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Teachers’ Union Head Under Fire for Anti-Semitic Comments

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Civil rights groups are condemning teachers’ union president Randi Weingarten for accusing Jewish Americans of depriving others of opportunity in their bid to reopen schools. Photo Credit: WFB

Rabbi: Weingarten ‘took legitimate criticism of her union’s refusal to go back to work as a way to demonize the Jewish community’

By: Graham Piro

Civil rights groups are condemning teachers’ union president Randi Weingarten for accusing Jewish Americans of depriving others of opportunity in their bid to reopen schools.

Weingarten has already found herself in the middle of multiple battles over reopening schools since the union she heads, the American Federation of Teachers, pushed back on CDC guidance about physical distancing guidelines in school. Her comments about American Jews unleashed a firestorm of condemnations from groups that accused Weingarten of trafficking in anti-Semitic tropes.

Rabbi Aryeh Spero, president of the Conference of Jewish Affairs, accused Weingarten of “denouncing her own people and inciting others against Jews in order to be the darling of the Left.”

“She took legitimate criticism of her union’s refusal to go back to work as a way to demonize the Jewish community. Historically this was labeled ‘scapegoating,'” Spero said. “She understands that today power is achieved by those who scapegoat Jews.”

Weingarten made the comments in an interview with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency where she responded to a question about the perception that teachers’ unions are trying to keep schools closed. She pivoted to criticizing American Jews as part of the “ownership class” who “want to take that ladder of opportunity away from those who do not have it.”

Weingarten defended herself against accusations of anti-Semitism by pointing to her marriage to a rabbi. “My entire life is dedicated to promoting Jewish values like tikkun olam (repairing a broken world),” she wrote on Twitter. She also retweeted another rabbi who defended her as “talking about her disappointment when Jews don’t support unions.”

But her defense was not sufficient for groups that fight anti-Semitism.

“We are nauseated the head of the Teachers’ Union has the audacity to spread century-old antisemitic tropes of Jewish dominance and power,” Liora Rez, executive director of Stop Antisemitism, said. “While Ms. Weingarten herself is collecting a hefty six-figure salary, the majority of Jewish Americans do not. Her dangerous rhetoric does nothing but provide white supremacists and other antisemites more verbal weaponry to use against Jews at a time when antisemitism is spreading like wildfire in America.”

Asaf Romirowsky, executive director of Scholars for Peace in the Middle East, criticized Weingarten for using “identity politics” to target a religious minority.

“Weingarten’s comments represent a growing antisemitism within the progressive Left – which spends its days seeking out fictional ideas weaved in identity politics such as ‘ownership class,'” Romirowsky said. “Anti-semitism is a form of racism. Until racism in all of its varieties is no longer tolerated, it will flourish.”

The American Federation of Teachers did not respond to a request for comment. The union told the CDC in a letter sent March 23 that the union was “not convinced” about the agency’s updated guidance concerning reduced physical distancing in schools. The union put out a press release this week touting high vaccination rates among its members and an increased desire to return to some form of in-person learning.

(Washington Free Beacon)

San Francisco School Board Reverses Decision to Rename Schools

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The district faced multiple lawsuits from the city and a group of school alumni after the board voted in January to rename 44 district schools that are named after individuals with purported ties to oppression and racism

Parents slammed district for renaming schools while keeping them closed

By: Alex Nester

After facing criticism from parents, San Francisco’s public school district on Tuesday rescinded its decision to rename dozens of schools with “inappropriate” namesakes—including Abraham Lincoln High School.

In a resolution, the San Francisco Unified School District’s education board said it reversed the decision “to avoid the distraction and wasteful expenditure of public funds in frivolous litigation.” The district faced multiple lawsuits from the city and a group of school alumni after the board voted in January to rename 44 district schools that are named after individuals with purported ties to oppression and racism. Schools named after Presidents George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, as well as patriot Paul Revere, were set to be renamed before Tuesday’s reversal.

Officials said they would only take up the project again when all district students are back in the classroom.

The education board first considered renaming more than one-third of the district’s schools in October. School officials deemed the names of schools “inappropriate” if they were named after racists, white supremacists, slave owners, colonizers, historical figures who oppressed women or the gay community, or others who perpetuated human rights abuses.

The decision sparked outcry from parents and city officials, who slammed the board for prioritizing the renaming of schools over reopening them. One parent told the New York Times that the decision was a “caricature of what people think liberals in San Francisco do.”

Historians also criticized the board’s renaming plan, citing several factual errors. For example, school board members planned to rename Paul Revere Elementary School because they said the patriot tried to steal land from the Penobscot people in Maine, when in fact, he led an unsuccessful battle there against the British.

The city of San Francisco sued the school district in February for keeping schools closed, citing skyrocketing rates of suicidal ideation among the city’s children. The board paused its plan to rename schools later that month.

Renaming schools was one of several controversial decisions made by the school board in recent months. In February, district officials voted to nix an admissions test at Lowell High School—the district’s elite, STEM-based public school—because the test allegedly perpetuated white supremacy. Lowell is often criticized for lacking diversity, though minorities comprise more than 75 percent of the school’s student body. More than half of the school’s students are Asian.

Education board vice president Alison Collins found herself in hot water late last month after parents found anti-Asian comments the official tweeted in 2016. Collins called Asian Americans “house n*****s” who “use white supremacist thinking to assimilate and ‘get ahead.'” The official refused to resign even after pressure from Mayor London Breed (D.), parents, and other officials.

San Francisco public schools are set to reopen beginning next week. Preschool through second grade at some elementary schools will return April 12, with third through fifth grade to follow on April 19. Middle and high school students are expected to return to the classroom on April 26.

Faauuga Moliga, a board member, told the Washington Free Beacon that he would create a resolution to “ensure integrity” in the renaming process if the board takes up the issue after schools reopen.

(Washington Free Beacon)

World’s Largest Jewish Museum Opens in Tel Aviv

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The newly expanded and reimagined ANU–Museum of the Jewish People opened last week, becoming the world’s only museum dedicated to celebrating and exploring the diverse experiences, collective accomplishments, and boundless spirit of the Jewish people, told from all perspectives, from biblical times to today. Photo Credit: anumuseum.org.il

Expanded and reimagined ANU–Museum of the Jewish People features 72,000 square feet of gallery space, tripling its previous footprint

Edited by: TJVNews.com

The newly expanded and reimagined ANU–Museum of the Jewish People opened last week, becoming the world’s only museum dedicated to celebrating and exploring the diverse experiences, collective accomplishments, and boundless spirit of the Jewish people, told from all perspectives, from biblical times to today. Capping a transformational, decade-long, $100 million expansion that triples its gallery space to 72,000 square feet, the renewed museum features four wings spanning three floors. Formerly known as Beit Hatfutsot, the museum embarks on this next chapter with a new name and brand identity by adding “ANU” — Hebrew for “we” or “us” — which embraces and reflects the diversity, nuances, collective spirit and celebration of the entirety of Jewish peoplehood.

Formerly known as Beit Hatfutsot, the museum embarks on this next chapter with a new name and brand identity by adding “ANU” — Hebrew for “we” or “us” — which embraces and reflects the diversity, nuances, collective spirit and celebration of the entirety of Jewish peoplehood.

ANU–Museum of the Jewish People will guide visitors of all faiths, backgrounds and ages on an inspiring and enlightening journey of discovery to recognize and embrace their unique part in the Jewish story. The museum’s centerpiece is a comprehensive new core exhibition featuring historic and modern artifacts, images, specially-produced films, multimedia displays, state-of-the-art multi-sensory stations and immersive spaces, as well as original and newly commissioned artworks to illuminate the 4,000-plus-year history of the Jewish people in a fresh, contemporary context. The redesigned museum is open with enhanced health and safety protocols in place.

The museum’s centerpiece is a comprehensive new core exhibition featuring historic and modern artifacts, images, specially-produced films, multimedia displays, state-of-the-art multi-sensory stations and immersive spaces, as well as original and newly commissioned artworks to illuminate the 4,000-plus-year history of the Jewish people in a fresh, contemporary context.

“It is a dream come true to realize the transformation and expansion of this beloved institution, which is the largest and most comprehensive Jewish museum in the world,” said Irina Nevzlin, Museum Board Chair. “The museum will serve as a beacon of Jewish identity and culture, celebrating our unique history and future. We’re grateful for the incredible support that has helped make this museum rebirth possible.”

“It’s never been more important to underscore what binds us together as a people: our history, culture, values and a sense of belonging,” said Dan Tadmor, CEO of the Museum. “Our reinvigorated museum represents what can be achieved through patience, perseverance and passion. From rich history illuminated through unique artifacts, to engaging interactive and immersive experiences, ANU is a mosaic of today’s diverse Jewish identity. We are excited to open our doors for all to visit, discover and be inspired.”

A Re-imagined and Enhanced Museum Experience

The new museum’s cornerstone experience is conceived as a journey from the top floor (reflection of Jewish identity and culture today) and working your way down to the first floor (the foundations of Judaism).

The new museum’s cornerstone experience is conceived as a journey from the top floor (reflection of Jewish identity and culture today) and working your way down to the first floor (the foundations of Judaism).

The Mosaic–Modern Jewish Identity and Culture Wing (third floor) — The largest of the three floors, this vast, open wing is dedicated to the vibrant and rich life of the Jewish people today, the diverse forms of Jewish culture in modern times, and the myriad contribution Jews have made to global civilization and culture. Featuring a Jewish Hall of Fame, the gallery showcases Jewish achievement and impact in areas such as dance, theater, film, TV, music, humor, literature, languages and modern art.

The Journey–The Jewish Story Through Time Wing (second floor) — This floor is devoted to the full narrative of global Jewry tracing the roots and history of the Jewish people from all corners of the world and from Biblical times through the establishment of the State of Israel to the present; a central, interactive map of Jewish migrations and journeys across the world; the evolution of Jewish faith, thought and creativity.

The Foundations–A Common Core, A Universal Message Wing (first floor) — This wing explores the conceptual foundations of the Judeo-Christian existence, whether uniquely Jewish or commonly universal. This includes Jewish practice, beliefs and traditions, and the Bible and its influence on world culture, especially as it relates to concepts of justice and liberty.

In recent months the museum developed programs specifically tailored to visitors of all backgrounds, including Christians, that demonstrate and connect visitors to shared Judeo-Christian roots. While creating these programs, the museum consulted extensively with its own Christian Advisory board, consisting of many of the most prominent Christian leaders in North America.

The programs include Introduction to Christian Zionist heroes, The Bible, the covenant, and the Jewish calendar. They examine the history of the Jewish people, the Hebrew language, and traditions and celebrate the rich history of the Jewish house of worship–the synagogue. Additional experiences explore the Ladino Christian community and the history of Sepharad Judaism, including conversos (“the converted”), expulsions, and migrations to the New World.

Continuing the institution’s longstanding commitment to experiential storytelling and innovation, ANU–Museum of the Jewish People utilizes radio frequency identification (RFID) technology to allow visitors to tag favorite experiences or areas they’d like to further discover that will be included in an email sent following their visit. Additionally, the museum — in partnership with Geni.com — has developed a customized app, MJP & Me, that enables users to see if and how they’re related to famous Jews across the ages; and if these icons are part of the exhibition where visitors can find their location in the galleries to learn more about them. Patrons can even discover if they’re related to any other visitors in the museum at that moment, creating immediate personal connection.

 

Additional Information

ANU–Museum of the Jewish People is open daily, including Saturdays, and until 10 pm on Thursdays. Tours are available in several languages. General admission is 52 NIS / $16 USD for adults and children over five; 26 NIS / $8 USD for seniors; and free for children under five and soldiers in uniform.

For more information about ANU–Museum of the Jewish People, its new core exhibition and all of its programs and offerings (in-person and online), visit www.anumuseum.org.il.

 

About ANU–Museum of the Jewish People

Anu–Museum of the Jewish People is the world’s largest Jewish museum and the only institution that tells the unique, ongoing story of the Jewish people in its entirety, through the lens of identity, culture and history, as well as the foundations of Jewish life and thought across generations. Founded in 1978, and located in Tel Aviv, the museum serves as a central destination for Jewish discourse, engagement and learning for individuals, families, communities and organizations from Israel and around the world. For more information, visit www.anumuseum.org.il

Parshas Tazria Metzorah – Gold in Them Thar Walls

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A further illustration of how careful we must be of speaking even that which is true is demonstrated by the story of Miriam the Prophetess who spoke with genuine love about her brother Moshe. While her concerns were valid and pure, she was nevertheless stricken with tzaraas.

By: Rabbi Mordechai Kamenetzky

This week, in reading both Tazria and Metzorah, we combine portions that deal with the physio-spiritual plague of tzora’as. Tzora’as is a discoloration that appears in varying forms on human skin, on hair, clothing, and even on the walls of one’s home. The afflicted individual must endure a complicated process of purification in order to rejoin the community. The Talmud explains that tzoraas is a divine punishment for the sins of slander and gossip. In fact, the Talmud in Ararchin 16b comments that the reason that the afflicted is sent out of the camp was because “he separated friends and families through his words, and deserves to be separated from his community.”

Rashi and the Ramban explain that the first form of tzora’as does not begin on the person. Hashem in His mercy first strikes at inanimate objects — one’s possessions. The discoloration first appears on the walls of a home, forcing the affected stones to be removed and destroyed. If that event does not succeed as a wake-up-call, and the person continues his malevolent activities, then his clothing is affected. If that fails, eventually the flesh is transformed and white lesions appear, forcing the afflicted to leave the Jewish camp until the plague subsides and the Kohen declares him acceptable to return.

Rashi tells us that the first stage of tzora’as — the home — is actually a blessing in disguise. Tzora’as on a home can indeed bring fortune to the affected. As the Israelites were approaching the Land of Canaan, the inhabitants, figuring that one day they would re-conquer the land, hid all their gold and silver inside the walls of their homes. When one dislodged the afflicted stones of his home he would find the hidden treasures that were left by the fleeing Canaanites.

It is troubling. Why should the first warning of tzora’as reek of triumph? What message is Hashem sending to the first offender by rewarding his misdeeds with a cache of gold? What spiritual import is gained from the materialistic discovery?

After the end of World War II, the brilliant and flamboyant Torah sage, Rabbi Eliezer Silver visited and aided thousands of survivors in displaced persons camps in Germany and Poland who were waiting to find permanent homes. One day, as he was handing out Siddurim (prayerbooks) and other Torah paraphernalia, a Jewish man flatly refused to accept any.

“After the way I saw Jews act in the camp, I don’t want to have any connection with religion!”

Rabbi Silver asked him to explain what exactly had turned him off from Jewish practice.

“I saw a Jew who had a Siddur, yet he only allowed it to be used by the inmates in exchange for their daily bread ration. Imagine,” he sneered, “a Jew selling the right to daven for bread!”

“And how many customers did this man get?” inquired Rabbi Silver.

“Far too many!” snapped the man.

Rabbi Silver put his hand around the gentlemen and gently explained. “Why are you looking at the bad Jew who sold the right to pray? Why don’t you look at the many good Jews who were willing to forego their rations and starve, just in order to pray? Isn’t that the lesson you should take with you?”

Perhaps Hashem in His compassion is sending much more to the gossiper than a get-rich-quick scheme. He shows the first-time slanderer to look a little deeper at life. On the outside he may see a dirty wall of a former Canaanite home. Dig a little deeper and you will find gold in them thar walls. Next time you look at a person only superficially — think. Dig deeper. There is definitely gold beneath the surface. Sometimes you have to break down your walls to find the gold you never thought it existed.

Rabbi Eliezer Silver (1881-1968) was a prominent figure in the emerging American Torah Community. A powerful, witty and brilliant leader, he came to America as a Rabbi in Harrisburg, PA and ended his career as Rabbi of Cincinatti, OH. He was a founder of the Vaad Hatzalah during World War II.

             (www.Torah.org)

5 Styles of Camping in the Pocono Mountains

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Warmer weather is right around the corner, and that means camping season is almost here! Immerse yourself in the stunning outdoor beauty of the Pocono Mountains for a relaxing and rejuvenating escape.

By: Emily Whalen

Warmer weather is right around the corner, and that means camping season is almost here! Immerse yourself in the stunning outdoor beauty of the Pocono Mountains for a relaxing and rejuvenating escape.

Poconos camping season typically runs from late April to mid-October, and with dozens of locations throughout the region, we’ve got a style for everyone. Most of our campgrounds are family-owned and spread out across acres of wooded property, providing scenic backdrops and a wide range of bivouacking possibilities.

Whether you’d like to disconnect from the modern world entirely or know you’ll want to check the ‘likes’ on your campfire pic right away, you’ll find campgrounds with just the amenities you’re looking for in the Pocono Mountains. From tranquil tent sites to cozy cabins, read on for a breakdown of options for your next camping trip.

  1. Tent Sites
  2. RV Campsites
  3. Cottages & Cabins
  4. Summer Camps
  5. Glamping

 

Tent Sites

River Beach Campsites is located on the scenic Delaware River in the Pocono Mountains.

Pitching a tent in your backyard is fun, but why not enjoy a change of scenery? Most campsites in the Poconos are furnished with everything you need: a fire ring, picnic table, water and electric, with technology and restrooms providing hot showers available upon request. Want a site with a view? River Beach Campsites offers riverfront camping sites along the beautiful Delaware River.

Situated within the town limits of historic Jim Thorpe (formerly called Mauch Chunk), this 28-acre wooded campground offers every modern convenience the camping family could desire.

Looking for something a little more off the grid? Campgrounds like Jim Thorpe Camping Resort offer bare bone sites for a true “roughing it” wilderness experience.

“Ruff” it with your pooch! Don Laine Campground and Foxwood Campground welcome pets and offer dog parks and trails on-site. Check out our other pet-friendly accommodations to include your four-legged best friend in your vacation fun!

 

RV Campsites

Daily, seasonal, long term and year-round RV sites are available at many area campgrounds. Otter Lake Camp Resort and Mountain Vista Campground have full hook-ups, 50 amp electric plus free TV and WiFi. Pull thru campsites and back in sites vary by location.

Mountain Vista Campground’s wooded setting provides a perfect spot for your next vacation.

Forgot to stock up your RV cupboards? Most campgrounds have stores for the convenience of tent and RV camping guests alike, offering ice, campfire supplies and snacks, just to name a few items. On-site activities vary by location but include kid-friendly happenings, game rooms, entertainment and water recreation. Relax by the pool, play a round of mini-golf or join a game of beach volleyball. The choice is yours!

 

Cottages & Cabins

Cottages and cabins are fully equipped for a home away from home escape. Kitchens, fireplaces and BBQ grills are just a few of the conveniences you’ll find, and it wouldn’t be like home without cable and internet, would it? Extend your camping getaway into a staycation and work from home in a cozy cottage rental.

Named one of the best 247 campgrounds in North America by Good Sam, Otter Lake Campground is a beautiful family campground located on 250 wooded acres with a 60-acre private lake. Paved roads lead to fully equipped, wooded campsites.

Experience privacy and comfort from either wooded or waterfront sites. Enjoy lakefront views from a rocking chair on your private porch, along with the same amenities and activities you would have access to at a campground. Retreats like Sylvania Tree Farm & Country Lodging offer plenty of opportunites for outdoor adventure and water recreation.

Campgrounds like Hemlock Campground and Cottages and Keen Lake Camping & Cottage Resort offer the best of all worlds, with tent and RV sites as well as cottages.

 

Summer Camps

Both children and adults can find a variety of exciting programs at Poconos summer camps. Whether you’re looking for a sleep-away camp for the season or planning to host a family reunion, the region’s spacious camps offer something for everyone.

Looking for sports camp training for the kids? Blue Mountain Adventure Camp and International Sports Training Camp offer programs for a range of ages. Spruce Lake hosts Christian camps for children throughout the summer while Trout Lake accommodates any large group up to 275 people.

Spring kicks off the busy season, and we recommend booking sooner than rather later. The earlier you make your camp reservations, the more availability you’ll find!

 

Glamping

Ever heard of glamping? You never knew camping could be this glamorous and luxurious! Glamping provides guests staying outdoors with many of the amenities they’d find at indoor accommodations, not to mention an aesthetic backdrop for photos.

A glamping stay at the Campsites at Blue Mountain Resort begins with an ATV ride shuttle whisking guests to private sites with stunning views. Here you can reconnect with the outdoors by exploring hiking trails, fishing at the nearby pond or simply relaxing at your secluded camp site.

The Shawnee Inn and Golf Resort offers two types of glammed-up camping experiences: island glamping and riverside glamping. Access Shawnee’s private island by a 20-minute canoe ride for island glamping, or walk to a semi-secluded area of their property for riverside glamping. Nearby showers and restrooms, WiFi and electricity are included with your stay.

Whether you’ve been dreaming of snuggling into a sleeping bag under the stars or planning a weekend cottage getaway filled with creature comforts as well as rustic charm, the Pocono Mountains has a camping option that’s perfect for you and your family! Be sure to check out our campgrounds, cottages and summer camps pages for more details, and don’t forget to explore our pet-friendly accommodations as well. Take a look at events and things to do in the area and plan an itinerary full of outdoor adventure for a camping vacation you won’t forget.

             (Pocono Mountains Blog)

Emily Whalen is the Communications Manager for the Pocono Mountains Visitors Bureau. A small town coffee shop connoisseur and lifelong lover of the mountains, she is excited to share tips to help visitors make the most of their stay in the Poconos. Sign up to receive the monthly Pocono Mountains Newsletter.

How to Create Your Own At-Home Spa for the Ultimate Relaxation

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You don’t have to pay a lot of money to get a spa’s amazing experiences if you create your own at home.

By: Andrea Lozoya

We all need a bit of me-time to relax, unwind, and enjoy a little pampering. You don’t have to pay a lot of money to get a spa’s amazing experiences if you create your own at home. With a few simple tweaks and tips, you can enjoy your very own at-home spa for the perfect way to practice a little bit of self-care. We’ve put together an awesome list of ideas to help you relax and create a DIY spa that’ll have you feeling calm and serene.

Set the mood in order to create your very own spa at home, you’ll need to set the mood. From finding the perfect spa space to supplies and lighting, here are some tips to get you started on your journey to total relaxation.

Set up Your Space

Start by choosing where you want your at-home spa to be. It can be your master bathroom or just a spare room where you can spend time in peace and quiet. A room with a view is another great option to help you get some sunshine and enjoy a little bit of nature as you unwind.

  • Once you’ve chosen your space, use some relaxing products like essential oils, a bottle of bubble bath, fresh flower fragrance pillows, or a vase filled with a bouquet of fresh flowers.
  • Choose scents that have a calming effect such as lavender, eucalyptus, and chamomile. Put them in an essential oil diffuser to enjoy the benefits of aromatherapy at home.

Gather Supplies

  • A cup of hot tea is a great way to help you relax. Gather some of your favorite herbs to make tea, a cute kettle, and your favorite mug so you can sip your cares away.
  • Look for ingredients to make your own DIY mask. A facial mask can soothe your skin and help you feel calm and relaxed.
    Organize all of your favorite spa goodies in a cute basket and keep them in your special space. This will make it easy for you to find everything you need so you can start relaxing right away. Photo Credit: Pinterest
  • Organize all of your favorite spa goodies in a cute basket and keep them in your special space. This will make it easy for you to find everything you need so you can start relaxing right away.

Adjust the Lighting

  • Bright light might not make you feel as relaxed as you could be, so dim the lights in the room for a soothing ambiance.
  • Bring in some candles and turn off the overhead lights so you can bask in the candle’s illuminating glow.
  • Light a scented candle before you hop in the shower or tub. This simple act will make daily bathing more relaxing, even when you don’t have time for a full spa day.

Create a Playlist

  • Music has an incredible ability to calm the nerves, so make a custom playlist featuring some of your favorite songs to help you chill.
  • You can find spa music that’s specially made to help you feel calm and tranquil. Use this music as you relax and listen your cares away.
  • Add a Bluetooth speaker to your spa room so you can change tracks from your smartphone and won’t need to get up and walk over to the stereo.

Dress for the Occasion

  • Find a fabulous robe that you can wear in your at-home spa. Silk robes are super-soft, lightweight, and perfect for recreating an authentic spa experience.
  • Wear a comfy pair of slippers you can put on and take off whenever you want to keep your feet cushioned and your mood elevated.
  • Invest in a quality pair of pajamas. A two-piece set with a top and bottoms is a great choice, or you can buy a nightgown so you can go from your spa right to bed.

Decorations for Your Home Spa

No spa is truly complete without beautiful decor. Here are a few suggestions to help you create a serene, relaxing spa space at home:

  • Plants: Houseplants create a nice, calming effect and a beautiful, organic touch. Choose plants that are easy to care for but that will add color and beauty to your spa area.
  • Lamps: The right lighting makes your spa feel much more relaxing, so choose a few decorative lamps and use a soft, warm lightbulb. Himalayan salt lamps are a great choice for a spa, and a lighted oil diffuser gives off a soothing glow and adds an extra boost of relaxing fragrance.
  • Artwork: Elevate your spa at home by hanging some beautiful artwork. A lovely landscape painting or a softly colored modern work of art can add to the ambience of your spa without being overwhelming.
  • Candles: You can use candles for lighting, scent, and décor all in one. Choose a candle in a scent you love that will soothe you. Try a battery-operated candle if you’re just looking for a nice flickering glow without the scent.
  • Flowers: Add a vase with some freshly cut flowers whenever you have a spa day at home. Flowers bring calm, cheer, a light fragrance, and natural colors to your self-care space.

DIY Spa Treatments

If you really want to feel relaxed, make sure you’re giving your hair, nails, and face the treatment they deserve. You don’t have to spend a lot of money on high-end luxury products to get the same experience. There’s a ton of options for DIY spa treatment and self-care subscription boxes available that you can use to create the perfect hair and face masks at home. Try doing your own pedicure and manicure and doing some nail art. Look for recipes and suggestions that you can do yourself to make custom spa treatments using safe, natural ingredients. A body scrub is also a great way to relax. This treatment sloughs off dry skin and leaves you feeling smooth, soft, and moisturized. Just remember to apply a moisturizing lotion after using a body scrub for the best results. Avoid applying body scrubs to damaged skin, or skin that’s extremely dry. Be experimental and look for DIY hair masks that will help your hair feel like new. This is the perfect time to allow your hair to breathe and relax.

Enjoy a Manicure and Pedicure at Home

Freshen your fingers and toes with a simple at-home manicure and pedicure. Shop for a few of your favorite polish colors so you have lots of options to choose from. Here are some tips to ensure your at-home mani and pedi are a success:

  • Make sure you have some quality nail clippers, cotton pads, a nail file, a foot scrubber (like a pumice stone), and your nail polish before you begin.
  • Trim and shape your nails using the nail clippers and file. Remove any old nail polish using a gentle nail polish remover, then file your nails to your preferred shape.
  • Pamper yourself with a nice foot soak before you paint your toenails. Soak for around 15 to 20 minutes in a tub of warm water up to your ankles, a cup of bath salts, and a few drops of essential oil.
  • Paint your fingernails and/or toenails in your desired color. Wait for them to dry, then finish with a clear topcoat so they stay beautiful longer.
  • Moisturize your hands and feet once your nails are completely dry.

Spa Products to Add that Special Touch

After you’ve chosen a space, picked out some music, and planned your day, there are a few other things you can add to ensure that your spa is as tranquil as can be:

  • Neck Pillow: Use a neck pillow to help you relax. You can choose a bath neck pillow that supports your head in the bath, or try a soft, supportive scented pillow to cradle your neck while you lay back and relax.
  • Gel Eye Mask: Soothe those dark undereye circles with a cooling gel eye mask. These masks can reduce puffiness and help you feel calm.
  • Jade Roller: A jade roller is a great product that can relax your facial muscles. Use this handy roller after you’ve rinsed all facial products from your skin. These handy beauty tools are inexpensive, and they can help reduce facial puffiness while promoting feelings of calm.
  • Bath Salts: To give your bath some extra benefits, look for bath salts or sea salts in soothing scents. This product is great for relaxing while it softens the skin and emits a gentle, calming fragrance.
  • Facial Headbands: A headband will keep your hair out of your face when applying masks or bathing. Choose a headband made of soft material like a terry cloth or microfiber.
  • Spa Slippers: Find a pair of soft, cushy slippers you can wear around the house. This footwear is a perfect way to protect your feet while keeping them comfy and warm.
  • Massagers: A foot massager is a perfect addition to your spa. This gadget will relax your feet and calves as you sit back and relax. You can also find massages for your neck and back to remove pesky knots and relax tense muscles.
  • Essential Oil Diffuser: Once you’ve chosen some essential oils, use an oil diffuser to emit the soothing scents throughout your space. Try to diffuse just one oil at a time, or you can combine a few different oils within the same fragrance group.
  • Candles / Incense Sticks: Scented candles and incense sticks are both great ways to create a soothing ambiance and enjoy a gentle fragrance in your home spa. Find an incense holder that will catch the “soot” from your incense and protect your counters. Some scent suggestions include patchouli, ylang-ylang, rosemary, and jasmine.

Skincare Tools

Stock up your at-home spa with some essential skincare tools:

  • Gua Sha stone: This smooth stone, usually made of jade or quartz, improves blood circulation and keeps your skin looking fresh and young.
  • Facial massage roller: Use this tool to massage your face to stimulate circulation and help you relax. Some rollers can be frozen or refrigerated for extra cooling, relaxing effects.
  • Exfoliating sponge: These sponges use gentle abrasion to remove dead skin cells, resulting in fewer blemishes and smoother, clearer skin.
  • Microneedling tool: Try this handy tool to help your skin stimulate collagen production naturally. With regular use, it can help your facial skin look toned, smooth, and bright.
  • Makeup removing pads: Look for reusable pads you can wash to reduce waste. You can also find cotton rounds to remove makeup and apply toner.
  • Facial cleansing brush: These brushes will give your skin cleansers a thick, creamy lather. Look for brushes made of bacteria-resistant silicone.

Hair Care Tools

Every good home day spa should have a quality assortment of hair care tools. These are the essentials:

  • Hair dryer: A quality hair dryer will help your hair dry faster and leave it smooth and frizz-free.
  • Diffuser attachment: Add this attachment to your hair dryer if you have thick hair to reduce drying time and keep curls intact.
  • Curling iron: Give your hair some extra bounce with a hot curling iron.
  • Straightener: If you prefer sleek, straight locks, try a straightener that uses gentle heat to smooth and “flatten” the hair cuticle.
  • Round brush: A rounded brush is great for adding volume to your hair. Look for brushes made of boar bristles, which are much more delicate on hair to prevent breakage.
  • A quality comb: You can use a fine- or wide-tooth comb, but a good comb is definitely a haircare tool must-have for smoothing and detangling.

Include Your Family

Relaxing in your spa alone is great, but you can also enjoy a special spa day with the entire family. Here are some suggestions you can use to provide your family with the ultimate at-home spa experience:

  • Make some delicious smoothies full of fruit, greens, and other goodies that are healthy and delicious.
  • Buy your kids a comfy bathrobe and slippers they can wear on their special spa day.
  • Look for fun bath accessories for kids like colorful bubble bath and bath toys to make the day special.
  • Listen to relaxing music and teach your kids about breathing techniques and meditation.
  • Spend some time together as a family after your spa day by finishing with your kid’s favorite movie or a special dinner.

Make it Romantic

You can enjoy a romantic getaway right in your own home with a couple’s spa day. Take a day off from work and invite your other half to join you. To create a romantic spa day, try some of these suggestions:

  • If the tub is big enough, enjoy taking a nice long bubble bath together and play some romantic tunes by candlelight.
  • Choose romantic scents for your spa day including rose or vanilla to help set the mood.
  • Buy your partner a matching bathrobe so you can both wear comfy clothing after you soak in the tub or take a relaxing shower.
  • Enjoy a few snacks together, like chocolate-covered strawberries, whipped cream, or a fresh fruit tray.
  • If you’re experienced at massage, offer to give your partner a nice, long rubdown.
  • You can also get a professional massage therapist to go to your place, they provide everything needed for a total trouble-free experience.
  • Disconnect from the outside world and turn off your smartphone and the TV. This is the time to reconnect and enjoy some peace and quiet as you both relax and decompress.

Now that you have everything you need for a relaxing DIY spa day in the comfort of your own home, it’s time to get started. We hope you’re able to fully relax, chill, and enjoy your at-home spa day using these tips and ideas. From essential oils to DIY masks and scrubs, it’s easy to experience the same relaxing effects of an expensive spa right in your own home for the ultimate spa day anytime. Also if you are planning to open a spa and salon in this competitive market, then have a plan to Increase Return Clients Ratio At Your Spa & Salon.

This article originally appeared on www.Porch.com and is reprinted here with permission.

New Trial Explores Non-Thermal Approach to Heart Ablation Procedure

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Drs. Stavros Mountantonakis, Nicholas Skipitaris and Kabir Bhasin are helping lead Lenox Hill’s Advent Trial.

A first-of-its-kind device in clinical trial uses non-thermal pulsed electric fields to treat an irregular heartbeat known as atrial fibrillation

By: Margarita Oksenkrug

Chest pain used to jar Yvonne Spivack, 67, awake in the middle of the night, a persistent symptom of atrial fibrillation (AF). But, she is able now to sleep through the night after undergoing an experimental procedure on March 4.

Ms. Spivack is one of the first two patients treated at Lenox Hill Hospital as part of a pivotal national ADVENT Trial. The randomized clinical study will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of an innovative device for the treatment of AF, which is the most common type of heart arrhythmia.

The Pulsed Field Ablation (PFA) system from FARAPULSE Inc. is the first device developed to treat AF with non-thermal pulsed electric fields. Ablation is a non-surgical procedure used to disrupt abnormal electrical signals within the heart in order to restore a normal heartbeat.

Heart ablation procedure

The current standard of care utilizes thermal-based ablation – either hot or cold – to eliminate the targeted cardiac tissue associated with irregular heartbeats. Although effective, standard ablation may inadvertently cause thermal damage to critical structures near the heart, such as the esophagus or major nerves.

Patients like Ms. Spivack may avoid those risks with PFA’s enhanced precision. The groundbreaking device enables physicians to isolate and ablate arrhythmia-causing cells within the heart, while sparing non-target tissue. It does so by generating a pulsed field of energy specific to cardiac tissue. There are also numerous benefits for the physicians performing the procedure. The device is easier for doctors to manipulate and it is extremely rapid, cutting procedural time virtually in half.

Breaking new ground with heart arrhythmia trial

The hospital, one of more than 30 study locations across the United States, is the second medical center in the nation to enroll trial patients. At Lenox Hill, the trial team is led by site principal investigator Stavros Mountantonakis, MD, associate director of electrophysiology and includes Nicholas Skipitaris, MD, director of electrophysiology and Kabir Bhasin, MD, cardiac electrophysiologist.

Nicholas Skipitaris, MD, is the director of electrophysiology at Lenox Hill Hospital.

“This groundbreaking technology is a potential game-changer in the treatment of atrial fibrillation, as it increases the safety margin for the patient, simplifies the technique for the physician and significantly reduces the length of the procedure,” Dr. Skipitaris said. “As an institution that values innovation and participates in the latest clinical trials, Lenox Hill is committed to offering our patients the best electrophysiology treatments available today.”

Like Spivack, Larry Wallace, 64, underwent treatment on March 4 and both experienced improvement in their condition after the procedure. They will be evaluated regularly for the next year.

The ADVENT Trial is a randomized controlled trial being conducted by more than 50 leading electrophysiologists across the U.S. and will involve at least 350 patients in more than 30 U.S. centers. All study participants qualify to receive either standard ablation or the PFA procedure. Patients are randomized 1:1 with an equal chance of undergoing either treatment. However, the initial patients at each site usually undergo the PFA procedure.

To qualify, individuals must be between 18 and 75 years of age and must present with drug-refractory, recurrent, symptomatic paroxysmal (sudden and abrupt) AF. The primary endpoint will be freedom from AF for 12 months after a single ablation procedure.

More than 170 patients have been treated with the PFA system in European feasibility studies since 2018 and key findings showcasing the device’s safety, effectiveness, efficiency and ease-of-use have been published extensively by investigators, most recently in the September 2020 issue of The Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

What is atrial fibrillation?

AF is a heart rhythm disorder affecting up to 6.1 million Americans, making it the most common arrhythmia diagnosed in clinical practice. It is estimated to rise to 12.1 million cases by 2030. Individuals with AF are five times more likely to suffer a stroke than those with a regular heartbeat. The debilitating condition with symptoms like fatigue, palpitations and shortness of breath can also lead to blood clots and heart failure and even result in life-threatening complications if left untreated.

Treating heart rhythm disorders

A nationally recognized leader in cardiac care, Lenox Hill houses the Heart Rhythm Center, which is dedicated to the treatment of heartbeat disorders and equipped with the latest technology to manage and treat the various types of arrhythmias with a range of cutting-edge electrophysiology procedures, including complex ablations, minimally invasive pacemaker and defibrillator implantations, and structural interventions. In addition, the hospital was one of the first medical centers in the nation to offer a revolutionary sensor vest mapping system to quickly, accurately and non-invasively identify the exact site of an electrical malfunction within the heart.

To get more information about the ADVENT Trial or to find out if you qualify, please contact Lenox Hill’s trial research coordinator, Kristie Coleman, at 212-434-6500 or [email protected].

Israel’s Memorial Day begins at sundown with 1-minute siren

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Israeli soldiers place flags on the graves of fallen soldiers in Mount Herzl Military Cemetery in Jerusalem, April 11, 2021. (Flash90/Yonatan Sindel)

By World Israel News Staff

Israel’s ‘Memorial Day for the Fallen Soldiers of the Wars of Israel and Victims of Actions of Terrorism’ begins at sundown on Tuesday.

A one-minute memorial siren will sound at 8:00 p.m. throughout the country. Memorial ceremonies will begin immediately afterwards.

The main ceremony will take place at the Western Wall plaza in Jerusalem. President Reuven Rivlin, Chief of Staff Lt. Col. Aviv Kochavi, Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Leon, and other officials will attend. Five hundred people are expected to participate.

The total number of casualties in Israel, from 1860 to this year’s Memorial Day, is 23,928. The number of civilians killed in hostilities since the state was declared in 1948 is 3,158.

Two civilians were killed since last Memorial Day. They are Esther Horgan, who was beaten to death near her Samaria home, and Rabbi Shai Ohayon, who was stabbed while walking home in central Israel.

On Wednesday, at 11:00 a.m., a two-minute memorial siren will sound, signaling the start of official memorial services at 52 military cemeteries across the country and at memorial sites. During the two-minute siren, citizens of Israel stand, cars come to a stop and all business ceases.

At 1:00 p.m., a state ceremony will take place at the Victims of Acts of Terror Memorial on Mount Herzl to honor the memory of terror victims.

Names of all the victims of Israel’s wars runs on a number of Israeli channels from Tuesday sundown through Wednesday.

Due to Covid-19, the Ministry of Defense has asked that only families who have lost loved ones visit cemeteries. The ministry’s official memorial website has added virtual candles this year. Lighting memorial candles is a traditional way Israelis mark the somber day.

Trump Claims “The FDA’s love for Pfizer” is Reason for J&J Vaccine Pause

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(AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File)

CHARLIE SPIERING

Former President Donald Trump condemned President Joe Biden’s administration for pausing the delivery of the Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccine Tuesday.

“The Biden Administration did a terrible disservice to people throughout the world by allowing the FDA and CDC to call a ‘pause’ in the use of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine,” Trump wrote in a statement sent to reporters.

The decision to pause administration of the vaccine was announced by the Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday morning citing “extremely rare” cases of blood clots among recipients.

Trump defended the “extraordinary” results of the vaccine but lamented the company’s vaccine would never recover its reputation after the pause was announced by federal regulators.

The former president floated a theory that the decision was done for political reasons or due to “the FDA’s love for Pfizer.”

“The FDA, especially with long-time bureaucrats within, has to be controlled,” he wrote. “They should not be able to do such damage for possibly political reasons, or maybe because their friends at Pfizer have suggested it.”

Trump criticized the reputation of the FDA, reminding Americans they failed to approve the coronavirus vaccine for emergency use until two days after the 2020 presidential election.

“They didn’t like me very much because I pushed them extremely hard,” he wrote.

Trump urged the FDA to test the vaccine quickly and shift it back into circulation.

“Do your testing, clean up the record, and get the Johnson & Johnson vaccine back online quickly,” he wrote. “The only way we defeat the China Virus is with our great vaccines!”

Breitbart

Bombshell Video: CNN Director Admits Network Peddled ‘Propaganda’ to Remove Trump

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AP

Project Veritas released damning new video Tuesday showing a CNN director admitting that the fake news network engaged in “propaganda” to boost Joe Biden’s candidacy and denigrate President Trump during the 2020 election.

In the undercover footage, CNN Director Charlie Chester admitted that his network engaged in shameless propaganda to lie about President Trump’s health, temperament, and policies.

“Look what we did, we [CNN] got Trump out. I am 100% going to say it, and I 100% believe that if it wasn’t for CNN, I don’t know that Trump would have got voted out…I came to CNN because I wanted to be a part of that,” Chester told a PV journalist.

“[Trump’s] hand was shaking or whatever, I think. We brought in so many medical people to tell a story that was all speculation — that he was neurologically damaged, and he was losing it.”

“He’s unfit to — you know, whatever. We were creating a story there that we didn’t know anything about. That’s what — I think that’s propaganda,” he admitted.

Chester also confessed CNN deployed propaganda to portray ailing Biden as a vigorous “young geriatric.”

“We would always show shots of him [Biden] jogging and that [he’s] healthy, you know, and him in aviator shades. Like you paint him as a young geriatric,” he said.

Chester went on to explain that, since Trump was successfully ousted from the White House, CNN would pivot to climate change messaging for the long-term, especially now that COVID-19 hysteria is waning.

“It’s going to be our [CNN’s] focus. Like our focus was to get Trump out of office, right? Without saying it, that’s what it was, right? So, our next thing is going to be for climate change awareness,” Chester said.

“I think there’s a COVID fatigue. So, like whenever a new story comes up, they’re [CNN’s] going to latch onto it. They’ve already announced in our office that once the public is — will be open to it — we’re going to start focusing mainly on climate.”

“Pandemic-like story that we’ll beat to death, but that one’s got longevity. You know what I mean? Like there’s a definitive ending to the pandemic. It’ll taper off to a point that it’s not a problem anymore. Climate change can take years, so they’ll [CNN will] probably be able to milk that quite a bit,” he added.

Veritas baited Chester to confess through several staged Tinder dates, according to Mediaite.

“A source close to CNN tells Mediaite that Chester was targeted by Project Veritas via the dating app Tinder, in which his dating profile included CNN. The unidentified Project Veritas employee claimed to by [sic] a nurse and the two initially bonded over Chester’s past health concerns. They went on a total of five dates, the last of which occurred at a coffee shop in Chester’s neighborhood, but was interrupted by O’Keefe and others before leaving the coffee shop.”

If You Still Believe J Street is Pro-Israel, You’re (Pea)Nuts!

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David Lange(israellycool)

 Street, the liberal pro-Israel group, is presenting Jimmy Carter with a peacemaker award at its conference, recognizing the former president, who has frequently tangled with the mainstream pro-Israel community, for brokering the 1979 Egypt-Israel peace.

“By helping to broker the incredible Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt, President Carter demonstrated that determined American diplomacy can end decades of conflict and bring together even the most determined foes,” J Street President Jeremy Ben-Ami said Monday in a release sent to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

J Street’s Tzedek v’Shalom award goes to “distinguished individuals who have made critical contributions in their lives to the cause of peace for Israelis, Palestinians and the wider Middle East,” the release said.

The award is in line with the longstanding claim by J Street, itself a group that forcefully criticizes Israeli policies and pro-Israel orthodoxies, that doing good work on Israel’s behalf sometimes requires tough love.

“With visionary moral clarity, he has emphasized that the well-being of the Israeli and Palestinian peoples are inextricably intertwined — and has never given up the hope that the occupation and their conflict can and must be brought to a just and peaceful end,” Ben-Ami said.

Besides being perhaps the worst US President history in history, Carter is vehemently anti-Israel, even antisemitic. Nothing demonstrates this more than showing he has lust in his heart for Hamas.

Jimmy-Carter-and-Ismail-HaniyehJimmy Carter Hamas

Cop, Police Chief Resign 2 days After Controversial Minnesota Shooting

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This May 31, 2007 photo shows Officer Kim Potter, part of the Brooklyn Center Police negotiation team in Brooklyn Center, Minn. Potter, who fatally shot Daunte Wright, a Black man, during a traffic stop on Sunday, April 11, 2021 in the Minneapolis suburb and the city’s chief of police have resigned. Brooklyn Center Mayor Mike Elliott says he hopes the moves will heal the community and lead to reconciliation after two nights of protests and unrest. (Bruce Bisping/Star Tribune via AP)

(AP) — A white police officer who fatally shot a Black man during a traffic stop in a Minneapolis suburb resigned Tuesday, as did the city’s police chief — moves that the mayor said he hoped would help heal the community and lead to reconciliation after two nights of protests and unrest.

The resignations from Officer Kim Potter and Police Chief Tim Gannon came two days after the death of 20-year-old Daunte Wright in Brooklyn Center. Potter, a 26-year veteran, had been on administrative leave following Sunday’s shooting, which happened as the Minneapolis area was already on edge over the trial of the first of four police officers in George Floyd’s death.

Brooklyn Center Mayor Mike Elliott said he was “appreciative” that Potter submitted her resignation but that he had not asked for it nor accepted it. It wasn’t immediately clear what that would mean.

Gannon has said he believed Potter mistakenly grabbed her gun when she was going for her Taser. She can be heard on her body camera video shouting “Taser! Taser!” However, protesters and Wright’s family members say there’s no excuse for the shooting and it shows how the justice system is tilted against Blacks, noting Wright was stopped for expired car registration and ended up dead.

Elliott said the city had been moving toward firing Potter when she resigned. He said he hoped her resignation would “bring some calm to the community,” but that he would keep working towards “full accountability under the law.”

“We have to make sure that justice is served, justice is done. Daunte Wright deserves that, his family deserves that,” Elliott said.

Activists who attended the news conference called for sweeping changes to the Brooklyn Center Police Department and sharply criticized the acting police chief, Tony Gruenig, for not yet having a plan.

Elliott said the department has about 49 police officers, none of whom live in Brooklyn Center. He said he didn’t have information on racial diversity at hand but that “we have very few people of color in our department.”

The modest suburb just north of Minneapolis has seen its demographics shift dramatically in recent years. In 2000, more than 70% of the city was white. Today, a majority of residents are Black, Asian or Latino.

Wright was stopped for having expired license plates. Police then tried to arrest him on an outstanding warrant after failing to appear in court on charges that he fled from officers and possessed a gun without a permit during an encounter with Minneapolis police in June.

Body camera footage released Monday shows Wright struggling with police when an officer shouts, “I’ll Tase you! I’ll Tase you! Taser! Taser! Taser!” She draws her weapon after the man breaks free from police outside his car and gets back behind the wheel.

After firing a single shot from her handgun, the car speeds away, and the officer is heard saying, “Holy (expletive)! I shot him.”

Wright died of a gunshot wound to the chest, according to the medical examiner.

Protests began within hours.

In her one-paragraph letter of resignation, Potter — a 26-year veteran — said, “I have loved every minute of being a police officer and serving this community to the best of my ability, but I believe it is in the best interest of the community, the department, and my fellow officers if I resign immediately.”

Wright’s father, Aubrey Wright, told ABC’s “Good Morning America” on Tuesday that he rejects the explanation that Potter mistook her gun for her Taser.

“I lost my son. He’s never coming back. I can’t accept that. A mistake? That doesn’t even sound right. This officer has been on the force for 26 years. I can’t accept that,” he said.

Chyna Whitaker, mother of Daunte’s son, said at a news conference that she felt police “stole my son’s dad from him.”

The Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association said in a statement Tuesday that “no conclusions should be made until the investigation is complete.”

Prosecutors in Hennepin County, where the shooting occurred, said they have referred the case to nearby Washington County — a practice county attorneys in the Minneapolis area adopted last year in handling police deadly force cases. The Washington County Attorney’s office did not immediately return a request for comment.

 

Elliott, the mayor, called for the governor to move the case to the attorney general to prosecute.

Asked to comment, John Stiles, spokesman for the attorney general’s office, said the attorney general has confidence in Washington County Attorney Pete Orput’s review of the case.

Ben Crump, the Wright family’s attorney, spoke outside the Minneapolis courthouse where a fired police officer is on trial in Floyd’s death. Crump compared Wright’s death to Floyd’s, who was pinned down by police when they tried to arrest him for allegedly passing a counterfeit $20 at a neighborhood market last May.

Daunte Wright “was not a threat to them,” Crump said. “Was it the best decision? No. But young people don’t always make the best decisions. As his mother said, he was scared.”

Potter has experience with investigations into police shootings. She was the police union president and one of the first officers to respond after Brooklyn Center police fatally shot a man who allegedly tried to stab an officer with a knife in 2019, according to a report from the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office.

After medics arrived, she told the two officers who shot the man to get into separate squad cars, turn off their body cameras, and not to speak to each other. She accompanied two other officers involved in the shooting while investigators interviewed them.

On Monday, hundreds of protesters gathered hours after a dusk-to-dawn curfew was announced by the governor. When protesters wouldn’t disperse, police began firing gas canisters and flash-bang grenades, sending clouds wafting over the crowd and chasing some protesters away. Forty people were arrested. Thirteen arrests were made in neighboring Minneapolis, including for burglaries and curfew violations, police said.

In Portland, Oregon, police said a Monday night demonstration over the shooting turned into a riot, with some in the crowd throwing rocks and other projectiles at officers.

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This story has been corrected to delete an incorrect description of MPPOA as a union; it is a professional association.

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Associated Press writers Scott Bauer in Madison, Wisconsin, Stephen Groves in Sioux Falls, South Dakota and Tim Sullivan in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

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Rand Paul: Fauci Should Be ‘Removed from TV’ for ‘Fear-Mongering

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Dr. Anthony Fauci (Patrick Semansky/AP)

During a Tuesday appearance on Fox Business Network’s “Cavuto: Coast to Coast,” Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) called for White House chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci to be removed from his television appearances for “fear-mongering.” This comes a day after he referred to Fauci as a “petty” tyrant.

According to Paul, Fauci is spouting information that “isn’t even matched by the science of his own institute,” the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

“Now, immunity doesn’t have to be perfect to be protective. It could be that possibly someone who’s had COVID like myself could they be reinfected — there are very small numbers of it. But guess what, almost none of them are really getting sick. … You’re not reading stories of, ‘Oh, my goodness, thousands of people have been reinfected and they’re hospitalized and they’re dying.’ Those stories don’t exist. You will read about a random, very rare person getting reinfected or getting infected when they have been vaccinated. But the good news is, is that even if you got infected from COVID after you’ve been vaccinated, you have some immunity, you have partial immunity, and it lessens the degree or significance of the disease.”

He added, “Almost everything out there is good news. This is why I so much think Dr. Fauci should be voluntarily removed from TV because what he says is such a disservice and such fear-mongering, and almost all of what he says isn’t even matched by the science of his own institute. So, really, what we need to is hear from a lot of different experts.”

First They Came For…

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Dr. Hughes

By Phyllis Chesler

If our leading literary enchantress, J.K. Rowling, an author who cherishes those who are seen as unacceptably “different” because they wield magical powers, can be cursed and shamed for her belief that biology, DNA, and anatomy are real—imagine what can be done to a less magical, or certainly less powerful being such as the distinguished Professor Donna Hughes.

Dr. Hughes holds an Endowed Chair in Women and Gender Studies at the University of Rhode Island. She founded the invaluable academic journal Dignity: A Journal of Analysis of Exploitation and Violence and also pioneered the academic study of sex trafficking in the United States, Russia, Ukraine, and Europe.

Professor Hughes’s Thought Crime involved the publication of an essay at a feminist website in which she said “that a person could not change their biological sex; that children are not “born in the wrong body and cannot have the brain of one sex and the body of another.”

Hughes, who has a Ph.D in genetics, is now in grave danger. Her university released a statement to the media which says: “The University does not support statements and publications by Professor Donna Hughes that espouse anti-transgender perspectives….a faculty member’s First Amendment and academic freedom rights are not boundless…faculty have a special obligation to exercise critical self-discipline in transmitting their personal opinions.”

This is a remarkable statement. URI is claiming that anything a professor says or writes anywhere that challenges the Party Line is forbidden. URI’s going public is equivalent to putting Professor Hughes’s face on a wanted poster.

Two female URI students launched a petition on Change.org denouncing Professor Hughes which now has more than 1,200 signatories. The Gender and Women’s Studies faculty and the College of Life Sciences also piled on with statements of their own though their statements are not online. Dr. Annie Russell, the director of the university’s Gender and Sexuality Center, published a pro-trans letter.

Currently, diversity of race is essential but intellectual diversity is forbidden. Were such student petitioners to seize state power they would either be executing dissidents like Professor Hughes or sending them to a remotely located pig farm or a gulag punishment cell for re-education. In our post-Orwellian world, intolerance is the new tolerance.

The “disappearance” of dissident views, amounts to the de-construction of Western thought. Statue-toppling is no longer enough; one must also censor views which challenge the reigning “politically correct” opinions about racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, and American history itself.

From 2003 on,  I’ve been writing about the “cancellations” of American professors. First, they came for anyone who was too pro-Israel or not pro-Palestinian enough. Then they came for those who were critical of Islam/Islamism, including its gender and religious apartheid and Jihad terrorism—and then, for those professors who were seen as racists, misogynists, or homophobes. Eventually, Big Brother came for anyone who wanted to teach the traditional Western (white) Canon as opposed to “relevant” and more recent works of intersectional social justice.

They have now come for those who are critical of the well-funded transgender movement, and who are not necessarily opposed to trans individuals. There is a huge difference.

And so, the arrogant children and the virtue-signaling adults have come for Dr. Hughes.

In an interview, Professor Hughes told me that “Even at URI, I’ve seen the fear on faculty member faces when they are told they must learn the (new) language of transgenderism or possibly face legal action.” Thus far, she has been deluged with both negative but, like J.K. Rowling, also with very positive and supportive email.

After nearly twenty years of Cancel Culture, people are beginning to fight back. For example, a new organization, the Academic Freedom Alliance, was launched in March.  Both Professor Hughes and I are founding members. They have provided her with a lawyer.  However, she may also need to raise funding for the kind of lawsuit that will be necessary.

A precedent on academic freedom and transgender rights may now exist in the state of Ohio. On March 26th, the Sixth Circuit ruled that Nicholas Meriwether, a philosophy professor and an evangelical Christian, had the right not to use politically correct pro-transgender pronouns—and he could do so without fear of suspension or termination at Shawnee State University. This decision may have absolutely no bearing on what happens elsewhere or to anyone other than Professor Meriwether.

At the risk of being shamed, and defamed, allow me to join Professor Hughes in suggesting that biology is objectively real and so is DNA and anatomy.

Professor Hughes has stood up to pimps and pornographer and she assures me that she “remains dedicated to defending my right of free speech, and I’m sure I’ll prevail in the end.”

Until then, we had all better be prepared for a very long night and for a time that will try our souls. I will give J.K. Rowling the last word:

“I’ve been forced to the unhappy conclusion that an ethical and medical scandal is brewing. I believe the time is coming when those organizations and individuals who have uncritically embraced fashionable dogma, and demonized those urging caution, will have to answer for the harm they’ve enabled.”

Phyllis Chesler is an Emerita Professor of Psychology and Women’s Studies and the author of twenty books, including Women and Madness, A Politically Incorrect Feminist, and Requiem for a Female Serial Killer.

Facebook blocks Jewish prayer ad calling it ‘political advertising’

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The Great Synagogue, on Allenby street in central Tel Aviv. (Flash90/Nati Shohat)
By Paul Shindman, World Israel NewsFacebook has taken down an ad announcing Israel Independence Day prayers at the Great Synagogue in Tel Aviv, claiming that the posting constituted “political advertising” and was in contravention of the social media giant’s standards, Channel 20 News reported Monday.

With Israel’s economy opening up after the successful coronavirus vaccination campaign and the sharp drop in morbidity, the Ministry of Health eased the restrictions on gatherings. Group prayer is once again allowed in synagogues, but generally limited to less than full capacity and to those who have been vaccinated.

One of the synagogues eager to celebrate both Israel’s Independence Day and the return to group prayer was the Great Synagogue in central Tel Aviv. The synagogue posted an ad on Facebook announcing the annual special prayers for Independence Day that will be held Wednesday evening.

“The establishment of a Jewish State in the Land of Israel after thousands of years of exile is a miracle, so we open Independence Day with thanksgiving and praise – join us,” says the posting on the synagogue’s Facebook page.

In order to increase the exposure, the synagogue decided go beyond just a regular posting and purchased a Facebook ad for a fee. However, a few hours later, Facebook blocked the ad saying it did not comply with Facebook’s standards.

“It turns out that this is not an isolated incident,” tweeted Channel 20 reporter Kobi Bornshtein. “I have now received another case in which a page that published a religious event was blocked by Twitter on the pretext of a ‘political event.’”

The festive prayers on Wednesday will be opened by Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau, former chief rabbi of Israel and feature two popular Jewish cantors, with the poster for the event stating that admission is only for those who have received the coronavirus vaccinations or have recovered from the disease.

Israeli Air Force preparing for Israeli Independence Day

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The most awesome Israeli Air Force are getting ready for the 73rd Independence Day, this coming Thursday.