Categories
News

Deja vu: Local activists and leaders on how to move forward after chaos

Two weeks ago, the far-right riot at the U.S. Capitol—fueled by President Donald Trump’s false claims that he won the election—shocked people across the world. But for many, it was a familiar scene. As the country looks ahead to a new administration and beyond, Charlottesville’s leaders and activists have hard-won advice for President Joe Biden.

“[The January 6 siege] is the same horrific play we’ve seen over and over again in this country,” says community activist Don Gathers, who was at the infamous 2017 Unite the Right rally. “So much of the opening act of that play looked just like Charlottesville, where the police stood by and did nothing.”

For weeks, watchdog groups and activists repeatedly warned law enforcement that Trump supporters’ plans to violently storm the Capitol—and assault, kidnap, and even kill members of Congress—were posted across social media.

Despite these warnings, the Capitol Police anticipated a crowd in only the “low thousands,” and prepared for “small, disparate violent events,” according to Representative Jason Crow.

So, like in Charlottesville, police on the scene were massively unprepared for the thousands of people who showed up to Trump’s rally. Insurgents later overpowered the police and stormed the building, resulting in dozens of injuries and five deaths.

“It’s not like they were secretive…It was all over the internet,” says community activist Ang Conn, who was also at the Unite the Right rally.

Before August 11 and 12, 2017, members of the far-right also openly discussed their plans to incite violence and threatened local residents online, as well as held a few smaller “test” rallies in Charlottesville, says Conn. Local activists continuously alerted law enforcement and urged the city to stop the event from happening, but were not taken seriously.

“The people who were supposed to be keeping the peace had all of this information given to them and they ignored it,” says Tyler Magill, who was hit on the neck with a tiki torch during the Unite the Right rally, later causing him to have a stroke.

Video evidence also shows several Capitol officers moving barricades to allow rioters to get closer to the building, as well as one taking a selfie with a member of the far-right mob. Some rioters were members of law enforcement themselves, including two off-duty Virginia police officers.

The scene at the Capitol serves as a stark contrast to the nationwide Black Lives Matter protests last year, during which police deployed tear gas, pepper spray, rubber bullets, and other types of force against thousands of people, and made over 10,000 arrests.

“If Black and brown folks were to do that exact same thing [at the Capitol], we would be dead,” says Conn.

Now, those who were present for the Unite the Right rally say a key to moving forward is to hold the perpetrators accountable.

Since January 6, federal authorities have arrested around 100 people, and say they could arrest hundreds more.

“This cannot be seen as anything other than armed insurrection,” says City Councilor Sena Magill, speaking solely for herself. “It needs to be very clear that people who participated in this need to be prosecuted, and not lightly. …Representatives who instigated this also need to be held accountable.”

Tyler Magill says it’s crucial to expand our definition of white supremacy. “We as a society just don’t take far right extremists seriously,” he says. “We think of it as rednecks [and] trailer park people when it’s not—it’s everybody. The people at the Capitol riot tended to be middle class and above, and the same happened in Charlottesville.”

Other activists have warned that arrests or the threat of arrests will not be enough to deter far-right extremism on—and after—Inauguration Day, pointing to white supremacist calls for violence online.

“We know that they’re not finished,” says Gathers. “I’m fearful for what may happen on the 20th of January, not only in D.C. but really all across the county.”

And though Biden’s inauguration, and the end of Trump’s term, will be a cathartic moment for many, Conn emphasizes that it won’t solve our problems overnight. After the inauguration, she anticipates more white supremacist violence across the country, and says she doesn’t expect President Biden to handle the situation in the best possible manner. Instead, she fears the new administration will ramp up its counterterrorism programs, which are “typically anti-Muslim and anti-Black,” she says.

“The change of the administration doesn’t change the fact that the system of white supremacy is embedded in the fabric of what we call America,” she explains. “We cannot expect [anything from] an administration that condemns uprisings stemming from state violence against Black and brown folks but calls for unity without resolve.”

Gathers also does not agree with the calls for unity made after the riot. “You can’t and shouldn’t negotiate with terrorists, and that’s who we seem to be dealing with,” he says.

However, both activists hope that now more people will not only see white supremacy as a serious threat, but actively work to dismantle it.

“We’ve got to figure out how to change not only laws, but hearts and minds,” says Gathers. “If what we saw [at the Capitol]…and in Charlottesville in 2017 wasn’t enough to turn people around, I’m not sure what it’s going to take.”

Categories
Living

Refugee crisis hits home: Local agency braces for more cuts to U.S. resettlement programs

The 2020 federal fiscal year begins October 1, marking the deadline for Donald Trump’s presidential determination on the number of refugees allowed to enter the United States for resettlement. Virginia has already taken a hit from previous reductions by Trump, with Richmond’s Church World Service—one of nine State Department-designated resettlement agencies in the U.S.—announcing that it will close even before Trump makes his determination public.

“We’re turning our backs on a core American value,” says Harriet Kuhr, executive director of the Charlottesville International Rescue Committee. She cites the precipitous drop since Trump took office in the number of people allowed to enter the U.S. after fleeing violence, persecution, and famine in their home countries.

By the end of September each year, the president is required to announce the limit for refugee admissions to the U.S. The determination process is mandated by the Refugee Act of 1980, and requires that the president consult with Congress to reach a decision that is “justified by humanitarian concern.”

In September 2016, President Barack Obama significantly increased that limit to 110,000 for fiscal year 2017, responding to the Syrian refugee crisis. But shortly after taking office, President Trump lowered the refugee ceiling to 50,000 by executive order. In September 2017 and 2018, respectively, Trump cut the maximum number to 45,000 and 30,000.

In recent weeks, rumors have swirled around reports that the Trump administration is considering one of two options for fiscal year 2020: reducing the cap to 10,000 to 15,000 refugees, or dismantling the U.S. refugee resettlement program entirely. Prominent voices have risen in opposition to the anticipated cuts, including high-ranking former military leaders, who argue that failing to accommodate asylum-seekers who have helped our defense, diplomatic, and intelligence efforts could erode national security.

Here in Charlottesville, Kuhr says our local IRC office is not threatened with closing, but she still worries as this year’s deadline draws near. “We don’t know yet what the numbers will be,” she says. “But what we do know is that it seems there is this intention to again significantly reduce the number of refugee admissions at a time when more people are in need than at any other time in history.”

Numbers from the U.N. Refugee Agency back her up. By the end of 2018, the agency reports, 70.8 million individuals worldwide had been forcibly displaced. These included 25.9 million refugees, less than 1 percent of whom have the opportunity to resettle in another country.

“Even before any of this started with Trump, the number of refugees who ever get resettled in a third country—that’s including the U.S. and Canada, all of Europe, and any other country—was already a tiny, tiny number,” says Kuhr. “But now that solution for some of the most vulnerable people in the world is under threat for no apparent reason.”

“We have people who have already been vetted,” she continues. “They have already gone through a stringent security process. They have been found to be in dire need of a new start and a new life—and we’re basically turning our backs on them.”

In 2018, the IRC resettled 154 people here, far below its capacity of 250. “Charlottesville has been a wonderful place for refugee families,” she says. “They feel safe here. They feel welcome. The kids are thriving in school. The parents are working. We know there are people in need of what we have to offer. Yet we’re not being allowed to [offer it].”

Kuhr hasn’t given up hope, but neither is she optimistic. “My expectation is that no matter what happens, the IRC is not going away. We will still be here. We are still resettling a significant number of people, but a lot less than we were two or three years ago.”

Categories
News

In brief: Interim imbroglio, Miller Center imbroglio, gunman imbroglio and more

Infighting implodes council

The hiring of an interim city manager, an event that usually takes place behind closed doors, has become heated and public, with reports of shouting at a July 20 closed City Council session. Mayor Nikuyah Walker has gone on Facebook Live twice to express her concerns that the process is part of the old boys’ network because someone suggested a candidate for the position to Vice Mayor Heather Hill, which she calls a “white supremist practice.”

On July 23, councilors Hill, Mike Signer and Kathy Galvin issued a five-page response to Walker’s Facebook Live video. “We regret that our rules requiring confidentiality about closed session discussions for personnel choices—which are in place under Virginia law, to protect local elected officials’ ability to discuss and negotiate employment agreements—were broken by the mayor.”

The search for an interim city manager became more urgent when Maurice Jones took a town manager job in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, leaving the city without a chief executive as the anniversary of August 12 looms.

Chris Suarez at the Daily Progress reports that three sources have confirmed U.S. Army Human Resources Command Chief of Staff Sidney C. Zemp has been offered the job.

In the councilors’ response, all three say they’ve never met the candidate, and that review panels are not used when filling interim positions.

In her July 20 video, Walker walked back a comment she made on Facebook and Twitter July 19: “We might have to protest a City Council decision. Are y’all with me?” She said she didn’t want supporters to shut down a council meeting, but did want them to pay attention to the process.

Walker was back on Facebook Live July 23, blasting her fellow councilors for their “very privileged” backgrounds and questioning their integrity.

She says she favors an internal candidate—the two assistant city managers and a department head have been floated—which councilors Wes Bellamy and Signer initially favored.

Bellamy issued his own statement: “Elected bodies agree and disagree all of the time” and that can lead to “healthy debate.”

Will council actually vote for an interim city manager at its August 6 meeting? Stay tuned.

Mayor Nikuyah Walker expressed concern in a July 20 Facebook Live video about the hiring process for an interim city manager.


In brief

Too much heritage

The Louisa County Board of Zoning Appeals said the giant Confederate battle flag on I-64 must come down because its 120-foot pole is double the county’s maximum allowable height. Virginia Flaggers erected the “Charlottesville I-64 Spirit of Defiance Battle Flag” in March and argued that after putting up 27 flags across the state, they wouldn’t have spent $14,000 on this one without confirming county code.

Controversial hire

A petition with more than 2,000 signatures of UVA faculty and students objects to the Miller Center’s hiring of Trump legislative affairs director Marc Short as a senior fellow. The petitioners are opposed to Trump administrators using “our university to clean up their tarnished reputations.”

Presidential paychecks

New UVA president Jim Ryan commands a higher salary than his predecessor, but can’t touch Brono Mendenhall’s paycheck. Photo UVA

Outgoing UVA prez Teresa Sullivan’s base pay of $580,000 and total compensation of $607,502 last year makes her one of the higher paid university chiefs, according to the Chronicle of Higher Education. Her successor, Jim Ryan, starts with a $750,000 base pay, but to put those numbers in perspective, remember that UVA football coach Bronco Mendenhall makes $3.4 million—with a possible $2 million-plus bonus. At this week’s ACC Kickoff event, media members predicted—for the fifth straight year—that UVA will finish last in the conference’s Coastal Division.

New tourism director

Adam Healy, the former CEO of online wedding marketplace Borrowed and Blue, which closed abruptly last October, will now serve as the interim executive director of the Charlottesville Albemarle Convention and Visitors Bureau.

Standoff on Lankford

A state police vehicle on the outskirts of the standoff.

About 50 city, county and state police and SWAT team members were on the scene of a four-hour standoff with 29-year-old Alexander Rodgers, who had barricaded himself inside a Lankford Avenue home on July 19. Someone called police around 8am and reported shots fired. Rodgers, who has a history of domestic violence and was wanted on six outstanding warrants, eventually surrendered and was charged with three felonies and a misdemeanor.


Quote of the week:

“The fish rots from the head.”—Senator Tim Kaine, after U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security and UVA alum Kirstjen Nielsen said about last summer’s violence in Charlottesville at a July 19 press briefing, “It’s not that one side was right and one side was wrong.”


County crime report

The Albemarle County Police Department released its annual crime report for 2017 last month. Here are a few things that caught our eye.

-Police misconduct has been reframed in a new “cheers and jeers” section, where police complaints are compared side-by-side with commendations.

  • Complaints: 57
  • Commendations: 69

-The award section may come as a surprise, because Detective Andrew Holmes, who faces five lawsuits for racial profiling, was granted a community service award.

-Albemarle County had the second-lowest crime rate in the state while Charlottesville had the highest. Crime rate is measured by tallying the number of crimes committed per 100,000 people.

  •   Fairfax: 1,273
  •   Albemarle: 1,286
  •   Prince George: 1,334
  •   Arlington: 1,355
  •   Prince William: 1,370
  •   Chesterfield: 1,450
  •   James City: 1,611
  •   Roanoke: 1,638
  •   Henrico: 2,548
  •   Charlottesville: 2,631

-County police officers made 2,296 arrests and used force “to overcome resistance or threat” on 14 occasions.

-Assaults on police officers have gone up and down.

  • 2015: 3
  • 2016: 10
  • 2017: 7
Categories
News

In brief: Red Hen ruckus, ‘white civil rights’ rally, Republican dropout and more

Red Hen refusal ignites firestorm

When two former C-VILLE Weekly writers opened the Red Hen in Lexington in 2009, they loved everything about the Rockbridge County college town—except its lack of a farm-to-table eatery. Since then, the restaurant has become a renowned fine dining option, and that could be why White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders and her party of eight came to dine June 22.

Stephanie Wilkinson Facebook

Owner and UVA alum Stephanie Wilkinson, who used to write about literary happenings for C-VILLE and later was publisher of Brain, Child magazine, asked Sanders to leave because of her work for “an inhumane and unethical” administration, Wilkinson told the Washington Post. [Co-founder John Blackburn is no longer an owner of the restaurant.]

Sanders confirmed on Twitter she’d been 86ed, the second Trump administration official to not be welcomed into a dining establishment in a week, although Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, another UVA alum, left a D.C. Mexican restaurant because of protesters chanting, “Shame.”

Outrage—and appreciation—over Wilkinson’s action ensued, and other unaffiliated Red Hens around the country received death threats.

By Saturday night, the Red Hen did not open because of safety concerns, according to [former C-VILLE Weekly editor] Hawes Spencer’s report on NPR. Its Yelp page is going through active cleanup because of non-food-related comments, says the site.

And by June 25, POTUS himself tweeted, “The Red Hen Restaurant should focus more on cleaning its filthy canopies, doors and windows (badly needs a paint job) rather than refusing to serve a fine person like Sarah Huckabee Sanders.”

Trump administration employees are not alone in being unwelcome at a dining establishment. Local “white civil rights” agitator Jason Kessler reportedly was banned for life from Miller’s last year when protesters shouting “Nazi go home” became bad for business.


“An all-too-familiar story in my timeline. A beautiful woman’s life cut short by a violent relationship. The only twist today is it’s my child on the other side of the gun. My son is the perpetrator. The very thing I advocate against has been committed by someone I once carried inside me.”—Trina Murphy, advocate for Help Save the Next Girl


In brief

Xavier Grant Murphy Charlottesville police

Another Murphy tragedy

Xavier Grant Murphy, 23, son of domestic violence advocate Trina Murphy and cousin of murdered Nelson teen Alexis Murphy, is charged with second-degree murder in the June 22 slaying of Tatiana Wells, 21, at the Days Inn.

GOP resignation

Richard Allan Fox, co-owner of Roslyn Farm and Vineyard, resigned from his seat on the Albemarle County Republican Committee, because he says he can’t support U.S. Senate candidate Corey Stewart, who has not denounced Unite the Right rally participants, and who has said the Civil War was not about slavery.

ABC settles with Johnson

Martese Johnson, the 20-year-old UVA student whose encounter with Virginia ABC agents during St. Patrick’s Day revelries on the Corner in 2015 left him bloodied and under arrest, reached a $249,950 settlement with the agency June 20. Johnson, now 24, heads to University of Michigan Law School in the fall.

Cantwell calls CPD

On the same night that seven activists were arrested on Market Street for protesting the conviction of August 12 flamethrower Corey Long, “Crying Nazi” Chris Cantwell called the police department to commend it, chat about the rioting “communists” and suggest they be put through a woodchipper. He was recording as a female CPD employee said, “That’s awesome. Thanks for your support.” According to a city press release, the incident is being investigated.

Access denied

Community activists, some reportedly wearing Black Lives Matter shirts, were shut out of a meet-and-greet at the Paramount Theater with new Charlottesville Police Chief RaShall Brackney, who was welcomed on the theater’s marquee. Paramount spokesperson Maran Garland says it was a private, invitation-only event hosted by the Charlottesville Police Foundation.

I-64 stabber gets life

Rodney Demon Burnett was convicted of aggravated malicious wounding for the July 11, 2017, attack of a woman driver on I-64. When she stopped the car, he continued knifing her in the neck, pushed her out of the car and sped away, leaving her with life-threatening and permanent injuries. A jury imposed a maximum life sentence, $100,000 fine and seven years for other related charges.

Drafted by whom?

photo Matt Riley

Former UVA basketball guard Devon Hall is chosen by the Oklahoma City Thunder in the second round as the No. 53 pick.


Whites-righter seeks permit

Speaking of Kessler, the Unite the Right organizer is looking for a place to hold an anniversary rally August 11 and 12. City Manager Maurice Jones denied his application for a permit December 11, and Kessler filed a civil lawsuit against the city and Jones, alleging the denial unconstitutionally was based on the content of his speech.

On June 22, his attorneys filed a motion for a preliminary injunction to force the city to allow his two-day event and to provide security for demonstrators and the public.

According to a memo filed with the motion, Kessler contends counterprotesters were responsible for the violence. “Counterprotester misconduct constitutes a heckler’s veto and cannot be used as a justification to shut down Mr. Kessler’s speech by the city,” says the memo.

Kessler sued last year when the city tried to move his white nationalist rally from Emancipation Park to McIntire, and a judge sided with him in an August 11 decision that was made about the same time neo-Nazis were marching through UVA Grounds shouting, “Jews will not replace us.”

At press time, a hearing for the injunction had not been scheduled.

Many of those who attended the rally last year have said they will not return for a redo, but Kessler is asking those who want to come to be prepared to go to either Charlottesville or Washington.

His application for a “white civil rights rally” in Lafayette Square has received preliminary approval from the National Park Service, but a permit has not been issued.

kessler prelim injunction memo 6-22-18

kessler motion prelim injunction 6-22-18

Categories
News

In brief: Love lawsuit, killer creeks, pot busts and more

Love estate drops lawsuit against Huguely

The estate of Yeardley Love nonsuited a nearly $30 million wrongful death lawsuit against Love’s former boyfriend George Huguely June 11. Huguely was convicted of second-degree murder in the 2010 death of Love and sentenced to 23 years in prison.

Her mother, Sharon Love, filed the civil suit in 2012, and it’s been continued four times. Most recently the suit was put on pause while a federal case was heard in Maryland in which Chartis Property Casualty balked at paying off a $6 million policy held by Huguely’s mother and stepfather. A Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals panel ruled in Chartis’ favor, and Love has asked the entire appeals court to revisit the ruling.

Through his attorney Matt Green, Huguely asked Judge Rick Moore to hold off on signing the motion to nonsuit until June 20, when the Fourth Circuit will decide whether it will reconsider the ruling.

The Supreme Court of Virginia has ruled a plaintiff can nonsuit at any point and doesn’t have to give a reason. Moore said normally he immediately signs the motion, but “I really do think it’s important in a case like this to hear you out.”

The three-week jury trial was scheduled to begin July 30. Love has six months to file the suit again, and Green believes she will.

And while he knows public sympathy isn’t with his client, Green said, “It’s just taxing on George to get emotionally ready every 18 months for trial.”


“I think that without Otto, this would not have happened… I really think Otto is someone who did not die in vain.”President Donald Trump on UVA student Otto Warmbier, who was brutalized in North Korea, at a press conference during his summit with North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un.


Flood couple ID’d

The people swept away in their Toyota Prius by recent Ivy Creek flash flooding on Old Ballard Road have been identified as Sugar Hollow residents Robert and Carroll Gilges, who were 82 and 79 years old, respectively. They were found dead on May 31 and June 5.

Another creek death

A wheelchair belonging to Cedars Healthcare Center resident Thomas Charles Franklin, aka Colonel, was found June 10 beside a nearby creek. Franklin, 65, an Army veteran, was found around 200 yards downstream and pronounced dead at UVA Medical Center, according to police.

Train crash indictment

photo jack looney

Dana William Naylor Jr., the driver of the garbage truck that was hit by an Amtrak train carrying GOP congressmen in Crozet in January, has been indicted on one count of involuntary manslaughter and one count of DUI maiming. Truck passenger Christopher Foley died in the crash.

Martese settlement?

photo Jackson Smith

Martese Johnson, the former UVA student whose bloody face went viral after Virginia ABC agents approached him in March 2015 on suspicion of using a fake ID and slammed him to the ground, has a July 10 settlement hearing scheduled for his $3 million lawsuit against the agents and ABC.

 

 

Crime spree

Last summer Matt Carver, now 27, racked up 21 felony counts that included terrorizing a Crozet woman when he broke into her house. He also kicked out the window of a cop car, leaping out at 45mph while handcuffed and going on the lam for 15 hours. In court June 6, Carver apologized for his meth-fueled rampage, and was sentenced to 28 years in prison.

Topless suit settled

Morgan Hopkins was one of the few people arrested August 12—for topless busking. Her indecent exposure charge was dismissed, and her lawsuit against the city and police Sergeant Russell Handy was settled June 5.

 

 

 


Crime in the community

The Virginia State Police released its annual Crime in Virginia report for 2017. Violent crimes like murder and rape decreased throughout the state by 3.9 percent, and property crimes dropped almost 3 percent. However, drug arrests were up nearly 16 percent, and 71 percent of all drug arrests were for marijuana. Charlottesville and Albemarle bucked that trend, with drug arrests decreasing—by 43 percent in Charlottesville. Here’s what the offense totals looked like on the local level.

Categories
Arts

Warren Craghead draws the campaign and presidency in Trump Trump

Every day since Donald J. Trump became the Republican presidential nominee on July 21, 2016, local artist Warren Craghead has drawn him, or someone in his administration. Now six months’ worth of Craghead’s daily drawings have been published in a collection titled Trump Trump, Volume 1: Nomination to Inauguration.

“I thought when I started it that I would be drawing until November of 2016,” Craghead says. “And then when he won I decided to keep going, drawing every day, pairing a grotesque portrait with quotes from him.” Now 18 months into the project, Craghead hasn’t grown weary of drawing President Trump.

“I like drawing him,” Craghead says. “There are days I feel like I can’t keep up with the stuff he says or the stuff his administration does. But I never feel like I don’t want to draw him. I know that sounds crazy.”

In his daily practice, Craghead says, the aesthetic deepens and grows. It has become a way to document not only the things Trump says but also the policy changes he makes. Craghead says he’s doing this “to preach to the choir because that’s who a preacher should preach to first.” He wants to tell those resisting Trump, “You’re right to resist. This isn’t normal.” And then there are Trump’s supporters. “I wanted to make it uncomfortable for people who were holding their noses and voting for him,” Craghead says. “You can’t look away from the racist things he says and enables. …I want to make it difficult for people to stay on the Trump train.”

Courtesy of the artist

Trained as a fine artist with an MFA in painting, Craghead says, “I really resisted being a cartoonist for a long time.” For about 20 years he drew a little-known genre called poetry comics, doing both the writing and drawing himself. But with the Arab Spring that began in 2010, Craghead was moved to “use my drawing skills to look at and talk about things that matter to me in a social way.” After Bashar al-Assad gassed a Syrian neighborhood, he looked at photographs and drew them, “making myself witness it even though I’m from very far away and in this privileged place,” says Craghead.

For the last three years he has also made it a daily practice to draw images of the Armenian genocide of 100 years ago. He says these different kinds of political drawings attempt to “elicit empathy or make people really see what’s happened.”

“It is different for me to go on the offense,” he says of drawing Trump. His focus on the president grew out of two other political cartoon projects, Ladyh8rs, which focuses on misogynist public figures, and USAh8rs, which focuses on anti-American public figures. “I started those projects because I felt like there are a lot of people who get away with stuff, especially at the state government level, and no one knows who they are and what they do, so I started drawing horrible pictures of them.”

Over the last 18 months, his feeling toward Trump has evolved. “When the year first started I really just hated what he stood for and the things he said.” Now, Craghead says, “I have a deeper kind of loathing for his politics and the people around him, but I’ve also found some sympathy.”

While the caricature genre may seem an unlikely route to discovering someone’s humanity, studying President Trump every day has done this for Craghead. “I think that he’s a very sad person in a lot of ways,” Craghead says. “I think he’s hollow inside. I think he knows that he’s hated and it bothers him. Of course we’re all along on this ride with him so it’s sad for all of us.” And Craghead is quick to add “that doesn’t excuse who he is.”

“It’s like a King Lear kind of thing except we’re all in the crosshairs of his rage,” says Craghead. “I have sympathy for him on one level, but on others I don’t because he’s actively hurting people.”

As for the future of the project, Craghead says, “I’m going to draw him until he’s not president anymore. I feel pretty committed to that now because I’ve lasted this long.” The second volume, which covers the first year of the presidency, will be released this fall.

Categories
Opinion

Germ of an idea: How to disinfect dirty politics

False equivalence makes me sick. Likely it does the same to you, too, even if you don’t recognize the symptoms. It’s rhetorical MRSA, an indestructible super-bug that infects the mind and body politic. And as has been widely reported, a new strain of contagion took hold on August 15 when the 2016 Electoral College Winner declared that yes, Virginia, Nazi-resisters are as bad as Nazis. With his toxic words about the “very fine people” standing up for white supremacy, Trump attacked civic decency, democratic values and American history.

Sadly, it was a familiar pain. Last time I felt it this bad was when members down at the Church of Privileged Self-Righteousness declared there was “no difference” between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. Way back then, such folks had the media to lean on for some of their claims.

Plenty of so-called liberal-leaning pundits equated the computing issues and defensive personality of one candidate with the vulgarities and incompetence of the other, a known sexual predator, racist, liar and cheat who was entirely unqualified to run a local street cleaning crew, let alone the United States. Chanting “they’re all the same,” a critical number of true believers sat out the election, leaving the rest of us, but especially the nation’s most vulnerable, with a raging staph infection.

If, after all that has happened since, you still think skipping out on Election Day is inconsequential, you’re not paying attention. And yet, a recent study from the Washington, D.C.-based research firm Lake Research Partners, released by the Voter Participation Center, predicts that about 40 million fewer people will vote in 2018 compared to 2016. The biggest drop-off is projected to be among millennials and unmarried women, crucial members of what’s called the “rising American electorate,” which also includes blacks and Latinos.

In Virginia, the center projects, roughly 1.1 million of those voters will stay away from the polls next year. The study, based on census data, does not sample why non-voters and non-registered voters would choose to stay home. We can only guess.

But you had to travel only as far as the MLK Performing Arts Center for the August 27 “recovery” town hall and the August 21 Charlottesville City Council meeting before that to understand how little trust Virginians have in government these days—and why.

And yet, local voting is the best way to throw the bums out, if that’s your goal.

Leading up the federal elections in 2018, here’s another reason to get in practice and vote on November 7: the race for state attorney general. Democratic incumbent Mark Herring is running against Republican John Adams, a former clerk for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas who opposes reproductive choice and marriage equality and vows to roll back Obama-era environmental regulations. Herring, among other things, supports Obama’s Clean Power Plan and has the endorsement of gay rights groups. Perhaps even more crucially at this moment, Herring is inclined to let localities manage their own statuary and Adams is not.

No doubt, false equivalence is toxic. The same can be true for malaise. Maybe you can’t do anything about the sputum coming out of Trump’s mouth. But you can beat back the spread of malaise. The center that commissioned the voting study noted it’s likely more effective to register new voters than to try to persuade disaffected registered voters to give a damn. When left unchecked, no difference-ism can be as harmful as false equivalence.

So get your rest, Virginia, and then take your medicine: Register two voters and call me in the morning.

Yes, Virginia is a monthly op-ed column.

Categories
News

Trump’s migrants: Winery seeks more foreign laborers

Trump Winery has applied for temporary visas for another 23 laborers, which it says it cannot find domestically. Earlier this year, it imported six workers to prune grapevines. Critics suggest that if the vineyard, owned by President Donald Trump progeny Eric Trump, paid a living wage, it might be able to hire American workers.

Approximately 75 percent of the winery’s 110 employees are Americans, according to general manager Kerry Woolard. And like 2,000 other farms across the country that use H-2A visas for seasonal agricultural workers, the winery uses the visa program when it cannot find domestic laborers, she says.

“We engage in extensive efforts to recruit enthusiastic, qualified and committed employees for all positions, including labor positions at the vineyard, and are committed to employing U.S. workers whenever possible,” writes Woolard in an e-mail.

She says the winery aggressively recruits workers online through indeed.com, Charlottesville area Craigslist and the U.S. Department of Labor’s iCert system, as well as through print ads in multiple states and word of mouth.

Trump Winery is not the only area vineyard to use the H-2A visa program. Horton, Early Mountain and Barboursville vineyards also find help that way.

And as C-VILLE reported in January, temporary workers aren’t cheap. The employers must provide round-trip transportation, housing, vehicles and weekly trips to Walmart, as well as pay Mas Labor in Lovingston, the largest H-2A employment agency in the country, according to its owner, Libby Whitley.

The laborers Trump Winery brought in to prune over the winter were paid $10.72 an hour, but the newest batch will get a bump to $11.27, according to the U.S. Department of Labor website.

Many other local wineries, such as Blenheim, Cardinal Point and King Family, do not use the visa program, and most of them did not respond to inquiries about how much they paid.

Bill Pelton, owner of Clay Hill Farm, says he pays his crew $14 an hour and is considering upping them to $15 because that’s considered a living wage. “I do feel strongly they should be paid a living wage,” he says. And he wants to retain his crew, which he describes as “reliable, competent,” and as bringing expertise from other places.

Matt Murray, who grew up on Panorama Farm, has worked for Pelton. “It is hard labor,” he says. “The nature of the work is, you have to bend over. It’s reaching, pulling, cutting with sharp clippers. I’ve cut myself.”

And then there are the bees that wake up as the sun comes up and are drawn to the grapes. “Getting stung once a day is not uncommon,” says Murray.

Labor, says Murray, is a “miniscule” cost in producing a bottle of wine. Employers should pay workers responsibly, “if nothing else to make sure there’s a crew for next year’s work,” he says.

Murray lambasts “the hypocrisy of a self-proclaimed billionaire proclaiming he can’t find people to work. If he was willing to pay $14 or $15 an hour, he wouldn’t need to import people. The visa program wouldn’t be necessary.”

Not everyone agrees that Americans would be willing to do farm labor, even at a higher wage.

According to Woolard, out of 3,500 H-2A visas issued in Virginia in 2016, only 160 American workers applied for those positions.

Categories
News

For fake’s sake: Assault on real news continues

“What I’m about to show you is keeping me up at night,” said former CBS correspondent and current UVA professor Wyatt Andrews at a February 9 seminar addressing the relationship between President Donald Trump, the media and “fake news.” And what he said might surprise you.

At 1.2 million, the Wall Street Journal has the largest number of print subscribers of any national newspaper. The New York Times has the greatest number of online subscribers—3 million—and the biggest audience of cable news viewers—4.4 million of them—belongs to “The O’Reilly Factor” on Fox News. Lester Holt has the overall largest audience in daily TV news with 9.2 million viewers on “NBC Nightly News”—but none of those can hold a candle to the (mostly untrue) news being consumed on Facebook.

Facebook reaches about 67 percent of adults in America, and two-thirds of them say they get their news there, according to the Pew Research Center in 2015. That’s a potential reach of 13 million people and 44 percent of the general population.

But it gets worse, said Andrews. And here’s the real kicker: From August until election day, Facebook users engaged with 8.7 million fake news stories, surpassing the 7.3 million mainstream news engagements. So while the majority of people received their news from Facebook, more than half of it was fake. No scientific poll was taken on whether that swayed the election.

Two of the most widely read stories—the social media platform stopped counting after each story reached 900,000 engagements —had headlines that read, “Pope Francis Shocks World, Endorses Donald Trump for President, Releases Statement,” and “Wiki-Leaks Confirms Hillary Sold Weapons to ISIS.” Both are, quite obviously, completely false.

Perhaps even scarier is new face-altering software that already exists and could be made accessible to the public soon, said Andrews. He showed a video of a man sitting next to a computer screen. When the man began to speak, his words appeared to be coming out of George W. Bush’s mouth on the screen beside him.

“What happens when someone makes a video of Trump saying something really horrible?” he asks, alluding to a fake news story that caused a Pakistani minister to threaten nuclear war with Israel on Christmas Eve.

The number of lies and fake news coming from the Trump administration is also a concern, said Andrews, pointing to White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer’s January 21 press conference—amid thousands of people marching for women’s rights in Washington—to announce that Trump’s inauguration was the most heavily attended in history. “Period,” Spicer said.

“Yeah, the dishonest media drew all that white space in the photograph,” Andrews said, adding that he saw for himself the much more massive crowd at Barack Obama’s ceremony, which he covered for CBS. And though he’s covered many White House press briefings, Andrews said, “the idea of using that podium for a purposeful falsehood is new,” and shows that disregarding the truth won’t just be the way Trump campaigned, but the way he governs.

Lest we forget, counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway defended Spicer’s claims, calling them “alternative facts” on a “Meet the Press” interview with NBC’s Chuck Todd.

“The media should decline to air any of the serial liars, beginning with Kellyanne Conway,” Andrews said.

Wyatt Andrews on…

…how Trump thinks: “He’s wired from his time in business to counter-punch, to never admit that what he’s done is wrong.”

…a bully pulpit: “The thing about presidential power is that it’s finite. No one has ever insulted their way into the presidency before.”

…fighting back: “Should the press declare war in a reciprocal basis? My answer to that is a resounding ‘no.’”

…the truth: “Let’s all become advocates of facts. That’s a way to look at it.”

…the news: “When you hear anyone say, ‘You won’t hear the mainstream media report X or Y,’ that’s because it’s 90 percent nonsense.”

FIVE TIPS FOR THE MEDIA:

  • Cover more policy and real citizen concern.
  • Media owners should spend more money on reporters.
  • Declare war on provable falsehoods.
  • Decline to air serial liars.
  • Demand the president defend fake news claims.
Categories
News

UPDATED: ‘Capital of the resistance’ rally draws hundreds

Mayor Mike Signer had a quorum of councilors today outside City Hall, but it wasn’t for a City Council meeting. A band played Woody Guthrie’s “This Land is Your Land” as hundreds of Charlottesvillians assembled at noon below the statues of three presidents, along with a handful of vocal protesters, and Signer declared Charlottesville the “capital of the resistance.”

President Donald Trump’s January 27 executive order barring refuges from seven predominantly Muslim countries was the catalyst for this and other protests both here and throughout the country.

Signer assembled a dozen speakers, including Gold Star father Khizr Khan and Pam Northam, wife of Lieutenant Governor Ralph Northam.

The mayor said he’d met with a dozen local refugees over the weekend and listened to “the fear, the confusion, the anxiety” caused by the president’s order. “They are hearing the message America doesn’t want them,” said Signer.

signer-amos
Mayor Mike Signer calls President Trump a “demagogue” and says the nation is being tested. Photo Eze Amos

He invoked poet Emma Lazarus and said, “We are a place that embraces your huddled masses yearning to be free.”

And he listed four actions he’d be taking, including working with senators Mark Warner and Tim Kaine’s staffs to get specific help for local immigrants and refuges, providing volunteer legal assistance, discussing with the commonwealth’s attorney how to protect residents, particularly if federal enforcement “becomes more draconian” in the coming weeks, and asking the city’s Human Rights Office to address xenophobia and harassment on the streets.

The latter issue became an immediate clash of constitutional freedoms, with at least one protester talking loudly as Signer and other speakers addressed the crowd, and frequent council speaker Joe Draego spotted packing heat. When another attendee shouted, “He has a gun!” Draego noted it was his Second Amendment right.

Charlottesville police spokesman Steve Upman says no arrests were made from the crowd he estimates at 500.

bellamyKessler-amos
Vice-Mayor Wes Bellamy snaps a selfie while blogger Jason Kessler, right, points a finger. Photo Eze Amos

At the beginning of the rally, Signer urged, “If anyone tried to disrupt these proceedings with messages of hate, drown them out with messages of love.” He suggested protesters make use of the nearby Free Speech Wall.

That didn’t deter blogger Jason Kessler, whose commentary inflamed many of those standing near him, and who drew a shout of “Shut up, Jason!” when Khan began to talk.

khan3presidents-amos
Gold Star parent Khizr Khan addresses the crowd under the three presidents. Photo Eze Amos

Khan, whose UVA alum son, Captain Humayun Khan, was killed serving the U.S. Army in Iraq in 2004, said, “We will continue to speak against the darkness, the dark chapter that is being written in our country. We will not let that happen.”

karimGinena-amos
“The people united will not be defeated,” said Karim Ginena, who studies at Darden. Photo Eze Amos

Karim Ginena with the Islamic Society of Central Virginia, pointed out, “Steve Jobs was the son of a Syrian immigrant.” He drew a laugh when he said, “Two-thirds of President Trump’s wives are recent immigrants.”

harrietKuhr_amos
Harriet Kuhr. Photo Eze Amos

Harriet Kuhr, the director of the local branch of International Rescue Committee, said, “The refugees coming here are the victims of terrorism and are desperate to find safety.” A Syrian family arrived here two weeks ago, she said, and family members who were supposed to join them are blocked by the new restrictions.

“Is this the America we stand for?” she asked, and received a resounding “no” from the crowd.

pamNortham-amos
Pam Northam’s husband, Lieutenant Governor Ralph Northam, is running for governor. Photo Eze Amos

Northam acknowledged the continuing drone of hecklers, and said, “I’m a teacher and I’m real used to talking over people.”

jeffreyLegros_amos
Jeff Legro remembers coming to UVA when it was much less diverse. Photo Eze Amos

UVA Vice Provost Jeff Legro lamented “the exceptional talent from around the world that cannot get here,” and Rabbi Tom Gutherz, the child of refugees, expressed his dismay with the “shameful” executive order.

“I am very tired of Christianity being hijacked by the voices of hate,” said the Reverend Elaine Ellis Thomas from St. Paul’s Memorial Episcopal Church.

earlPendleton2-amos
Pastor Hodari Hamilton, of First Baptist Church, speaks and prays at the January 31 rally. Photo Eze Amos

Following a final prayer, Signer returned to the mic: “This is not an end, this is a beginning.”

He said the event was not a partisan one. “This is an American thing. This is a Virginia thing.” And he ended the capital of the resistance rally with shouts of “USA! USA!”

Signer drew some criticism from the Charlottesville chapter of Showing Up for Racial Justice, which in a statement questioned the timing of the rally as “politically expedient” for the mayor amid the wave of national protests, while taking place just hours before the first public meeting of Equity and Progress in Charlottesville, a new group political group that seeks to involve more marginalized members of the community.

SURJ also objected to Signer “co-opting the language of ‘resistance'” while not acknowledging the many other activists that have stood up against white supremacy and racial injustice.

Updated 5:05pm with SURJ statement.

Updated 2/1/17 with additional photos.

Correction 2/1/17: The Islamic Society of Central Virginia was misidentified in the original version.