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Saturday, May 25, 2024

‘De-whiting NY’: North Africans, Middle Easterners would lose ‘white’ status under state bill

 A controversial bill being pushed by lefty legislators in Albany is trying to make the Empire State less “white,” critics say.

The legislation, sponsored by Assemblywoman Jessica González-Rojas (D-Queens) and Sen. Michael Gianaris (D-Queens), would mandate state agencies and other entities use separate categories for Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) New Yorkers when collecting demographics data – rather than relying on the US Census, which classifies them under one “white” umbrella.

The state Senate on Thursday voted unanimously to pass it, but González-Rojas’ version of the bill is still facing pushback in the Assembly.

A bill sponsored by Queens Assemblywoman Jessica González-Rojas (pictured) and Queens Sen. Michael Gianaris would separate categories for Middle Eastern and North African New Yorkers when collecting demographics data.Hans Pennink
They and other supporters also insist the current system shuts MENA individuals out of qualifying for minority-owned business grants, language programs and other critical government aid and services by labeling them white.

“This bill isn’t anti-white – it’s pro-MENA,” González-Rojas told The Post. “Data is power. It will give elected representatives and state agencies and institutions the tools to better understand the unique and diverse needs of all New Yorkers.”

However, state Assemblyman Alec Brook-Kransy, a Brooklyn-based Dem-turned-Republican, disagreed, saying he believes the endgame is “de-whiting” New York.

“I am deeply concerned that this further separation of New Yorkers into categories . . . may lead to more division,” he said. “If the desire is inclusion, then why are we pushing a path of forcing legislation that will clearly result in separation and further division in our society?”

State Assemblyman Sam Pirozzolo (R-Staten Island) agreed, saying the bill stinks of “hypocrisy.”

Sen. Michael Gianaris (D-Queens) said MENA individuals shouldn’t be counted as white “because they are not, in fact, white.”Hans Pennink
Assemblyman Sam Pirozzolo (R-Staten Island) said the MENA bill fans “the flame of racial division.”Paul Martinka

“They want to fight systemic exclusion with systemic exclusion,” Pirozzolo said. “Instead of trying to help and uplift everyone, they are fanning the flame of racial division.”

The bill covers people of Egyptian, Moroccan, Libyan and other North African descent, as well as those of Iranian, Palestinian, Israeli, Lebanese and other Middle Eastern descent.

New York City is home to some of the largest Middle Eastern and North African communities in the nation, including the “Little Egypt” enclave in Astoria, which Gianaris and González-Rojas represent.

Their legislation is gaining steam in Albany while the Biden administration is in the process of adding a “Middle Eastern or North African” identifier to official documents like the US Census, picking up a plan first proposed by former President Barack Obama but tabled by his successor Donald Trump.

González-Rojas said the state can’t wait for the next Census in 2030 for MENA individuals to be fairly counted.

Mayor Eric Adams (center) and Queens Assemblywoman Jenifer Rajkumar (far left) celebrating Arab culture and heritage with guests at Gracie Mansion last year. The U.S. Census currently counts Arab-Americans as being white.Benny Polatseck/Mayoral Photography Office

“This bill would cause this . . . to go into effect sooner,” González-Rojas said. “These communities have been made invisible from this decades-old erasure for too long, and each year only furthers that erasure.”

Gianaris said he believes MENA individuals shouldn’t be counted as white “because they are not, in fact, white.”

“This was obvious to every member of the Senate from both parties, which is why [the bill] passed unanimously,” he said.

Assemblywoman González-Rojas said MENA New Yorkers shouldn’t have to wait until the 2030 Census to be fairly counted under specific ethnic groups rather than be classified “white.”Hans Pennink

Gov. Hochul in 2021 signed into law similar legislation requiring New York to “disaggregate” data it gathers for Asian-Americans into specific ethnic groups, such as Vietnamese and Chinese.

A Hochul rep declined to comment on the MENA legislation beyond saying the governor would “review it” if it passes both houses of the state Legislature.

https://nypost.com/2024/05/25/us-news/bill-gaining-steam-would-shrink-new-yorks-white-population/

Leftists Appalled That Black And Latino Voters Turn Out For Trump

 by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Following Donald Trump’s rally in the Bronx earlier this week, Democrats and their leftist media mouthpieces were shocked that Black and Latino voters turned out en mass to support Trump and embrace a message of unity.

The estimated number of New Yorkers were in attendance to see Trump was between 10-25,000, with many unable to get into the stage area at Crotona Park. It was evident that the majority of those in attendance were were either Black or Latino voters.

During the rally, Trump had a message for them, noting “It doesn’t matter whether you’re Black, or Brown, or White or whatever the hell color you are, it doesn’t matter. We are all Americans and we’re going to pull together as Americans.”

Compare the messages being sent to these demographics by Trump and Biden:

CNN reporter Anderson Cooper expressed shock that there were so many people at the rally who were actually from the Bronx.

MSNBC acted appalled that the black and Latino voters in attendance were highly enthusiastic about Trump, labelling him as “the man that can save this country.”

People simply are not buying into the fake leftist media narrative that Trump is a racist, white supremacist anymore:

CNN’s Ana Navarro reacted to all this by suggesting that Latino voters supporting Trump are “very stupid”:

Democrat New York Governor  Kathy Hochul, who recently suggested black people in The Bronx don’t know what computers are, claimed that the state will “never, ever support” Trump, and that the rally “won’t make a difference at all,” further stating that the Trump supporters who were in attendance are “clowns.”

They are in complete denial that Americans have woken up and are wholesale rejecting their message of division and failure.

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https://www.zerohedge.com/political/unity-vs-division-leftists-appalled-black-and-latino-voters-turn-out-trump

ASCO: AffyImmune claims a first with CAR-T for solid tumours

 AffyImmune Therapeutics has recorded what it says is the first documented complete response in a patient with a solid tumour treated with CAR-T therapy.

The case comes from a phase 1 study of its ICAM-1 targeting CAR-T autologous candidate AIC100 in patients with relapsed/refractory poorly differentiated thyroid cancer (PDTC) and anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC), which will be reported at the ASCO congress next week.

CAR-T therapies have transformed the treatment of various blood cancers, but have been less effective for solid tumours, in part because they find it difficult to target cancer cells, as well as infiltrate and survive in the hostile microenvironment of the tumour.

AffyImmune said it has seen a complete metabolic response in a patient with ATC enrolled in its study, which had treated 10 patients with AIC100 at the data cut-off point of 2nd February, according to the ASCO abstract. ATC is the most aggressive form of thyroid cancer, with a median overall survival of less than six months.

There was also one partial response in a PDTC patient and an overall disease control rate – including cases where there was stable disease – of 56%.

Patients in the study were treated with three dose levels of the one-shot therapy, and the maximum tolerated dose has not been reached and the CAR-T has an “excellent” safety profile, according to the study investigators.

Zeroing in on six patients treated with the two higher dose levels indicated an overall response rate (ORR) of 33% and DCR of 67%, which lead investigator Dr Samer Srour, of MD Anderson Cancer Center, said provides proof-of-concept and “a strong foundation to advance this candidate further in development.”

“We look forward to improve on these results and to further evaluate the safety and efficacy of AIC100 at higher dose levels and to potentially expand its application to other ICAM-1-positive cancers,” he added. That could include gastric and triple-negative breast cancers.

AffyImmune’s CAR-T platform relies on a technology known as affinity tuning, which increases the specificity of the T-cells to their tumour-associated antigen target, improving their safety, and preventing them from becoming “exhausted” – which can happen if they latch on too tightly and cannot move on to target another cancer cell.

Chief executive Matt Britz, who took the helm of AffyImmune in March after a two-year stint as the company’s head of business development and chief operating officer, said AIC100 “has the potential to overcome current barriers to CAR-T and ultimately establish a new paradigm for patients with solid tumour cancers.”

https://pharmaphorum.com/news/asco-affyimmune-claims-first-car-t-solid-tumours

Supreme Court Faces Historic Finish To Eventful Term

 by John Malcolm via The Epoch Times,

Oral arguments are over at the Supreme Court for this term. Although the rallies and protesters have dispersed (for now, anyway), the justices remain frantically at work on the numerous opinions they have yet to hand down. With several closely watched cases still pending, it will likely be a historic finish to this Supreme Court term.

The court heard 61 arguments in 69 cases this term (some of the cases were consolidated for oral argument), 20 of which the court has already decided.

The most newsworthy of those cases was the unanimous ruling in Trump v. Anderson, in which the court reversed the Colorado Supreme Court and held that former President Donald Trump could not be removed from the state ballot under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment.

Because, the court said, “the Constitution makes Congress, rather than the States, responsible for enforcing Section 3 against federal officeholders and candidates,” state courts and state officials have no power to remove federal candidates from the ballot.

Opinions in some of the biggest cases, however, have yet to be issued.

These cases address issues ranging from government censorship of online speech to abortion drug regulation to Trump’s immunity from criminal prosecution to how much deference courts should give to federal agencies’ interpretations of the scope of their own authority.

The court heard five cases this term that could significantly reshape administrative law and the regulatory state.

In Relentless, Inc. v. Department of Commerce and Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, for instance, the court will decide how much courts should defer to agencies’ often expansive interpretations of federal law.

In both cases, fishing companies challenged a federal agency’s rule that the companies had to pay for the government to monitor their compliance with federal laws and regulations. A majority of justices appear ready to say that agencies cannot define their own powers by interpreting vague laws however they want. If that happens, this will represent a sea change in the area of administrative law, will curtail the vast power currently exercised by federal agencies, and may well force Congress to write clearer laws in the future.

In another administrative law case, FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine, the court will decide a challenge brought by doctors and a medical association against the Food and Drug Administration’s repeal of safety measures that protected women who use mifepristone, a drug commonly known as the abortion pill.

If the court rules for the FDA, it could sidestep the question of whether the FDA violated the law and only hold that the doctors and medical association were not harmed and thus lacked standing to sue. A win for the doctors, however, would bring back the repealed safety restrictions.

And in a third administrative law case, Corner Post, Inc. v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the court is grappling with the question of when someone can sue because they were harmed by a federal regulation. Under the government’s reading of the relevant statute, a person can sue only up to six years after a regulation is issued—meaning that a company created more than six years later can’t get into court to challenge the regulation.

The court will also decide whether the funding scheme for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, or CFPB, is unconstitutional in Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. Community Financial Services Association, Limited.

The case focuses on whether Congress, in the name of “efficient” solutions to modern problems, can abdicate its fiscal oversight powers by passing a statute that perpetually funds an agency, as it did for the CFPB. If the CFPB prevails, Congress could easily sidestep the democratic process by guaranteeing forever-funding for the entire regulatory state.

Last but not least of the administrative law cases, Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy presents the court with three questions about the SEC’s enforcement proceedings. The court mostly focused its attention at oral arguments on one question, however: whether George Jarkesy had a right to a jury trial when the SEC brought an enforcement action against him.

For context, the SEC alleged that Jarkesy committed wrongs that look like common law fraud. Thus, when it brought an in-agency enforcement proceeding before agency judges, Jarkesy argued he had a right to a jury trial because he would have that right if a private person sued him for fraud.

The catch is that the court already held years ago that when the government creates and enforces a public right—something given to the public collectively, like a right to a deception-free securities market—the enforcing agency can decide the case itself without having to face a jury.

If the court chooses to address the jury issue, it will need to address whether Congress can convert a private right into a public one and let the agency have one of its own decide the agency’s enforcement actions.

The court will also decide in three separate cases whether government officials and Big Tech companies can suppress online speech that they disfavor.

In Moody v. NetChoice, LLC and NetChoice, LLC v. Paxton, the court will decide whether Florida and Texas can restrain Big Tech from “deplatforming” online speech (removing users’ content from their websites or apps).

And in Murthy v. Missouri, the court is weighing whether federal officials’ relentless pressure on those companies to suppress disfavored speech was unconstitutional censorship or nothing more than the bully pulpit in action.

Although the justices could side with Florida and Texas in the NetChoice cases without reaching the merits of the cases and instead by deciding them on a procedural question, they appeared skeptical in Murthy that the government violated the First Amendment.

The justices also appeared concerned about the government’s broad reading of a federal statute that the Justice Department is using to prosecute a Jan. 6 defendant in Fischer v. United States. If the court agrees that the federal law covers a narrower range of criminal acts than the government argues it covers, this could have an impact on the pending criminal case against Trump, since two of the four charges in that case rely on the same statute.

Speaking of the former president, the court will decide in Trump v. United States whether Trump enjoys absolute immunity from subsequent prosecution for official acts he took while he was president. Trump’s attorneys are arguing that the only exception would be for acts that led to a president’s impeachment and removal from office.

While Trump was impeached twice while in office, he was acquitted both times by the Senate. A ruling in Trump’s favor would make it very difficult for special counsel Jack Smith to criminally prosecute him for contesting the 2020 election and for Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis to prosecute him in Georgia as well.

But that’s not all.

In City of Grants Pass v. Johnson, the court appears likely to reverse a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision that fining a homeless individual for sleeping on public property violates the Eighth Amendment’s cruel and unusual punishment clause.

In Moore v. United States, the justices will decide whether a tax on unrealized wealth - such as an increase in your stock portfolio’s value—is constitutional under the 16th Amendment, which only allows Congress to impose a direct tax on “income.”

The court is also still working on two firearms cases. The first, United States v. Rahimi, poses the question of whether a federal statute violates the Second Amendment by prohibiting a person subject to a domestic violence restraining order from possessing firearms. The second, Garland v. Cargill, will determine whether the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives can define a bump stock device as a “machine gun.”

In yet another chapter of the ongoing controversy over the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) “Good Neighbor Plan”—which imposes national emission standards for certain states that are “upwind” of other states—Ohio, other affected states, and various organizations have asked the court to stay the plan while they challenge it in the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The plan, they point out in four consolidated cases (captioned Ohio v. Environmental Protection Agency), was designed for 23 states, but a dozen of those states, and three-quarters of the emissions the plan would have originally regulated, are now exempt. Among the potential costs the challengers point out as justifying a stay is the likelihood that compliance would trigger power-grid emergencies.

Finally, in Alexander v. South Carolina State Conference of the NAACP, the court will decide South Carolina state officials’ appeal of a decision from a three-judge district court panel that held that the state’s Congressional District 1 was racially gerrymandered.

The officials argued that the panel concluded that partisan gerrymandering—which is permissible under the Constitution—was racial gerrymandering by wrongly inferring that a correlation between race and politics meant that race was the true basis for the election map.

If you feel overwhelmed, that is only a snapshot of some of the remaining cases this term.

And if some (or many) of them seem rather partisan or controversial, keep in mind that the Supreme Court frequently hands down rulings that are not decided on partisan lines—such as its unanimous judgment earlier this term that Colorado cannot unilaterally remove Trump from the ballot.

At the end of the day, no one but the justices and their clerks know what the results are in the cases still to be handed down or when those opinions will be released.

But one thing is certain: It will be a historic end to an already historic term.

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https://www.zerohedge.com/political/supreme-court-faces-historic-finish-eventful-term