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" ... But there are other facets of “reparations” that will not be addressed at all by baby bonds. Some commentators, like Ta-Nehisi Coates, believe that “reparations” are not just about the money. They also want a full airing of our history of racial oppression and racially motivated violence, a genuine reckoning with the scars left behind by centuries of racial domination. They want Americans to understand the distance between the realities they have countenanced and the ideals they claim to hold. The prospect of achieving those ideals is dimmed without an understanding of these realities. ... "
" ... First, my standard observation that -- even though this case involved an Alaska DAPT -- this case was nothing like a true asset protection case, because the transfers occurred after the claims against the Tangwelds and Toni had already arisen. Cases like this are simply good old fraud-on-creditor cases, which ought not be countenanced by anybody engaged in real creditor-debtor planning. ... "
" ... Only two of the players who began in Adelaide in December were on the field a week ago in Brisbane, Cheteshwar Pujara and captain Ajinkya Rahane. Injuries enforced a level of rotation that the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) would never have countenanced. ... "
" ... The DPRK, as it calls itself, has been the outlier in discussions of Asia-Pacific. Even as other formerly isolated regimes such as Burma/Myanmar rejoined the formal economy, Pyongyang?s rulers remained apart. Of course, they maintained their underground and often illicit trade to keep their own plates full, and in recent years have countenanced growing commerce with bordering areas of China, but basically North Korean GDP has been a null set. This in a country that, through the early 1960s, at least had a Stalinist presence in world output. ... "
" ... The future of tenure will take one of two directions. Either it will continue to gradually erode, succumbing to a slow death of a thousand cuts, or it will be replaced with various approximations involving tenure-like contractual protections. The latter course is preferred. It preserves many of the essential protections afforded by traditional tenure, it balances faculty independence with institutional flexibility, and - perhaps most importantly - it would allow more adjunct appointments to be converted into well-protected and better compensated, full-time faculty positions, thereby reducing the exploitation of part-time faculty that the tenure system has long countenanced. ... "