Wednesday, July 3, 2024

Corruption

Former NY authority chief sought kickbacks from ‘predatory’ program meant to help disadvantaged people set up cannabis shops: suit


A FRESH EMBARRASSMENT FOR THE CLIMATE CULT

A FRESH EMBARRASSMENT FOR THE CLIMATE CULT


Remember how we’ve been told for years now that climate change, and hence rising sea levels, were an imminent threat to islands and island nations around the world? Well, the New York Times reported a few days ago, oops:

The Vanishing Islands That Failed to Vanish

[W]hen the world began paying attention to global warming decades ago, these islands, which form atop coral reefs in clusters called atolls, were quickly identified as some of the first places climate change might ravage in their entirety. As the ice caps melted and the seas crept higher, these accidents of geologic history were bound to be corrected and the tiny islands returned to watery oblivion, probably in this century.

Then, not very long ago, researchers began sifting through aerial images and found something startling. They looked at a couple dozen islands first, then several hundred, and by now close to 1,000. They found that over the past few decades, the islands’ edges had wobbled this way and that, eroding here, building there. By and large, though, their area hadn’t shrunk. In some cases, it was the opposite: They grew. The seas rose, and the islands expanded with them.

Climate realists have been reporting the growth of island atolls for years, but were resolutely ignored. And now of course the Times behaves like they and their sources are noticing this inconvenient fact for the very first time.

The rest of this long—very very long—feature labors mightily to say there’s a still a problem, and scientists are working hard to understand the “complexities” of the situation.

One thing the story avoids saying, however, is that the science apparently isn’t “settled.”

Gays live in a fantasy world when it comes to Islam

Lesbian Duo Baffled as to Why Muslim Gang Would Pummel Them. 

Who Wants to Break the News?


The genocide of the Jews crowd don't see anything wrong with Hamas

80 pro-Palestinian protesters have charges dropped after Art Institute encampment arrests

Local leaders worry dropping charges sends wrong message, with DNC 1 month away


https://abc7chicago.com/post/chicago-protest-80-pro-palestinian-protesters-have-charges/15021763/Jasmine Minor Image

Tuesday, July 2, 2024 5:00PMCHICAGO (WLS) -- 

Dozens of pro-Palestinian protestors walked free Tuesday, after having their charges dropped following their arrests in May.

Now, some local leaders are concerned this sends the wrong message, with the Democratic National Convention just a month away.



Meet the Rich Kids, Professors, and Activists Arrested at Columbia in April

Meet the Rich Kids, Professors, and Activists Arrested at Columbia in April


The Washington Free Beacon’s guide to occupying a Columbia campus building

July 2, 2024

Eloise Maybank is accustomed to luxury. A London native, Maybank attended high school at a private French academy in London, the renowned Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle de Londres, and then at Milton Academy, an elite Massachusetts boarding school where tuition runs $76,000 a year. Then she enrolled at Columbia.

Maybank was among approximately 100 people arrested at Columbia University in late April for storming and occupying a campus building. Of those arrested, 45 were charged with third-degree criminal trespassing, public records show. At a hearing last month, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office dismissed cases against 31 of those people. Prosecutors told the 14 others that charges against them would be dropped if they avoided arrest for the next six months, but the defendants rejected that offer and will return to court in late July.

Washington Free Beacon review of those charged shows they included several Columbia University, Barnard College, and New York University students and recent graduates, a City University of New York professor, and a wealthy outside activist also facing charges for setting an Israel supporter’s flag aflame during the April protest.

Maybank is not the only student arrested in April who comes from wealth and privilege.

Eloise Maybank
Julia Jackson
Madelyn McGuigan

Also arrested were Julia Jackson, an alumna of New York University and New Hampshire’s Phillips Exeter Academy—tuition $70,000 a year—as well as Barnard College graduate Madelyn McGuigan, the daughter of finance executive Chris McGuigan, the owner of a picturesque home valued at $2.2 million in the beachside town of Rumson, New Jersey, the Free Beacon found. Both McGuigan and Jackson will return to court in late July after rejecting the deal offered by prosecutors.

Then there is Columbia graduate student and self-described "medievalist" Grant Miner, the son of veteran California lobbyist and former Arnold Schwarzenegger aide Paul Miner, the owner of a $1.8 million Sacramento home, real estate records show. In October, just two days after Hamas's terror attack on the Jewish state, Grant Miner was photographed at a New York City rally holding a sign that read, "Resistance against occupation is a human right."

Grant Miner

Others came from less privileged backgrounds and attended Columbia thanks to the generosity of others. That was the case for Sebastian Jimenez, who graduated from Columbia in May. He was the recipient of a scholarship underwritten by Columbia alumni that paid his tuition. Jimenez, who was booted from campus after his April 30 arrest, also sued Columbia to regain access to his campus dorm.

CUNY professor Elizabeth Reade is also among those who still face charges. The Department of Education said last month that CUNY was one of two schools that had failed to protect Jewish students, and the school has spent the past several years grappling with campus anti-Semitism. The school drew criticismafter putting its chief diversity officer, Saly Abd Alla, a former director of a regional branch of the Council on American Islamic Relations, in charge of a series of "diversity dialogues."

Reade is represented in the case by Victoria Marie Ruiz, a former New York public defender who resigned from the job in November 2023 after she was filmed tearing down posters of Israeli hostages in New York City. Ruiz went on to raise tens of thousands of dollars through a GoFundMe she launched to "help out with legal fees" and "living costs between jobs."

"Our incredible friend is under attack," a member of Ruiz's punk rock band wrote on the fundraising page.

One of the leaders behind the Hamilton Hall occupation, the 40-year-old professional agitator James Carlson, is the son of prominent advertising executives Richard Tarlow and Sandy Carlson Tarlow, the New York Post reportedlast month. In 2019, he bought a three-story townhouse in Brooklyn's Park Slope for $2.3 million. Carlson is also facing criminal mischief and arson charges after he was caught on video setting an Israeli flag on fire outside of Columbia's campus. During the ordeal, another activist hit a pro-Israel demonstrator in the face with a rock.

Others arrested include Columbia graduate student and fellow protest leader Aidan Parisi, the son of longtime State Department official Elizabeth Daugharty. Columbia suspended Parisi over his involvement in a pro-terror "Palestinian Resistance 101" event held on campus in March, barring him from campus. But Parisi refused to leave his university apartment, saying that doing so would require him to find "housing that would accept his emotional support rabbit," and later emerged as a constant presence in the encampment that plagued campus for weeks. Police arrested Parisi during their April 30 campus sweep.

Of the 46 protesters arrested over the occupation of Hamilton Hall, 3 have ties to Sen. Bernie Sanders (I., Vt.), the Free Beacon found.

Catherine Curran-Groome, a University of Vermont graduate, interned for Sanders as a student before joining People's Action, a left-wing advocacy group working to "curb climate change and end our dependence on fossil fuels." University of Virginia graduate Raiya Al-Nsour also interned for Sanders in 2019 before working as a legislative project specialist for the United Postal Workers Union.

Catherine Curran-Groome
Raiya Al-Nsour

Jackson, the NYU and Phillips Exeter graduate, volunteered for Sanders's presidential campaign as a canvasser from Oct. 2019 to April 2020, according to her LinkedIn profile. Before that, she interned in the Philadelphia District Attorney's Office under George Soros-backed prosecutor Larry Krasner, who called the Columbia arrests "stupid."

Jackson, McGuigan, Miner, and Al-Nsour did not respond to requests for comment. Parisi declined to comment. Maybank, Carlson, and Curran-Groome could not be reached.

Other Columbia arrestees have similar backgrounds in left-wing advocacy.

Columbia graduate student Marianne Almero, for example, interned at the Urban Indigenous Collective, where she engaged in "social justice advocacy to decolonize education institutions, climate justice, incarceration and police systems, and health accessibility." Rose Bottorf, an undergraduate philosophy student with the pronouns "they/she/he," taught "critical race theory and activism to children ages 14-17" as an intern at City Mission Boston, a since-shuttered nonprofit that worked to "expose systemic barriers" and "use storytelling as a healing tool for social change."

Marianne Almero
Rose Bottorf

In one case, an arrestee participated in the Hamilton Hall occupation roughly one year after Columbia honored her for her political activism. That arrestee, Andrea Salamanca, graduated from Columbia in 2023, when the university awarded her a Multicultural Graduation Cord, given to graduating students "who have demonstrated an outstanding commitment to diversity, social justice, and multiculturalism."

Columbia 2024 graduate and fellow arrestee Franziska Lee, an organizer with the Columbia Revolutionary Marxist Students Organization, said she chose to minor in race and ethnicity studies because "everyone was on board with, like, leftism and critical race theory."

"Columbia has all these core required classes, so you end up with people from all different majors, which is cool in one sense," Lee said last year.


"But if you're trying to have a discussion about history or something, and people are like, 'Well, I don't think colonization is bad,' or something like that … It's like you can't get far with that," she continued. "So I like the Ethnic Studies department, because everybody is to an extent on board."

Almero, Bottorf, and Reade did not respond to requests for comment. Salamanca, Lee, and Jimenez could not be reached.