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Words From James Baldwin for Our Times: Behind Media Beef Over College "PC Culture"

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James Baldwin, the late novelist, playwright, essayist, and civil rights activist was lost to cancer 28 years ago this week. Still, his timeless diagnosis of American life and lore echoes like no other in our current moment. Baldwin once said in 1963: "The whole nature of life is so terrible that somebody's right is always somebody else's wrong."

Today, the country's media finds itself caught in a maelstrom of misunderstandings as conversations surrounding incidents of racial insensitivity on college campuses shift towards broader considerations. Whether some tactics used by activists hedge free speech and whose job it is to institutionally provide what students deem "safe spaces" where they feel sufficiently protected against heinous offenses and their more subtly manifested microaggressive kin.

"It's clear that the students' anger and resentment were long in coming," Yale Dean Jonathan Holloway told the New Yorker's Jelani Cobb in an interview during the aftermath of that campus' spilling tensions. "This is not about one or two things. It's something systemic and we're going to have to look at that."

A whole host of people have had a look at the implicated systems underpinning these divides and yet greater consensus, among even those on the political left, has failed to form. It seems every thinkpiece touching on the issue has been either a direct or indirect counterpoint to a series of other written salvos in another publication. Authors accusing one another of strawman arguments, inaccurate paraphrasing, mischaracterization of conclusions, or all the above.

In a media landscape so democratized (and hyperlinked) the fissures are there for everyone to see. Crucially however, upon inspection one finds the disagreements, though sometimes presented as core, are often over wording. By this I don't mean petty quarrels over rhetorical semantics. Rather there are, apparently, truly different definitions of what certain words - specifically words that express grave principles - mean, or should mean.

Many agree to the platitude of greater inclusion, but what's inclusive enough? What is liberalism really? Or racism? What are our rights and privileges exactly and where do they end? Why do they often end in different places depending upon one's area code or skin color? Why do some people not believe that? What do simultaneous intellectual diversity and emotional safety look like, feel like? How do we measure them and with whose calculus does an organization operate if everyone's appreciation of meaningfulness and meaningful change is different?

Since making sense of all those layers of consideration alone is effectively impossible, I've found myself intellectually and emotionally leaning on the wisdom of James Baldwin - particularly his 1963 speech The Artist's Struggle for Integrity in which he uses that struggle as an allegory for the painstaking process of growing humanity's collective consciousness.

Baldwin, always particularly poignant when interrogating America's idyllic self-conception with its harsher realities, had this to say about the relationship between words and ideals:I really don't like words like artist or integrity or courage, or nobility. I have a kind of distrust of all those words because I don't really know what those words mean. Anymore than I really know what such words as democracy, or peace or peace-loving, or warlike, or integration mean. And yet, one's compelled to recognize that all these imprecise words are kind of attempts made by us all to get to something which is real, and which lives behind the word.
Language is ultimately nothing but an attempt to express ourselves and make sense of our world. By the fact of our being human, there will be limits to our ability to pin down meaning and attach corresponding letters, much less agree to a common conception of how that meaning should be applied in our personal or public lives. Baldwin immediately grapples with this too:...There is such a thing as integrity. Some people are noble. There is such a thing as courage. The terrible thing is that all of these words, the reality behind these words, depend ultimately on what the human being, meaning every single one of us, believe to be real.
In reflecting on that idea of words' meanings being dependent on what people "believe to be real," it comes into stark light how articles outlining 'perceived injustices' can lead to accusations of media 'dismissive of black pain,' how 'First Amendment advocation' can be interpreted as a 'Free Speech Diversion,' and even how Black Lives Matter can suitably in the minds of many be 'countered' with All Lives Matter (stubborn to the notion of mutual inclusivity though it is.)

To be sure, the altercations are not always verbal. Donald Trump supporters attacking a man while chanting 'All Lives Matter!' at a campaign rally is chilling evidence of that. There is undoubtedly, a large slice of America, diametrically, sometimes violently, opposed to greater inclusion - who believe the solution for America's problems is not to move forward together, but rather for some among us to take their country back. Any attempt at conversation with those loyal to demagoguery is, in all likeliness, an act of futility.

Yet misunderstandings between "the relatively conscious whites and the relatively conscious blacks" who Baldwin famously said "must, like lovers, insist on, or create, the consciousness of the others in order to end the racial nightmare and achieve our country" may very well just be part of a painful, but eventually fruitful process of better communicating what we mean by the words we say. A process - albeit much more painful for people of color - of establishing a new 'normal' as far as common lexicons go.

Because to those who are not hip to the parlance on 2010s college campuses, it is tough to keep up. In the way that Americans of African descent have been on an unmatched journey of changing identity descriptors - from Freedmen to Colored to Negro to Black to African-American and Black again - now LGBT has been extended to LGBTQIA and more flexible terminology like gender non-conformity are gaining traction.

The usage of some terms has overlapped and every transition has been fraught. As things change, the way people talk about things change - though never in step with one another.

When student activists speak of microaggressions as a form of 'enacting violence' they are regrettably written off as hyperbolic by those who aren't privy to academic spaces in which 'violence' has come to be used in a much broader context that doesn't necessarily denote physical harm. I imagine that definition is confusing for an overwhelming majority of Americans. And if the goal of these increasingly relied upon vocabularies are not only to validate and formalize their ideas, but also to better express their ideas to the public, then clearer distinctions must be made or words must be changed.

And yes, there is an argument to be had that the idiom "stepping up to the plate" is ableist and that "hey guys!" is sexist, but the hawkish monitoring of language in that manner can ultimately be counterproductive to producing forums conducive to dialogue. McGill graduate Aurora Dagny fleshes out that argument well in her widely shared longform piece 'Everything is Problematic.'

The hypocrisy of higher education's liberal scions can be confounding, even nauseating. At Tufts, I've witnessed those who rail against the irredeemability of gentrification and proceed to move into gentrified neighborhoods upon graduation. I've scratched my head at those who denounce classism and elitism, yet turn their noses up at those who disagree with them if they are not equipped to spar with all of identity politics' newfangled, often inaccessible, phraseology.

Yet positionality and intersectionality, two hallmark isms among the liberal academy, are crucial concepts grounded in concrete realities of privilege and oppression, proven by empirically-based research.

And I personally would have never experienced the growth that's helped me more actively consider personhood without professors and classmates well-versed in activism within the academy, who had the patience to engage with my social misconceptions and help me unlearn them.

Though the overwrought application of some terms invokes eye rolling, it has to be acknowledged that it was high time that there be popularized scholarship verifying perspectives outside of the dominant narrative of what middle-aged white males at proverbial and literal roundtables deem objective truth and history.

Some things on the list of demands from students at fellow NESCAC school Amherst College may come across as overzealous such as the ironic demand to censure and "not tolerate" posters on campus that proclaimed free speech was being censored by activists. However, students make a devastating point when they demand the school discontinue Lord Jeffrey Amherst as its mascot. Turns out Lord Jeff may have very well been involved in biological warfare against Native Americans.

Still, growing calls to rename the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton due to that president's racial policies egg on the recurring question: where is the line? Getting rid of Confederate flags on public property is finding wide favor, but if Wilson is denounced who's next? The same logic would dictate that the Rhodes Scholarship be renamed because of its namesake, Cecil Rhodes, a ruthless British imperialist.

The list would tumble on. There are over a dozen American presidents who owned slaves. Gandhi, cleanly served to us in lore as a universal egalitarian, had a well-documented distaste for Africans. Frankly, very few people of the past could stand up to the scrutiny of modern morality.

All things considered, combatting the hegemony of the whitewashed western canon and deconstructing problematic conventions that so many interpret as givens in post-colonial society are at the heart of student activists' energies. That energy must, in the least, be respected as an important counterweight to traditionalists as the country debates its compass.

In the end, I'm not sure there is any effective way to institutionally regulate the interpersonal tensions that are the bedrock of the more superlative - and thus more widely condemned - manifestations of racism. It's those interpersonal tensions that tacitly communicate to people of color everyday in the classroom or out at night that they just don't matter as much or belong as much as their white counterparts.

How does an administration, in practice, guard against the air of superiority a WASP carries on campus or disincentivize the dull glare and patronizing chuckle he gives whoever challenges his worldview which implicitly tells them "whatever, my parents are rich and my eyes are blue."

There's no clear top-down way to fight those in the "whatever" camp. They're not interested in fighting, much less dialoguing. Maybe that's because they have no motivation to put their privilege on the line. Maybe the only hope is in steadily converting those on the fence, who lean towards empathy, but don't quite 'get it' or don't quite 'get' the vocab used to describe 'it.'

Baldwin, too, bemoaned the very people who he deemed must be won over in order to move humanity toward greater consciousness as "terribly inarticulate in a very particular, hard to describe way." Those who he alliteratively labels as "unlettered in the language of the heart, totally distrustful of whatever cannot be touched, panic stricken at the very first hint of pain ... it frightens me half to death ... I'm talking about two thirds of the public and our technical allies."

This is the Baldwin who after considerately weighing the scales of arguments, comes to an unequivocal verdict. He goes on. "I am tired of people saying 'what should I do?' They mean 'what can I do for you?' There is nothing you can do for me. There is nothing that can be done for negroes. It must be done for you!"

It is incumbent upon all of us, not just those deemed oppressed, to better understand each other because ignorance of how marginalized peoples experience the world come to haunt the humanity - and security - of the privileged as well. Baldwin the humanist and artist, more a civil prophet than simply a social critic, understood this well.

"The framework in which we operate weighs on us too heavily..." he concludes at the end of Struggle for Integrity. "It is time to ask very hard questions and take very rude positions, and no matter what price." Spoken to an audience in the thick of the civil rights movement, his words reverberate in the recently awarded pages of Ta-Nehisi Coates' Between the World and Me and in the manifestos of student activists - many of whom surely read Coates this fall.

The current nomenclature used by anti-oppressive movements has made some awfully-hard-to-articulate aspects of the world, which so often render us speechless, more sayable. The fractious discourse, colorful disagreements, and sharp feelings surrounding it all illustrate an incomplete stained-glass mosaic of our world. Hopefully, through the mosaic people of goodwill can grout how to better say what we mean and move towards a reality living behind the words, if such a thing is possible.

And to that attempt - even as we do the work of googling what the hell we're talking about - we should all say bravo.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 5 hours ago.

Metro Denver apartment portfolio sold for $68 million

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A two-property metro-Denver apartment portfolio has sold to a Texas company for $68 million, including complexes in Castle Rock and Aurora. The Bluffs at Castle Rock, a 220-unit apartment complex at 483 Scott Blvd. in Castle Rock; and Center Pointe East, a 208-unit complex at 15490 E. Center Ave. in Aurora, were sold by Lynd Co., a San Antonio, Texas-based family of real estate companies. Jackson Square Properties, based in San Francisco, purchased the properties. "We had a tremendous amount of… Reported by bizjournals 5 hours ago.

Tunnel update: Bertha to move again before year's end, lane closures coming to Aurora, more

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In a Monday morning update before Seattle City Council, officials from the state announced upcoming closures to south Route 99 north of downtown and described the work to come on the tunnel to replace the Alaskan Way Viaduct. Reported by SeattlePI.com 4 hours ago.

Denver lags Boulder, Colorado Springs for broadband Internet

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Boulder County has the fourth-highest rate of broadband Internet adoption among major U.S. communities and Colorado Springs the seventh highest, while the Denver-Aurora metro area ranks 30th, a new report says. The Brookings Institute’s Metropolitan Policy program published a report on broadband adoption among U.S. metro areas. It found 75.1 percent of U.S. households, more than 87 million, bought broadband Internet service in 2014. In Boulder County, that percentage was 86.1 percent of households,… Reported by bizjournals 12 minutes ago.

We Have Nothing to Fear Except Fear-Mongering Politicians

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During the past year Sonya Jones was killed picking blueberries; Carla Grow was killed on a family picnic; Megan Nickell died playing volley ball on a beach; and Gage McFadden met the same fate playing disc golf. William Clevenger was struck down rounding up cattle, as was Frankie Roberts walking some dogs.The killer in all of these cases -- *lightning!*In fact, since September 11, 2001 there have been more than 400 people killed by lightning in America, according to the national weather service.And while we are at it, here are some more facts. During the 14 years between the horrific but flukish events of 9/11 and last week's massacre in San Bernardino, *there had been just six civilians killed on American soil by jihadist oriented terrorists*. Two were killed at the El Al counter at LAX airport in 2002 and four at the Boston Marathon attacks in 2013.There were also five deaths from the unsolved anthrax attacks of 2001 that were not likely the work of terrorists, as well as the murderous 2009 rampage at Ft Hood and the killings at the Chattanooga military centers last summer. But most Americans have never set foot on a military base nor do they have any risk of exposure to the special propensity for violence that may be kindled at such facilities.Yes, we clearly had a lone wolf(s) event last week or what some oafish CNN war storm-chaser described as "do it yourself terrorism".But the best thing that 318 million Americans can do about that danger is to tune out every single word that politicians have to say about it.That's because for 99.99% of Americans the risk of being killed or injured by a jihadist lone wolf is lower than being struck by lightning; and most surely it is far less than their exposure to the periodic eruption of mass killings by homegrown psychopaths and demented malcontents that occur with disturbing regularity.Just in the last four years alone, 105 people have been killed and 100 injured by non-jihadist killing rampages in a dozen different cities from coast to coast. These included the recent events at the Colorado Springs planned parenthood clinic and the Roseburg, Oregon campus, as well as the horrific black church murders in Charleston SC last June, the madness at Newton CT elementary school in December 2012 and the slaughter in the Aurora CO movie theatre in July 2012.Altogether there have been 26 incidents of mass killings since 9/11 including the Blacksburg Virginia campus rampage which resulted in nearly 50 deaths and injuries. About 425 Americans were killed or injured during these incidents of terror -- crimes committed overwhelmingly by sick young men often harboring white supremacist or other hate-based motivations.Would that both kinds of terrorism could be expunged from the land -- the hateful doings of the Syed Rizwan Farooks and the demented mayhem of the Dylann Storm Roofs. But there is virtually nothing that Washington politicians can do about either -- *except most surely to not make it worse by trying to bomb, drone, invade and occupy the jihadist kind of terrorism out of existence.*After all, is it not evident after two decades now of jihadist style terrorism -- whether quasi-organized, remotely-inspired or lone wolf executed -- that it is fostered by blowback from Washington's imperial mayhem? And most especially the terrible 21st century military violence it has inflicted on the Muslim populations of the middle east?The fact is, terrorism did not suddenly sprout up from the teachings of a 1300 year old religion, nor from a belated discovery in struggling middle eastern nations that they hate America's freedom, prosperity and materialistic culture.No, jihadist style terrorism came to America only after Washington trained and armed the Mujahedeen in the 1980s, waged unprovoked war in Arabia and Mesopotamia in the 1990s and fostered the anarchy of failed middle eastern states thereafter.Indeed, once the neocons fully took power in the 2000 elections, Washington has mowed them down -- Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Somalia, Yemen -- with the alacrity of a jihadist gunman. Now all these failed states are breeding grounds of terrorism, but none of them trafficked in it until the beltway regime changers had their way with the assorted tyrannts and authoritarians who previously ruled these unfortunate lands.There probably is no better symbol of that than the fact that in recent months Khadafy's hometown of Sirte has become ISIS' second capital; or that the so-called "government" Washington installed in Baghdad can't even manage to hold Saddam's hometown of Tikrit.Nor is the Islamic State anything new under the sun or inherently more threatening to the US homeland than was al-Qaeda in its heyday. The only reason it can even posture as a "state" is owing to the endless gifts of Washington and its allies.That is, the Islamic State managed to occupy a narrow, desolate strip of dusty, impoverished villages on the upper Euphrates in Syria, the desert expanse of Western Iraq, the war-shattered towns of Anbar province and Mosul by dint of seizing massive troves of the best weapons the Pentagon could leave behind after Washington "liberated" Iraq; and by augmenting them with even more lethal firepower seconded to ISIS by killed, captured, defecting and fleeing so-called "moderates" in Syria, who were supplied the latest and greatest US weapons by the CIA, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and various and sundry arms merchants and smugglers of the region.Furthermore, the Islamic State's brutal tyranny even in its backwater redoubts would not last more than a few months without the oil revenues that are smuggled in plain sight through NATO ally Turkey, and by all accounts with the intermediation of Erdogan's own family trading company.The notion that this crypto-state could actually sustain itself by taking ransoms, selling women into sex-slavery and levying internal tariffs on the virtually non-existent economic activity within its putative borders is pure Washington fiction. Seal the Turkish border, and ISIS' days are numbered.Moreover, Turkey does not posses the largest military organization in NATO with 500,000 men under arms, 1,000 aircraft and 3,000 tanks because it is incapable of sealing its border. It's border outside the Kurdish controlled northeast is an open air souk for the transit of oil, arms and recruits only because Washington and the West have greenlighted its campaign to overthrow the government of its Syrian neighbor.If our well-intentioned but feckless President really wants to "eliminate" the Islamic State he only needs to make peace with Damascus; and then to tell Erdogan to scamper back north of his border and seal it off or face expulsion from NATO.That would do more do extinguish ISIS than all the bombing sorties that have come back 75% loaded with their bombs undelivered to date; or that will be launched in the foreseeable future.Washington could do three more things to further reduce the already marginal risk of lone wolf terrorism in the homeland. First, stop the bombing and get the US military presence out of Iraq and Syria entirely. No one wants us there -- not even our so-called allies and vassals.For crying out loud, last week our clueless career warmonger who heads the DOD, Ashton Carter, said he was going to put a few more special forces on the ground in Iraq. Yet lickety-split, the Iraq militias said they would hunt them down, and the puppet prime minister Washington recently installed in Baghdad publicly and pointedly said "no thanks".And then over the weekend, that very same Baghdad government threatened to bring in Russian forces to help it expel uninvited Turkish-NATO troops from its territory outside of Mosul. To clarify, that would be the same Turkish government that is allied with the Kurdish regional authority in Erbil, but which is making war on the Kurdish militias of northern Syria that Washington claims to be the only effective force against ISIS on the ground.You truly need a multi-volume playbook to untangle the centuries of sectarian, ethnic, tribal and political history that are embedded in the lands that Washington foolishly believes it can pacify with cruise missiles and high altitude bombers.Secondly, Washington could acknowledge that there is no coalition of the willing, anyway; its a gang of the unglued. Saudi Arabia and Qatar are in Syria not to defeat ISIS, but to score a sectarian and political victory against Assad and his Iranian-Shiite Crescent allies; and to secure gas pipeline rights that Assad and his Russian backers oppose.Here's the thing. There has never been a single Shiite attack -- organized or inspired -- on American soil. Jihadist terrorism is essentially a poison arising from the Wahhabi-Sunni world -- that is to say, Saudi Arabia.The way to combat that particular curse is to get the Fifth Fleet out of the Persian Gulf. The cure for high oil prices is high prices and the global marketplace, as has been so well demonstrated by the massive and permanent collapse of the so-called OPEC cartel in response to the surge of shale, tar sands, deep oil and non-fossil alternatives.Indeed, it just so happens that the oil provinces along the Persian Gulf are inhabited by as many Shiite as Sunni.So were the despicably corrupt, tyrannical and insatiably greedy rulers of the House of Saud to be forced to hightail it to Geneva in their 747s, their loathsome Wahhabi clerics would be sentenced to an Hobbesian life in the Arabian interior; they certainly would not be in a position to wax any longer on the drippings of Riyadh's oil rents.Finally, if Obama really wanted to make San Bernardino safer, he would get some gumption in his final 400 days, and tell the Washington War Party that its campaign against Assad and the so-called Shiite Crescent is over and done.With the Turkish border sealed in the North, the alliance of Iran, Shiite Iraq, the Alawite government in Damascus, Hezbollah and their Russian ally would make short work of the medieval Sunni barbarians crouched along the Euphrates valley.At the end of the day, the so-called Islamic State's main recruiting arm is not its bloody perversion of Islam, but the bombing campaigns of the US Air Force; and the fighters it fields are retained not by religious zealotry, but by the payroll financed by oil receipts. Stop the bombing and the recruits would dry-up; cut off the oil revenue and its fighters would steadily vanish just as have all unpaid soldiers from time immemorial.Obama's Sunday night speech was mostly an attempt to placate the War Party and the rabid politicians who feast on its lies and depredations. But he at least made an effort near the end to say what we can't do.He said Washington can't put boots on the ground and the nation can not throw away its liberties in a fit of Islamophobia and hysteria about terrorism. Perhaps his Homeland Security Chief didn't hear the speech or get the memo. Said Jeh Johnson,

"We have moved to an entirely new phase in the global terrorist threat and in our homeland security efforts." Terrorists have "in effect outsourced attempts to attack our homeland......*This requires a whole new approach, in my view."*

Why, yes it does. They way to lessen even the tiny threat of terrorism that now confronts the nation is to stop Washington's imperial interventions and the blowback it so self-evidently fosters.There is also one other thing that can be done. We might as well recognize that America is an armed camp; that this unfortunate condition does contribute to the fear of wanton terror and violence that pervades the land; that the Second Amendment fetishism of the Right has precious little to do with real liberty; and that the nation would be far better off without its fevered cult of guns.At last count there were 300 million guns in private hands in the US -- 114 million handguns, 110 million rifles, 86 million shotguns and some several millions of military-style assault weapons. This means that about 40% of all the known non-military guns in the world are in the hands of our 4% of the planet's population.No, this insanely huge arsenal is not about hunting -- there are probably not even that many ducks, pheasants, rabbits and deer in America. And its not about self-protection of persons and property by amateur gun-toting citizens. That's why we compact for professional police protection.At the same time, the mere fact of this arsenal does not give rise to the demented psychopaths, racists and whackos who are responsible for the non-jihadist terrorism and mass killings that recur in the nation. It enables it, but sick people do it.Still, there have been 400,000 gun deaths in America since 9/11. There is a terrible consequence to all this retrogressive championing of guns and right-wing political crusading about one of the constitution's most vestigial features.Unfortunately, we now have a culture of guns so endemic and an arsenal so immense that no conceivable further gun control laws could make any difference. Its a hopeless cause -- even if a 1787 notion of the right to bear arms is a relic of agrarian society.At the end of the day, the greatest danger to the homeland is the anti-terrorist hysteria of demagogue domestic politicians. It is the Donald Trumps, and their like and sundry but less bombastic imitators, who threaten our true constitutional liberties of speech, assembly, religion, property and due process.It is they who do not recognize that further arming the domestic population to combat the foreign barbarism set loose by Washington's war machine is the height of insanity. The Left's ineffectual arm-waving at the Second Amendment is trivial by comparison.
Cross-posted from David Stockman's Contra Corner.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 12 hours ago.

Buxton to Support Invest Aurora's Focus on Retail Recruitment and Retention

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Buxton will provide Invest Aurora with consumer insights to identify retail matches.

Fort Worth, Texas (PRWEB) December 08, 2015

Buxton has partnered with Invest Aurora to support the community of Aurora, Illinois’ retail attraction efforts. Buxton’s advanced consumer analytics will allow Invest Aurora to identify the retailers that match the shopping and dining habits of consumers in Aurora’s trade area, making the city an attractive place for new residents and businesses by providing shopping and dining options.

As a Buxton client, Invest Aurora will have access to SCOUT, Buxton’s proprietary web-based real estate platform, giving local leaders information at their fingertips to analyze retail matches for different areas of the city.

“We are excited to partner with Buxton in developing our retail recruitment strategy,” commented David Hulseberg, President/CEO of Invest Aurora. “Buxton’s knowledge of the retail sector will help provide us with additional insight into retail and restaurant options for our growing city.”

“We are thrilled to partner with Invest Aurora,” said Lisa McCay, vice president of Buxton’s public sector division. “We’ll provide Invest Aurora with the information they need to expand retail development in a way that best suits the city and its residents.”

Buxton has worked with more than 700 communities nationwide to implement retail development strategies. Other client cities in Illinois include Effingham, Oak Park, and many others.

About Invest Aurora

Invest Aurora is a progressive, dynamic economic development partnership dedicated to expanding economic opportunities in Aurora and developing a sustainable community for its residents. Embracing Aurora’s rich history and cultural boom, Invest Aurora leverages partnerships between public and private sectors to attract and expand commercial, industrial, retail, and mixed-use ventures that stimulate the economy, create job opportunities, and strengthen the community.

For additional information about Invest Aurora, visit http://www.investaurora.org.

About Buxton

Buxton is the industry leader in customer analytics. Our analytics reveal who your customers are, where more potential customers are located and the value of each customer. More than 3,000 clients in the retail, restaurant, healthcare, private equity, and public sectors have relied on our insights to guide their growth strategies. Clients include Jamba Juice, GNC and Anthropologie.

For more information, visit http://www.buxtonco.com. Reported by PRWeb 12 hours ago.

Fitch Releases Report on Aurora West School District No. 129, IL

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NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Fitch Ratings has published a report on Aurora West School District No. 129, IL. The report is available at 'www.fitchratings.com'. Additional information is available at 'www.fitchratings.com'. Aurora West School District No. 129, Illinois https://www.fitchratings.com/creditdesk/reports/report_frame.cfm?rpt_id=874966 Applicable Criteria Tax-Supported Rating Criteria (pub. 14 Aug 2012) https://www.fitchratings.com/creditdesk/reports/report_frame.cfm?rpt_id=686015 ALL Reported by Business Wire 11 hours ago.

President Obama's Speech: How Can We Fight Terrorism If We're Confused About Its Causes?

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I watched President Obama's speech with a mixture of hope and gratitude and frustration. I was grateful that he reminded us that American Muslims are our friends, neighbors, sports stars, and men and women serving in our military. And I, like other American Muslims, feeling horror and anger and revulsion at the Paris and San Bernardino terrorist attacks, was glad to hear him talk of defeating ISIS.

Moreover, President Obama was absolutely right to distinguish between Muslims and Muslim terrorists. Virtually all of the world's Muslims (about 1.6 billion people) have condemned terrorism and ISIS (about 30,000 people). You can see some statements here but just google "Muslims condemn" if you want tens of thousands more.

The Paris terrorists and the San Bernardino terrorists might have been Muslim, but they were unquestionably violating long-established tenets of Islam, which clearly prohibits terrorism and prohibits killing civilians, even in legitimate warfare. (See my previous blog explaining jihad.) As such, these terrorists were typical of ISIS: violent thugs who use religion to justify their criminal behavior, but who violate myriad rules of Islam. Virtually all Muslims hate ISIS; they kill in our name. So we stand with President Obama in condemning the terrorists.

It was the president's words on terrorism and ideology that I found confusing and frustrating. He rightly said that Muslim leaders must combat extremist ideology; but Muslim leaders, clerics and non-clerics have already been doing so for years, in mosques and in many other organizations. (Of course it doesn't help when, for example, in France authorities are getting ready to close more than a hundred mosques -- it just makes it harder for Muslim leaders to reach Muslims to combat extremist ideology.) The problem with the president's statement is that it assumes that it's this extremist ideology that causes terrorism.

It has been repeatedly shown by Robert Pape, Marc Sageman, Lydia Wilson, and many others that the vast majority of terrorists are not acting from extremist ideology or even religious motivation, but from personal or political grievances. Therefore, to continue to attribute terrorism to religion or ideology is not only a mistake, it's counterproductive because it scapegoats Islam and Muslims; it prevents us from addressing and eliminating the real causes of terrorism; it legitimizes terrorism (by calling it Islamic); and it breeds new terrorists (by inviting Muslims to buy into the media rhetoric that terrorism is related to their religion).

ISIS, for example, grew as a result of the U.S.-backed Iraqi government's severe repression of Sunnis; most of its members don't even seem to know much about religion. The only reason ISIS has been more politically successful than, say, the Ku Klux Klan (which cites the Bible as its primary authority and which has actually come to political power in the past), is because ISIS operates in failed states and the KKK operates in the U.S., which has a strong government. Groups like ISIS and the KKK attract disenfranchised people who want to empower themselves by being part of a powerful in-group.

We don't know much about the San Bernardino shooters , but the president was right to call the San Bernardino shootings a "terror attack." However, he also called Major Nidal Hassan's shooting at Fort Hood a terror attack, as well as the Chattanooga shooting. And one of the commentators called San Bernardino the deadliest terror attack since 9/11. And that's when it got murky.

Why was Hassan's shooting at Fort Hood an act of terror when an earlier shooting that same year by Sgt. John Russell, who shot five soldiers dead at Camp Liberty, not an act of terror? Why was the Chattanooga shooter, who was mentally ill and doing drugs, a terrorist, when Robert Bales, an American who shot 16 Afghan civilians (9 of them children) in their homes while they were sleeping, was not a terrorist?

So calling San Bernardino the deadliest terror attack since 9/11 clearly indicates that only shootings by Muslims are deemed acts of terror. Because the shootings at Sandy Hook, Oregon's Umpqua Community College, Planned Parenthood, and Aurora, among others, all look like acts of terror to me. If religion is the key to whether someone is "radicalized" and commits an act of terror, then why didn't we ask what the Sandy Hook shooter's religion was? The murder of abortion doctor George Tiller was clearly religiously motivated, but it wasn't called terrorism. And, far from asking what Robert Dear's religion was when he opened fire at Planned Parenthood, the New York Times amazingly described him as "gentle loner."

Juan Cole sums up the top ten differences between white terrorists and other terrorists in his blog. Glenn Greenwald comments that "what terrorism really means in American discourse -- its operational meaning -- is: violence by Muslims against Americans and their allies."

Therefore, although I'm grateful to our president for his words about American Muslims, I'm frustrated that his comments funneled into the same flawed narrative connecting violence and Muslims. Other people commit violence, too, but Muslims make national headlines when they do, and always as another confirmation of the "Muslims commit violence because of their religion and others commit violence because they're mentally ill" narrative.

What the media and American talking heads don't seem to realize is that this narrative doesn't benefit any Americans. In the long run, it hurts and divides us. It's time to stop reflexively regurgitating the same narratives and thus giving the terrorist what they want -- legitimacy.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. Reported by Huffington Post 10 hours ago.

UltraShipTMS to be Implemented at Aurora Organic Dairy

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US Leading Producer & Processor of Store-Brand Organic Dairy Selects Growing, Cloud-Based TMS Platform for Outbound Transportation Management and Supply Chain Logistics

Fair Lawn, NJ (PRWEB) December 08, 2015

Boulder, Colorado-based Aurora Organic Dairy (AOD) selects the UltraShipTMS solution for supply chain logistics management after a rigorous evaluation of the leading TMS solutions serving high volume shippers. Upon implementation, UltraShipTMS will be used by the organic dairy producer and processor to effectively plan, optimize and execute management of outbound logistics across the United States.

AOD selected UltraShipTMS as the preferred platform to support its vertically integrated supply chain, which will help to ensure superior logistics management for their highly perishable product. With quality at the forefront of its business model, AOD produces organic milk at company-owned farms, processes it at a company-owned milk plant, and distributes its products nationwide.

Explaining the decision to implement UltraShipTMS, AOD President, Scott McGinty said, “Our integrated model has allowed us to continue to grow. We needed a transportation management solution that would be flexible enough to meet a business that is growing both in scale and complexity. UltraShipTMS allows us to automate our transportation and logistics processes and improve our service to our customers. UltraShipTMS brings state-of-the-art technology, ease of use, and organic food shipping experience. That differentiates them from the other solutions we considered.”

UltraShipTMS continues to add prominent food shippers and agricultural producers to its growing list of clients using the transportation management system and the LoadFusion transportation optimizer tool. “UltraShipTMS and LoadFusion are perfect for managing supply chain logistics for food shippers who commonly seek tools for consolidation of truckload freight and robust, accurate scheduling capabilities due to the perishability of their freight,” said Ultra President, Nicholas Carretta. “We’re proud to add AOD to our list of valued customers and look forward to a long and beneficial partnership.”

About UltraShipTMS
UltraShipTMS offers award winning software-as-a-service solutions to leading shippers in food production, packaging, manufacturing, retail and other industries. UltraShipTMS, UltraYMS and the LoadFusion transportation optimizer provide a single-source solution for transportation and private fleet management, optimization and settlement handling in- and out-bound shipping across all modes of transport. Built and supported by a talented team of transportation industry veterans and software developers, UltraShipTMS is an emerging leader in the supply chain management industry. http://www.ultrashiptms.com Reported by PRWeb 9 hours ago.

6 Charged in New York Kidnapping of Illinois Men

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Patch Glenview, IL -- Police in New York file charges in weekend kidnapping of college students from Aurora and Northbrook. Reported by Patch 8 hours ago.

Magna seeks start-ups at CES

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Hosting Pitch Day at show floor exhibit  AURORA, ON, Dec. 8, 2015 /PRNewswire/ - Magna International Inc. will hang an "open for business" sign on its booth this year at the CES tradeshow in Las Vegas.  Magna, along with venture capital firm IncWell and... Reported by PR Newswire 7 hours ago.

6 Charged in Kidnapping of Aurora Man

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Patch Naperville, IL -- Police in New York file charges in the kidnapping case of Nicholas Kollias of Northbrook and Ani Okeke Ewo of Aurora. Reported by Patch 6 hours ago.

6 Charged in Kidnapping of Former Romeoville Student

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Patch Romeoville, IL -- Ani Okeke Ewo, of Aurora, reportedly played defensive back for the Spartans. Reported by Patch 7 hours ago.

Aurora man, 77, charged with assaulting nurse at VA hospital

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A 77-year-old Aurora man has been charged with assault, use of a deadly weapon and impeding a nurse at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Denver. Reported by Denver Post 5 hours ago.

Aurora finds temporary solution for day laborers on Dayton Street

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The city of Aurora has come up with a short-term solution for day laborers who gather along Dayton Street just north of the busy East Colfax Avenue looking for work. Reported by Denver Post 3 hours ago.

Avitus Group Relocates Corporate Headquarters to Aurora, Colorado; Announces Plan to Hire Nearly 500; Official Ribbon Cutting Slated for February 4, 2016

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Avitus Group Marks 20 Years in Business With Rapid Growth; Requires New Corporate Headquarters in Major Metropolitan Area to Serve Hiring Needs

Aurora, Colorado (PRWEB) December 08, 2015

“Our company has grown rapidly to one of the top 20 largest in our co-employment industry. We have found it necessary to have a corporate presence in the greater Denver area, giving us access to a larger population-base from which to hire,” says Avitus Group Public Relations Manager, Dianne Parker. “Billings, Montana will always be the place we proudly founded our company nearly 20 years ago. We will continue to hire staff in our Billings Operations Center as we begin to hire staff in Aurora.”

Avitus Group, a company that helps simplify, strengthen and grow other companies by taking responsibility for necessary, yet burdensome administrative tasks, like payroll, accounting and taxes, made the move official in December, 2015 with a custom build out of Aurora’s most prominent and visible building along the I-225 corridor. Avitus Group’s new Aurora Corporate Headquarters is located at 3131 S Vaughn Way Suite 400, in Cherry Creek Place and boasts 11,000+ square feet with room to nearly double the square footage by 2018. The construction project is expected to wrap up in January of 2016, and staff is expected to move in shortly after. An official ribbon cutting and champagne toast, in partnership with the Aurora Economic Development Council, is slated for February 4, 2016. The Colorado business community is invited.

“Aurora is proud that Avitus Group selected our city to establish its new corporate headquarters,” says Mayor Steve Hogan. “We look forward to working with Avitus Group for many years to come.”

“We’re excited to be part of the Aurora community and to provide so many good-paying jobs that support the local economy,” says President of Avitus Payroll Services, Inc. and Avitus Business Services, Inc., Ken Balster.

State and local incentives helped attract Avitus Group’s headquarters. The incentive terms are performance-based and call for the company to hire at least 125 employees in Aurora over the next decade.

“Avitus Group has an aggressive growth strategy that includes tapping into the Colorado labor market. We plan to exceed the hiring numbers required by the incentive package to bring additional, quality jobs to Colorado. Conservatively, we plan to hire 40 to 50 employees each year for the next several years,” says Avitus Group CEO and Chairman of the Board of Directors, Willie Chrans. “We expect to employ at least 200 staff members at our Aurora corporate headquarters within the next 5 years. We anticipate more than doubling that number to nearly 500 over the next decade.”

Avitus Group has already begun hiring, and plans to hire about 40 employees over the next 12 months. The company expects to hire an additional 40 employees in 2017. More than 20 existing staff members in Denver are moving to the corporate headquarters, as well as the company’s CEO, Willie Chrans. Staff positions include accounting, payroll, tax preparation and sales staff.

“It is our privilege to work with Avitus Group and show them the numerous assets Aurora has to offer," commented Aurora Economic Development Council President and CEO Wendy Mitchell. “Aurora’s diverse and talented workforce, for example, will fulfill the demand Avitus Group needs to meet.”

“Our largest client-bases are in Colorado, California and Montana. We carefully considered numerous locations in all three states before selecting Aurora as our new corporate headquarters. Aurora is the ideal location for Avitus Group as we grow and expand, and we’re excited about the vibrant workforce in Aurora and its relative close proximity to our Billings Operations Center,” says President of Avitus Group, Inc., Don Reile.

"The prime office space is located near the Tech Center with quick access to DIA, has close proximity to an existing light rail station and the expanding line and has room for expansion. It is a prime location for us," says Avitus Group's Denver-based Senior Executive Marketing Specialist," Chris Balster.

Avitus Group is a worldwide company. Avitus Group simplifies, strengthens and grows businesses by providing 'back office' support (Payroll, accounting, taxes, recruiting, information technology, etc.). When a business uses Avitus Group, all of the necessary yet burdensome functions of the business become Avitus Group's responsibility, so the business can focus on what it does best. Avitus Group serves clients nationwide through regional office locations from coast to coast. The company also serves international clients through partner locations in Europe, Canada, China, England, India, Japan and Singapore. Reported by PRWeb 3 hours ago.

Technology Solution Provider ITsavvy Achieves Coveted HP Inc. Platinum Partner Status

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ITsavvy was just awarded Platinum Partner Status by HP Inc. This is a valuable addition to ITsavvy’s expanding list of growth and competency-oriented recognitions.

ADDISON, Ill. (PRWEB) December 09, 2015

ITsavvy, one of the fastest growing companies of its type in the U.S., was just awarded Platinum Partner Status by HP Inc. This is a valuable addition to ITsavvy’s expanding list of growth and competency-oriented recognitions.

This highest level HP Platinum status is only awarded to partners that demonstrate comprehensive expertise across the entire HP portfolio and deliver the greatest value to their clients.

In its solution providers, HP looks for high flexibility and responsiveness; professional planning and implementation; rapid, efficient and cost-effective deployment through long-term experience and leading-edge tools; and seamless follow through and follow up. HP considers Platinum Partners to be the most valued channel partners.

For ITsavvy’s clients, the elevated partner designation provides assurance that ITsavvy has demonstrated the highest level of HP product knowledge, client service, expertise and overall value. It puts ITsavvy one more step ahead of the competition.

ITsavvy’s President and CEO Mike Theriault said, “HP has been a valuable partner since our inception. We have worked closely over the years to maximize the value of both companies by enabling our clients to take full advantage of smart, effective technologies that help them grow into industry leaders.”

To determine membership in Partner First, HP reviews partners’ sales revenue and competency accomplishments semi-annually. By becoming an HP Platinum Partner, ITsavvy joins a select group that has achieved the ultimate level of revenue growth and competency in HP solutions.

The Platinum Partner designation aligns with HP’s new Partner First Program, which was developed to help partners like ITsavvy capitalize on opportunities through client-centric, solution-led sales. The program is dedicated to being first in driving partner growth and profitability, first in speed and agility, and first in simple and consistent operations.

“We appreciate this special recognition by HP,” Theriault added. “It is just one example of the level of service and dedication to forward-thinking solutions that permeates our entire organization. Beyond awards and certificates, the real tangibles for us are delighted clients that rely on us for their continued success.”

Learn more about ITsavvy’s recent awards and certifications.

ITsavvy, one of the fastest growing companies of its type in the U.S., is a recognized leader in tailored end-to-end IT product and service solutions. ITsavvy built its reputation as a value-added reseller with industry-leading product availability, design and implementation, client support and delivery speed through 46 distribution centers across the U.S. ITsavvy also has data center locations in New Jersey, Illinois and New York. The company’s new, user-friendly website provides hundreds of concise, leading-edge IT decision-making resources, including an e-commerce site with real-time pricing and availability. ITsavvy is headquartered in Addison, IL, with offices in Chicago’s Loop; Hauppauge, NY; New York, NY; Warren, NJ; Aurora, IL; Davenport, IA; Hayward, CA; Beavercreek, OH; Indianapolis, and Miami. Call 1-855-ITsavvy (1-855-487-2889), email: info@ITsavvy.com, visit: http://www.ITsavvy.com.

Full release at: http://www.itsavvy.com/technology-solution-provider-itsavvy-achieves-coveted-hp-inc-platinum-partner-status.
### Reported by PRWeb 19 hours ago.

A century ago, a popular Missouri newspaper demonized a religious minority: Catholics

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The year was 1915, and the strange new newspaper in Aurora, Mo., had grown so quickly in its first four years that rail officials had to build extra tracks for all the paper and printing materials suddenly rolling into town.

The Aurora post office, according to one account, more than tripled its... Reported by L.A. Times 15 hours ago.

Children's Hospital to open clinic at Milwaukee's Midtown Center

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Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin, which has been expanding aggressively in Milwaukee’s suburbs, said it will open a clinic at the Midtown Center on Milwaukee’s near northwest side. The clinic will house primary care and behavioral medicine services currently at the Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin Downtown Health Center on the Aurora Sinai Medical Center campus. The new site will increase access to health care for the growing number of children who live on the northwest side of the city,… Reported by bizjournals 12 hours ago.

A century ago, fear of a Roman Catholic plot to take over America

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The year was 1915, and the strange new newspaper in Aurora, Mo., had grown so quickly in its first four years that rail officials had to build extra tracks for all the paper and printing materials suddenly rolling into town.

The Aurora post office, according to one account, more than tripled its... Reported by L.A. Times 12 hours ago.
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