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NBA Owners' net worth (Dan Gilbert's net worth rose from $7.5 billion to $45.3 billion this year)
...After his company went public. I had to include that in the title. Maybe now he won't be such a cheap bastard with his GMs. I had no idea Gilbert was now the second richest owner in the league. Which made me wonder what other owners are worth (the title of this post was almost "why is Tilman Fertitta such a cheap bastard while Joe Lacob spends money like he thinks the shit's gonna rot?"). Which brings us to this handy Forbes list from March: 1. Steve Ballmer (Los Angeles Clippers): $51.4 billion Ballmer scored a huge win this week for his dream of building a new arena. He bought the Forum for $400 million from the Madison Square Garden Company, which tried to block a new Clippers arena near the Forum in Inglewood, California. 2. Philip Anschutz (Los Angeles Lakers): $11.2 billion Anschutz owns one-third of the Lakers, plus the arena in which they play, the Staples Center, in addition to the NHL’s Kings. \For those wondering, it's hard to find a reliable source on Jeanie's net worth but according to unreliable sources it's in the ballpark of $500 million* 3.Stanley Kroenke (Denver Nuggets): $10 billion The real estate and sports mogul owns teams in the NBA, the NHL, the NFL, MLS and the Premier League. 4.Joseph Tsai (Brooklyn Nets): $9.9 billion The cofounder of Alibaba Group completed his purchase of the Nets last year for $2.3 billion and bought the Barclays Center for an additional $1 billion. 5. Robert Pera (Memphis Grizzlies): $7.1 billion Pera owns nearly three-quarters of wireless equipment maker Ubiquiti Networks. He was the lead investor in the Grizzlies purchase in 2012. 6. Daniel Gilbert (Cleveland Cavaliers): $6.2 billion Gilbert made his first fortune from Quicken Loans, the largest online mortgage lender, which he cofounded in 1985 at 22 years old.*List is from March, before the IPO 7. Tom Gores (Detroit Pistons): $5.7 billion Gores and his brother Alec are both private equity billionaires. The Pistons opened a new $90 million headquarters and training facility in September. 8. Micky Arison (Miami Heat): $5.3 billion Arison’s net worth plummeted 33% over the past six weeks with the collapse in the stock price of Carnival Corp. The world’s largest cruise ship operator was founded by Arison’s father in 1972. 9. Tilman Fertitta (Houston Rockets): $4.4 billion Fertitta furloughed roughly 40,000 employees at his casino and restaurant empire to curb the economic impact caused by coronavirus-induced shutdowns. His fortune is derived from his ownership of the Golden Nugget Casinos and Landry’s, a Texas-based restaurant and entertainment company. 10. Mark Cuban (Dallas Mavericks): $4.3 billion Cuban was one of the first sports team owners to commit to paying hourly arena workers for games missed during the coronavirus crisis. He’s invested more than $20 million as a “shark” on ABC’s popular Shark Tank show. 11. Joshua Harris (Philadelphia 76ers): $3.7 billion Harris cofounded private equity powerhouse Apollo Global Management in 1990 with fellow billionaires Leon Black and Marc Rowan. He remains a managing director there. 12. Gayle Benson (New Orleans Pelicans): $3.2 billion Benson inherited the Pelicans and the NFL’s Saints when her husband, Tom, died in 2018. 13. Glen Taylor (Minnesota Timberwolves): $2.8 billion His printing firm, Taylor Corp., generates more than $2 billion in revenue annually. Taylor also owns stakes in Minnesota’s MLS and WNBA teams. 14. Herb Simon (Indiana Pacers): $2.6 billion The real estate mogul bought the Pacers with his since-deceased brother, Melvin, in 1983, for $10.5 million. Simon Property Group is one of the world’s largest real estate investment trusts, with 206 properties in the U.S. 15.Antony Ressler (Atlanta Hawks): $2.4 billion Ressler cofounded private equity firm Ares Management in 1997. He owns a small piece of the Milwaukee Brewers, in addition to his controlling stake in the Hawks. 16. Michael Jordan (Charlotte Hornets): $2.1 billion The NBA’s GOAT sold a minority stake in the Hornets in September in a deal that valued the team at $1.5 billion. Nike pays Jordan more than $100 million annuallybased on growing sales for the company’s Jordan Brand. 17. Marc Lasry (Milwaukee Bucks): $1.8 billion Lasry, a hedge fund titan, joined Wes Edens to buy the Bucks in 2014 for $550 million. He was born in Morocco and moved to the U.S. at age 7 with his family. 18. Gail Miller (Utah Jazz): $1.7 billion Miller transferred ownership of the Jazz in 2017 to a family legacy trust to deter her heirs from selling or moving the team. Gail and her since-deceased husband, Larry, bought the team for $22 million in 1986. 19. Jerry Reinsdorf (Chicago Bulls): $1.5 billion Reinsdorf led a group of investors who bought a controlling stake in the Bulls for $9.2 million in 1985. Good timing. It was one year after the team drafted Michael Jordan, who led the Bulls to six NBA titles. The team is now worth $3.2 billion. 20. Theodore Leonsis (Washington Wizards): $1.4 billion Leonsis initially built his fortune as a senior executive at AOL, before investing in sports teams like the Wizards and the NHL’s Capitals. *Not included on the list but googled for your edification: DeVos Family (Magic): $5.4 billion James Dolan (Knicks): $2 billion Joe Lacob (Warriors): $1.2 billion Vivek Randive (Kings): $700 million Robert Sarver (Suns): $400 million Jody Allen (Trail Blazers): The sister of Microsoft cofounder, Paul G. Allen, took control of the team after his death. At the time her brother was worth $20 billion though he intended to give most of his fortune away... Boston Basketball Partners LLC (Celtics): An American local private investment group formed to purchase the Boston Celtics Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment (Raptors): The Raptors are a subsidiary of MLSE The Professional Basketball Club, LLC (Thunder): A group of OKC businessmen "who represent a wide variety of local and national business interests" owns the Thunder Spurs Sports & Entertainment LLC (Spurs): An American sports & entertainment organization, based in San Antonio, Texas owns the San Antonio Spurs
Inside the mind of a serial killer (2000 Film: The Cell)
Mad scientist laboratory
Mannequin factory or storage facility
Malfunctioning robotic theme park
Small town that has been cut off and isolated by a recent natural disaster (blizzard, earthquake, flood, etc)
Structure with a malfunctioning or insane AI
Summer Camp
Wax Museum
More of my own ideas 58: Burning Man Festival 59: Abbey 60: Dance Academy 61: Airport 62: City that's basically just a maze of alleyways 63: Alligator Farm 64: Art Gallery 65: Art Studio 66: Artist Colony 67: Auto Junkyard 68: Ancient Pyramid 69: Animal Sanctuary 70: Animal Shelter 71: Animal Research Facility 72: Art Museum 73: Aquarium 74: Barber Shop 75: Baseball Stadium 76: Basement 77: Beach 78: Beauty Salon 79: Blood Bank 80: Blood Drive 81: Bookstore 82: Botanical Garden 83: Bridge 84: Buddhist Temple 85: Cabin
Castle
87: Casino 88: Cathedral
Cave (Bat, Collapsed, Crystal)
90: Cemetery
Center for Disease Control Laboratory
Cheap Hotel
Chinatown (any city)
Church
95: City Dump 96: City Rooftop(s)
City Street
Coal Mine
Coffee House
College Dorm Room
More
Concert Hall
Corporate Board Room
Day Spa
Distillery
Fairground
106 Fishing Boat 107 Floating Fish Factory 108 Football Stadium 109 Fort 110 Garden 111 Graveyard 112 Gymnasium 113 Highway Rest Stop 114 Hospital 115 Hospital Board Room 116 Insectarium 117 Jazz Club 118 Landfill 119 Lighthouse 120 Logging Camp (Town) 121 Medical Laboratory 122 Mississippi River Barge 123 Mosque 124 New Orleans during Mardi Gras 125 Nuclear Reactor 126 Nursing Home 127 Observatory 128 Opera House 129 Palace 130 Park 131 Pet Grooming Salon 132 Precious Metal Mine (Gold, Silver, Copper) 133 Priory 134 Prison 135 Police Station 136 Pottery Studio 137 Previously Undiscovered Island 138 Previously Undiscovered Planet 139 Principal’s Office 140 Racetrack 141 Rainforest 142 Roadside Motel 143 Roadkill Pickup Truck 144 Salt Mine 145 Sanitarium 146 Schoolroom 147 School Lab 148 Secret Hideaway 149 Sewer 150 Shack 151 Shoeshine Stand 152 Shopping Mall 153 Spider Farm 154 Steel Mill 155 Steam Ship (or Boat) 156 Synagogue 157 Trailer Park 158 Train Graveyard 159 Train Station 160 Treehouse 161 Wildlife Ranch 162 Windmill 163 Winery 164 Worm Ranch 165 Zoo 166 Alcatraz 167 Amazon Rain Forest 168 Angkor Wat, Cambodia 169 Buckingham Palace 170 Death Valley 171 Disneyland 172 Easter Island 173 Forbidden City 174 Galapagos Islands 175 Golden Gate Bridge 176 Grand Canyon 177 Great Barrier Reef 178 Great Wall 179 Hollywood 180 Jerusalem 181 Kashmir Valley 182 Machu Picchu 183 Mount Everest 184 Nile 185 Palace of Versailles 186 Pike’s Peak 187 Pompeii 188 Potala Palace, Tibet 189 Pyramids of Giza and Great Sphinx 190 Sahara Desert 191 Serengeti 192 Sistine Chapel 193 Statue of Liberty 194 Stonehenge 195 Taj Mahal 196 Uffizi Gallery 197 Valley of the Kings 198 Venice (Canals) 199 The White House 200 Zen Garden of Kyoto
10/10 KIDS SEE GHOSTS-Kids See Ghosts You Won't Get What You Want-Daughters 9/10 Ion-Portal Boarding House Reach-Jack White 2012 - 2017-A.A.L. (Against All Logic) Wide Awake!-Parquet Courts Year of the Snitch-Death Grips Joy as an Act of Resistance-Idles Idol-Horrendous 8/10 Little Dark Age-MGMT All at Once-Screaming Females In a Poem Unlimited-U.S. Girls You're Not Alone-Andrew W.K. Dead Magic-Anna von Hausswolff Firepower-Judas Priest Twin Fantasy-Car Seat Headrest Musas Vol. 2-Natalia Lafourcade Bark Your Head Off, Dog-Hop Along Veteran-JPEGMAFIA Virtue-The Voidz Everything's Fine-Jean Grae & Quelle Chris A Laughing Death in Meatspace-Tropical Fuck Storm Dirty Computer-Janelle Monae Isolation-Kali Uchis Your Queen is a Reptile-Sons of Kemet 春と修羅 (harutosyura)-Haru Nemuri Prequelle-Ghost The Sciences-Sleep Stranger Fruit-Zeal and Ardor Daytona-Pusha T ye-Kanye West Streams of Thought, Vol. 1-Black Thought OIL OF EVERY PEARL'S UN-INSIDES-SOPHIE Clear Tamei-Iglooghost Vile Luxury-Imperial Triumphant Hate Music Last Time Delete-HMLTD Trench-Twenty One Pilots TA13OO-Denzel Curry Time-Louis Cole Twisted Crystal-Guerilla Toss Negro Swan-Blood Orange Collapse-Aphex Twin Orpheus vs. the Sirens-Hermit and the Recluse Room 25-Noname Paraffin-Armand Hammer Aviary-Julia Holter El Mal Querer-Rosalia Time 'n' Place-Kero Kero Bonito Oxnard-Anderson .Paak New Levels New Devils-Polyphia The Light Is Leaving Us All-Current 93 DiCaprio 2-J.I.D Some Rap Songs-Earl Sweatshirt Modern Flows, Vol. 2-Marquis Hill 7/10 Bon Voyage-Melody's Echo Chamber Primal Heart-Kimbra Snares Like a Haircut-No Age Ruins-First Aid Kit Down Below-Tribulation Beerbongs & Bentleys-Post Malone Freedom's Goblin-Ty Segall Superorganism-Superorganism Ephorize-cupcaKKe American Utopia-David Byrne American Dolar Bill - Keep Facing Sideways, You're Too Hideous To Look At Face On-Keiji Haino & Sumac Now Only-Mount Eerie Mark Kozelek-Mark Kozelek Czarface Meets Metal Face-CZARFACE & MF DOOM Lil Boat 2-Lil Yachty Singularity-Jon Hopkins Beyondless-Iceage 7-Beach House soil-serpentwithfeet I'm All Ears-Let's Eat Grandma The Tree of Forgiveness-John Prine God's Favorite Customer-Father John Misty SR3MM-Rae Sremmurd Four Pieces for Mirai-James Ferraro LUMP-LUMP Beware The Book Of Eli-Ski Mask The Slump God Sweetener-Ariana Grande ASTROWORLD-Travis Scott High as Hope-Florence + Machine Bad Witch-Nine Inch Nails Die Lit-Playboi Carti Hive Mind-The Internet Zephyr-NIKI Whack World-Tierra Whack And Nothing Hurt-Spiritualized Lower East Suite Part Three-Onyx Collective For My Crimes-Marissa Nadler Steel Mogu-Iglooghost I Loved You at Your Darkest-Behemoth Slide-George Clanton iridesence-BROCKHAMPTON Safe in the Hands of Love-Yves Tumor Cantos-Okonkolo Am I A Girl?-Poppy DROGAS Wave-Lupe Fiasco THINK : PEACE-Clarence Clarity Velvet-JMSN Fetti-Curren$y, Freddie Gibbs, The Alchemist What Happens When I Try To Relax-Open Mike Eagle FM!-Vince Staples A Love Letter To You 3-Trippie Redd Works by Tul Kupferberg (1923-2010)-Jeffrey Lewis And The Deposit Returners Kai Whiston Bitch-Kai Whiston Streams of Thought Vol. 2-Black Thought & Salaam Remi i am > i was-21 Savage 6/10 Tha Carter V-Lil Wayne A Brief Inqury Into Online Relationships-The 1975 Room Inside the World-Ought POST--Jeff Rosenstock Amen-Rich Brian Cocoa Sugar-Young Fathers Vacation in Hell-Flatbush Zombies Communion-Park Jiha PRhyme 2-PRhyme Gangin-SOB X RBE Tell Me How You Reall Feel-Courtney Barnett Two Parts Together-Big Ups Lush-Snail Mail Invasion of Privacy-Cardi B Age Of-Oneohtrix Point Never Heaven and Earth-Kamasi Washington Love Yourself 轉 Tear-BTS Lamp Lit Prose-Dirty Projectors Be the Cowboy-Mitski Smote Reverser-Oh Sees The Now Now-Gorillaz Magus-Thou NASIR-Nas Nasty-Rico Nasty Errorzone-Vein K.T.S.E.-Teyana Taylor This Is My Dinner-Sun Kil Moon I Want To Die In New Orleans-$uicideboy$ Konoyo-Tim Hecker Electric Messiah-High on Fire Bottle It In-Kurt Vile Nina Cried Power-Hozier Budding Ornithologists Are Weary of Tires Analogies-Milo MUDBOY-Sheck Wes City Morgue Vol. 1 : Hell Or High Water-ZillaKami & SosMula Antipositive, Pt. 2-Little Big Not All Heroes Wear Capes-Metro Boomin Stokeley-Ski Mask The Slump God Black Panther The Album-Various Artists 5/10 I can feel you creep into my private life-tUnE-yArDs Godfather II-Wiley A Productive Cough-Titus Andronicus Time & Space-Turnstile New Material-Preoccupations Song For Alpha-Daniel Avery Eat the Elephant-A Perfect Circle Sex & Food-Unkown Mortal Orchestra Bobby Tarantino II-Logic My Dear Melancholy,-The Weeknd Tranquilty Base Hotel & Casino-Arctic Monkeys KOD-J. Cole Ordinary Corrupt Human Love-Deafheaven STAY DANGEROUS-YG Jxmtro-Slim Jxmmi Queen-Nicki Minaj Slime Language-Young Thug Goodbye & Good Riddance-Juice WRLD Electricity Is On Our Side-Busdriver Everything Is Love-The Carters Head In The Clouds-88rising Life's A Trip-Trippie Redd YSIV-Logic Simulation Theory-Muse Ballads 1-Joji WRLD On Drugs-Future & Juice WRLD White Bronco-Action Bronson Championships-Meek Mill X 100PRE-Bad Bunny 4/10 Swell-Tiny Moving Parts Culture II-Migos The Neighbourhood-The Neighbourhood Golden Hour-Kacey Musgraves The Scars of Man on the Once Nameless Wilderness Part I and II-Panopticon ?-XXXtentacion A Girl Cried Red-Princess Nokia Scorpion-Drake Redemption-Jay Rock Testing-A$AP Rocky Marauder-Interpol From Gas to Solid / You Are My Friend-Soap&Skin Kamikaze-Eminem East Atlanta Love Letter-6LACK Quavo Huncho-Quavo Come Over When You're Sober, Pt. 2-Lil Peep The Last Rocket-Takeoff Dummy Boy-6ix9ine 3/10 Memories Don't Die-Tory Lanez Man of the Woods-Justin Timberlake Day69-6ix9ine GOOD Job, You Found Me-Valee Swimming-Mac Miller Zoo-Russ Music Inspired by Illumination & Dr. Seuss' The Grinch-Tyler, the Creator 2/10 Nuthin' 2 Prove-Lil Yachty The Sunset Tapes: A Cool Tape Story-Jaden Skins-XXXtentacion 1/10 Swaecation-Swae Lee Red Light-Bladee 0/10 n/a NOT GOOD Mania-Fall Out Boy We Beefin?-Wendy's Total Xanarchy-Lil Xan Reckless-Nav When Legends Rise-Godsmack Drip Harder-Lil Baby & Gunna Anthem of the Peaceful Army-Greta Van Fleet Origins-Imagine Dragons Other lists
Florida police search for ‘sweet-talking duo’ accused of drugging, robbing tourist at casino
This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 34%. (I'm a bot)
Police in Florida were on the hunt Friday for two women suspected of drugging a tourist at a casino and then robbing him of a $15,000 Rolex watch and $1,000 in cash. The Broward Sheriff's Office released surveillance footage this week hoping the public can help identify the "Sweet-talking duo" involved in the incident at the Hard Rock Casino in Hollywood on Sept. 13. Investigators say the pair first approached the victim while he was playing poker at around 2 a.m. HARD ROCK HOTEL UNDER CONSTRUCTION IN NEW ORLEANS COLLAPSES, KILLING 2. "While at the slot machines the security video shows the blonde-haired suspect pouring a substance into the victim's drink and then handing it to him," police said in a statement. CASINO ROBBERY SUSPECT DIES AFTER SHOOTOUT WITH POLICE. The victim and the two women then left the casino after one of them helped him get a cab, the Broward Sheriff's Office says. The other suspect, police say, was wearing a leopard jumpsuit.
Henry Collins was just a freshman from the University of Chicago when he committed suicide. Before he died, he was under a lot of pressure from his family, his friends, his girlfriend, his professors, his therapist, his guardian angel (yes, he was a devout Roman Catholic), his acquaintances, his guidance counselor, his lawyer, the person he was supposed to give his next year dorm payment to, his Spanish teacher, the entire registry office of his college, the dean of his college, the people following his YouTube account, the people following his Instagram account… The list goes on. But I’ll leave it at that for the meantime. I have been granted the duty of offering a biographical testimony as to what happened in Henry’s life before the nightmare known as PayPal whipped him into domestication and turned him into the laughing stock of their board meetings, but also a central heated topic of debate between clients, stockbrokers, interns, managers, assistants, executives, and secretaries.One of these interns, an SSRI-fiend named Cody Williams, whose bags under his eyes seemed to represent his volatile mental state, said that “the story of Henry Collin’s life gave mine meaning. We were always excited what would happen to him next. I always thought he was elect-from-God to experience this pain to sort of purify the human race of it’s sins. In other words, he was a Messianic figure, but in a way that sort of turns our sadness and grief into amusement at his expense.” The razzmatazz began when Henry’s father decided to send a large amount of funds so that he could pay off the fee for his housing next year. He had then been living in a not so shabby perhaps even exclusive domicile where he spent most of his days doing what a regular college student usually did: study, sleep, have a coffee, write things in his diary, pray to God, talk to his friends, play football, scroll through his Facebook feed, after he was done scrolling through his Facebook feed he would then scroll his Twitter feed…There was an obligatory urgency as to which he did these things, he wouldn’t consider them a part of his routine, but he knew from then on there was an ominous deterministic element he had cruelly been subjected to. He didn’t know where that ominous feeling came from, in fact, he knew he should probably to talk to his therapist Lily about it but he hesitated. Lily, despite all her charming good looks, had always presented him with the most artificial solutions to problems. Lily presented her solutions in a way that made it seem like she was ‘troubleshooting’ Henry’s problems. In other words, she wasn’t very original, and sometimes Henry suspected she would Google some of the issues Henry was dealing with to see if other therapists might have encountered similar problems.Of course, this might’ve just been a symptom of that monkey in Henry’s back; the one which would whisper that cruel word: determinism. Henry had an anthropology teacher which went on and on about it, and it was partially the reason he had stopped attending most of the classes. He talked to his therapist about his fear and she diagnosed Henry with autism. “I don’t think you can express your emotions very well, therefore we can now conclude you’re autistic.” When the diagnosis came back to Henry’s father, he was furious and decided that was the last time Henry would see that therapist ever again. He asked for a refund to which she replied: “Settle that with my lawyer.” This would be the first of many injustices in Henry’s life.Henry believed he had a fear of lacking free will, and he believed the fear controlled him at a physiological level. Even though he was a devout Catholic, he was also a doubting thomas. He had started reading about the Scurvhamites which he blamed Thomas Pynchon for introducing him to. Eternal death was reserved to those who didn’t accept the doctrine. He had thought about converting but just chalked his skepticism as being part of ‘the fear’. When ‘the fear’ came, it would make his teeth grind, and his pores would sweat blood like Jesus in the Garden of Gethsamane. What lay deep beneath his unconscious processes… Oh, I feel almost guilty for using that phrase… Once you said the word ‘unconscious’ he would do a double take and start heaving like an asthmatic. Besides these eccentric conditions, he was a good kid.One serene Tuesday he received a notification from PayPal saying that they had froze his account. During this point in his life, Henry had been on medication prescribed to him by his new therapist, a man named Dr. John, or as he was known in the streets, ‘the gris gris man’. Before I go in depth about the PayPal notification, it is necessary to discuss the relationship between Henry and the gris gris man. Dr. John had taught Henry the art of self-medication, and bestowed him his own street name - ‘The Night Tripper.’ Henry felt a figuratively sacred aura about his newly appointed name. This is where he also was introduced to New Orleans voodoo - a deterministic move which might have just sealed his non-Scurvhamitic fate.In the sweaty bayous of Louisiana, Dr. John’s eyes would dilate; and in a Delphic trance he would speak in tongues to poor old Henry, who suddenly started to become fascinated with the gris gris merchant. Dr. John said he was an interesting patient with a sad fate, and he wasn’t far off. The thing is Henry wasn’t the same when he turned into the Night Tripper. He became removed and distant. His girlfriend would often grow worried since he wouldn’t reply to her texts. She suspected there were other women in Henry’s life. But the truth was Henry was merely under the gris gris man’s effervescent spell.One night, Dr. John called Henry on FaceTime to his surprise. “You did something embarrassing a while ago.” said the doctor. Henry; under the influence of psilocybin and jimson weed he had obtain from a client of the doctor’s, started to grow confused, his search for self-discovery had been halted. The ‘fear’ bubbled in his chest and sizzled, and then with every progressing gnawing instant, he realized the fear became associated with a burning flame - like the symbol of the Holy Ghost. It hit him - he had finally understood what his schizophrenic uncle had meant when he asked many years ago why he had stopped painting: “The fire…” He said. And that was all he said. Dr. John seemed amused with Henry. “Take care of yourself.” he said, but Henry didn’t know if he meant it or not, he didn’t know if the doctor was simply cunning or doing his trademark business of mystification or speaking incomprehensibly or sincerely being understanding to Henry’s condition. Henry didn’t think he was ever meant to understand the gris gris man’s motives. “There is no touch. Why is no one touching me? I’m so lonely…” muttered Henry to himself. He lay there on his bed, trapped inside his four-by-four cell in the dead of the night, with no words of his consolation from his parents; who were asleep. Or from his girlfriend; who was also sleep. Henry didn’t want to risk calling her and telling her about the concoction the doctor had cooked up for him. No. That was a huge no no. A shiver arcs it’s way down the crevices of his spine. He needs to figure out if the world is real now. Nobody can help him do that.The following morning he awoke groggy from the night before. He resumed his daily responsibilities, such as fixing his blog, writing papers for school, and going to class discussions. In the afternoon, he resumed his reading of ‘The Magus’ by John Fowles, drawing parallels from the rich hypnotist/mastermind of illusions Maurice Conchis to the gris gris man, except he understood that Conchis was more precise and surgical with his psychological diagnostics, and the narrator, a rather intellectual but excessively promiscuous character, had been the victim. He is psychoanalytically defined as having a ‘partially resolved Oedipal complex, where the initial loss of maternal protection due to an authoritarian relationship with his father lead him to develop unhealthy coping mechanisms such as adopting the whole ‘rebel without a cause’ image, and also seeking out isolation as a means for his sexual predatory exploits and also situations where he must be ‘forced to rebel’.” But this act of rebellion is a castrated one wherein the narrator (Nicholas Urfe) is compared to a ‘drone’ which lacks the innovation or the creativity to justify said rebellion.Henry’s father that day had been frustrated with him since the funds which were stuck in his PayPal account were frozen, and he was told that he wasn’t assertive enough to properly deal with the situation independently. This was a big blow to Henry’s ego. He knew there were other ways of dealing with the situation, but then he realized that perhaps his desire for handling the situation differently was just his own way of avoiding that lack of assertiveness. He often has thoughts of being emasculated by his peers, his brother, and his father. This probably would later contribute to a stasis he would soon fall under the influence of; a stasis of seesawing sexuality, and one that would make him undefinable to his peers. He knew little about his peers aside from the fact that they drank, smoked, and capitalized on college girls with low self-esteem. Henry also received an email later that day. It was from PayPal. “I regret to inform you that we can not accept the proof of address provided because no issue date appears on it. Provide us with a document that shows a date of issue. We accept a copy of the following documents:-Invoices for public services (landline and mobile phone, medical insurance, gas, water, electricity, etc.) -Bank or card statements -Working life report- Certificate or registration-Hard copy of the payroll We do not accept: -Commercial bills -Partial documents Note: The document must include your full name and address as they are registered in your PayPal account. The document must show the date of issue, which must be more than 12 months old and must be legible in its entirety.” Henry didn’t think of this email as that of a big deal. He was just sloppy enough to grab the nearest bank envelope on his desk and take a picture of the bank letter - thinking this passed as a ‘bank/card statement’. Obviously, the date of issue was necessary, so he opened his desk drawer and looked for a thick brown envelope which had his bank contract inside. He skimmed through a couple pages of terms of service jargon and took a picture of a page which had his address, the date of issue, and his full name. He then uploaded the picture to his PayPal account so that whoever was responsible of moderating personal documents could verify it.“Neurotics and lunatics…” he thought, thinking he ought to write a story about their anal fascination of detail. But then he realized how awful that sounded, he had written thousands of lines filled with words before, now his ideas were like frenetic flies that would flee once you tried to swat at them, he thought about those lines… An absurd fascination for the cryptic and absurd. He remembered again Nicholas Urfe’s diagnosis - “The normal cultural life pattern of the type: excessive respect for iconoclastic avant-garde art, contempt for tradition, paranosic sympathy with fellow rebels and nonconformers in conflict with frequent depressive and persecutory phases in work and personal relationships.” He entertained the idea of the sadistic researchers in the novel as being entities of his subconscious manifesting themselves through text, as if he had stumbled upon someone’s own intimate personal secret. One of the characters in his past stories was a lunatic gunman who was ravaged by an innate love for his biographer; who happened to be a narcissist obsessed with coming up with the rawest, most visceral revelation of the human character known to man. But the underlying irony of it all stuck out like a sore thumb. He had the unique idea of having the gunman speak in aphorisms, while the biographer clings zealously to the sheer beauty of the fragmentary figments of the gunman’s imagination.He also began experimenting with a technique known as ‘surface realism’, which was a way of playing tricks on the reader by leading them to think that a fragment or portion of the story consists almost exclusively of the real, and these portions have the power to imprison reality within their concrete and seemingly absolute descriptions. But then the reader learns that there are actually multiple mythical realities, but these are myths disguised as reality from the surface, and this is emphasized by the matter-of-fact description of the narrator, which gives the reader the sense that he or she is potentially not of a lucid state of mind, or perhaps even that there is a truth which the narrator hasn’t managed to fully grasp, and maybe not even a truth, but a subliminal detail.One ought to take advantage of discrepancies between what the reader is capable of assuming and trace the discrepancies to form an anamorphic image. Since the plot is a living thing; an organism that is conscious and breathes. We must assume that these discrepancies are actually connected like the organs of a body. The reliability of the narrative fixation on the real or the imaginary - which can also be said to represent another aspect of reality, is essential in setting the tone of the hazy infinities of surface realism. Also, the question of whether surface realism is a satirical label or not is a prime example of this unexplored genre. It is as they say - “The social chameleon of literary genres. ”Besides narration, there is also the unreliability presented by the idiosyncrasies and state of mind of the character, the reader must simply approach the text at face value in order for the fantasy to begin, there is a time where genius must become extinct and parasitic (in the sense of convolution and clicheness), allegories must defy reality completely and shit on the painfully mundane. Novelty will always establish and constitute its own respectable domain. The gris gris man had once said that the tendency to resolve ambiguities and textual inconsistencies by scholars only ensure confusion, the reader is lead into a room filled with mirrors and mirrors reflecting complexity - but complexity is entropy - and entropy is indirect information.He had made it very clear that information was the plaything of the mind, a product of its dialed fine tuning, processing quantum bits and collapsing wave functions… Some believe the reader absorbs more by actively taking part in the novel and playing an invisible role; that of the spectator. “Without being aware of it the reader can relate in a humanistic level based on his or her own limitations to the norms of the characters. When such a symbiosis takes place, distinct similarities are observed between one’s identity and that of the roles the characters actively take part in. There is richness and substance to be found in ambiguity and perhaps even subdued interpretations, for what we overlook at face value when we fail to grasp the innate simplicity of complexity, is a mirror attempting to reflect infinity in a nutshell. This may all sound very understandably delusional. Yet in delusion - there is that profoundness; that superfluousness of perception. But let’s get back to Henry’s problems; one of them being meeting Dr. John in the bar of a casino downtown from where he lived. It was the dead of the afternoon and this was the time security would come and patrol; usually on the lookout for the gris gris man himself, having been previously convicted of vehicle theft, assault, public nudity, and the alleged abduction of a teenage bartender. Although, one reporter claims that the abduction barely fazed the regulars in the Smokey Joe Tavern. Why? Well, according to one of those present during the scene of the crime, the disinterested chatter persisted when a frantic struggle was occurring somewhere in the kitchen, there were plates crashing on the floor, trays, utensils… and then the sound of incomprehensible machinery humming, affirming the futility of everyone around to even be bothered enough to call the cops until about an hour later. I think it was the manager who came around that time too asking where his bartender was. When the news broke that he was abducted, he couldn’t fathom why the crowd were so unconcerned, maybe they were just drunk… he must’ve thought. He slept a few hours that night, disgusted with himself, he called his doctor up to sedate him and he was given a couple Halcion. He woke up the next morning with a recurring bout of constipation that persisted all throughout the day, and the afternoon memory haze, probably due to the sedatives, had prevented him from recalling the name he was given by one of the bar hounds. And then he realized he hadn’t even cared to recall names from ten years ago, from his high school, they were dead ends of broken memories, cotton buds already nipped. At least once or twice these apparitions of thought would resurface, it was a residue of his youth perhaps, maybe he was sapped and finally overwhelmed by the present. While dancing with the weightlessness, the buoyancy of youth, and the remnants of its wonderful feasts, he ought to bear that mask to forget about the weight of a lifetime pulling him toward the waiting room.The waiting room was a terrible place. A place where Dr. John brought most of the men and women he abducted. From bars, hotels, motels, bus stops, kiosks, beaches... Little did Henry know he was about to be lead there himself, he was already briefly straddling between two worlds; the insidious cancer inside and the tea-softened biscuit bones outside. Chapter 2 -- coming never.
OP ED: A Socialist View of US Government 'Gun Control' - by Tom Crean (Socialist Alternative) 5 Dec 2017
The horrific Las Vegas massacre at the start of October and the more recent massacre at the First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, Texas has rekindled the debate about what can be done to prevent the nightmare of recurring mass shootings. There have been renewed calls from liberal politicians for gun control measures. Even the National Rifle Association recently agreed that there should be some limits placed on the availability of “bump stocks” which allowed Stephen Paddock to turn his weapons into killing machines spewing hundreds of rounds of ammunition over the course of a few minutes into the concert crowd across the street from the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino. But while mass shootings focus public attention, the truth is that they only account for a fraction of the total number of people killed by guns in the U.S. One recent report suggested that more Americans have died due to gun violence since 1968 than in all the wars engaged in by the U.S. in its entire history. The question we posed in the document is whether the situation where society is awash in weapons in the interests of the working class. We elaborate why, as socialists, we reject both the “gun rights” narrative of the right as well as the liberal gun control narrative. We must also note though that despite numerous horrific mass shootings, overall support for gun control measures has not grown over the last five years although there are increases in support for some measures in the wake of particularly horrific mass shootings. For example, 64% told Politico/Morning Consult in October that they support tightening gun regulation, a 3% increase. But the picture becomes much less clear when you look at specific measures The longer term trend over the past 20 years is actually away from support for tougher gun control measures. For example, according to Gallup the support for a ban on assault rifles went down from 46% in December 2012 to 36% in October 2016. In 1996, by contrast, there was 57% support for a ban. The gun control measure with overwhelming support is universal background checks including for private sales and sales at gun shows. There is also strong support for preventing people with mental health issues and those on government screening lists from buying weapons as well as for a centralized national database for gun sales. Gun rights have become a key issue in the country’s deepening political polarization. It is also clear that the liberal arguments for more sweeping gun control measures have failed to convince broad swathes of the population. The NRA tragically has clearly had some success arguing in sections of the population that the way to combat gun violence in society is for the “good guys” to be armed to the teeth. This points all the more to the left needing to articulate an independent position on how to address the epidemic levels of violence in our society. Is Gun Control the Solution to Gun Violence? A Socialist Analysis (2012) Horror in Newtown The massacre of 20 students and 7 adults in a Newtown, Connecticut school in December 2012 by a mentally disturbed young man has reignited the debate on gun control in the U.S. In mid-January, the Obama administration announced its support for a series of legislative measures that would among other things mandate background checks on all gun sales; ban the sale of “military style” semiautomatic weapons and limit ammunition magazines to a maximum of 10 rounds. This proposal to impose limited measures of gun control at the federal level has led to a furious response from the right, led by the National Rifle Association (NRA). However, polls indicate that there is a significant shift in popular sentiment toward supporting such measures. Nevertheless the attempt to strengthen gun regulation at the federal level is for now dead in the water after even the background check measure which polls say is supported by nearly 90% of the public failed to get the 60 votes required to prevent a filibuster in the Senate. It should be stressed that this outcome does not mean the debate on gun control is over. Measures have been brought forward at state level and other massacres, unfortunately inevitable, will revive the issue. It is also clear that a significant section of the elite for their own reasons want to bring the gun lobby to heel. As a Marxist organization with an increasing public profile we need to have a clear position in this public debate. We must look at the historical context of the right to bear arms and gun control both in the U.S. and internationally. We need to analyze the complex causes of the massive level of gun violence that exists in American society and put forward socialist solutions. We must look dispassionately at the real agenda of both the bourgeois forces pushing for gun control and those opposing it. Perhaps most importantly, we must ask whether the arming of large sections of the American population in the concrete circumstances of the early 21st century and given the reactionary individualist ideology that promotes this is really in the interests of the working class. On the other hand, how do we address the ever increasing powers of the state which clearly do pose a threat to any section of American society that would resist the dictates of the ruling class? These are complex issues which cannot be summarized in a few glib phrases. Historical Context The Second Amendment to the Constitution reads as follows: “A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.” The context of the amendment in 1791 was the recent Revolutionary War and the belief that the struggle against the British crown was probably not over – this was confirmed by the War of 1812 when the British burned Washington DC to the ground. There was strong opposition to the idea of a standing army based on historical experience in Europe and recent experience with the British Army. Standing armies were correctly seen as the tools of tyrannical regimes. As a result, in the early American republic, a big section of the white male population was armed for military reasons first and foremost. Of course there was no question, as far as the elite was concerned, of allowing black slaves or even free blacks to have guns. Many states required gun owners to register their weapons and prohibited carrying concealed weapons. Broadly speaking, the Second Amendment and the Bill of Rights of which it is part, represents part of the progressive legacy of the American Revolution. But as capitalism developed, the issue of weapons and gun control became inseparable from the class struggle between labor and capital and the desire of the ruling class to maintain the subjugation of the African American population. There have been repeated horrific massacres in U.S. history of working people fighting for their rights. In 1914 during a miners’ strike in Colorado, 21 men, women, and children were killed in Ludlow by machine gun fire from the state militia. In 1937 during a peaceful protest of striking Republic Steel workers and their families in South Chicago, the police opened fire. Ten workers were shot dead and another 40 workers were wounded by gunfire, all of them shot in the back. On the other side, striking workers resisting attacks from company goons and/or the state during strikes have on numerous occasions armed themselves for self-defense. In the 1880s Chicago’s militant German-centered labor movement went as far as creating a workers’ militia. This is not just a question of the dim and distant past. As recently as the 1970s, some miners pickets armed themselves in self-defense during wildcat UMWA strikes. Likewise in the mid-1960s during the civil rights movement, the armed Deacons for Defense and Justice were formed by black veterans to protect civil rights activists against attacks by the Klan and state forces. The Deacons were very effective and played an important adjunct role to the mass protests at the heart of that struggle. The Black Panther Party for Self Defense continued this tradition although their experience also shows the life and death consequences of an “ultra-left” approach to this question. Initially some of the actions the Panthers took were effective in exposing police violence, giving people confidence to stand up and putting a check on the state. On a general political level the Panthers were correct to argue a revolutionary case, i.e. against pacifism, and for the right to self-defense, and indeed to take concrete defensive action that was understandable to broader (not yet revolutionary) layers of the black community and the working class – such as practical measures to defend against violent attacks by racist forces. However, the brandishing of weapons, while being attractive to a minority of revolutionary black youth, was a serious mistake. It contributed to keeping the Panthers isolated from the broader black working class, which sympathized with them but was not prepared to join an explicitly armed revolutionary organization, and played into the hands of the capitalist state which succeeded in brutally crushing them. Huey Newton, Bobby Seale, and the Panther leadership eventually recognized this. As Huey Newton says in his book Revolutionary Suicide “We soon discovered that weapons and uniforms set us apart from the community. We were looked upon as an ad hoc military group, acting outside the community fabric and too radical to be a part of it. Perhaps some of our tactics at the time were extreme; perhaps we placed too much emphasis on military action.” Even in an actual revolutionary situation, the key issue is not military but political mobilization of the working class and the oppressed on the basis of defensive and democratic appeals to oppose and defeat any violent efforts of the small ruling elite to subvert the will of the majority. This was precisely what the Bolsheviks did in October 1917, the most democratic revolution in history in which there was extremely little violence. The Bolsheviks also made a class appeal to the ranks of the Tsarist army thereby largely neutralizing the old state forces as a weapon for the autocratic regime. Of course history is replete with negative examples where the working class lacked a leadership sufficiently determined to face down the threat of the old order to unleash counterrevolutionary violence. Adventurist attempts by revolutionaries to prematurely “seize power” have also led to bloody defeats for working people. The ruling class always tries to portray its opponents as violent. It is the task of Marxists to demonstrate to the mass of the population that the central source of violence in modern society is capitalism and the capitalist elite. This is particularly true in the United States whose ruling class has waged and is still waging a whole series of bloody imperialist adventures around the world to defend the rule of profit. This is the context in which we must look at gun control. Attempts at gun control have been an ongoing feature of U.S. and other capitalist societies. In Europe, the ruling class made concerted efforts to disarm revolutionary and working class forces in the wake of the revolutionary upheavals of 1848. In general, whatever the reasons given at the time, most attempts at gun control have been at least partly motivated by the desire of the ruling class to disarm its potential opponents, first and foremost the working class. For example, the Mulford Act passed by the California legislature in 1967 which banned the public carrying of a loaded firearm was a direct response to the Black Panthers. The federal Gun Control Act of 1968 was also partly motivated by fear of an armed black population especially in the wake of the 1967 urban upheavals. Marxists have historically opposed such attempts to try to enforce the bourgeoisie’s desire for a monopoly of force. We do not accept the idea that only the state should be armed as a “neutral” arbiter between the classes. All historical experience shows that the state’s armed bodies are not neutral but rather serve the interests of the ruling class. How the debate on gun rights changed For much of the 20th century, federal gun control measures had bipartisan support. In the wake of the defeat of the radical wing of the civil rights movement, the collapse of Stalinism, and the drastic weakening of the labor movement and any real internal challenges to the power of U.S. capitalism, the debate on weapons within the ruling class shifted away from trying to disarm its potential adversaries. This shift could already be seen during the Reagan administration, with the development of the New Right which took the position that any restrictions on the “right to bear arms” were an attack on the Second Amendment. This was part of a broader process underway in the Republican Party with a turn towards populist and religious appeals. The issue of gun ownership was tied to right-wing populism which used coded racism about crime to mobilize sections of the white working and middle class. This was part of providing a broader political and electoral base for an increasingly aggressive neoliberal corporate agenda. The NRA wielded increasing power. Despite suffering a setback in the banning of the sales of assault rifles from 1994-2004, their influence continued to grow. At state and local level, they have had a string of successful drives to remove restrictions on the “right” to carry concealed weapons. [According to David Frum, writing in The Atlantic, “Since Newtown, more than two dozen states have expanded the right to carry into previously unknown places: bars, churches, schools, college campuses, and so on” (10/3/2017)]. While we would not in general base ourselves on the argument of what the Constitutional “founders” had in mind, let us be clear that the members of Congress who voted for the Bill of Rights in 1789 would not have supported the right to carry concealed weapons into taverns! What is behind the rise of the NRA and the drive to systematically repeal gun control measures? One part is the NRA’s role as mouthpiece for the incredibly profitable gun industry whose sales in 2012 are estimated to have been $11.7 billion and whose profits amounted to $993 million (Washington Post, 12/19/2012) [by 2015 revenue had reached $13.5 billion and profits stood at $1.5 billion]. In the wake of the Newtown massacre, it was revealed that Cerberus Capital, a major Wall Street private equity firm, owned the Freedom Group, makers of the legally owned Bushmaster AR-15 that was used by Adam Lanza. Those making big money off of the sale of guns are not just the manufacturers but retailers like Walmart which is now the biggest seller of firearms and ammunition in America (The Nation, 1/7-14/2013). But the NRA is also driven by a right-wing libertarian ideology that promotes a particularly reactionary version of individualism. This point of view overlaps with the idea that an armed (white) citizenry is needed to defend the constitution against a new tyranny. Of course it is true that the state has significantly increased its powers in the past historical period, using first the “war on drugs” and then the “war against terrorism” as excuses for increasing surveillance and largely shredding Fourth Amendment protections against “unreasonable search and seizure.” It is no accident that gun sales have accelerated since Obama came into office in 2008 and have reportedly skyrocketed since his announcement in the wake of Newtown that he would make gun control a priority. Obama’s reelection margin as we have noted was significant but hardly overwhelming. And within the vote for Romney there is a significant section that has been influenced by the fantasies of the far right, specifically the view that Obama is some sort of anti-American Muslim/socialist tyrant. According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, right-wing militia groups and other right wing extremist groups have been growing since 2008 although for the time being none of them has a mass audience. The Tea Party was a vehicle for this development but they were set back after 2011. In reality one of the main right wing groups with a mass base is the NRA itself – as of 2010 it claimed 4.3 million members [5 million as of 2017]. Currently it is used in the interests of the gun industry and to mobilize for “gun rights” as one of several issues that provide cover for the right wing of corporate America to pursue its anti-working class agenda (along with opposition to abortion, immigration, etc.). But we should be clear that while the NRA and its backers currently promote the idea of individually armed citizens and not militias, at another stage a significant part of their heavily armed base could be turned into an overtly counterrevolutionary force to terrorize left-wing activists, workers in struggle, people of color, immigrants, and LGBT people as an auxiliary force to the capitalist state. Gun violence in the U.S. today We also need to look at the specific features and causes of the extremely high level of gun violence in U.S. society. There are an estimated 300 million privately owned weapons in the U.S. The U.S. is far and away the most violent of the wealthy capitalist societies. In 2004, there were 5.5 homicides for every 100,000 persons, roughly three times as high as Canada (1.9) and six times as high as Germany. To quote Occupy the NRA, an OWS offshoot, “The U.S. has 5% of the world’s population but accounts for half of all firearms worldwide and 80% of gun deaths in the 23 richest countries.” Nevertheless we also need to recognize that the homicide level declined sharply in the 1990s. As of 2009 the homicide rate was at its lowest level since 1964 and half of what it was at the start of the 1980s. While this is a significant fact, the level of violent death is still staggering. In 2010, there were 14,748 homicides. 67.5% of these killings involved a gun (“Crime in The United States 2010, FBI Statistics” ). The homicide rate nearly doubled from the mid 1960s to the late 1970s. In 1980, it peaked at 10.2 per 100,000 population and subsequently fell off to 7.9 per 100,000 in 1984. It rose again in the late 1980’s and early 1990’s to another peak in 1991 of 9.8 per 100,000. From 1992 to 2000, the rate declined sharply. (Bureau of Justice Statistics) [in the past few years, the number of homicides has been creeping upward nationally, and dramatically in some cities like Chicago]. And while homicide levels have declined to the level of the early 1960s, violent crime overall (much of it involving guns) remains at a much higher level than it was 50 years ago (FBI Uniform Crime Reports). While media attention has focused on massacres from Virginia Tech to Aurora, Colorado, gun violence is concentrated in poor neighborhoods in big cities and most of the victims are poor people of color. Perhaps the most extreme example is New Orleans where the 2004 homicide rate was 52 per 100,000, ten times the national average. Chicago has recently experienced a spike in gun violence. But as The New York Times noted, more than 80 percent of the Chicago’s 500+ homicides in 2012 took place in only about half of the city’s 23 police districts, largely on the city’s South and West Sides (1/3/2013). Opponents of gun control will argue that the sharp decline of homicides shows that the prevalence of gun ownership and lack of much regulation does not mean that violence will increase. On the other hand, proponents of gun control like New York City’s former Mayor Mike Bloomberg will cite the fact that homicides in NYC are at a 50 year low [334 in 2016 compared to a high of 2,245 in 1989] as proof of the effectiveness of aggressive policing policies and the drive to get illegal guns off the street. In reality in many big cities there is much tighter gun control than in suburbs and rural areas. Massive police presence in poor communities has undoubtedly had some effect but at the cost of creating mini-police states where the police systematically harass young men and a massive prison gulag. But there are clearly other reasons for the decline in homicide including the end of the crack epidemic of the 1980s. A more recent factor is the improvement in emergency medicine which improves the survival chances of people who have been shot. A Wall Street Journal (12/8/12) article on this subject is worth quoting at length because of its emphasis on the key point – gun violence and overall violence remain at epidemic levels: “The number of U.S. homicides has been falling for two decades, but America has become no less violent. “Crime experts who attribute the drop in killings to better policing or an aging population fail to square the image of a more tranquil nation with this statistic: The reported number of people treated for gunshot attacks from 2001 to 2011 has grown by nearly half. Improved medical care doesn’t account for the entire decline in homicides but experts say it is a major factor. “Emergency-room physicians who treat victims of gunshot and knife attacks say more people survive because of the spread of hospital trauma centers—which specialize in treating severe injuries—the increased use of helicopters to ferry patients, better training of first-responders and lessons gleaned from the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan.” Why is American Society So Violent? There is no single reason for the level of violence in society. Clearly, the fact that the U.S. is one of the most – if not the most – unequal of the Advanced Capitalist Countries (ACCs) is very relevant. For example the U.S. has a higher poverty rate (17.2% in late 2000s) compared with 22 other OECD countries (Economic Policy Institute, based on OECD Stat Extracts). As documented in The Spirit Level: Why Equality is Better for Everyone by Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, the level of inequality in a society contributes directly to the level of alienation. But of course massive inequality is the result of the particular development of U.S. capitalism. U.S. society has also been steeped in violence from its birth. One element of this historical legacy was that the U.S. was a frontier society where the violent campaign to wrest land from Native Americans lasted well into the 19th century. This involved the arming of a significant section of the population. Even more important is the legacy of chattel slavery and the ongoing violent repression of African American communities to the present day. The “war on drugs” beginning in the 1970s was an attempt to criminalize and suppress black youth whom the state saw as the most radical section of society, as well as a political/electoral strategy to make a coded appeal to racism under new conditions with the end of legal segregation. This has led the U.S. to have the highest level of incarceration in the world – which in itself is a huge source of violence. Hundreds of thousands of nonviolent drug offenders enter the extremely violent prison system and come out with far fewer rights and far more alienated from society than when they entered. In many of the most depressed communities in the U.S. there exists a toxic combination of systemic poverty, massive alienation, and ferocious state repression. Violence is the inevitable result. Does the availability of weapons contribute to the level of violence? Undoubtedly but it is not the central cause. And while the dynamic is not the same in more affluent communities like Newtown, it is undoubtedly the case that stress because of economic uncertainty and general social alienation are pervasive in American society. It can be argued that alienation for some young people in some suburbs may be even worse due to the lack of recreation facilities, areas to socialize, etc. An author of a study of “rampage shootings” points out that “There has been only one example of a rampage school shooting in an urban setting since 1970” (The Nation, 12/19/2012). Added to this is the severely ineffective mental health system, an inevitable result of for-profit medicine and the cuts in funding for mental health and social services. These factors have all contributed to the spate of massacres. U.S. imperialism’s willingness to unleash massive violence around the world also directly contributes to the violence within the U.S. itself. In a direct sense it has led to a massive expansion of the state justified by the “war on terror.” Obama and other capitalist politicians repeatedly call to “end the violence” inside America while using drones and state assassination abroad and militarizing the police domestically. But there are other indirect effects as well. As Marxists point out, cultural production inevitably reflects the dominant (ruling class) values of society. Given the commitment of the U.S. ruling class to endless violence against its perceived enemies it is not surprising to see this reflected in movies, videogames, and music which idealize a macho, gun toting cult of death. The Current Debate on Gun Control After years in which gun control measures especially at the federal level were seen by liberals as politically unfeasible because of the strength of the NRA, the aftermath of the Newtown massacre caused the issue to return to center stage. Obama decided to make this one of the central issues of his second term alongside immigration reform, fiscal “reform,” and climate change. The debate on gun control as played out in the capitalist media features only two sides: on the one hand high profile Democrats, big city mayors and a section of the bourgeois who have decided that it is time to take on the NRA and on the other side right wing Republicans, backed up by the NRA who are digging in to oppose almost any gun control measures. Our starting point in formulating our position should be sympathy with the understandable desire of most ordinary people to do something about gun violence, particularly to stop the horrific string of massacres. We completely rejected the NRA’s proposal that the appropriate response to Newtown was to put an armed police officer in every school in the country – right wingers have even raised the idea of allowing teachers to carry concealed weapons in the classroom and incredibly South Dakota passed a law to allow this! Their argument that the only way to stop “bad guys with guns” is to have more “good guys with guns” on the streets is a recipe for even more violence in society not less. While we strongly believe in the right of working people, racial minorities, and the oppressed to defend themselves against the violence of the bosses, the state or reactionary groups, the current level of gun violence in the U.S. is actually an obstacle to the development of social struggle. While defending our general theoretical position on the state – and not making any concession to liberal ideas that the state is neutral we need to examine the question concretely under the current conditions, balance of forces, and consciousness. In the situation prevailing in the U.S. today, does the current regime of widespread access to guns actually help strengthen the position of the working class? The reality is that it does not, and in fact the past 30 years – when the tendency has been for gun control to be relaxed – has seen a major offensive by big business, an undermining of democratic rights, and the strengthening of the repressive powers of the state. The dominant forces arguing against gun control promote a right-wing, individualist, racist, and sexist ideology that weakens the working class. Furthermore the threat of violence, ranging from the everyday threat of shootings in many communities up to and including the threat of terrorist attacks, has given the state ready-made excuses to ramp up its powers of repression. That does not mean we should adopt the position of the liberal gun-control advocates or echo the view that guns are the main problem in society. We need to put forward an independent, working-class position. We reject the NRA argument that the type of limited gun control measures proposed by Obama are the beginning of the end of the Second Amendment or the right to bear arms. There is no serious proposal being put forward to try to disarm or partially disarm the population as a whole. The only areas where there are forcible attempts by the police to disarm people are public housing projects in the inner cities. But opposing the attempt of the NRA to whip up collective paranoia is not sufficient. We also need to be clear that there are many legitimate reasons why people want to own guns. In rural culture, guns are widely used for hunting, dealing with predators, and entertainment. This does not inevitably lead to massive levels of violence. Likewise many suburban and urban dwellers understandably want to own a gun for protection. This is often particularly the case in areas where gun violence is endemic. It is not surprising that many women want to own a gun for self-defense. Socialists are not pacifists and we do not criticize ordinary people for owning a gun or wanting to. But the question which most ordinary people want answered now is how to significantly reduce the violence. The elite advocates of gun control do not have a serious answer to this question. Even if all the measures proposed by the Obama administration were passed into law the history of recent gun control measures suggests that the extremely powerful gun industry will find ways around them. This is what happened to the 1994 “ban” on assault weapons. The other fundamental reason that the ruling-class gun-control lobby can’t show a way to seriously reduce violence is that, as has already been pointed out, the central source of violence in society is capitalism itself including the capitalist state. Serious measures to reduce violence would include ending the “war on drugs” and decriminalizing most or all drugs. (It should be stressed that decriminalization is not the same as legalization. Essentially it means trying to treat drug addiction as a public health problem first and foremost.) Releasing the hundreds of thousands of nonviolent drug offenders from prison and the dismantling of the bloated and racist criminal injustice system would do more to reduce violence than any gun control measure. We also advocate taking serious measures against the massively profitable gun industry such as banning the sales of weapons by these companies (or the government) to various right-wing regimes around the world. We also are for ending the military adventures of U.S. imperialism abroad and massively reducing the scale of the military and the Pentagon budget. The resources freed up could be used to create jobs and improve education, health care (including mental health), and social services and thereby contribute to reducing violence abroad and at home. Finally we are for repealing the Patriot Act and other legislation that has legalized a massive security state that has done precious little to improve the safety of ordinary people but has certainly contributed to a big increase in state violence. Simply enacting a massive jobs program, a $15 an hour federal minimum wage and other anti-poverty measures, and a single-payer, socialized health-care system which prioritizes mental health care would be huge steps forward in creating a saner, less violent society. We advocate all measures that would reduce the level of inequality in society and that would dismantle institutional racism, but we stress that only by uprooting capitalism can we create a just, egalitarian society. However, even limited reforms quite quickly come up against the limits of this diseased and decaying system. Again it should be stressed that these measures we are proposing would be far more effective in reducing gun violence than “gun control” which is likely to be very ineffective. But in the context of our wider aim of strengthening the struggle of working people, we support some gun control measures including mandating background checks on all gun sales, banning the sale of “military style” semi-automatic weapons, and reducing the number of rounds in ammunition magazines on the basis that they would act to reduce the level of violence even if only to a limited degree. However, we have reservations about how background checks proposals are often written. Banning anyone with a conviction from buying a gun in practice means excluding a significant section of the black working class. At the very least, there should be an appeal process built into background checks. Again we are in no way saying that many ordinary people do not have entirely legitimate reasons for owning or wanting to own weapons but we do not see the present situation as being in the interests of the working class. Not all issues have a simple yes or no answer. Our position embodies a certain contradiction but really it is reality which is full of impossible contradictions as long as we continue to operate within a capitalist framework. https://web.archive.org/web/20171210101637/https://www.socialistalternative.org/2017/12/05/gun-control-solution-gun-violence-socialist-analysis/
Chargers (5-0) - The chargers dreams of being repeat super bowl champions got off too a bad start when Super Bowl MVP Johnny Manziel crashed the team bus in the championship parade and received a DUI. Thankfully for bolts fans, the team hasn't lost a step on the field, earning a 5-0 record with the #1 offense and #2 defense in the league. Manziel addressed the press for the first time this season and gave an eye grabbing quote, "At this point, our only goal is history."
Saints (5-0) - The saints were the team that every casino owner hated after the divisional round of last years playoffs. Coming in as one of the top teams in the league they were bounced after one game. The team has responded with vengeance this season as newly acquired franchise QB Paxton Lynch has thrown a insane 15 TDs threw 5 games and has the saints out to a undefeated start.
Eagles (4-1) - The "rookie renaissance" has given this team new life. After a midseason collapse in 2016, new faces and star rookies Shakim Ivy and Tevin Briscoe, leaders of the offense and defense respectively, have flown the eagles to new heights in 2017. They've dominated opponents this season and have everybody wondering if the week 2 loss to the broncos was a fluke or signs of another collapse to come.
Buccaneers (4-0) - After a offseason of major roster turnover, this team came into 2017 with a ton of hype and so far has delivered on it. Veteran QB Aaron Rodgers is off too a MVP caliber season leading the buccaneers to an undefeated start behind his 7 TDs passes. The one knock the critics have on the Bucs is that they lack a marquee victory this season, but they have an opportunity to change all that when they take on the Bears in solder field this week.
Jaguars (4-1) - The biggest surprise of the 2016 season was the jaguars elevating themselves from being a perennial bottom-feeder to a championship caliber team. Possibly the team with the most young talent in the NFL, Vegas gave them the second best odds to win the title this season and they have kept pace nicely. With four solid victories, including one in Seattle, and a very close loss to the super bowl champions, this team looks to contend again this year.
Bears (3-1) - The Bears were one of the most dominant teams in the NFL last year so it came a surprise to most when the team experienced so much roster turnover in the offseason. While Matt Jones has remained the leader of the team, it's been the "Alcatraz" defense that has been its backbone. After a heartbreaking loss to the packers in week 4, the bears will have an opportunity for retribution in their upcoming matchup with the undefeated buccaneers.
Seahawks (4-1) - Last years defensive juggernauts have become a liability on that end in recent weeks, giving up 30+ points in three straight weeks. Thankfully QB Russell Wilson has elevated his game to an elite level, throwing 7 TDs and just 2 interceptions over that span. With a tough test coming next week against the Saints, this defense will get a chance to prove if it is championship caliber.
Steelers (4-1) - After a shocking loss to the Browns week 1 that killed people's survivor pool hopes everywhere, the Black and Gold bandits have rebounded nicely. With solid divisional victories over playoff hopefuls such as the ravens and the bengals, this team looks on the right track to the playoffs again. Steelers fans everywhere are hoping that Big Ben can come back to playing at an elite level in the coming weeks as rumors of him retiring following the season have been circulating the airwaves.
Packers (3-1) - Following a 8-8 season, Cheeseheads everywhere we're calling for major change in the team makeup. Management obliged, among many moves they shipped QB Aaron Rodgers out of town and brought in former Heisman trophy winner Jameis Winston to be the signal caller. After a disappointing season opening loss to the bengals, the pack have rebounded well with three victories including a marquee triumph in solder field over their bitter rival the Bears.
Raiders (4-1) - Most sports writers penciled in the raiders as one of the most mediocre teams in the league coming into the season, making this years fast start that much sweeter in Oakland. The thing that has given this team life is there heart, as they have scraped and clawed for every single yard in there four victories. With three tough test coming after there week 6 bye, the raiders will have chances in San Diego, Philadelphia, and Dallas to carve out an identity for their team and prove there a legitimate contender.
Cowboys (3-2) - America's team opened the season with one of the toughest schedules in the league but it hasn't broken them. After getting slaughtered by the Chargers and losing a heartbreaking game to the Bears, the boys have won two strait to give them momentum coming into their week 6 bye. With a game against the high flying eagles on the horizon, the Boys have a chance to claw their way back on top of the NFC east.
Titans (3-2) - This team has picked up were it left off last year. Right on the bubble of good and great. With one of top developing rosters in the league the Titans have took care of the games they should win but have struggled to capitalize and earn a marque victory. The last two weeks they have faced two of the top teams in the league and both games were in there grasp till the end. The reason they lost? Turnovers. Specifically 2 ints in the Seattle game and 4 vs the Steelers. If this team wants to take the next step, they must protect the ball.
Broncos (3-2) - When a team brings in a lot of new faces, you really never know what to expect. The broncos have shown glimpses of greatness this season. With a victory over the angels and two close games against the raiders and cowboys, mile high is on the bubble of becoming a title contender again, unfortunately QB Andrew luck will be out for a few weeks with a foot fracture. If the broncos can stay afloat while luck is recovering, this team could be everyone's favorite dark horse in the playoffs.
Dolphins (3-2) - Football in south beach has been a laughingstock for over a decade now, and last season didn't do anything to change that perception. Coming into this season everyone had written the fins off and this was considered a lame duck year for coach Marshall Atkins. After starting the season 1-2 everything seemed normal, but now in week 5 the fins appear to be the clear front runner in the AFC east. The Dolphins defense has been absolutely dominant the last two weeks only letting up six points, we will see if they keep momentum vs the Texans this week.
Bengals (3-2) - Football is a sport where inconsistency can kill you. The bengals have been an epitome of this principle, after opening the season with two decisive victories over the packers and lions they have lost two divisional games and are searching for answers. After shipping QB Andy dalton to the quarterback graveyard that is Cleveland, they have struggled to find a replacement, as rookie QB Jawan Ricard has hit a wall. The bengals have been shipping out their players left and right and the coming weeks will us whether we should be saying #WhoDat or #TrustTheProcess
Ravens (3-2) - Nothing puts more fire under a coaches seat than cutting a former super bowl champion QB. When Coach Kinchen moved on from Joe Flacco and brought Matt Ryan to Baltimore he knew he was going out on a limb. After the first two weeks of the season, fans were furious and calling for a termination of Coach Kinchen's contract immediately. Despite all this pressure the ravens have rebounded nicely, rattling off three straight victories including a nice road win against the divisional opponent Cincinnati. Despite these victories, an area of concern for this team is the defense and they have given up 3+ TDs in three straight games. If the ravens correct the use mistakes they could be looking at a playoff berth.
Colts (2-2) - Coming into this season, the fans that fill Lucas Oils stadium were anticipating a full rebuilding year because of the departure of veteran players such as Andrew Luck and T.Y. Hilton. In a weird way, this year has been unfortunate cuz the team is stuck in that dreaded middle ground. There not bad enough to get a top pick yet there nowhere near good enough to secure a playoff spot. With three picks in the first two rounds, the calls for the team to start playing more young players will begin to get louder.
Panthers (2-3) - "Clusterf*** - A disastrously mishandled situation or undertaking" Carolina has been in clusterf*** mode since the end of the 2016 season. After a spectacular 2016 season, Coach Antwan left Carolina for NE amid rumors of a toxic front office culture. 4 weeks into the season first year head Coach Bondor resigned amid more reports of about the front office and now the reigns of the franchise rest in the hands of Coach Go Cowboys (wtf?) who started things off with a victory over the Vikings. Despite the chaos of the franchise, Carolina has a very talented team on both sides of the ball.
Jets (2-3) - Entering the season In the rebuilding process is always a hard thing as a coach. You have to keep the players motivated, keep the fan base spending money, all while making sure you lose enough games to get a good draft slot and keep your GM happy. Coach Todd Bowles has done a marvelous job and 1st round pick and hopeful franchise QB Hayden Skelton has been getting better every week. In a down year for the AFC east, the jets are somewhat poised to make a run, but the smart bet for the franchise would be to continue to develop the young players and stockpile talent.
Rams (2-3) - Having a good young developing franchise QB is always something to look forward to as a NFL fan. Thankfully for Ram nation, former No 1 overall pick Jared Goff looks like the real deal. Unfortunately for the Rams, being stuck in a division with a powerhouse like the saints means a wildcard berth is the best case scenario, but because of the competitiveness of the NFC this year looks like a rebuilding year for LA. While most teams in their position would start full on tanking, it may be a good idea for the Rams to win as many games as possible so they can keep a competitive culture alive for there young players to develop in.
Chiefs (2-3) - Kansas City entered the year with a energized fanbase due to the acquisition of QB Brett Hundley from Green Bay. This year was thought to be the year we're arrowhead could possibly be the host of a playoff game. Sadly, things haven't went that way. While they have secured two decisive victories over the Redskins and Giants, they have been absolutely demolished by any teams with relevancy losing to the Dolphins and Eagles by a combined score of 69(lol)-6. If things don't turn around in KC, there front office could be looking at a major shakeup.
Texans (2-3) - Starting the season out is always a good thing. After two nail biting victories, the Texans were looking down on their division with pity, almost certain to claim a playoff berth... but things have went south quick. Following three straight losses, calls for Coach Zucchini to be fired have been heard all over the stadium. QB jay cutler, the biggest offseason acquisition, threw 8 picks in the Texans last game, setting an NFL record. Things are looking grim in Houston and change appears to be on the horizon.
Lions (2-3) - Most teams in this section of the power rankings are laughing-stocks and disappointments, but for the lions this rings hollow. Viewed by many as one of the best young teams in the NFL due to their stockpile of talent acquired in the 2016 NFL Draft, the lions are building. While they sit 1-3 coming out of there week 5 bye week, things are looking bright for the franchise. Two of the teams losses this seals have been by less than a score to good teams in the bengals and Bucs, and the lions took care of business with the falcons. While some fans are disappointed, most people understand the lions positions and are hopeful for the future.
Bills (2-3) - The team from upper New York has been nothing short of a disappointment this season. Coming off a great year where they won the AFC east in what felt like a century, the Buffalo bills have hit a wall. And when I say hit a wall I mean it's bad, their three losses this season have been by a combined score of 3-71. While most analyst believe that Coach Cory should keep his job, if he refuses to fire his Offensive Coordinator he could facing the axe himself. Because of the mediocre state of the AFC east, the bills have a shot at making a run but the pulse of this team is barely beating right now and could use a jumpstart.
Browns (1-3) - between the Indians and the Cavaliers, Cleveland had a hell of a year last year. People thought that maybe the magic was back, maybe the browns are back? After a week 1 victory over the Steelers, one of the biggest regular season upsets in recent memory, fans were believing in the browns again, fans were crying coming out of the stadium and hope was in the air. Since then...... they've been the browns. Three straight losses going into the bye week has Cleveland fans on the brink.
Patriots (1-4) - When Billy B and Tom Brady retired following last seasons disappointment, fans were dismayed but regained hope when Coach Antwan left Carolina for New England. Sadly, the team has came up short quite a bit this season. After suffering three losses this season by less than one score, fans are left feeling like there is something there with this team but it needs more talent. The smart move for the pats would be to trust in Coach Antwan to develop the young players on this team and start to rebuild the franchise going into the offseason.
Redskins (0-4) - The RedDawgs of 2017 look a lot like the RedDawgs of 2016. A lot of close losses have demoralized the team. The talent is there, the Heart is there, but the team continues to come up short with all of there losses this season coming by less than two scores. The Redskins have been stockpiling draft picks and auctioning off veteran players left and right. Washington is looking at a rebuilding project this year and it's up in the air if Coach Woat's contract will be renewed next season.
Giants(1-4) - The Giants had quite a turbulent offseason after last years playoff berth, swapping out future HOF QBs by cutting Eli manning and signing drew Brees. Three weeks into the season Coach Ben Mccadoo resigned citing personal reason. The team has gone off the Rails and Coach SG has quite a rebuilding project on his hands. The best bet for the Giants would be to cut there losses on some of there aging veteran players and build around the young core of the team.
Cardinals (0-5) - Arizona is one of the Hottest states in the USA and Coach Jones feels it every time he sits down. The Cardinals went from mediocre last year to pitiful this year. The team doesn't have a victory on the season after Coach Jones took the first 5 weeks off to go get married, a unique situation in the NFL. The cardinals have one of the oldest teams in the NFL, and if this continues Coach Jones will almost certainly looking for new work.
Falcons (0-4) - The offseason for Atlanta was a clean sweep, with most of the longtime veteran players being moved. Coming into this season the Falcons were expected to be bad but are actually somewhat better than expected. They've been blown out by the lions and panthers but have had two close games with NFC powerhouse New Orleans. Despite their lackluster record, Atlanta looks like a team on the rise and could piece together some victories following the acquisition of QB Ryan Tannehill.
Vikings (0-5) - Minnesota was the Laughingstock of the league last year, and most people were surprised that Coach Satan kept his job. Coach Satan guaranteed a victory in the Vikings game against the packers after starting the season 0-1. Packers Coach Biggie Smalls responded by saying "Bow down and kiss the ring b****." After the loss Vikings fans showed up to the next game wearing ring-pops in protest of their head coach. It's safe to say Coach Satan's job is in trouble.
49ers (0-5) - Unlike the bengals, we actually know the the 9ers are in #TrustTheProcess mode. After selecting once in a generation QB prospect Adam West with the #1 pick, the future looked bright. Unfortunately after throwing 20 INTs through 5 games, West is already drawing Ryan Leaf comparisons. This is a building team, everyone knows it, but if they don't start protecting the ball this franchise could face another year of full on rebuilding.
A Hard Rock Hotel and Casino building under construction in downtown New Orleans partially collapsed on Saturday, killing at least one person and injuring more than a dozen others. Artist Monica Kelly poses as banners are installed at 201 N. Rampart street during the 1-year anniversary of the Hard Rock Hotel construction site collapse in New Orleans, Monday, Oct. 12, 2020. Now that two cranes at the partially collapsed Hard Rock Hotel in New Orleans are toppled, crews can begin searching for two bodies that remain in the debris, city officials said Sunday. Crews in New Orleans are trying to rescue two workers trapped in the wreckage of a Hard Rock Hotel under construction that collapsed on Saturday. NEW ORLEANS – A video posted on social media claiming to show structural problems inside the Hard Rock Hotel construction site two days before its deadly collapse has become part of the ... At least 2 dead, 20 injured after Hard Rock Hotel collapse in New Orleans. Updated on: October 13, 2019 / 12:36 AM / CBS News 2 killed in NOLA hotel construction collapse . A drone captured the aftermath of the building collapse in downtown New Orleans. (Source: Andres Braud) By Chris Finch October 12, 2019 at 1:24 PM CDT - Updated October 12 at 6:49 PM The partial collapse of the planned Hard Rock Hotel in New Orleans in 2019. In January, a red tarp flew off the rubble, revealing the dangling legs of a corpse. A HARD Rock hotel in New Orleans collapsed today leaving at least two dead, one missing and around 20 others injured. Horrifying footage shows the moment the 18-storey hotel came crashing down onto… Body spotted months after Hard Rock Hotel collapse sparks outrage in New Orleans The building partially crumbled to the ground as it was under construction, killing three workers.
Outrage after body of Hard Rock worker exposed at collapse ...
Live look at the site of the Hard Rock Hotel construction collapse in New Orleans, La. Engineers in New Orleans plan to bring down a pair of unstable constructi... Watch live coverage of the demolition of a Hard Rock Hotel that partially collapsed in New Orleans, La.» Subscribe to NBC News: http://nbcnews.to/SubscribeTo... New Orleans officials have set off a series of explosions to topple two cranes that had been looming precariously over the ruins of a partially collapsed hot... Part of an outer wall in the construction of a Hard Rock Hotel came crashing down as horrified passengers on a New Orleans, Louisiana, trolley watched, Satur... One person was killed and at least 18 injured in New Orleans on Saturday (Oct 12) when part of a Hard Rock Hotel under construction collapsed, filling a stre... Watch live coverage of the crane demolition of the Hard Rock Hotel that partially collapsed in New Orleans, La. » Subscribe to NBC News: http://nbcnews.to/Su... The city of New Orleans continues to try to cover up the remains of a deceased worker at the Hard Rock collapse site near Rampart and Canal Streets in what o... Scenes from the collapse of the Hard Rock Hotel in downtown New Orleans.