Sunday, July 26, 2020

Trump Is 'Poisoning' Case Against Huawei's Meng Wanzhou: Court Docs

Her lawyers say the U.S. president intends to use her as a bargaining chip.

VANCOUVER — New court documents accuse the United States president of “poisoning” the extradition case against a Huawei executive being held in Canada.
An application to B.C. Supreme Court by Meng Wanzhou’s lawyers says misconduct by Donald Trump and interference by other U.S. officials meet the clear standard to stay proceedings for abuse of process.
The documents say Trump has used Meng’s case to further his trade negotiations with China and that he intends to use her as a “bargaining chip” in the dispute, which is unrelated to the charges against her.
“By using Canada’s extradition process to gain a strategic advantage in its dispute with China, the United States has undermined — and is undermining — the integrity of Canada’s judicial proceedings,” the documents say.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS
In this Jan. 21, 2020 file photo, Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou leaves her home to attend a hearing in the British Columbia Supreme Court, in Vancouver. New court documents accuse the United States president of "poisoning" the extradition case against Huawei's CFO to further the American trade agenda.
Trump has linked resolution of the U.S. government’s dealings with Huawei to a potential trade agreement with China. He has said he would consider Huawei’s role in a trade deal at the final stage of negotiations, the court application says.
“This prior conduct shows the reasonableness of (Meng’s) fear that he will intervene in her case, and the merit of her submission that his comments have already poisoned the extradition process.”
As long as Meng is the subject of an extradition process in Canada, “she can continue to be used as a bargaining chip by the U.S.,” the document says.

 Denies charges

Meng is being held on an U.S. extradition request over allegations that she lied about Huawei’s relationship with a telecommunications company in Iran, violating American sanctions.
Both she and Huawei deny the charges.  
Her arrest at Vancouver’s airport in December 2018 has prompted increasing tensions between Canada and China. The arrests and subsequent spying allegations against Canadians Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor in China are widely seen as an attempt to pressure Canada to release Meng.
She is out on bail, living in her Vancouver home, while her legal team makes numerous applications for her freedom.
In May, Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes dismissed the first phase of legal arguments by Meng’s lawyers, who claimed the case should be thrown out because the U.S. allegations against her wouldn’t be a crime in Canada.
The latest application filed with the court says continuing the proceedings “would inevitably undermine respect for, and confidence in, Canada’s judicial process. It would appear to condone and ‘lend a stamp of approval’ to the requesting state’s intended misuse of the Canadian courts.”
The documents say Prime Minister Justin Trudeau aligned Meng’s case with Spavor and Kovrig by saying the United States shouldn’t sign a final trade deal with China until the question of Meng and the detained men has been settled.
“Within this climate, every legal decision that (Meng) makes is improperly influenced by considerations about politics.”
“These proceedings have been poisoned. They can no longer be reasonably regarded as fair, regardless of the undoubted good faith of the court,” the document says.
“Prejudice to the fairness of these proceedings is made out by the president’s repeated assertions that (Meng’s) liberty is effectively a bargaining chip in what he sees as the biggest trade deal ever.”
Meng’s lawyers are expected to make abuse of process arguments and apply for a stay in B.C. Supreme Court next February.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 24, 2020.
Ontario Premier Ford Considers Mandatory COVID-19 Testing For Farm Workers As Cases Surge

Windsor-Essex has the highest rate of COVID in the province.
Shawn Jeffords Canadian Press
JULY 24,2020

TORONTO — The Windsor-Essex area now has the highest rate of COVID-19 cases in Ontario, local health officials said Friday as Premier Doug Ford mulled ordering mandatory testing for farm workers in a bid to contain the spread of the surging virus.

Medical Officer of Health Dr. Wajid Ahmed said new case rates in the southwestern Ontario region passed Toronto and Peel this week with 484 cases per 100,000 people.

Ahmed said the spike in diagnoses in the community and on local farms may be attributable in part to loosened public health restrictions that took effect when the region entered Stage 2 of the provincial economic recovery plan weeks ago.

The cases are “stretching” local hospital capacity in Windsor and Leamington, Ont., he added.

“It is definitely stressful (and) concerning and we’ve been dealing with this for quite some time now,” he said. “My message to the community is ... unless we all work together, unless we all do our part, it has the potential to get worse, even worse than what we’re seeing right now.”

On-farm testing paused

Windsor-Essex reported 53 new cases of COVID-19 on Friday, attributing 43 of them to agri-food workers.

Hundreds of migrant workers in the region have tested positive for the virus over the past few months and two have died.

On Thursday, Ontario’s chief medical officer of health said on-farm testing efforts had recently been “paused” after only 19 of 176 such facilities in the region participated.

That revelation drew an angry rebuke from Ford, who reversed his previous opposition to the idea of mandatory testing and conceded it may be the only way to properly trace and contain the virus.

“Guys, I’m just going to cut to the chase here,” he told farmers during his daily news conference. “If you have migrant workers, get them tested. Bottom line. Full stop. That’s it. We can’t keep playing this cat and mouse game.”
CHRIS YOUNG/THE CANADIAN PRESSOntario Premier Doug Ford speaks at press availability in Brampton, Ontario on Thursday.


Ford said he’s reached the point of considering implementing mandatory tests, adding the government is currently seeking legal advice on the issue.

Ahmed said he will not rule out mandatory testing on farms if he thinks the measure would protect the community.

“In the worst case scenario, if we are in that situation because of the risk, that option will be available for me to use,” he said.
Hospital at capacity

Windsor Regional Hospital, the largest health-care facility in the area, said Friday it expected to reach 100 per cent capacity by day’s end.

It currently has nine patients with confirmed cases of COVID-19, and another 51 patients with suspected cases of the virus.

That has forced it to reduce the number of elective surgeries because of the shortage of bed capacity.

Chief Executive Officer David Musyj said widespread testing is needed in the agri-food sector, likening the need to similar measures implemented in the long-term care sector months ago.

“Some (nursing homes) didn’t want hospitals involved and some put up a little fight,” he said. “It was a matter of the government saying ’Yes, you need to allow these organizations in to help you. ... my point is, let’s replicate that, it worked.”

He is concerned the community still doesn’t know the extent of the COVID-19 infection rates on local farms. Because on-farm testing has stalled, local positive tests are being uncovered by the health unit as it does proactive outreach to farms after a single worker tests positive.

“It’s a limited amount of swabbing that’s taking place,” he said.
The problem isn’t the workers, it’s the employers and the power they wield over the lives of migrant farm workers on a daily basis.Chris Ramsaroop, Justice for Migrant Workers


The Ontario Greenhouse Vegetable Growers, which represents 118 farmers in the region, said that 46 of its members have engaged in testing either on-farm or at one of the assessment centres.

“There were a number of farms booked for on-farm testing when the initiative was paused so we expect uptake once that is available again,” spokeswoman Justine Taylor said.

A spokesman for advocacy group Justice for Migrant Workers says mandatory testing will lead to “criminalization and heightened surveillance” of the workers.

“The problem isn’t the workers, it’s the employers and the power they wield over the lives of migrant farm workers on a daily basis,” Chris Ramsaroop said in a statement. “It’s telling that the province won’t hold the rich and powerful to account but will develop policy tools to infringe on the charter rights of racialized communities.”

Local political leaders in Windsor-Essex have formally requested the provincial government take charge of the farm outbreak response, a request that has so far gone unanswered.

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NDP legislator Taras Natyshak, who represents a riding in Windsor-Essex, said he can’t understand why the province hasn’t responded to the community request.

“If COVID rates are a barometer of leadership, the premier has failed miserably,” he said. “Despite our loudest appeals, the premier has refused to take a co-ordinated approach and to deliver the resources that we know are available through the public service.”

Overall, Ontario reported 195 new cases of COVID-19 provincewide on Friday, as well as three new deaths.

Hamilton and Niagara are among some regions of Ontario that have moved to Stage 3 reopening on Friday.

The easing of measures meant to curb the spread of COVID-19 gives the green light for gyms, theatres and bars to reopen in regions cleared for the next stage of economic recovery.

Ford said that Windsor-Essex, Toronto, and Peel Region will have to wait until Wednesday for news on whether they can proceed to Stage 3.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published on July 24, 2020.

Arrests and clashes follow anti-Netanyahu protests in Israel

Police say they arrested more than a dozen Israelis in country-wide protests that drew thousands of people in a growing and persistent show of force against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his handling of the coronavirus crisis





TEL AVIV, Israel -- Police said Sunday they arrested more than a dozen Israelis in country-wide protests the previous night that drew thousands of people in a growing and persistent show of force against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his handling of the coronavirus crisis.
Thousands of people demonstrated outside Netanyahu's official residence in Jerusalem and hundreds gathered in a seaside park in Tel Aviv, demanding Netanyahu's resignation and slamming his response to the crisis.
For the first time since the wave of protests began weeks ago, hundreds also assembled outside Netanyahu's private home in the upscale coastal town of Caesarea, where heavy security greeted them. Demonstrators across bridges and intersections waved black flags, the symbol of one of the movements behind the protests that is demanding Netanyahu's ouster.
The protests are emerging as among the biggest challenges to Netanyahu's lengthy rule since demonstrations over the cost of living in 2011 drew hundreds of thousands to the streets. They come following what critics say is Netanyahu's fumbling of the coronavirus response and in the shadow of Netanyahu's corruption trial, which resumed earlier this month.
At a press conference last week that coincided with protests, Netanyahu addressed the surging protests, warning demonstrators: “Do not drag the country into anarchy, violence, vandalism.”
Critics say police have been heavy-handed in trying to clear out the protests, using water cannons to drive them out and in some cases causing injury. Police say that protesters who ignore calls to disperse are removed to restore order.
Police fired water cannons on protesters at the Jerusalem protest and said 12 people were arrested there for being involved in disturbances. Two other people were arrested in separate locations for attacking protesters with pepper spray and a knife.
Israel appeared to have contained its first wave of coronavirus infections in the spring, with Netanyahu boasting that Israel was among the most successful countries in the world in its response with the virus. But what critics say was a hasty and ill thought out reopening sent new cases soaring, with Israel now claiming one of the world's highest infection rates, adjusted for population. The government, formed with the intention of focusing on combating the virus, has moved slowly and haltingly to contain the new outburst.
Israel has since reimposed some restrictions after an extended lockdown in the spring paralyzed its economy. Unemployment has since jumped to more than 20%, from around 3.9% before the outbreak, and anger has grown over the government's financial assistance plans, which have been chided for providing those in need with a pittance or nothing at all.
The crisis has brought public confidence in Netanyahu and his government to a nadir, at a time when the Israeli leader could use the support. A court decided earlier this month that Netanyahu's corruption trial will resume in January with three hearings a week, a pace that will keep his legal woes firmly in the public consciousness and raise questions about his ability to simultaneously govern and fend off the accusations against him.
Netanyahu is charged with fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes in a series of scandals involving billionaire associates and media moguls. He denies wrongdoing and accuses the media, judiciary and law enforcement agencies of a conspiracy to topple him against the will of the people.
Trump's Federal Squads Steal Leaf Blower Idea From Portland Protest Dads

Protesters have been using garden tools to blast tear gas back at federal squads.


By Mary Papenfuss, HuffPost US
JULY 26, 2020

The vicious military-style federal squads sent by the Trump administration to protect U.S. buildings from graffiti were a bit slow on the uptake, but have now stolen a clever idea from protesters in Portland, Oregon: leaf blowers to redirect tear gas.

The hand-held machines were apparently first wielded earlier this week by protesters calling themselves Portland dads and “Fathers Against Fascism” (who joined the “Wall of Moms”) to blast tear gas back at federal forces. Other protesters have since adopted the idea. The leaf blowers serve as a kind of tech jiu-jitsu that employs an innocuous clean-up tool to redirect toxins back at those who fired them.

Portland dads 💕👏 pic.twitter.com/chZcu8BtrJ— Hermits United ☂️ (@HermitsUnited2) July 22, 2020

Now the federal squads have their own blowers, according to The Associated Press. Federal officers in camo and gas masks have also been photographed with leaf blowers. It’s not clear whether the appliances were purchased by the feds — or were confiscated from protesters.

The squads, now firing tear gas and leaf blowers, are adding to the “fog” of war as Portland’s downtown has been turned into a battle zone.

Federal officers throw tear gas into crowd, the crowd usss leaf blowers to push tear gas back, so most of the gas ends up in the courthouse pic.twitter.com/9x32vvX84p— Sergio Olmos (@MrOlmos) July 25, 2020

DHS also carrying leaf blowers now pic.twitter.com/eZw35SgOJG— Sergio Olmos (@MrOlmos) July 25, 2020

Far from quelling disruption in the city, the federal forces are exacerbating it and drawing new throngs of protesters outraged by the city’s occupying army, according to officials. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown has characterized the deployments as “political theater” intended to provoke violence in a desperate bid by Donald Trump to win reelection with a crackdown.

Several videos posted on Twitter have shown federal squads attacking protesters for no apparent reason: striking them, jumping on them, blasting them in the face with gas.



Guy dancing with flowers in front of the DHSChadArmy kidnappedpic.twitter.com/HkmOJ0itwW— ALT-immigration 🛂 (@ALT_uscis) July 25, 2020



Portland protester hit in head by munition fired by federal officer recovering but still suffering from brain injury https://t.co/rhd7bsg44Wpic.twitter.com/NMRfFc3fgO— The Oregonian (@Oregonian) July 25, 2020

Police and the president's militarized federal agents are brutally attacking volunteer street medics in Portland.

We're suing. pic.twitter.com/abvG1jsNfM— ACLU (@ACLU) July 25, 2020

Thirty local officials from both political parties have demanded the uninvited squads leave the city. “We condemn the actions undertaken by the officers — shooting unarmed protestors in the face, breaking the bones of protesting veterans, tear gassing parents,” said a letter they sent Friday to Trump and acting secretary of the Department of Homeland SecurityChad Wolf. “We call on you both to put an end to this at once.”

They added: “We also want to declare to the rest of the country that Portland is not a ‘city under siege.’ There are nightly protests in our downtown core – something with which we are quite familiar. These protests are a foundational part of our democracy and are protected by the U.S. Constitution. Federal interference only inflames more animosity from those who have peaceably assembled.”

The federal squads were sent under the cover of protecting federal statues and monuments from damage and graffiti by protesters. Wolf posted a long list of his critical concerns over “graffiti” by what he calls “violent anarchists” on the DHS web site.
SCREEN SHOT/DHS WEBSITE
chad wolf on what 'violent anarchists' are up to in portland

Department of Justice Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz has launched an investigation into use-of-force incidents against Portland protesters by federal agents.
Why Portland? The city's history of protest takes an exceptional turn
By Jason Kravarik and Sara Sidner, CNN
Updated  Sun July 26, 2020

(CNN)When Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler inhaled a face full of tear gas after addressing protesters on Wednesday, something atypical happened in the city's long history of protest: Its mayor went from years of managing protestors and conflict in the city to becoming a protester himself.
Wheeler's target was federal law enforcement's presence in the city, sent to curtail a months-long movement -- sparked by George Floyd's killing -- that had encroached on a federal courthouse in downtown Portland.

Policing tactics under fire as video shows medics in Portland getting shoved to the ground
Speaking to a crowd, which occasionally drowned him out, Wheeler called it an "unconstitutional occupation" and derided federal officer tactics as "abhorrent." He later told CNN: "They're not appropriately trained, and we're demanding that they leave."
Those officers made 18 arrests last week on charges ranging from assaulting a federal officer to arson, the US Attorney's Office said. Video has emerged of the federal officers yanking people off streets and placing them in unmarked vehicles. Those kinds of tactics, the mayor says, are escalating tension in the city.


Wheeler's contempt for the way federal law enforcement is acting exemplifies Portland's history of dissent -- and its impact on national politics.
"Our informal motto is Keep Portland Weird, so we like people who aren't sort of mainstream folks," said Randy Blazak, a former professor at Portland State University. "And that has allowed a lot of room on the margins, including the political margins."

Trump's militarized policing of Portland has no place in the US
But he says the "Portlandia" image -- of 1990s slackers driven by liberal ingenuity -- isn't entirely true to the city's history.
"We have communists and anarchists and we also have neo-Nazis and fascists," said Blazak, who also chairs the Oregon Coalition Against Hate Crimes. He says the region is also home to several militia and anti-government groups.
That petri dish of extremes has made Portland a hotbed for protest. Its predominantly White population, nearly 80%, also makes it attractive to White supremacists who see the city as fertile ground for an all-White ethnostate.
"It starts with the Oregon trail, when the land that was given was to White settlers only," Blazak said. "It was a state that would remind us of being in the deep South except it was in the Pacific Northwest."
When far-right groups gather in Portland it brings out the city's prolific anti-fascist movement, commonly referred to as Antifa. The ideologies of both sides were on display during a high-profile conflict last August, when the far-right group Proud Boys came to Portland and were met by a wall of counter protesters.


Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler stands at a fence guarding a federal courthouse as tear gas drifts by in Portland, July 23, 2020.
"Letting them come and protest is actually worse (than ignoring them)," an Antifa protester told CNN during a live interview last August. "They will get violence by any means necessary. If they get violent against Antifa, at least these are people who are prepared."
But the Proud Boys, a group that calls themselves "Western Chauvinists," say they come to Portland to take a stand against leftist groups in the city.
"As long as Ted Wheeler keeps pandering to Antifa and not calling them out by name we're going to keep coming out here, we're going to keep wasting his resources," Proud Boys chairman Enrique Tarrio told CNN.
Though protesters had a few skirmishes, tension did not explode into major violence like it did just a few months before. That's when a bar brawl took Portland's protest movement from the streets to the courts.

A seminal case
Justin Allen thrives in Portland's supercharged world of political protest, which kindles on social media and sometimes erupts on the streets. May 1, 2019 was one of those days.
His foray into the protest scene began after a crime that shocked Portland and reminded it of the city's history of radicalism.
In 2017 a man who had been spotted at far-right rallies in Portland boarded a light rail train and allegedly berated two Black teenagers -- one wearing a traditional Muslim hijab. Three other passengers stepped in to help the teens but were stabbed. Taliesin Myrrddin Namkai-Meche, 23, and Ricky Best, 53, later died. A third person, Micah Fletcher, survived.
"That's what liberalism gets you," the suspect, Jeremy Christian, allegedly said in a police car, according to an affidavit. He was convicted of murder in February.
That case would bring Allen, 34, to tears at a memorial a few days after the murders. He was convinced he would have stepped in to help the girls, and the murders became a turning point in his life, he says.


Justin Allen infiltrated a group of far-right protestors.
For about a year Allen had picked up a camera and joined a protest movement. But instead of joining liberals in street demonstrations, he infiltrated a group of far-right protestors. His exposé is now evidence in a criminal case related to a brawl that erupted at Portland's now-closed Cider Riot bar.
Allen was recording with the far-right Patriot Prayer group as they discussed confronting left wing demonstrators. Dozens of people were taunting and provoking each other before punches were thrown and the brawl spilled into the streets.
"I had seen a woman get knocked unconscious with a steel baton striking her in the back of the neck," Allen said.
Allen's footage shows what happened before the riot, when Patriot Prayer members gathered blocks away, talking about carrying weapons and using pepper spray.
"You're a featherweight," a man tells another in the video, encouraging the group to wait for reinforcements. "You going to fight a heavyweight? Or are you going to wait to be a heavyweight?"
Allen offered his video to authorities, claiming it proved the riot was premeditated. Five followers of Patriot Prayer and its founder, Joey Gibson, were indicted on riot charges. One of the defendants faces an assault charge for allegedly striking a woman with a baton, according to the original complaint from the prosecutor's office.
Allen was named as a witness in court papers. He says he is unnerved by some of the threats he has received on social media. But he is willing to speak out as he prepares to testify at the upcoming trial.
"We need to use official power," he said. "It's all well and good to have a short-term solution of just keeping specific violent fascists from being violent in the moment... (but) if you have evidence of the crime, give that sh*t to the cops."


Joey Gibson of Patriot Prayer, a far-right group, speaks to demonstrators in Vancouver, Washington, May 16, 2020.
Gibson denies he committed any crime. He tells CNN he accepted an invitation from others who were planning to go to the Cider Riot but only planned to livestream Antifa followers.
"I just want people to see... you guys have a bar in your neighborhood where there's 50 people with weapons and masks drinking beer outside," Gibson said.
He maintains that except for shoving a woman who got too close to him, he did not engage in violence. He only appears in Allen's video at the bar, not during the group's preparation.
One of Gibson's attorneys, James Buchal, argues that Gibson can't legally be treated as someone who wields power over the group.
"This is obviously a spontaneous, disorganized mess, and all he does is stand in front getting sprayed," Buchal said. "And occasionally (saying) 'calm down,' you know, 'don't throw stuff.' But he's not in control of these people."

'A nation poised for outrage'
In an interview with CNN last year, Mayor Wheeler said the city hosts 200 demonstrations a year, with only "a very small percentage" resulting in violence and arrests. He insists there is a 21st century reason the city has the reputation it does.

Trump is calling protesters who disagree with him terrorists
"We're a nation poised for outrage, where the most extreme voices get the most attention on social media," Wheeler said. "They get the most coverage in the news. And frankly people rise to the top of certain movements by being the angriest and the most outrageous."
George Floyd's killing in Minneapolis ignited the latest round of protests in Portland. And while protests in Minneapolis died down weeks ago amid calls for peace from Floyd's family, they have continued to rage in Portland.
On Tuesday Wheeler told protesters during a CNN interview that "you've been heard" and "it's time to end it." Protesters returned the next day and Wheeler picked up a bullhorn himself, venting his own outrage at the federal government.
"This is a use of police force, federal police force, for political ends," he said. "That is not an acceptable solution anywhere in America."
Americans With Disabilities Act Turns 30

Years ago, discrimination people with disabilities started right at birth.

By Julie Taboh VOA
July 26, 2020 

That was the case with Danny Woodburn, an actor, comedian and activist who shared his story with VOA via Zoom.


Danny Woodburn is an actor, comedian and activist who is a passion advocate for people with disabilities.

“When I was born, a doctor came to my mom and explained to her my diagnosis in this way: ‘Your son is a midget like you see in the circus,’ Woodburn explained. “So, in that one sentence that he said to my mother, he's basically laid out my entire future.”



One family’s story

The family had been through a similar experience two years earlier, when Woodburn’s brother Steven was born with Down syndrome.

“The doctor came in and said to my mother, ‘your son will be institutionalized his entire life.’ So again, they laid out what his life would be without any sort of understanding of Down syndrome at the time.”

Discrimination against people with disabilities was not only was rampant then, but many were flat out rejected by society.

“What did we do with the disabled people with autism or Down syndrome?” Woodburn noted. “We locked them away; we hid them from the community.”

But luckily, times have changed.

Woodburn, who was officially diagnosed with dwarfism at the age of eight, went on to have a successful acting career, appearing in more than 30 films and making more than 150 television appearances, including the popular TV show Seinfeld.

ADA anniversary

His success reflects the impact of the ADA — the Americans with Disabilities Act, which offers protection against discrimination to the roughly one in four adults in the United States who have a disability.

Karen Goss is co-director of the Mid-Atlantic ADA Center, an organization dedicated to improving the lives of individuals through meaningful work and community inclusion.

Goss points out that the ADA is a civil rights law.

“As we know, our country has a rich history of civil rights, “she told VOA via Zoom. “But individuals with disabilities were not part of that protection and it became evident that they were not being included in ways that other previously marginalized groups were.”
President George H. W. Bush signs the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 into law. Pictured (left to right): Evan Kemp, Rev Harold Wilke, Pres. Bush, Sandra Parrino, Justin Dart. July 26, 1990.

Signed into law by President George H.W. Bush on July 26, 1990, the ADA provided protection against discrimination to millions of Americans in school, on the job, and in all public and private places. By doing so, it improved access and quality of life for millions.

“I think one of the most important things that we look at with the Americans with Disabilities Act is its opportunity to level the playing field,” Goss said.

On the job

But in the area of employment for people with disabilities, Goss acknowledges that the number remains low. In 2019, less than 20% of disabled adults had jobs, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

It’s one reason why more advocacy is needed, says Woodburn.

“I feel like the real change that has occurred with me and the experience has been through the advocacy that I've been involved in,” he said. “And part of my advocacy with my own industry has been to change the landscape of employment of actors with disability, for example, because the belief system is that for kids if you can't see it, you can't be it.”

Besides improving lives, many of the law’s provisions have benefited those without disabilities.

Ramps and curb cuts, designed to accommodate wheelchairs, for example, help others.

“After those were put in place, people started to see more and more mothers walking their babies in strollers, and delivery persons using those.”

Bicyclists, seniors with walkers, and anyone with wheels needing a smooth path to roll over also are appreciative of these advancements.

And text messaging, another modern convenience, was borne out of technology for the hearing impaired, Woodburn says.

“We owe that to the deaf community and their need to have that access.”

As the world became more accessible, Woodburn says, society came to see more people with disabilities, which helped destigmatize them.

His message to people with disabilities?

“I say, ‘You know, get out! Get out in the world, make yourself known, meet people, be on the street. I don't care that you don't communicate as well as others or you don't move as well as others.’”

Advocacy

As the ADA celebrates 30 years of advancing the lives of millions of Americans, Woodburn says there’s still plenty of room for improvement…

“We have to be included, every step of the way, and we're just not right now. So, we have rhetoric that comes out about what is diversity, what is inclusion, and 95% of the time it doesn't include people with disabilities.”

His hope, he says, is that “anyone that has a diversity or inclusion discussion — either as an advocate or as a corporate leader — that they always include disability, despite how uncomfortable it might make them feel.”
FILE - In this June 25, 2020, photo, two young children hold signs through the car window that make reference to the 2020 US Census as they wait in the car with their family at an outreach event in Dallas, Texas.
President Donald Trump’s bid to exclude undocumented immigrants from a census tabulation used to determine how many U.S. representatives are apportioned to each state is unworkable and unconstitutional, according to civil rights groups and several American cities and counties suing the administration.
“It can’t be done,” Sarah Brannon, managing attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union’s Voting Rights Project, told VOA, adding that the citizenship determination Trump is mandating would be hard to ascertain and “not very reliable.”
Another civil liberties group, Common Cause, filed a lawsuit Thursday challenging Trump’s directive, joined by cities in New Jersey and Georgia. Later in the day, Arlington County, Virginia, said it was joining the suit.
“The Constitution requires an accurate count of our population every 10 years,” Arlington County Board Chair Libby Garvey said in a statement. “We must have an accurate count of everyone living in Arlington and refuse to allow this unlawful effort to scare people and suppress the census count of our immigrant community.”
Others are applauding the executive order. Alabama’s Attorney General Steve Marshall called it a “victory” for the state.
“When the states’ congressional seats and Electoral College votes are divided up, representation should be based on those people who reside in their states and this country lawfully,” Marshall said.
The Supreme Court last year blocked the Trump administration from including a citizenship question on the 2020 census.
In an executive order issued earlier this week, Trump directed Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, who oversees the U.S. Census Bureau, to present data as to the number of undocumented people counted by the census. The administration would then exclude the undocumented from each state’s census count for the purpose of determining whether a state loses, gains or retains members in the House of Representatives, a process that occurs every 10 years.
The executive order reads: “For the purpose of the reapportionment of Representatives following the 2020 census, it is the policy of the United States to exclude from the apportionment base aliens who are not in a lawful immigration status under the Immigration and Nationality Act.”
The U.S. Constitution makes no mention of citizenship in relation to the census or congressional apportionment, a point underscored by law professor Ilya Somin, who teaches at George Mason University in Virginia.
“Section 2 of the 14th amendment specifically says that representatives shall be apportioned among the several states according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each state,” Somin, a self-described libertarian, told VOA. “I think the overwhelming likelihood is the courts will rule against [Trump’s directive] because it is blatantly unconstitutional.”
Population subset not counted
On Tuesday, the Trump administration argued the Constitution “does not specifically define which persons must be included for the purposes of apportionment and requires only that representatives be apportioned according to what has long been understood to mean the ‘inhabitants’ of each state.”
But Howard University Constitutional Law Professor Steven Jamar told VOA the argument the administration is using deals with a subset of people – such as tourists and business travelers – who, though they might be counted in the census, are not counted for apportionment purposes.
“There are some people who are not within the state on the date of the census. They are traveling or they're out of the country. … There are some people who are just tourists visiting the state from somewhere else. And those people have historically not been counted for apportionment purposes. … they’re generally not even counted in the census because they aren't resident in the state. But an immigrant, whether they're documented or not, is residing in the state,” Jamar said.
Trump, however, vowed to “collect all of the information we need to conduct an accurate census and to make responsible decisions about public policy, voting rights, and representation in Congress.”
Last year the Supreme Court blocked an attempt by the Trump administration to add a citizenship question for the first time in 60 years.
“It's not about who can vote. It’s not about citizenship. It's about whole persons residing in the state. So, the question is really just ‘Who's living there?’” Jamar said.
Conservatives agree with administration
The Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank based in Washington, agrees with the administration’s directive, adding that Trump acted “firmly within his statutory authority to determine who are the ‘inhabitants’ of a state for purposes of apportionment.”
“The administration must now work diligently to collect and make available the data necessary to support and implement this substantial change, and hopefully this change can be implemented swiftly,” according to a statement.
In 2018, the state of Alabama filed litigation against the U.S. Census Bureau and argued the current system of apportioning congressional seats gives an unfair electoral advantage to states with more undocumented immigrants and that Alabamians would likely lose a congressional seat and an Electoral College vote if undocumented immigrants were counted. The lawsuit is currently pending before a federal court.
The Pew Research Center in its latest report showed that if unauthorized immigrants were excluded from the apportionment count, California would lose two seats instead of one, Florida would gain one instead of two, and Texas would gain two instead of three. Alabama, Minnesota and Ohio would keep a seat that they would have lost if apportionment were based only on total population change.
The report, released Friday, is based on projections of Census Bureau 2019 population estimates.
“In addition to these states, 11 more would gain or lose seats based on population change alone, no matter whether unauthorized immigrants are included or excluded," according to the analysis.
Gathering immigration data
The administration has not disclosed how it would identify undocumented immigrants. The questions in the census questionnaire does not include or require respondents to disclose their immigration status or citizenship status.
Terri Ann Lowenthal, a census consultant who once served as the staff director of the former House oversight subcommittee for the census, said all the data available on the undocumented immigrant population are estimates.
“We have some sense, right, we do have states that provide benefits to undocumented persons and so they have some administrative data, which give us some sense of the size of the population. But again, having said that, the apportionment formula for seats in Congress is an extraordinarily complex mathematical formula, I always say, that about five mathematicians in the country can explain,” Lowenthal said.
She is more concerned about the heightened fear the directive creates in immigrant communities.
“I'm concerned that this fear will affect participation in the rest of the census. The census still has to count more than 35 percent of households in this country, in the remaining field operation,” Lowenthal said.
This week, the Census Bureau started to visit households that have yet to respond. The bureau has also reported that so far 62 percent of U.S. households had completed their census forms.
The first results were due December 31 but because of the coronavirus outbreak, the Census Bureau has delayed fieldwork, and some of these dates have changed. The agency has also asked Congress to extend the legal deadline to publish data.
Stacey Abrams, a Georgia Democratic politician and voting rights activist, told VOA that people on both sides of the aisle need to worry about this directive because when the population is not accurately counted, everyone suffers. In 2019, Abrams launched a nonprofit to ensure that “hard-to-count” populations are recorded during the 2020 census.
Abrams emphasized the lack of legality to gather immigration status data.
“The census cannot inquire about the citizenship of any person. It's not on the form. They can't ask it out loud. And if you get that question, close the door and call the Census Bureau,” she said. 

RIP 

Nightmare On Elm Street Actor John Saxon Dies At 83 

Enter the Dragon star leaves behind vast body of work.


New Line

John Saxon, the rugged and intense-eyed actor who rose to iconic status for his roles in Enter the Dragon and A Nightmare on Elm Street, has died of pneumonia in his home in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, according to his wife Gloria. He was 83 years old.
Born Carmine Orrico in Brooklyn, New York, he was discovered at age 17 by famed talent agent Henry Willson and rechristened John Saxon. His breakthrough came in 1956, when his starring roles in the film noir The Unguarded Moment and the musical Rock, Pretty Baby made him a teen idol and brought in some 3000 fan letters a week. At the 1958 Golden Globes, he won Most Promising Newcomer - Male.
For the next three decades Saxon would appear in dozens of films and television series as both a charismatic leading man and reliable supporting player. His turn as an unstable Mexican bandito opposite Marlon Brando in the 1966 Western The Appaloosa brought him a second Golden Globe nomination, and he played Dr. Theodore Stuart on the NBC drama The Bold Ones: The New Doctors for three seasons. During this time he also began appearing in European films, starring in Mario Bava's seminal giallo horror The Girl Who Knew Too Much (released stateside as Evil Eye), and several poliziotteschi (crime) films.

Enter The Dragon John Saxon
Warner Bros.

One of his most well-remembered parts would come in 1973, when he starred opposite martial arts icon Bruce Lee in Enter the Dragon. Saxon, who was practiced in judo and Shotokan karate, played sleazy American gambler Roper, on the run from loan sharks and participating in a martial arts tournament with Lee and fellow martial artist Jim Kelly. Saxon was meant to die in the film's second act, but his agent insisted that he live through the end and had the script rewritten to accommodate the change.
Though no stranger to horror films, Saxon would become forever etched in the minds of horror fans when he starred as Lt. Donald Thompson, father of Heather Langenkamp's Nancy Thompson, in Wes Craven's iconic 1984 supernatural slasher A Nightmare on Elm Street. As a well-meaning but overbearing and ultimately-useless police officer, Saxon came to define the impotent authority figure that would be a central part of the series and the horror genre as a whole. He would later reprise his role in the 1987 sequel Dream Warriors, and play himself in the 1994 metasequel New Nightmare.

John Saxon Nightmare On Elm Street
New Line

Saxon continued acting well into his seventies. His last credited role was in the 2017 indie film The Extra, and he's still listed as part of Bring Me the Head of Lance Henriksen, which is in post-production. At the time of his death, he had appeared in 200 film and television projects over 60 years. He was married three times, to screenwriter Mary Ann Murphy, airline attendant turned actress Elizabeth Saxon and, since 2008, cosmetician Gloria Martel. He is survived by his sons, Antonio and Lance; grandson Mitchell; great-grandson John; and sister Dolores.
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LAST WEEK
Thousands of US workers walk out in 'Strike for Black Lives'
21 July 2020 - BY AFP

The Strike For Black Lives rally, which brought together labour unions, fast food restaurant workers and racial and social justice groups and a car caravan in support of Black Lives Matter, is taking place in numerous cities across America.
Image: Frederic J. BROWN / AFP

Thousands of US workers walked out of their jobs across the country Monday for a strike in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement and other minority groups which suffer racism.

The "Strike for Black Lives" saw employees from a broad range of industries briefly walk off their jobs in a call to end "systemic racism."

US media reported that tens of thousands of people in more than 200 cities across the country participated in the strike.
Although organizers did not have exact figures on how many people took part, they said around 1,500 janitors demonstrated in San Francisco, and nearly 6,000 nurses from 85 different nursing homes in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut also went on strike, according to The Washington Post.

In New York, some 100 people marched outside the Trump International Hotel to demand the adoption of the HEROES Act, legislation that would provide financial aid to households struggling during the coronavirus pandemic.

The bill was passed in May by the Democrat-majority House of Representatives but has since been blocked by the Senate, which is controlled by Republicans.

Among the New Yorkers who demonstrated in sweltering heat were nurses, doormen and cleaners -- workers who were considered essential during the pandemic and turned up for their jobs even when it put them at risk of infection.

African Americans and Hispanics died in disproportionately high numbers in New York City's coronavirus epidemic, which killed more than 22,000 residents.

"We are the ones who have kept the economy going and have kept everybody safe and in NY specially have kept the numbers down. We should be respected and compensated for that," said 42-year-old doorman Jordan Weiss.

The Service Employees International Union said protests would take place in more than two dozen cities including Boston, Los Angeles and Chicago.