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Hier — 18 avril 2024Presse

Takeaways From a Trove of ByteDance Records

The records briefly surfaced in a lawsuit involving the Republican megadonor Jeff Yass’s firm.

The ByteDance offices in Shanghai last year.
À partir d’avant-hierPresse

Ireland’s Prime Minister, Leo Varadkar, Resigned. What Happens Now?

Leo Varadkar, the prime minister of the Republic of Ireland, resigned unexpectedly, prompting a political scramble. Here’s what to know about what happens next.

Ireland’s prime minister, Leo Varadkar, at a European Council summit in Brussels on Thursday, a day after he said he would step down.

Study: Daily Cannabis Smokers 25% More Likely to Suffer Heart Attack, 42% Higher Stroke Risk

Par : Paul Bois · Paul Bois
A study suggests daily cannabis users have a 25 percent increased risk of a heart attack and a 42 percent increased risk of a stroke.

Rihanna Under Fire for $6M Gig at $125M Indian Billionaire's Pre-Wedding Bash as Quarter of Country in Poverty

Pop star Rihanna is facing backlash for her "lazy" performance at Indian billionaire Anant Ambani's star-studded $125 million pre-wedding bash. Meanwhile, a quarter of Indiana is stuck in poverty.

Thailand to Ban Recreational Marijuana by End of 2024

Cholnan Srikaew, the health minister of Thailand, said on Thursday that recreational marijuana will be banned by the end of 2024. Thailand was the first Southeast Asian country to legalize medical marijuana in 2018, followed by recreational use in 2022.

Khanna: Biden Ceasefire Announcement Is Cave to Left, to Help in MI Primary

On Monday’s broadcast of CNN’s “The Source,” Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) reacted to President Joe Biden’s announcement that he hopes for a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas by next week by stating that “I don’t think it’s a coincidence that

Anna Wintour's Met Gala Lands Major Sponsorship from China's TikTok

Par : David Ng · David Ng
The annual Met Gala has a new sponsor -- China's TikTok, which will have a major presence at this year's celebrity ball.

In a New Cannabis Landscape, a Navy Veteran Battles for Racial Equity

Wanda James is on a mission to empower entrepreneurs from communities harmed by racial disparities in marijuana arrests.

Wanda James at her recreational cannabis dispensary, Simply Pure Denver. A former Navy lieutenant, she now advocates for racial justice in the changing cannabis landscape.

Disney-Hulu's '1619 Project' Wins Emmy Award for Nikole Hannah-Jones, Oprah Winfrey

Par : David Ng · David Ng
The Hulu docuseries "The 1619 Project" won an Emmy Award Sunday, marking the latest establishment plaudit for the controversial and widely discredited New York Times project that argued the true founding of the U.S. was not 1776, but rather 1619 when the first slaves were brought to America.

Chess Federation Fines Player Over Her ‘Sports Shoes’

The Dutch chess player, who received an official warning, said she did not intend to violate the dress code when she wore her canvas Burberry sneakers at a chess championship in Uzbekistan.

Anna-Maja Kazarian said that leaving the venue of the World Rapid and Blitz Championships in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, to change her shoes made her feel stressed and unfocused during Thursday’s rounds.

Biden Administration to Loosen Marijuana Laws, Some Advocates Say It Changes Nothing

Par : Paul Bois · Paul Bois
President Joe Biden's administration will reportedly loosen laws regulating cannabis (marijuana), which some advocates say amounts to only a symbolic gesture that will ultimately change nothing.

2 Teens Convicted of Murdering Brianna Ghey, a Transgender Girl, in England

A jury found that a boy and a girl, both now 16, murdered Brianna Ghey, 16, who was stabbed 28 times at a park near Manchester in February.

Brianna Ghey, 16, was stabbed 28 times with a knife at a park near Manchester in February.

What I’m reading: Historical memory edition

Finding escapism and insight in two novels and Masha Gessen’s new essay.

The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, in Berlin. A new essay by Masha Gessen in The New Yorker explores the politics of memory in Europe and its implications for current events in Gaza, tracing history back via the lens of their own Jewish family.

Nikole Hannah-Jones: Attacks on Harvard President Are 'Racist'

Par : Pam Key · Pam Key
New York Times Magazine staff writer Nikole Hannah-Jones said Tuesday on CNN’s "NewsNight" that calls for Harvard President Claudine Gay to be fired after her controversial congressional testimony weare "racist."

Anna 'Chickadee' Cardwell, Eldest Daughter of Mama June, Dead at 29

Par : Paul Bois · Paul Bois
Reality star Anna "Chickadee" Cardwell, the eldest daughter of Mama June Shannon from Here Comes Honey Boo Boo, has died at the age of 29.

Cheney: 'No Question' Trump Will Refuse to Leave Office if Reelected President

Par : Pam Key · Pam Key
Former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) said Monday on NBC's "Today" that she believes that if former President Donald Trump wins the 2024 election, he will attempt to stay beyond the end of his second term.

Actress Julianna Margulies: 'Entire Black Community' Brainwashed to Hate Jews

Par : Paul Bois · Paul Bois
Actress Julianna Margulies set the internet on fire this week when she said that the black community has been "brainwashed" to hate Jews. 

Anti-Israel Mob Attacks Rihanna for Partnering with Israel Football Association-Tied PUMA

Pop star Rihanna has come under fire from her left-wing fans and other pro-Hamas groups for teaming with the PUMA brand sportswear company.

Murdered Kremlin Critic Anna Politkovskaya Was Veteran Journalist

The Russian journalist gained international renown for her criticism of the Kremlin and its policies in Chechnya. Her murder in 2006 provoked vocal condemnation from inside Russia and abroad.

Anna Politkovskaya, a journalist who was murdered in 2006.

Russia Pardons Man Convicted in Journalist’s Murder in Return for Ukraine Service

The lawyer of Sergei G. Khadzhikurbanov, who was sentenced to 20 years in prison for helping to organize the killing of Anna Politkovskaya, said he had been pardoned by President Vladimir V. Putin.

Sergei G. Khadzhikurbanov, a former law enforcement officer, at a hearing in Moscow in 2013.

How Germany’s Green Party Lost Its Luster

The party was riding high when it entered the government two years ago. Now it is stumbling, blamed for driving voters to the far right.

The prelude to an election event in Berlin in 2021, when the Green Party’s performance seemed to show a strong mandate to advance Germany’s transition toward a greener future.

Prince William Flying to Singapore to Join Cate Blanchet, Hannah Waddingham for Celebrity Studded Earthshot Prize

Prince William will fly to Singapore next month to join Oscar winner Cate Blanchett and actresses Lana Condor, Nomzamo Mbatha, and Hannah Waddingham amongst a host of other celebrities jetting into the city-state for the 2023 Earthshot Prize awards.

Green New Dealers

Politics

Green New Dealers

 A “Social equity” program rebrands convicted criminals as budding entrepreneurs.

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“Equity is not a thing. It is the thing.” 

With this unreadable statement, the architect of marijuana legalization in New York introduced the state’s Social and Economic Equity Plan for the budding cannabis industry. 

Chris Alexander, who had been the lead drafter of the bill that legalized recreational marijuana in the Empire State, was appointed executive director of the state’s Office of Cannabis Management—one of the first appointments made by Governor Kathy Hochul after she took the reins from Andrew Cuomo. 

“One of my top priorities is to finally get New York’s cannabis industry up and running,” Hochul said after Alexander’s confirmation. But Hochul and her fellow Democrats didn’t just want to open dispensaries; they wanted particular people to sell weed to particular communities. After legalizing recreational cannabis in 2021, New York implemented a “social equity program” under Alexander’s direction, seeking to provide a head-start in the state-level industry to certain groups historically impacted by cannabis criminalization. The program gives preferential treatment to racial minorities, women, and convicted criminals, which the program calls “justice-involved individuals,” under the nebulous guise of equity. 

In an attempt to effect reparations for the war on drugs, initial rounds of licensing were opened to individuals convicted of a marijuana-related offense or their family members. The first round of New York’s tiered cannabis licensing consisted of Conditional Adult-Use Retail Dispensary (CAURD) licenses, and guidelines stipulated that over half of CAURD license had to go to a “justice-involved” person. Upon receiving a license, individuals became eligible for a loan of $500,000 to $1.5 million and a retail space remodeled at the state’s expense. 

At the outset, Governor Kathy Hochul designated $200 million to support businesses licensed under the social equity program. With this massive endowment, Alexander was bullish on the program’s prospects. In March 2022, he told the New York Times that he expected to distribute between 100–200 licenses to people who had been convicted of a marijuana-related offense.  

Unlike any other part of the program, Alexander’s estimate proved far too conservative. CAURD has doled out at least three times as many cannabis licenses for ex-convicts than the 150 originally intended. In the summer of 2023 alone, New York’s Cannabis Control Board approved 212 additional licenses for former offenders, doubling the number of licenses given to individuals with former cannabis convictions in a matter of months. As of July, New York state had allowed 463 ex-convicts to become legal drug dealers.

Who are these former offenders? What exactly were their crimes? No one really knows—and, in the eyes of the state, you really shouldn’t be asking. New York has made sure that no one can get answers to these questions.

When the state legalized recreational cannabis, their policy included an automatic expungement of former cannabis-related convictions, meaning that marijuana crimes predating March 31, 2021 no longer appear on background checks and cannot be found by law enforcement unless the convicted individual is applying for a gun license or a law enforcement job. To make matters more confusing, the charges on record don’t always match the crime committed. The charge of cannabis possession often results from a plea bargain, which commonly occurs in situations where the offender is charged with a more serious crime, like trafficking. A drug dealer who pleaded down a sentence to possession is now able to pick up right where they left off, with the blessing (and funding) of the State of New York.

A few of these individuals became momentary media darlings, propped up by mainstream outlets as budding entrepreneurs whose dreams were no longer deferred. New York City resident Baron Fajardo, who had been arrested at age 16 for smoking marijuana, was subsequently arrested six additional times for both possession and distribution. Under the social equity program, Fajardo’s dealing would gain the government’s sanction.

“As a person you feel down, a little bit defeated, like ‘Oh, I got a stain on my name… Now, that stain is actually the same thing that can help you,” Fajardo told the New York Times.

Eager to give people like Fajardo the opportunity to get back in the game—and pay taxes this time around—the Cannabis Control Board heralded the program’s expansion as “a momentous leap forward in our pursuit of an inclusive and fair cannabis industry.” 

But their enthusiasm wasn’t shared by all. 

This August, a group of veterans filed a lawsuit arguing that regulators weren’t applying their equity plan equitably enough. Veterans and racial minorities had been promised special privileges alongside former “justice-involved individuals.” But when it came time to dole out the licenses, regulators limited the initial round of licensing to an applicant pool made up solely of individuals with former marijuana convictions.

These veterans aren’t the only ones confused about what exactly equity is—or isn’t. Activists pushed an anti-criminalization agenda for years, crafting a narrative of draconian enforcement built on systemic racism. The combination of national anti-police fervor and widespread misconceptions about marijuana’s social and medical dangers delivered an easy victory. But it seems that pro-cannabis politicians didn’t seriously consider what law and justice would look like in a marijuana-friendly state.

“Advocates fought hard to put racial equity at the center of New York’s cannabis legalization regime,” District Attorney Alvin Bragg of Soros funds and Trump trial fame said this February, expressing his disappointment at the proliferation of black-market storefronts throughout New York City. Never mind that black-market weed isn’t inspected or regulated—it frequently contains contaminants, heavy metals, and pesticides. No, Bragg was more concerned that the black market doesn’t live up to the “promise of equity and fairness” that he believes legalization offers to the industry. 

Bragg teamed up with New York Mayor Eric Adams to take “direct action” against illegal dispensaries. Despite sending warning letters to over 400 illegal smoke shops in Manhattan, the dynamic duo shuttered only four—1 percent. Six months later, New York City is still home to over 1,500 unlicensed shops.

Now, pro-cannabis progressives find themselves in a tricky situation: After decrying the War on Drugs as a racist crusade, they’re beginning to realize that legalization hasn’t actually eliminated the need to enforce laws, even if New Yorkers now can light up legally. Equity is the thing, after all, and if equity means reparations for people who faced penalties for buying, selling, or using marijuana before 2021, does the same equity not extend to those who break the law now?

The post Green New Dealers appeared first on The American Conservative.

Tom Emmer's Nomination Collapses as Republicans Eye Next Steps

Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-MN) dropped out of the Speaker race after his nomination's inevitable collapse became apparent amid a large number of Republican holdouts.

Lost in Tibetan Avalanches, 2 American Women Close to a Record

The mountaineers, who hoped to become the first American women to scale the world’s 14 tallest peaks, were among climbers struck by avalanches on Mount Shishapangma. One was 80 meters short of her goal, her mother said.

At just over 8,000 meters, Mount Shishapangma, in Tibet, is the world’s 14th highest peak.
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