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As I was leaving Sunday Night’s Slayer show at the LC, I saw a group of disheveled, rotund men wearing matching shirts that said “Cleveland 216 Juggalos.”
I chuckled at the idea of a group of dudes putting on the same outfit and driving two hours so they could represent their local chapter of Insane Clown Posse Fans.
I also thanked Allah, God, Jesus, Richard Dawkins, Jah, Jehovah, Clarence 13x and Lucifer that when I was young and rebellious ICP was not an outlet for my adolescent desire to identify with the ugly and appalling because of youthful, Holden Caulfield-style cynicism.
I will admit to wearing a Slayer “South of Heaven” shirt to church and catechism in middle school and might be coming from a slightly similar place, but at the end of the day Slayer has made music that most anyone will admit to being classic, and legendary.
Sunday at the LC was another classic night performed by the legendary Thrash metal band.
Slayer played an “old school” set. Their longtime guitarist and songwriter Jeff Hanneman died in May of liver failure at the age of 49.
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On the 31st of July, Yellow Springs Ohio was the site of a major police operation that involved multiple agencies. The resulting standoff left one resident dead from police gunfire and residents with serious questions about police conduct. Ohio Attorney General Mike Dewine took the opportunity on November 12th to deliver a state Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI) report and push for new mental health laws and greater police funding. Questions from the deceased's family were not answered and the press conference ended abruptly.
The BCI report, which has not been released in full, claims to have interviewed over 80 residents of Yellow Springs regarding the shootout and death of Paul Schenck in July. Several Yellow Springs residents have declined to give statements to the Columbus Free Press, claiming the police would not take their statements and alleging police harassment and surveillance since their attempts to go on record.
Dear Editor
To Jim Petric's (sic)questions: “why does our mounting monster debt of some
$17 trillion and unfunded promised entitlements of $60 trillion NOT
sincerely, inarguably scare the shit out of you?
“I am not a Tea Partier, nor a Republican--hell, I wouldn't belong to a
political party that would have me--but a former old school Kennedy
Democrat who simply cannot fathom why folks on both sides of the aisle
aren't begging and clamoring for and demanding government spending within
our means.” (John Petric' column Oct. 31)
Jim and any duckies who are interested. What you seem to be asking for is a
quick and easy to comprehend answer, which is a bit difficult because much
of the related concepts have been distorted or substituted with falsified
simplicities. What is going on is mostly a political struggle over the
fiscal capacities of the Federal government. A large portion of the
scramble and mumbling cannot be simply based upon "common sense." Some
economic and fiscal literacy is necessary to understand where, when and by
whom the fraud of the faux "debate" is being perpetrated.
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Tony “Doctah X” Harrington is a Reggae-rooted musician, singer and deejay who explores dub and dubstep often with Eastern and African Sounds.
Doctah X recently released “Bangkok Chili” on North Carolina-based Boom One Records.
This was a follow-up to his 2011 album “Agent of Kabul.”
He hosts and deejays a radio show on WCRS called “Perscriptions” which airs Fridays from 9-10pm.
He is one of those Columbus gems with a rich history.
In the 70s and 80s, as a blues guitarist, Doctah X recorded and toured in Europe with Cream drummer Ginger Baker and played with blues legends John Lee Hooker, Albert Collins and Lele Gaudi.
He also recorded with Umar Bin Hassan of the Last Poets.
FP: Put together your fantasy band, dead or alive
DoctahX: Jimi Hendrix and Eddie Hazel-guitars, Bernie Worrel, Jimmy Smith-keys and organ, Jaco Patorious -bass, Sly Dunbar-drums, Dr.
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With a stroke of his pen on November 6, 2013, Ohio Governor John Kasich demonstrated his utter contempt for democracy. Fearing that Ohio Libertarian Party nominee Charlie Earl, who has strong Tea Party support, would cut into his conservative base, Kasich outlawed all third parties in Ohio for the 2014 election.
The offending law is Senate Bill 193, which passed last week amidst controversy and turmoil at the Statehouse. It has been dubbed the “John Kasich Re-election Protection Act” for obvious reasons. The ever-arrogant Ohio Senator Bill Seiz (R-Cincinnati) introduced the draconian law the same day the Libertarians publicly announced Earl’s nomination.
Kasich has always been a bit contemptuous of competitive elections. Other than his first campaign, most of his electoral victories were landslides aided by gerrymandered districts and an incredibly safe noncompetitive seat in the 1990’s.
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Politicians should be envious of cannabis. It’s WAY more popular than they are. Its many wins at the ballot box testify to its popularity, and Election Day 2013 served as a case in point.
From Colorado to Michigan, Maine and Miami, voters handed the substance healthy margins that would feel like a mandate to any vote hungry candidate.
Take Colorado, for example. It is well known that the state’s Constitutional Amendment 64 to permit the “personal use and regulation of marijuana” passed by a 55 percent margin in 2012, the same year that President Obama won the White House with just 50.4 percent of the popular vote. Cannabis was on the ballot in Colorado again this year in the form of a tax on the sales made legal last year. This measure claimed an even higher 65 percent of the vote.
Three Michigan cities ran local ballot initiatives to remove penalties for possession of an ounce and guess what?
The Columbus International Film & Video Festival closes out this weekend with an array of award winning films from around the world. The Festival, the longest running in the US, started last Thursday and continues through Sunday.
Today (Thursday, November 14) the Festival features award winning student shorts. Local high school filmmaker Brian Ferenchik’s short “Wake Up” will be screened as well as OSU alumni Ryan Moody’s short “Last Call.” The screening is at the Canzani Center on the Columbus College Of Art & Design campus at 60 Cleveland Ave and admission is free for students and CIF&VF members, all others just $5. Parking is free in CCAD lots.
On Friday, the Festival screens the Silver Chris (Best in Division) film “Heart Of Sky, Heart Of Earth.” The film has also been awarded the Central Ohio Green Education Fund Award. Directed by Frauke Sandig and Eric Black (who is originally from the Columbus area) the film is a look at Mayan culture today and their spiritual connection to the environment.
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Far from the centers of worldwide financial trading, Ohio State University gave an award to an intelligence industry academic, while he called for more secrecy. Less than 24 hours earlier, the intelligence community ensured itself a tighter grasp on one of the key tools that we, the global public, use communicate amongst ourselves – Twitter.
On November 8, Joshua Rovner came to OSU to present his book “Fixing the Facts: National Security and the Politics of Intelligence,” a study of the influence of intelligence (as in CIA) on decision making in national policy. Rovner also received a prestigious award for its publication. The Edgar S. Furniss Book Award commemorates the founder of OSU's Mershon Center for International Studies and is given once a year.
Rovner began by presenting his book as a study of how intelligence professionals are manipulated into presenting estimates to national leadership figures that fit into the latter's pre-decided upon policy positions. He claimed that this historical tendency was caused by leader’s attempts to use intelligence estimates as public political tools.
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The Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) is in town and they are going to confront that redhead, Wendy. On Saturday, November 16 at 1:00pm, Ohio Fair Food and community members throughout the state will demonstrate at 9th Ave and High Street to raise the specter of how the CIW’s Fair Food Program is rooting out modern day slavery and abuse of farm workers.
That’s right. Slavery. When the Immokalee workers – who work in and around in the fields of Immokalee, Florida picking many of the tomatoes for the fast food industry – mean the term
slavery, they really mean slavery.
Emilio Faustino Galindo is a farmworker who worked for 16 years in the fields of Immokalee, Florida.. Florida produces over 90 percent of America’s fresh tomatoes during the fall and winter seasons. Galindo told the Free Press that workers are mainly from Mexico, Guatemala and Haiti. Galindo spoke at a Free Press gathering on Saturday, November 9, 2013 about the harsh conditions farmworkers historically faced. He stated that their movement started when a farmworker was “beaten bloody for getting a drink of water.”
“His shirt became the flag of our movement.
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The early heroes of the AIDS epidemic were honored in How to Survive a Plague, a 2012 documentary that focused on efforts to pressure health officials to devote more resources to fighting the disease.
Dallas Buyers Club dramatizes the self-serving but equally gutsy struggles of an AIDS hero who didn’t fit the usual mold: a hard-drinking, rodeo-loving electrician named Ron Woodroof.
As played by the increasingly surprising Matthew McConaughey, Ron is not only straight but homophobic. When a doctor tells the Texan, one day in 1986, that he’s HIV-positive and has only 30 days to live, he greets the news with angry skepticism.
“There ain’t nothing out there that can kill Ron Woodroof in 30 days,” he declares before storming out of the office.
But as the weeks go by and he finds himself growing weaker and weaker, Ron begins looking for help. When a local hospital starts testing the new drug AZT, he bribes an orderly to sneak him samples.
It’s only after the supply runs out that Ron finds his way to a Mexican clinic run by a renegade doctor named Voss (Griffin Dunne) who’s experimenting with more-holistic treatment options.