Search This Blog

Translate

Blog Archive

Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Showing posts with label Earth Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Earth Day. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

FOCUS: Bill McKibben | The Climate Science Is Clear: It's Now or Never to Avert Catastrophe





Reader Supported News
20 November 19

"The liberty of the Press is called the Palladium of Freedom, which means, in these days, the liberty of being deceived, swindled, and humbugged by the Press and paying hugely for the deception." - Mark Twain, 1870
You have your own news source, beholden to you. What does it take to preserve it? Precious little.
Marc Ash
Founder, Reader Supported News


If you would prefer to send a check:
Reader Supported News
PO Box 2043
Citrus Hts, CA 95611



Reader Supported News
20 November 19
It's Live on the HomePage Now:
Reader Supported News


FOCUS: Bill McKibben | The Climate Science Is Clear: It's Now or Never to Avert Catastrophe
Bill McKibben. (photo: Wolfgang Schmidt)
Bill McKibben, Guardian UK
McKibben writes: "The one thing never to forget about global warming is that it's a timed test."

Disastrous global heating will soon become irrevocable – but despite politicians’ inaction millions are taking to the streets to fight the planet’s fever

he one thing never to forget about global warming is that it’s a timed test.
It’s ignoble and dangerous to delay progress on any important issue, of course – if, in 2020, America continues to ignore the healthcare needs of many of its citizens, those people will sicken, die, go bankrupt. The damage will be very real. But that damage won’t make it harder, come 2021 or 2025 or 2030, to do the right thing about healthcare.
But the climate crisis doesn’t work like that. If we don’t solve it soon, we will never solve it, because we will pass a series of irrevocable tipping points – and we’re clearly now approaching those deadlines. You can tell because there’s half as much ice in the Arctic, and because forests catch fire with heartbreaking regularity and because we see record deluge. But the deadlines are not just impressionistic – they’re rooted in the latest science.
In the aftermath of the Paris climate accords in 2015, for instance, many researchers set 2020 as the date by which carbon emissions would need to peak if we were to have any chance of meeting the accord’s goals. Here’s an example of the math, from Stefan Rahmstorf and Anders Levermann. Under the most plausible scenario, they wrote, “even if we peak in 2020 reducing emissions to zero within 20 years will be required,” and that is an ungodly steep slope. But if we wait past 2020 it’s not a slope at all – it’s just a cliff, and we fall off it. As the former UN climate chief Christiana Figueres put it when she launched Mission 2020, “Everyone has a right to prosper, and if emissions do not begin their rapid decline by 2020, the world’s most vulnerable people will suffer even more from the devastating impacts of climate change.”
Here’s another way of saying it: the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reported last autumn that if we hadn’t managed a fundamental transformation of the planet’s energy systems by 2030, our chance of meeting the Paris temperature targets is slim to none. And anyone who has ever had anything to do with governments knows: if you want something big done by 2030, you better give yourself a lot of lead time. In fact, it’s possible we’ve waited too long: the world’s greenhouse gas emissions spiked last year, and – given Trump, Bolsonaro and Putin - it’s hard to imagine we won’t see the same depressing thing this year.
Which is why, I guess, it’s a good thing that 2020 is an election year in the US, and that the Democratic party finally seems willing to talk seriously about climate change. If it nominates Sanders or Warren, maybe the kind of aggressive approach that shakes things up is possible. But America is just one country; we also need to pressure our real global government, which has its headquarters not in Washington but in Wall Street. Last year banks increased their already staggering lending to the fossil fuel industry; if that continues there’s no chance of turning this round in time.
If you’re looking for optimism, at least we come into 2020 on a roll. The great climate strikes of this September were the largest demonstration of climate activism in history, with 7 million people in the street. And April 2020 marks the 50th anniversary of Earth Day – it could be a day for an even more massive outpouring.
The planet is running a hideous fever, and the antibodies – all those protesters – are finally kicking in. It’s a race, and we’re behind, and we better start catching up right now.





Sunday, September 22, 2019

CC News Letter 21 Sept - US sending more troops to Saudi Arabia amid rising war tensions





Dear Friend,


The Trump administration Friday announced that it is sending more troops along with air and missile defense systems to Saudi Arabia in the wake of the September 14 strikes against two Saudi oil facilities that temporarily cut Saudi Arabia’s oil production in half and sent global oil prices soaring by 20 percent last Monday.

Kindly support honest journalism to survive. https://countercurrents.org/subscription/

If you think the contents of this news letter are critical for the dignified living and survival of humanity and other species on earth, please forward it to your friends and spread the word. It's time for humanity to come together as one family! You can subscribe to our news letter here http://www.countercurrents.org/news-letter/.

In Solidarity

Binu Mathew
Editor
Countercurrents.org


US sending more troops to Saudi Arabia amid rising war tensions
by Bill Van Auken


The Trump administration Friday announced that it is sending more troops along with air and missile defense systems to Saudi Arabia in the wake of the September 14 strikes against two Saudi oil facilities that temporarily cut Saudi Arabia’s oil production in half and sent global oil prices soaring by 20 percent last Monday.



Greta Thunberg, autism and her America tour
by Zeenat Khan


Greta passionately hopes that her serious message will only increase people’s awareness in realizing the dangers of climate change. She has conquered many hearts including mine in her pursuit for a better world. People will cheer her on today, and for months and years to come. Vive le Greta Thunberg!



Inside out: Climate change induced migration
by Shobha Shukla


Climate change greatly impacts the lives of migrants in different parts of the world. According to the United Nations, by 2050, up to 1 billion people could be driven away from their homes due to the worsening impacts of climate change. Both, sudden and slow onset weather events, affect the migrants.



Iran: Neither Military Action Nor Economic Sanctions
by Dr Chandra Muzaffar


It would be utterly immoral of the United States to launch a military attack upon Iran if it is true that one of the missiles that destroyed an oil refinery in Saudi Arabia on the 14th of September 2019 had a casing bearing a number that suggested that the weapon was manufactured for NATO forces. The alphabets preceding the number denote the type of missile it is and one of its uses. The picture of the missile was inadvertently supplied to the media by the Saudi Defence Ministry.

It would be utterly immoral of the United States to launch a military attack upon Iran if it is true that one of the missiles that destroyed an oil refinery in Saudi Arabia on the 14th of September 2019 had a casing bearing a number that suggested that the weapon was manufactured for NATO forces. The alphabets preceding the number denote the type of missile it is and one of its uses. The picture of the missile was inadvertently supplied to the media by the Saudi Defence Ministry.
A theory that has emerged in the wake of the picture of this missile is that the assault on the oil refineries in Saudi’s Eastern Province could have been a false flag operation initiated by John Bolton who was sacked by President Donald Trump as National Security Adviser around that time. It was his way of orchestrating a ‘parting shot’  which he could then blame on Iran — a State that he has always targeted in pursuit of his neo conservative agenda of emasculating Israel’s regional adversaries in order to ensure the latter’s supremacy and hegemony.
A false flag operation would exonerate Iran which has consistently maintained that it had nothing to do with the attack on the refineries. Besides, Iran does not stand to gain in any way from such action. Its current preoccupation is with getting crippling sanctions imposed on it by the US lifted immediately.  A false flag operation would however raise a question or two about the Houthi( Ansar Allah)  claim that it destroyed the Saudi refineries. Indeed, if anyone in the region has a reason to act against the Saudi regime, it would be the Houthis and the people of Yemen in general. Since 2015 at least 50,000 bombs and missiles have been dropped in Yemen by the Saudi military and its regional allies. More than 15,000 children, women and men have perished. Farms, hospitals and schools have been bombarded.  The constant daily attacks have spawned the worst humanitarian crisis in the 21st century. Preventable diseases such as cholera have spread and malnutrition and starvation haunt tens of thousands of families. It has been estimated that a child dies every 10 minutes in Yemen as a result of all this.
It is this terrible catastrophe that the world should address. False flag operations divert attention from the root causes of a catastrophe ignited by the Saudi and US elites years ago. Those causes in turn are related to geopolitics, power and hegemony. The ordinary Yemeni has paid a huge price.
If a military assault on Iran is not to going to help the ordinary Yemeni neither will the tightening of economic sanctions against the people of Iran. Already the sanctions re-imposed upon that country since the US withdrew from the six nation nuclear deal have led to a great deal of pain and suffering within the populace. The sick including children have been deprived of much needed medicines which are presently imported from abroad.
Military action and economic sanctions it is obvious only exacerbate dire situations.  Whenever it is initiated by a mighty power in collusion with its allies and agents, it fails to achieve its objectives. Take US helmed military campaigns aimed at furthering their own often diabolical agenda. The US attempt to crush what was in reality a nationalist movement in Vietnam in the sixties and early seventies resulted in its own ignominious defeat. Under the banner of NATO, it took control of Afghanistan in October 2001 and in the process ignited a war of resistance which after 18 years has undoubtedly enhanced the Taliban’s grip upon power. Together with Britain, it invaded and occupied Iraq convinced that it would not only be able to control the nation’s rich oil resource but also determine the region’s politics in favour of Israel. Neither goal has been achieved and Iraq continues to be in a quagmire. Libya is another country in West Asia and North Africa (WANA) where the US and its NATO partners initially succeeded in overthrowing Muammar Gaddafi and murdering him brutally but is now bogged down in a chaotic terrain where there is no effective functioning government. In Syria for at least seven years, starting in 2011, the US and its allies sought through covert and overt means to oust the government of Bashar Al-Assad mainly because it refused to kowtow to them. Though they even employed terrorist outfits to achieve their objective, Bashar is still in the seat of power, supported by the Hezbollah, Iran and Russia. Syria has proven yet again that it is not possible to accomplish regime change through military means orchestrated by external actors.
Economic sanctions however harsh have also not succeeded in bringing governments that value their independence and integrity to their knees. An outstanding example of a nation that has withstood US sanctions and enhanced its sovereignty is Cuba.  One of those rare occasions when sanctions have worked is the global movement against Apartheid South Africa in the eighties. There was a universal moral principle underlying those sanctions that transcended any self-serving agenda which was one of the reasons that explained its success. One can argue that such a principle is also present in the Boycott, Divest Sanctions (BDS) movement in relation to Israeli occupation of Palestinian and Arab lands.
The time has come for people everywhere to reject military action and self-serving economic sanctions   as means towards certain nefarious ends. Since the former is a threat and the latter is a reality in the case of Iran, the Iranian crisis should serve as a platform for the mass mobilization of global public opinion against the use of these two weapons. Let Iran be that moment in history that will persuade humankind to eschew what is vile and vicious, what is cruel and callous in our setting as we journey towards a civilization that is just, humane and compassionate.
Dr Chandra Muzaffar is President of the International Movement for a Just World (JUST).. Malaysia.



What Is Energy Denial?
by Don Fitz


The fiftieth anniversary of the first Earth Day of 1970 will be in 2020.  As environmentalism has gone mainstream during that half a century, it has forgotten its early focus and shifted toward green capitalism.  Nowhere is this more apparent than abandonment of the slogan popular during the early Earth Days: “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.”



Rotten in Tunisia: The Corrupt Rule of Ben Ali
by Dr Binoy Kampmark


The Arab Spring seems, to a large extent, a flutter of history and packed with a good deal of wishful thinking; but for a time, it seemed that lasting change might take place, staged as grand theatrical acts of protest against military thuggery.  The stable of Egyptian politics was turned out; there were protests across North Africa stretching to Iran.  But the strong men returned, and authoritarianism reasserted itself.  We bear witness to a flirt of history rather than any lasting consummation of change.  Tunisia, however, proved the holdout exception.  Ben Ali might well have counted himself unlucky, a victim of posterity’s considerable, mocking condescension.



Gandhian way of changing corporate politics
by Dr Prem Singh


Gandhi had instilled the idea of freedom from colonialism in the hearts of crores of people in the colonized world along with Indians. This effort of Gandhi has also touched the hearts of the people of the colonial powers to some extent. Even after his assassination, his idea of civil disobedience and change of heart continued to inspire those people/groups world over whose freedom to be human or to civil rights was violated. The idea of freedom from neo-colonialist clutches can still find a place in the hearts of people including India by taking inspiration from Gandhi.










Monday, April 22, 2019

Andy Borowitz | Sarah Huckabee Sanders Accuses Media of Anti-Liar Bias





Reader Supported News
22 April 19

How Bad Do You Want Free Service?
Bad enough to allow your privacy to bought and sold on Wall Street?
Bad enough to be led to vote for policies that subvert social justice?
Bad enough to empower individuals and interests who profit from human suffering on an immense scale?
Notice the difference at Reader Supported News?
Help us pay the bills. It’s not so much.
Marc Ash
Founder, Reader Supported News
Sure, I'll make a donation!

Update My Monthly Donation

If you would prefer to send a check:
Reader Supported News
PO Box 2043
Citrus Hts
CA 95611





Reader Supported News
21 April 19
It's Live on the HomePage Now:
Reader Supported News


Andy Borowitz | Sarah Huckabee Sanders Accuses Media of Anti-Liar Bias 
Sarah Huckabee Sanders. (photo: Evan Vucci/AP)
Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker
Borowitz writes: "Reacting to the journalist April Ryan's call for her to be fired, the White House press secretary, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, said, on Friday, that she has been the victim of the media's 'widespread anti-liar bias.'"
READ MORE

Elizabeth Warren. (image: Elena Scotti/Getty Images/AP)
Elizabeth Warren. (image: Elena Scotti/Getty Images/AP)

Elizabeth Warren Has a Plan
Clio Chang, Jezebel
Chang writes: "Warren is telling a story about the country she wants to live in - and the country we currently live in: In the new gilded age, three of the richest people in America own more wealth than the poorest half of the rest of the country."
READ MORE

Theo Oshiro, deputy director of immigrant services organization Make the Road New York, is pictured at the group's offices in New York City, April 9, 2019. (photo: Andrew Chung/Reuters)
Theo Oshiro, deputy director of immigrant services organization Make the Road New York, is pictured at the group's offices in New York City, April 9, 2019. (photo: Andrew Chung/Reuters)

Supreme Court Girds for Fight Over Trump Census Citizenship Question
Andrew Chung, Reuters
Chung writes: "Sitting on a working-class commercial strip in the shadows of an above-ground rail line, a group called Make the Road New York's busy street-level offices are easy to miss. But its mission to support and advocate for immigrants is front and center."
READ MORE

Eric Gonzalez. (photo: Getty Images)
Eric Gonzalez. (photo: Getty Images)

Why Anyone Who Cares About Criminal Justice Reform Should Keep an Eye on Brooklyn
Dave Colon, Splinter News
Colon writes: "At the end of a mid-March press conference announcing Justice 2020, his new initiative to remake the role of the district attorney's office, Eric Gonzalez, the Brooklyn district attorney, got a question straight out of the era that gave us the East New York-set exploitation classic/nadir Death Wish 4."
READ MORE

The Liturgy of Remembrance, Contrition and Hope on April 18, 2017, drew over 100 descendants of people enslaved by Georgetown University. (photo: Allison Shelley/WP)
The Liturgy of Remembrance, Contrition and Hope on April 18, 2017, drew over 100 descendants of people enslaved by Georgetown University. (photo: Allison Shelley/WP)

Georgetown Students Voted to Pay a Fee for Slavery Reparations. America, Take Note.
Courtland Milloy, The Washington Post
Milloy writes: "While many are confounded by the subject of reparations for slavery, students at Georgetown University have acted on the courage of their convictions."
READ MORE

Haftar's offensive on the capital has raised fears of a full-blown civil war in the oil-rich country. (photo: Hani Amara/Reuters)
Haftar's offensive on the capital has raised fears of a full-blown civil war in the oil-rich country. (photo: Hani Amara/Reuters)

Explosions in Tripoli Suburb After Air Raid, Death Toll Rises
Al Jazeera
Excerpt: "Explosions have shaken Libya's capital Tripoli following an air raid, residents said, in an escalation of a two-week offensive by eastern forces on the city held by the internationally-recognised government."
READ MORE

A rally against climate denial. (photo: Nasief Manie/AP)
A rally against climate denial. (photo: Nasief Manie/AP)

7 Things We've Learned About Earth Since the Last Earth Day
Umair Irfan, Vox
Irfan writes: "This year's Earth Day, April 22, will arrive at a sobering moment in human history. The world is warming faster than ever."
READ MORE





Monday, April 24, 2017

Trump Just Responded To The Science Marches In A Disturbing Way









Trump Just Responded To The Science Marches In A Disturbing Way



While thousands of people took to the streets in today’s “March for Science” in honor of Earth Day, Trump responded with a press release as tone-deaf as it is contradictory.
In the press release, Trump immediately claims, “[his] Administration is committed to keeping our air and water clean, to preserving our forests, lakes, and open spaces, and to protecting endangered species.”
His policies say otherwise.
In February, Trump signed a bill ending the Office of Surface Mining’s Stream Protection Rule, which protected waterways from coal mining waste. After that, Trump signed a Congressional Review Act resolution, ending a financial disclosure requirement for energy companies. In March, Trump signed his “Energy Independence” executive order at the EPA. Per Reuters:
The order’s main target is former President Barack Obama’s Clean Power Plan, which required states to slash carbon emissions from power plants – a key factor in the United States’ ability to meet its commitments under a climate change accord reached by nearly 200 countries in Paris in 2015.
Trump’s decree also reverses a ban on coal leasing on federal lands, undoes rules to curb methane emissions from oil and gas production and reduces the weight of climate change and carbon emissions in policy and infrastructure permitting decisions. Carbon dioxide and methane are two of the main greenhouse gases blamed by scientists for heating the earth.
Trump’s statement goes on to claim that, somehow, “Economic growth enhances environmental protection… That is why my Administration is reducing unnecessary burdens on American workers and American companies…” Reminiscent of Representative Dave Brat (R-VA)’s claim that “Rich people, it turns out, like clean air and clean water,” to a chorus of boos at his own town hall, Republicans are operating under a faulty mindset that if we repeal regulations meant to protect the environment, we will get so rich that we can then afford to protect the environment. Another way, of course, would be to protect the environment in the first place.
The Obama Administration left a legacy of the strongest environmental protections in the history of the United States and, miraculously, managed to do so without decimating the American economy. In fact, the economy thrived. Under Obama, the unemployment rate dropped from 10% to 4.7% and 15.8 million private sector jobs were added, the longest streak of total job growth on record.
Trump then states, “My Administration is committed to advancing scientific research that leads to a better understanding of our environment and of environmental risks.” Of course, that research – largely ignored by the Trump Administration – already exists. For example, we already know that carbon dioxide, a heat-trapping gas, is the primary driver of global warming, a fact that Scott Pruitt, head of the EPA, denies in the face of all research.
Trump also proposed cutting the EPA’s budget by 31%. This would affect states’ ability to monitor public water systems, to have access to safe drinking water, to police environmental offenders and impose penalties, to revive wetland habitats, to clean up toxic pollution and hazardous substances, to combat invasive species, to protect from radiation, to study the health consequences of chemicals in everyday products, to increase federal vehicle and fuels standards, and to protect the planet from the effects of climate change.
Trump finally concludes his conflict-riddled press release by offering a tepid appeal: “This April 22nd, as we observe Earth Day, I hope that our Nation can come together to give thanks for the land we all love and call home.” Look outside, President Trump, at the thousands of people marching in Washington D.C. at this very moment and you will realize that there is only thing standing in the way of truly giving thanks for that very land we “all love and call home.” And that’s you.
http://occupydemocrats.com/2017/04/22/trump-just-responded-science-marches-disturbing-way/


Legendary Watergate Reporter Just Made A Chilling Trump-Russia Revelation


Friday, April 21, 2017

MASSterList: Scotty down under | Dems debate Israel stance | Tower funds as Trump hedge?


SUBSCRIBE FOR FREE FOR A GREAT NEWS RECAP

By Jay Fitzgerald and Keith Regan
04/21/2017

Scotty down under | Dems debate Israel stance | Tower funds as Trump hedge?

Happening Today
 
Baker honors teacher of year
 
Gov. Charlie Baker will be joined by Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, Elementary and Secondary Education Commissioner Mitchell Chester and others to honor Boston charter school teacher Sydney Chaffee for being named the 2017 National Teacher of the Year. Huntington Theatre Company BU Theatre, 264 Huntington Avenue, Boston, 10 a.m. 
 
 
Net neutrality presser
 
Following a a closed-door net neutrality roundtable, Sen. Edward Markey and technology and venture capital executives will hold a press conference. 2 Avenue de Lafayette, 6th floor, Boston, 10:30 a.m. 
 
 
Muddy River ribbon cutting
 
A slew of state and city officials, including Gov. Charlie Baker and Boston Mayor Marty Walsh, are expected to be on hand for the Muddy River Phase I ribbon cutting and to dedicate the new park land to former City of Boston Park Commissioner Justine Liff. Administration Building, Fenway Room, Emmanuel College, 400 Fenway, Boston, 1 p.m. 
 
 
Healey headlines Armenian commemoration
 
Attorney General Maura Healey speaks at the 102nd Armenian Genocide Commemoration. House Chamber, 11:10 a.m. Auditor Suzanne Bump and Treasurer Deborah Goldberg are among the state officials expected to attend a State House reception immediately following. 

Today's News
 
Brown New Zealand bound
 
It’s not the vice presidency or some of the other top positions his name was connected to after he became an early backer of Donald Trump, but if all goes well and he passes muster with Congress, former U.S. Sen. Scott Brown will be headed to the other side of the world to be ambassador to New Zealand. You can bet that Sen. Elizabeth Warren will be quietly wishing a hearty bon voyage to her long-time nemesis. While the not-shy-about-self-promotion Brown is not likely to meet any kings or queens, he should at least will meet the prime minister of the remote island nation.
Not surprisingly, Brown’s nomination caused a stir down under, with many of the first media reports there focusing on his one-time work as a nude male model. 
Boston Globe
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Walsh’s $16K per month consultants spark speculation
 
The re-election campaign of Boston Mayor Marty Walsh is paying Democratic strategists Stephanie Cutter and Teddy Goff $16,000 a month, Meghan E. Irons of the Globe reports. Given the high-profile nature of the Precision Strategies partners— both former Obama campaign staffers—the hiring could suggest Walsh wants to use this year’s mayoral campaign to build a political brand and message that will travel beyond the city. 
Boston Globe
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Arlington Dems eye Donnelly Senate seat
 
State Rep. Sean Garballey formally entered the special election to fill the seat vacated by the death of Sen. Kenneth Donnelly and another Arlington Democrat could take the plunge as soon as next week, Matt Murphy of State House News Service reports. Cindy Friedman, Donnelly’s chief of staff, will announce her own campaign on Monday. 
State House News Service (paywall)
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Legault announces state Senate run
 
Former Salem city councilor William Legault launched a campaign for the Second Essex district Senate seat Thursday, a move that prompted incumbent Joan Lovely to declare she’ll seek re-election when the seat comes up in 2018, Dustin Luca of the Salem News reports. Legault had been affiliated with the United Independent Party, but with that designation no longer recognized by the state, says he’s now a registered Democrat.
Salem News
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
City: Tower needed because, Trump
 
As they prepare to plead their case for an exemption from an ages-old state law prohibiting tall buildings from casting shadows on Boston Common, city officials are saying the $153 million windfall the city would see from selling the Winthrop Square parcel is necessary as a “backstop” against potential Trump administration budget cuts, Brian Dowling of the Herald reports. “This is an opportunity for us to backstop the exodus of federal money,” said Brian Golden, head of the Boston Planning & Development Agency. “We think the timing is right for this kind of deal because, I think, we all anticipate a contraction in federal money that flows to the state for these types of things, especially affordable housing.”
Boston Herald

T apologizes for fare fumble
 
The MBTA is red faced once again. This time it is apologizing for mistakenly informing riders that they would have to pay $6.25 for the five-mile ride between South Station and the new Boston Landing stop in Brighton, MassLive’s Gintautas Dumcius reports. At that rate, a ticket to Framingham would cost $30. Don’t ask about Worcester. Math hasn’t been a strong point for the T, but still, that’s a little much. The true cost of the trip: $2.25.
MassLive
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Family wins custody battle over Hernandez’ brain
 
As if the sordid saga of Aaron Hernandez could not get any more bizarre and disturbing, a scuffle briefly broke out yesterday over, of all things, the brain of the disgraced and now deceased former Patriots star. The former NFL player’s lawyer alleged his brain was being illegally withheld, a dustup resolved when the state medical examiner’s office later announced it would be releasing Hernandez’s grey matter after determining that suicide was the cause of death, the Boston Globe reports. Hernandez’s family plans to donate his brain to Boston University so it can be studied for signs of chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
Meanwhile, at WBUR, Steve Brown probes how the high-profile death could impact state lawmakers as they prepare to take up long-delayed criminal justice reform bills. 
Boston Globe
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Hernandez’s prison one tough place
 
The Souza-Baranowski Correctional Center in Shirley where Aaron Hernandez hung himself has long history of violence that stands out even among maximum security lockups, writes MassLive’s Kristin LaFratta. Just a few months ago, a fight between two rival gangs in the prison tore up the housing unit during three hours of rioting. The prison was also the place where convicted pedophile priest John Geoghan met an untimely end after he was inexplicably placed in the same cell as Joseph Druce, who was doing time for having killed a man for making sexual advances. There have also been several suicides as well. Granted prison is not meant to be Club Med, but just maybe the Shirley lockup could use a little outside scrutiny.
MassLive
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Worcester transit agency seeks higher fares, service cuts
 
Seems the MBTA is not the only transpiration agency in the state looking to fix a budget deficit with both service reductions and fare hikes. Cyrus Moulton of the Telegram reports that the board of the Worcester Regional Transit Authority has presented a plan to boost fares—though not by as much as previously planned—and trim some lesser-used services. The fare hikes will be the subject of public hearings before a final vote.
Telegram & Gazette
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Scientists gear up for march
 
Saturday is both Earth Day and the long-planned March for Science and Dusty Christensen of the Hampshire Gazette reports that hundreds from Amherst area will be among those headed to Washington, D.C. and elsewhere to protest Trump administration policies. Six protests are scheduled across the Bay State, in Boston, Amherst, Falmouth, Great Barrington, Pittsfield and Worcester.
Hampshire Gazette
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Can they hear me now?
 
Framingham-based Bose Corp. is facing a federal lawsuit alleging the audio technology company secretly disclosed its customers' music and audio selections to third parties, including a data mining company, Laura Finaldi of the Worcester Business Journal reports. The suit targets the Bose Connect smartphone app.
Worcester Business Journal


 
 
Israeli settlements resolution has Democrats scrambling
 
A longtime member of the Democratic State Committee has proposed a resolution that would have the party take a stand against Israeli settlements in the West Bank, a move some party heavyweights say could alienate many voters, Mark Arsenault and Joshua Miller report in the Globe. Former party chairman Steve Grossman is among those hoping to derail the resolution before it comes up for a vote. 
Boston Globe
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Tufts student government Israel sanction vote sparks outcry
 
Meanwhile, a move by the student government at Tufts University to call for the school to sanction Israel is sparking outcry and pushback, Andrea Levin reports at the Algermeiner: “In a particularly obnoxious move, Tufts’ Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP) chapter engineered the vote to occur just before Passover, thus blindsiding many Jewish defenders of Israel who had already headed home for the holiday. Those individuals were told to submit questions via Google if they couldn’t attend the proceedings.” 
Algemeiner.com
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Happy Friday: The next recession will bust the Mass. budget
 
Tax-slashing policies from the 90s are on a collision course with exploding healthcare costs, with only a recession keeping the two from creating a crater in the state’s budget, Ethan Horowitz writes for the Globe. Plans to raise revenue—think: millionaire’s tax—may not be in place fast enough to avoid deep cuts in services and programs when they’d be needed most. “The clock is ticking. Nearly eight years have passed since we escaped the last recession, and if we find ourselves in an economic free fall anytime soon, we won’t have a lot of good options.” 
Boston Globe
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Hundreds of rejected ride-hail drivers win appeals
 
More than 450 of the 8,000-plus Uber and Lyft drivers who failed state screenings have successfully appealed their license denials, Katie Lannan of State House News Service reports. Gov. Charlie Baker touted the numbers in a radio appearance Thursday, when he also dismissed claims that some drivers failed screenings due to minor infractions from the distant past. 
State House News Service (paywall)

Is Motley the fall guy for mounting UMass debt woes?
 
If you think it’s odd that outgoing UMass Boston Chancellor Keith Motley has gone overnight from rising star in charge of a sweeping remake of his public university’s long-crumbling campus to the goat for all its financial problems, well you have company. Jim Stergios, executive director of the Pioneer Institute, decries the “shameful scapegoating” of Motley, who was ousted after word broke of a $30 million budget deficit. The whole UMass system is drowning in debt right now, with Motley simply following a larger and risky financial game plan laid out by the system’s president and board of trustees, Stergios argues in his WGBH piece.
WGBH
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook
 
 
Sunday public affairs TV
 
Keller at Large, WBZ-TV Channel 4, 8:30 a.m. Guest: U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who talks with host Jon Keller about her new book and politics. 
This is New England, NBC Boston Channel 10, 9:30 a.m. With host Latoyia Edwards, this week’s main topics: Boston Debate League, Milagros Para Niño’s HAWC, Healing Abuse Working for Change.
This Week in Business, NECN, 10 a.m. Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce CEO Jim Rooney on the latest state job figures and the state budget; Jules Pieri, CEO of The Grommet, on launching undiscovered products; and Doug Banks, editor of the Boston Business Journal Editor, on the Adidas marathon marketing mistake and apology; Partners latest attempt at branching out and other issues.   
CEO Corner, NECN, 10:30 a.m. Massport CEO Tom Glynn weighs in on the latest at Logan Airport including the Emirates decision to cut back on Boston service, the overall expansion of international direct flights, changes in the terminals and other agency topics.
On the Record, WCVB-TV Channel 5, 11 a.m. This week’s guest: Treasurer Deb Goldberg, who talks with anchor Ed Harding and co-anchor Janet Wu. 
CityLine, WCVB-TV Channel 5, 12 p.m. With host Karen Holmes Ward, this week’s focus: April Arts Showcase.
DC Dialogue, NECN, 1 p.m. U.S. Rep. Stephen Lynch on the Trump presidency and policies, Jim Hunt, CEO of Massachusetts League of Community Health Centers, on the potential repeal of Obamacare, and New England Council CEO Jim Brett on the popularity of Gov. Charlie Baker.
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook



Today's Headlines
 
Metro
 

Massachusetts
 
 
Nation