuit against the Southern Poverty Law Center when the SPLC designated the Proud Boys a hate group. In McInnes' own words, the Proud Boys are a 'pro-western fraternity,' essentially a drinking club dedicated to male bonding, socializing and the celebration all things related to western culture. In reality, the Proud Boys bear many of the hallmarks of a gang, and its members have taken part in multiple acts of brutal violence and intimidation."

Aside from the Proud Boys, a few other out-of-towners came to support Sandy Backs the Blue.

One woman, who asked to remain anonymous, came from Gresham for the event. She said she is moving to Sandy soon and is "excited to get into a community that doesn't support hate and violence."

"Gresham claims it's not a city that values hate," she said. "I'm totally insulted they're flying the terrorist Black Lives Matter flag. I came out here to back the blue. I have all the respect in the world for the police."

Another woman, Cindy, who refrained from giving her full name, came from Rhododendron to "show support for my country, support for my president and support for the police."

While dozens came out to the event, Juli Hager, co-organizer of the Sandy Backs the Blue, said she had hoped to see members of the local anti-racism group, the Sandy STAND UP Movement, there.

Bailey said in an earlier interview that the event was open to all, was to be "non-political" and that leaders of the STAND UP Movement had been invited.

STAND UP leaders told The Post they'd informed their members of the event and made attending the flag wave an individual member decision.

"I wish the other group would come out," Hager said as the flag wave was kicking off. "To have people at odds doesn't sit well with me."

"I chose not to go because I did not want to stand alongside Proud Boys and those supporting them in this community," Sandy STAND UP co-organizer Lindsay Polk said. "It goes against what I (we) are trying to change in Sandy."

Sandy STAND UP co-organizer Tracy George echoed Polk's comments, saying "I did not go personally because with the presence of (Proud Boys). It did not feel like a safe situation to put myself or my children in."

Other members of the STAND UP group have expressed similar concerns about the Proud Boys' presence in Sandy.

For more information about the group, visit their Facebook page.

You count on us to stay informed and we depend on you to fund our efforts.Quality local journalism takes time and money. Please support us to protect the future of community journalism.

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Sandy Backs the Blue flag wave sees several out-of-towners - Pamplin Media Group

Mills wants activism to be remembered more than gold medal – Minneapolis Star Tribune

Posted By on August 6, 2020

TOKYO A few years before Billy Mills won his gold medal at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, the Native American was several floors up in front of an open hotel window,standing on a chair and ready to jump.

He was despondent over yet another racial slight, this time being excluded from a photograph because of his brown skin. It happened several times, often after he'd won a big race.

Unknown to him at the time, his bouts of depression were also triggered by un-diagnosed hypoglycemia and type-two diabetes.

"The feeling was there," he said. "Just let go. It'll be all over. You just want to go where it's quiet. You want to go where all the junk won't be there anymore."

He then heard what he interpreted as his late-father's voice, perhaps speaking from the South Dakota Pine Ridge Indian Reservation where Mills grew up.

"It was energy that sounded like 'don't, don't'. The fourth time it was more of an echo 'don't'."

His father died when he was 12, leaving him an orphan after his mother's death years earlier. He was most frustrated when he was a student at the University of Kansas, where he said "it was very hard in the beginning" with Native Americans limited to only a few streets around Lawrence.

"Any time we ventured too far, anybody felt they had the right to stop us and ask what we were doing," Mills explained in an interview with The Associated Press.

In the hotel room, Mills thought back to his father's words spoken long ago: "You have broken wings, and it takes a dream to heal a broken soul."

"So I had to find a dream,"Mills recalled. "You have to find a passion in life and develop the skills to equal the passion."

Now 82 and awaiting surgery later this year on a nagging right hip, Mills said he backed away from the window and put down his dream on paper. The words changed his life just moments after he almost took it.

"I wrote down Olympic 10,000-meter run," Mills explained. "Actually, I put down the 10,000, and 5,000 and the marathon."

He laughed telling the story, acknowledging his youthful overconfidence.

"As I got control of my emotions I put down only the gold medal 10,000-meter run," Mills said. "I went to Tokyo with a totally different perspective than most of my colleagues. I was on a quest to heal a broken soul. It was the journey, not the destination, that would empower me as long as I finished the race."

He did better than that.

Mills won the 10,000 in Tokyo in one of the biggest upsets of the Olympics, surging past Australian Ron Clarke, the world record holder at the time, and Mohammed Gammoudi of Tunisia.

The final seconds of the race were immortalized by Dick Bank, who was working as a spotter with NBC's Bud Palmer. Bank was dismissed a few days after for shouting out over the staid Palmer as Mills sprinted the final 80 yards on the cinder track, the last time that surface was used at the Olympics.

"Look at Mills," Banks shouted. "Look at Mills."

Palmer quickly got the microphone back.

"What a tremendous surprise here. Bill Mills of the United States wins the 10,000 meters. Bill Mills of the United States a tremendous upset wins the 10,000 meters here. This unheralded runner from Kansas..."

Mills remains the only American to win Olympic gold at 10,000 meters. But the medal is barely an asterisk in a life working for Native Americans.

"The gold medal fits in there because I healed a broken soul, but far behind it was winning the gold medal as an athlete," Mills said. "That is so far behind."

He'd rather talk about co-founding "Running Strong for American Indian Youth,"and being honored in 2014 by the Anti-Defamation League for his work "against hate and bigotry." Add to that, President Barack Obama awarding him the Presidential Citizens Medal.

After receiving the award, Mills said he told his wife Pat "that this is proof we're succeeding in our journey." His grand-daughter, Sydney, is now the deputy director of Running Strong, which among other things helps connect remote homes on reservations to running water.

"This is so a young girl can turn on the faucet and take a nice hot bath before she goes to bed, have a quick shower before she goes to school, wash the dishes with running water without having it hauled,"Mills said. "There are still places on the reservation where they are getting water from the creek and they have to boil it. We are solving some of these issues that the poverty pockets of America face."

Mills said he felt instantly at home in Tokyo in 1964, despite being a lieutenant in the U.S. Marine Corps and visiting a country that 19 years earlier had been the enemy.

"In my own mind I was going from the Black Hills of South Dakota," Mills said. "That to us spiritually it's the heart of everything that is. I fly into Tokyo and I remember seeing Mt. Fuji and I was so taken. My immediate thoughts were that the mountain and the sacredness of it must be the heart of everything that is to the Japanese people. I still say today, the Japanese were the greatest Olympic hosts."

A member of the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) tribe, Mills said the Olympic medal ceremony 56 years ago cut deep, a reminder the flag represents a broken promise for many Native Americans.

"I have to be very cautious saying this here in America because of the times today," Mills said. "I stood on the victory stand. They're playing our national anthem. It was beautiful. It was powerful. And I was honored to be a citizen of the United States of America. But with that was a sadness that America does not understand me, and that I do not belong."

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Mills wants activism to be remembered more than gold medal - Minneapolis Star Tribune

MSD investigating ‘white power’ symbol on truck – Citizen Times

Posted By on August 6, 2020

An "OK" symbol magnet, visible just to the right of the tailgate lift handle, was found on a Metropolitan Sewerage District truck July 31. MSD's general manager said the utility is investigating how it got there.(Photo: Photo courtesy of Zee Plotkin)

The Metropolitan Sewerage District of Buncombe County is investigating the placement ofa symbol associated with 'white power" on one of its trucks.

On Aug. 3, MSD General Manager Tom Hartye said the incident was "obviously a prank." MSD, a nonprofit utility, doesnot tolerate such placement of a magnet or sticker on its property.

"At first I thought it was a photo shop deal, but we found the vehicle and the magnet was there, and we immediately removed it," Hartye said via email July 31. "We are currently investigating if it was placed by a member of the public or an employee. If in fact it was an employee, there will be swift disciplinary action."

"It indeed does not belong there, not only on a public vehicle but anywhere," Hartye added.

In the follow-up email Aug. 3, Hartye offered more details.

"The vehicle was a fleet support vehicle that remains in the parking lot multiple users, not used often, especially with COVID," Hartye said. "It was an easily moved magnet. The driver in the picture had no idea it was on the vehicle."

While hisinvestigation yielded more details, it has offered "nothing conclusive" about who placed the magnet on the truck, Hartye said.

The magnet, on the upper right side of an MSD Ford pickup truck's tailgate, depicts a right hand making the OK symbol the forefinger and thumb making a circle, and the other three fingers pointing upward.

More: District attorney tried to put woman in Asheville racist videos in jail day before she died

The Anti-Defamation League notes that in 2017 the "OK" hand gesture "acquired a new and different significance thanks to a hoax by members of the website 4chan to falsely promote the gesture as a hate symbol, claiming that the gesture represented the letters 'wp,'for 'white power.'"

The three outstretched fingers representa "w," while the circled thumb and forefinger, with part of the hand, make a "p." Ironically, the hoax caught on with some on the far right.

"In the case of the 'okay'gesture, the hoax was so successful the symbol became a popular trolling tactic on the part of right-leaning individuals, who would often post photos to social media of themselves posing while making the 'okay'gesture," the ADL states on its website. "Ironically, some white supremacists themselves soon also participated in such trolling tactics, lending an actual credence to those who labeled the trolling gesture as racist in nature."

More: As Asheville makes history on local reparations, experts disagree on whether to 'applaud'

Asheville resident Zee Plotkin said he took the photo of the MSD truck around noon on July 31 on Brevard Road near the Asheville Outlets.

"I posted the photo on the Facebook group, because I was a little infuriated with what I was seeing," Plotkin said, referring to the Asheville Politics page, where the post generated over 100 comments.

MSD handles sewer projects, maintains sewer lines and handleswastewater treatment for Asheville and Buncombe County, but it is an independent agency. Established in 1962 by the state of North Carolina, MSD is a nonprofit, publicly-owned utility.

More: UPDATE: NC woman in viral racist videos dies after being struck by fire dept. truck

Plotkin said if someone placed the magnet on the truck without the employee's knowledge, that's a different issue. But if an MSD employee put it there or condoned its placement, that should result in discipline.

"No need to jump to conclusions, but most certainly this is an issue that should be pursued," Plotkin said.

Hartye said he and several of his staff had to Google the OK symbol's alternate meaning.

"Once we did, it was obviously upsetting," he said.

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MSD investigating 'white power' symbol on truck - Citizen Times


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