B.B. "The King"

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I can’t say anything more than others have about B.B. King. Except perhaps that my mother loved her “Blues Boy” more than any other musician in the world. They were both from Mississippi, for one thing. But there was a whole lot more to it than that.

So, I grew up hearing his guitar, Lucille, wail. And B.B. wailing with her. And I realized even as a child that he was in a class by himself. There were dozens of celebrated blues men and women out there, and we had a stack of albums and 45s by all of them.

But B.B. was somewhere above and beyond them all. His sound was somehow purer and more powerful than any other. It came from somewhere others couldn’t go. Can’t even be described, B.B.’s “sound.” Not accurately.

Actor/musician Hugh Laurie tweeted this today:

“Play a BB King song today & remember him! RIP Mr King & thanks for all the Great Music!!”

So I will post a song for you, from Indianola Missisippi Seeds, the album I loved most. One of the links takes you to the whole album via YouTube. If you like the one song, please go listen to–and maybe buy–the whole thing.

It was King’s favorite, too. And it sold better, I’m sure, than any of his previous albums. Perhaps better than all the others.

The song I’ve chosen, “You’re Still My Woman,” is the one that stopped me in my tracks the day my mother first played that album. I was a rock and roll girl, so I knew many of my favorite British bands had been influenced by her blues. But I wasn’t “into” her blues. Until that very day, when this achingly beautiful song filled me with a sweet sorrow that hinted at life experiences still ‘way over the horizon for me at the time.

I just hoped I would be able to make something wonderful of them, the way B.B. had. Just…listen. And remember “B.B. the King.”

Photo credit: By Tom Beetz [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

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Lessons From a Great Community Organizer

The death last month of Edward Chambers, one of the world’s great community organizers, serves as a strong reminder of how the power of the grass-roots can be mobilized to make a huge difference in the lives of the neediest. He was a master of building groups that could last for the long haul, a skill not enough activists possess.

For 37 years, Mr. Chambers served as the national director of the Industrial Areas Foundation, a network of community-based organizations that had been founded by his mentor Saul Alinsky, the iconic champion of “power organizing.”

Mr. Alinsky came on the scene in the early 1940s, when working-class and low-income neighborhoods were being besieged by corporations, elite interests and unfriendly local governments that wanted to destroy their economies and way of life. He argued that community people could overcome this attack on their well-being only if they organized strong local organizations that could gain power and influence in their own neighborhoods. In his celebrated book, Reveille for Radicals, he outlined a grass-roots strategy to achieve this goal.

Mr. Chambers, a tough pragmatist, brought discipline and a penchant for rigorous training to the growing number of groups that joined together to put Mr. Alinsky’s ideas into action. At its height, the network numbered over 50 groups, some clustered in states like California and Texas, where their joint efforts brought about major changes in housing, public education, and working conditions.

Mr. Alinsky had trouble building groups that were solid enough to keep operating for a long time, but Mr. Chambers believed that organizing efforts would never succeed unless they were buttressed and supported by enduring organizations.

To ensure more permanent success, he put a lot of effort into recruiting outstanding organizers, including some of America’s first female community organizers. It was well known to observers that Industrial Areas Foundation organizers were the most talented and substantial organizers in the country. In boxing parlance, they were pound for pound the best in the business.

Mr. Chambers was one of the first grass-roots leaders who realized that reliable organizers had to have stability in their lives. It was therefore not surprising that he made sure his staff was paid much more than other organizers and gave them generous benefits and ample vacation time. His compensation policies set a standard that other organizing networks would soon follow. He continually stressed that organizing was not a haphazard calling but a professional career, one that was as worthy as working as a doctor, civil servant, or politician.

Under his guidance, members of the Industrial Area Foundation network started ventures that were not strictly organizing projects. Some groups began to sponsor education services and government reform efforts. A group called East Brooklyn Congregations began to develop affordable housing. Its owner-occupied houses were called Nehemiah Homes; some, 3,800 Nehemiah houses have now been built, one of the outstanding achievements of his stewardship of the network Mr. Alinsky founded.

The son of a farmworker who emigrated to the U.S. from Ireland, Mr. Chambers flirted with the Catholic Church in his early days, studied for the priesthood but left the seminary over differences with church leaders, and became a volunteer in Dorothy Day’s Catholic Worker movement. His early organizing efforts led to his fervent belief that power was the essential ingredient in social change. His book, Roots for Radicals: Organizing for Power, Action and Justice, reflects that philosophy.

As Ernesto Cortes, who now serves with Mike Gecan as co-national director of the Industrial Areas Foundation, told The New Yorker, “Ed had a spiritedness … and a lot of straight talk about power. He said power is the most important thing to think about or else you’re going to accomplish nothing.” He added, ” Ed taught us that people know how to lose. Our job is to teach them how to win.”

Mr. Chambers was a huge bear of a man, somebody you didn’t want to meet in a dark alley. His imposing physical presence added to his reputation as a tough and sometimes mean opponent, yet he was respected by his colleagues who did not mind his strong and, at times, gruff leadership.

Beneath that rough exterior, lay a warm, gentle man with a rollicking sense of humor. A few years ago, several of us who had worked for the Barrow Cadbury Trust, one of England’s finest foundations, were at a small meeting in Ireland to honor Cadbury’s outstanding executive director, Eric Adams, who was retiring from the foundation. Among us was Ed Chambers, whose organizing work in England, was sponsored by Cadbury.

Far from being the morose, tough organizer many of us had known, Ed delighted us with hours of storytelling, humorous anecdotes, warm camaraderie, and personal reflections. When he turned to the sad lives that had been lost in his fights for justice and empowerment, he became teary-eyed and downcast. He was grieving for those he and his colleagues had not been able to save.

His departure from the helm of the Industrial Areas Foundation left a big hole in the organization, which has now decentralized its governance. Ed held it together for many years with toughness and brilliance. His leadership is being missed by all of us. There are no other Ed Chamberses to fill the vacuum he left.

Pablo Eisenberg, a regular Chronicle of Philanthropy contributor, is a senior fellow at the Center for Public and Nonprofit Leadership at the McCourt School of Public Policy at Georgetown University. His email address is mailto:pseisenberg@verizon.net..

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Egypt bans ultras in bid to break anti-government protests

By James M. Dorsey

An Egyptian court has banned militant soccer fan groups or ultras as terrorist organizations in a bid to break the backbone of anti-government protests.

The ruling at the request of Mortada Mansour, the controversial, larger than life president of Cairo’s storied Al Zamalek SC who alleged that his club’s ultras, the Ultras White Knights (UWK), tried to assassinate him, pushes further underground groups that often offer despairing youth a rare opportunity to vent their pent-up anger and frustration peacefully.

Ultras have for the past eight years been at the core of anti-government protest in Egypt. They have been the drivers of student protests in the last two years against the regime of Abdel Fattah Al Sisi, the general-turned-president who in 2013 toppled Mohammed Morsi, Egypt’s first and only democratically elected president.

Mr. Morsi was sentenced to death on Saturday, the same day that the ultras were banned, on charges of conspiring with foreign militants to break out of prison during Egypt’s uprising four years ago.

Anti-Sisi protests in universities have largely been suppressed with security forces taking control of campuses, but ultras still play a key role in flash demonstrations on Friday’s in popular neighbourhoods of Egyptian cities.

Thousands of fans and students have been arrested and large numbers have been expelled from universities. Anas El-Mahdy, a 21-year old second year Cairo University physical therapy student, died on Saturday from injuries sustained in April during campus clashes between students and security forces.

Mr. Mortada prides himself on having asked security forces in February to intervene to prevent fans from entering a Cairo stadium without tickets. He charged that UWK had been paid to provoke a confrontation with security forces. Twenty fans were killed in the incident in which security forces used tear gas and birdshot against fans who had been cornered in a cul-de-sac.

In response to a journalist’s question about how the fans had died, Mr. Mortada responded: “Ask the Muslim Brotherhood,” the group of Mr. Morsi that has been banned as a terrorist organization and brutally repressed by Mr. Sisi. The court most probably accepted Mr. Mortada’s assertion that ultras are terrorists on the grounds that many of the protesters against the Sisi regime define themselves as Islamists, some of whom are members of the Brotherhood.

Sixteen ultras and alleged members of the Muslim Brotherhood were recently sentenced to prison terms in connection with the incident at Cairo’s Air Defence Stadium.

Security forces further arrested in March 52 students and UWK members who participated in a protest at Fayoum University. Twenty one of those arrested were handed over to the prosecution on charges of belonging to a terrorist organization and violating Egypt’s draconic anti-protest law. Police separately arrested UWK leader Said Moshagheb on charges of having been part of the UWK group that stormed Zamalek’s offices and tried to assassinate Mr. Mansour. The UWK has confirmed the storming but repeatedly denied having attempted to kill Mr. Mansour.

Linking the ultras with their tentacles in the student movement is rooted in the history of a movement that since the crackdown on the Brotherhood by Gamal Abdel Nasser, the visionary Egyptian leader who toppled the Egyptian monarchy in 1952 and became a symbol of Arab nationalism, was the Brotherhood’s catalyst for adaptation.

“The Muslim Brotherhood of the early 1970s was a shell of its former self. Many of the surviving activists, numbering barely one hundred members, were not even certain that they wanted to resurrect the organization’s mission upon their release from prison. The real story of this era revolves around a vibrant youth movement based in Egypt’s colleges and universities. Even as they rebelled against the tenets of Nasserism, the youth of this period were the products of its socioeconomic policies, from increased urbanization to greater access to education. They found in their Islamic identity a response to the post-1967 (Middle East war) crisis, even as they adopted the modes of popular contention that had emerged under Nasser. The student movement was notable for the fluidity it displayed on the ideological level and the dynamism it exhibited on the organizational front,” said historian Abdullah Al-Arian, author of a book on Islamic activism in Egypt in the 1970s, in an interview with Jadaliyya.

Ultras, who under ousted President Hosni Mubarak’s grew to be one of Egypt’s three largest social movements became in the last four years of the Mubarak regime highly politicized, well-organized, and street battle-hardened groups because they were the only ones to physically resist the president’s brutal security forces in regular clashes in stadia.

They were the shock troops of the popular revolt that toppled Mr. Mubarak in 2011 and played a key role in protests against the military government in the first 17 months after the president’s fall. Ultras were on both sides of the fence in their attitudes towards the Morsi government and the military coup that toppled the president.

The military government that initially succeeded Mr. Mubarak sought to cut the ultras down to size in a politically loaded brawl in 2012 in a Port Said stadium that got out of hand in which 74 militant supporters of UWK rival Ultras Ahlawy died.

The case against UWK leader Moshagheb – a mesmerizingly charismatic, under-educated and unemployed ultra – lifted the veil on a process of radicalisation at the fringe of the ultras reflective of attitudes among Egyptian youth disaffected by a lack of economic and social prospects that is fuelled by the restrictive and repressive policies of the Sisi government.

Sources close to the ultras said Mr. Moshagebh was suspected by authorities of having been involved in violent resistance to the Sisi government. They said the UWK leader had been under surveillance for some time during which he had been smuggling arms into Cairo from Sinai, the setting for an armed insurgency that is being fuelled by neglect of the region by successive governments and a brutal military crackdown. The sources said that AK-47s had been found in the homes of friends of Mr. Moshagebh some two weeks before his arrest.

Mr. Moshagebh was arrested after he and another ultra, Hassan Kazarlan, allegedly set fire to a Cairo convention fire. Sixteen people were injured in the incident. Mr. Kazarlan fled to Turkey after the arson attack but was persuaded to return to Egypt after security forces detained his father as a hostage and immediately detained upon his arrival. Sources close to Mr. Kazarlan’s family said he had told authorities that he had wanted to travel from Turkey to Syria.

If he had made it to Syria, Mr. Kazarlan would have followed in the footsteps of Rami Iskanderiya, a former leader of Ultras Ahlawy in the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria, who joined the Islamic State, the jihadist group that controls a swath of Syria and Iraq, and married a Syrian woman in the group’s Syrian stronghold of Raqqa.

Messrs, Moshagebh and Iskanderiya are examples of a development that leaders of Ultras Nahdawy, which has some 65,000 followers on Facebook, and Students against the Coup, the two groups driving the anti-Sisi student protests and flash demonstrations, want to prevent.

Ahmed, a leader of the Nahdawy and a member of an ultras group that played a key role in the popular revolt on Cairo’s Tahrir Square in 2011, has been expelled from university for organizing anti- Sisi protests and sentenced twice in absentia to long-‐term incarceration. Ahmed is a fugitive who moves around Cairo in a protective cocoon, speaks in a low voice to avoid being overheard, and regularly looks furtively over his shoulder.

“We don’t like violence but we are not weak. Hope keeps us going…. This regime is more brutal but there still are options. Success for us is our survival and ability to keep trying… Politics is about making deals; revolution is putting your life on the line. We are the generation that staged the revolution. The new generation no longer cares. Our role is to get the new generation to re-join the revolution. The government markets itself with promises and the power of the state. We can promise only one thing: we will stay on the street. To us football is politics, politics is in everything. That’s why we tackle politics,” Ahmed said.

Like during the 2011 revolt, Ahmed and his fellow ultras form the front-line defence against security forces in protests on campuses and in neighbourhoods. Their ultras-rooted tactics of chanting, jumping up and down and using flares and fireworks are evident in the protests. Some 17 members of Nahdawy that has branches in most Egyptian universities have been killed in clashes with security forces in the last two years.

“We are absolutely concerned that if we fail things will turn violent. Going violent would give the regime the perfect excuse. We would lose all public empathy. We hope that Egyptians realize that there are still voices out there that are not giving up and are keeping protests peaceful despite all that has happened,” added Yusuf Salheen, a 22-year old student of Islam at Cairo’s prestigious Al Azhar University and leader of Students against the Coup.

Messrs. Ahmed and Salheen are the first to admit that they are fighting multiple uphill battles in which the odds are stacked against them. Their space to manoeuvre has been further curtailed by the banning of the ultras, the latest move by the Sisi regime to stymie their effort to stem radicalization as the government tries to project itself an effective bulwark against jihadism.

“Youth have nothing to look forward to. They are hopeless and desperate. They join our protests but their conversation often focuses on admiration for the Islamic State. They are teetering on the edge. We are their only hope but it’s like grasping for a straw that ultimately is likely to break,” said an ultra and student activist.

James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies as Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, co-director of the Institute of Fan Culture of the University of Würzburg and the author of the blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer, and a forthcoming book with the same title.

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New York City Pastor To Honor Detective In Ongoing Effort To Improve Community-Police Relations

Community and law enforcement relations have been strained in cities around the country since the national movement against police brutality took hold last summer. But one New York City church and its pastor are out to resolve some of that tension by honoring an NYPD detective during the upcoming Sunday service.

Middle Collegiate Church will present Detective Jaime Hernandez with its first “Keeper of the Peace” award on Sunday, followed by a performance of “Uniform Justice,” a staged reading about community members and police officers seeking reconciliation in Memphis, Tennessee.

Hernandez has been patrolling in the church’s neighborhood for 25 years and is a friendly face in the community, said Middle Collegiate’s senior minister, the Rev. Dr. Jacqui Lewis. There’s even a mural dedicated to him in New York’s East Village.

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When a gas explosion leveled the building across the street from the church in March, Hernandez was there the following Sunday to make sure parishioners felt safe on their way to services.

“He gave me the biggest hug, and said, ‘Rev. Jacqui, is there anything you need?'” Lewis told The Huffington Post.

The #BlackLivesMatter movement and related protests have prompted faith communities to play an active role in maintaining peaceful relations between law enforcement and community members, Lewis said. Faith leaders must take a stand against police brutality, she said, but simultaneously “celebrate what’s good” and lift up what positive relations exist between police and community members.

“The warm relationship we have with him helps warm the relationship with all the precinct,” she said. “There’s no way we can heal what’s broken in America between police and civilians without collaborating.”

Hernandez was not authorized to speak to press when HuffPost reached out for comment, but Lewis quoted the detective as saying, “For as long as I can remember, Middle Church has been my partner. Middle Church makes the community feel homey.”

Under Lewis’s leadership, Middle Collegiate Church has been an ongoing site of racial justice awareness in recent years. In 2012, the church hosted a “hoodie Sunday” service, inviting congregants to wear hooded sweatshirts in honor of slain Florida teen Trayvon Martin.

Several other faith communities around the country have mounted efforts to resolve tension between police and civilians, many in response to the 2014 deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner. In September, police and faith leaders in Rochester, New York, initiated the “Clergy on Patrol” program, which paired up clergy members and police officers for foot patrols.

“The goal is to mend the mistrust certain neighborhoods have in the police by using the trust they have in the clergy as a bridge,” Rochester press officer Jessica Alaimo told HuffPost in September.

Clergy can play an important role in speaking out against police brutality, but real change must happen on the institutional level, said Robert Gangi, the founder of Police Reform Organizing Project (PROP) and former executive director of the Correctional Association of New York.

“It’s not that individual officers are mean-spirited or racist … It’s the policy of the department,” Gangi told HuffPost on Friday. “That’s what has to change to improve relationships between law enforcement and community.”

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Claire McCaskill Backtracks On Criticism Of Elizabeth Warren, Admits The Truth About Washington

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) on Saturday backtracked from recent comments in which she seemed to suggest that Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) was getting more attention than she deserved by admitting what’s widely known about Washington: everyone seeks attention.

McCaskill told The New York Times recently that she was “confused” as to why Warren had gotten so much attention over her opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an agreement with 11 Pacific countries that the Obama administration is negotiating.

On Saturday, McCaskill tweeted that Warren wasn’t at fault for seeking the spotlight and deserved the praise.

In a story published Friday, the Times pointed out that even though Warren has been the most visible opponent to Obama’s trade deal, she has had little to do with the actual trade legislation in Congress. Warren has urged the Obama administration to make the details of the deal public and has said that it could allow banks and corporations to undermine the Dodd-Frank financial regulationssomething the Obama administration has said is untrue.

Obama has said that Warren is “absolutely wrong” on the deal, leading some to say that the dispute between the two Democrats has gotten too personal — something that Obama has also denied.

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A Philosophical Return to Aix-en-Provence

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I’ve never much cared for eating out alone, even when I tuck a book under my arm to take with me. But tonight I rather enjoyed it. And I was in no hurry to leave Bistrot des Philosophes, a restaurant my wife Kathy and I never visited during our five months in Aix-in-Provence in 2014.

Perhaps I took my time because of the perfectly pink magret de canard in front of me, smothered in a tasty fig sauce. Or perhaps it was because of the delicious and gargantuan creme brulee caramel dessert, almost a meal in itself. Or the ambiance of candlelit tables and soft American jazz (my table faced a framed picture of a young Bob Dylan, puffing on a cigarette). Or then maybe it was my charming waitress, who wore sneakers, stretch pants and an apron, her hair tied in a top knot. She spoke only French and showed great patience with mine, which is really rusty, particularly when trying to speak it on three hours of sleep in the last 36 hours.

Then again, two glasses of Bandol, one of Provence’s best rosé wines, for just $6.75 apiece had something to do with slowing the meal down. (The total bill was $47 and well worth it.)

Now I can pass out with a smile on my face. (No, I’m not drunk. Just really, really tired.)

I truly love this city, walking its streets, watching the people who pass by. And with 10 Emerson College students landing tomorrow, I knew that this first night was the time to linger, to taste the slow lane if just for a moment.

I look forward to seeing Aix through the students’ eyes. To sharing their excitement and, I hope, imparting some of my own in this city that seamlessly melds old and new on every street and square of its old town.

The authors Jean-Benoit Nadeau and Julie Barlow got it right in their two-year study of French culture, “Sixty Million Frenchmen Can’t Be Wrong.” In France, they write, “it is impossible to disassociate the past from the present. There is no clear line to divide ancient from modern in France and what goes for architecture goes for the people, too…. It’s as if they live in the past and the present at the same time. Yet it took us awhile to figure out what that actually meant.”

On this, something like my 15th visit to the country, I’m still trying to figure out what that means. But there is magic here, even in today’s difficult times. That I do understand.

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Skoll World Forum 2015 Opening: "Belief is Rooted in Lessons from Home"

The sun was shining yesterday in Oxford, as the 12th Skoll World Forum kicked off its three-day convening of 1,000 delegates eager to accelerate entrepreneurial approaches and innovative solutions to the world’s most pressing problems.

On the agenda hosted by Stephan Chambers, who helped found the Skoll Centre for Social Entrepreneurship 10 years ago, was a conversation about belief.

They discussed belief’s ability to inspire change, and propel us forward. To help start the conversation speakers such as founder and chairman of the Skoll Foundation Jeff Skoll and Archbishop Desmond Tutu shared their personal beliefs. One common theme was that belief is often rooted in the lessons that we learn from home–but it is for us to decide which ones we choose to carry forward.

Jeff was interviewed by Mabel van Oranje of Girls Not Brides, and shared his belief that we are all interconnected–that there is a force greater than all of us. Jeff’s beliefs are based on the values instilled by his parents, and by past experiences–seeing the dire way that people live in other parts of the world; loving to read as a young boy and being inspired by the power of stories; and as an entrepreneur, believing that anything can be accomplished when people rally around shared values.

Jacqueline Novogratz, CEO of Acumen, challenged us to think about other aspects of belief: What are the beliefs that make us more beautiful, and allow us to bring our best selves into the future; to bring our best selves to a world that is waiting for solutions?

Archbishop Desmond Tutu shared an infectious smile, commenting that when you come to believe that you count, you have a worth that is unquestionable. His daughter, Rev Mpho Tutu, shared that the faith she brings forward is one that she lives and experiences, not one that is written.

The Terrorist’s Son author Zak Ebrahim talked about being taught by his Muslim extremist father about the kinds of people he should associate with, and said that it was the isolation that was one of the most important ingredients to being indoctrinated. When he started to have more diverse interactions, it was those relationships that helped change his perspective.

Finally, Ophelia Dahl, president and executive director of Partners in Health and daughter of the writer Roald Dahl, grew up in a creative home, which inspired her with equal parts imagination and pragmatism. It is this perspective that gave her the inspiration and belief that she can change the world.

In the days to follow, the conversations around belief will continue to resonate throughout the halls of Oxford. What are the beliefs that inspire you?

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Get Ready For A New Janet Jackson Album And Tour

Janet Jackson rewarded her fans with some major news on her birthday.

On Saturday, Jackson celebrated turning 49 years old by dropping a video announcing a new album and tour. The singer tweeted the video with the hashtag #ConversationsInACafe, the presumed title of her upcoming album. In the video Jackson says, “This year: new music, new world tour, a new movement. I’ve been listening. Let’s keep the conversation going.”

Rumors of a new album from Jackson began earlier this month, but Atlantic Records, her label, denied the rumors last week.

Jackson’s last studio album was 2008’s “Discipline,” followed by “Icon: Number Ones,” a compilation released in 2010.

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Ed Helms Destroys Rolling Stone's Rape Story Scandal During UVA Commencement Speech

“Never let others define you, define yourselves.”

So began a seemingly comedic commencement speech by actor Ed Helms at the University of Virginia on Friday. In front of a large audience, the comedian peppered in jokes about Netflix and student loans before turning a harsh eye on the Rolling Stone rape story scandal, which has drawn widespread condemnation and lawsuits against the magazine.

“It has been said that a rolling stone gathers no moss,” Helms said. “I would add that sometimes a rolling stone also gathers no verifiable facts or even the tiniest morsels of journalistic integrity.”

“Rolling Stone tried to define you this year,” Helms said. “As a result, not only was this community thrown deep into turmoil, but the incredibly important struggle to address sexual violence on campuses nationwide was suddenly more confusing than ever and needlessly set back.”

The speech comes a month after Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism called Sabrina Rubin Erdely’s story “A Rape on Campus” a “journalistic failure” — a move that prompted Rolling Stone to retract the entire piece.

“The failure encompassed reporting, editing, editorial supervision and fact-checking,” the authors of the review said.

During his speech, Helms also delved into the strikingly negative news coverage of the Baltimore riots, chastising many major networks for their portrayal of the protestors as “thugs,” noting “Rolling Stone’s rush to define is just the tip of the iceberg.”

“The reductive labels aren’t helping and we better stop applying them, because there are a lot of Americans in a lot of pain,” Helms said. “We try to define others with simple labels because it makes the world easier to understand.”

“This community didn’t fall for the fallacy that just because Rolling Stone was wrong everything here must be perfectly peachy,” he continued. “You all had the courage to understand you can be outraged at Rolling Stone and still ask yourselves hard questions: When sexual violence does occur in our community, do we have the best possible protocols and resources available to our students? And UVA is charging forward to answer those questions and you should be proud of that.”

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Puerto Rico's Massive Anti-Austerity Protests Ignored By U.S. Mainland Media

Students in Puerto Rico launched mass protests this week against the governor’s attempt to slash some $166 million from the University of Puerto Rico’s budget. That’s about one-fifth of the funding for the island’s main public university system.

College students and their supporters flooded the streets in the capitol of San Juan on Wednesday, where they were met by a police presence that included a SWAT team. A video posted to Facebook by one of the activists appeared to show a police officer striking a protester with a baton.

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Lo pongo por aquí por aquello de que somos “violentos”. El primer macanazo del día está como al minuto 1:15.El video está público ahora ya que muchos lo están compartiendo pero quiero también aclarar que mi intención con publicarlo no es condenar a la Policía de Puerto Rico. El Nuevo Día ayer dejó entender que los estudiantes fueron los primeros en ejercer violencia física y la intención del video es que quede en récord que los estudiantes hicieron un llamado a la paz en todo momento. Aprovecho también para dejar claro que la mayoría del cuerpo de oficiales allí presente se comportó con respeto hacia los manifestantes, salvo por aquel que primero soltó el macanazo y el otro que usó pepper spray. Ellos están allí haciendo su trabajo y posiblemente algunos simpatizan con nosotros. Como me dijo uno de los oficiales: “No es personal”.

Posted by Jorge L Falcón Garrido on Wednesday, May 13, 2015

The head of Puerto Rico’s police force, Superintendent José Caldero López, defended his department’s handling of the situation.

“We established a perimeter where we always do during protests,” Caldero told reporters Thursday, adding, “We have a plan of action and we’re prepared to protect everyone.”

Protesters chanted, “We are students, we’re not criminals,” in front of a police perimeter in Old San Juan on Wednesday, May 13.

Tensions flared even higher on Wednesday after reports that an explosive had detonated near the governor’s mansion, La Fortaleza. No one was hurt by it, and police later described it as a small, improvised “chemical bomb” made of a soda bottle filled with acid and a piece of aluminum, according to Puerto Rican daily El Nuevo Día. Police said they did not know whether the explosion was directly related to the protests.

Student leader Chris Torres Lugo, who attended the protest, balked at the possibility that the explosion was linked to the students. “We don’t have much information concerning the ‘explosive’ and it comes directly from the police, which makes us doubtful of its accuracy,” he told The Huffington Post.

Whoever was responsible, the widely read Latino Rebels blog questioned why the explosion hadn’t received more attention in the English-language media.

“There were no injuries, but we do think that if a bomb-like device had gone off near where an elected official on the mainland was, it would be on a 24/7 constant loop coverage,” Latino Rebels wrote Thursday.

The proposed university cuts were part of a package of $1.5 billion in government spending cuts, proposed by Gov. Alejandro García Padilla amid budget shortfalls and a growing debt crisis — not to mention the mounting tensions with the public.

On Thursday, the García Padilla administration managed to cobble together an agreement with legislators to stave off some cuts by raising the island’s sales tax from 7 percent to 11.5 percent and adding a value-added tax of 4 percent on services currently exempted from taxation. García Padilla did not announce which specific services would fall under the new tax, but said the health and education sectors would remain exempt, according to The Associated Press.

The new proposal would boost revenue by $1.2 billion, the governor said, though the tentative agreement still contains some $500 million in spending cuts. Puerto Rico’s legislature will vote on the plan Monday. While the governor’s Popular Democratic Party, which is traditionally aligned with mainland Democrats, holds a majority in both houses, the question of whether to impose the value-added tax has divided the party in recent months.

By Friday, the student protests had generally calmed, though many were still unhappy with the latest budget plan. Students at the University of Puerto Rico campus in Rio Piedras called a 48-hour student strike starting on Thursday, while the Mayagüez campus planned a similar strike on Friday.

Puerto Rico has spent eight years struggling through a crippling recession. The island’s unemployment rate stands at 13.7 percent, more than double the U.S. average of 5.4 percent. It’s also on the hook for $72 billion in public debt, most of which is held by U.S. investors.

Along with years of financial mismanagement, many point to an initial round of austerity measures in 2009 by then-Gov. Luis Fortuño as a tipping point. To avoid a looming government shutdown and further downgrades from credit agencies, Fortuño took an ax to the public sector. His administration laid off 17,000 public employees and passed legislation allowing the government to suspend union contracts and collective bargaining rights. The pro-statehood Republican also lowered corporate tax rates to attract private investment, with mixed results.

Now García Padilla, a staunch critic of Fortuño’s policy moves, faces strong political and public opposition to his proposed tax increases. The governor’s plan to attract private investment through tax incentives for the wealthy has yet to turn the island’s economy around.

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