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Fears Of Marijuana 'Monopoly' In Ohio Undercut Support For Legalization

Ohio's proposal to legalize recreational and medical marijuana is being met with opposition from residents who generally support legalizing pot.
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Ohio’s proposal to legalize recreational and medical marijuana is being met with opposition from residents who generally support legalizing pot. iStockphoto hide caption

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Yellow Springs is a small college town in Ohio that has more than one head shop and a lot of tie-dye and hemp.

Many would consider it ground zero for likely supporters of the referendum on the ballot this November that could make Ohio the fifth state to legalize recreational and medical marijuana.

But the proposal is drawing some unusual opposition — and it’s coming from residents who generally support legalizing marijuana.

Samantha Van Ness is among them. While she’s all for legalizing marijuana, the 25-year-old says she’s dead set against the amendment that will be on the ballot.

“I would rather take the minor misdemeanor fine than let someone have such a massive monopoly in my state,” she says.

And that’s the word lots of liberals and old hippies in Yellow Springs don’t like: monopoly. Many people who generally support legalization have a problem with the group ResponsibleOhio that’s pushing this initiative.

That’s because it specifies just 10 locations in the state where growing pot would be allowed. And 10 groups of investors already have dibs on those sites.

These same investors are sinking $20 million into the campaign. So in essence, they are paying to try to amend the Ohio Constitution to grant themselves pot growing rights.

‘Middle-Of-The-Road Approach’ For A Purple State

Ian James, ResponsibleOhio’s director, says there’s a reason for this structure.

“There are other folks that say, ‘I think we should treat marijuana like lettuce and tomatoes,’ ” he says. “Well, lettuce and tomatoes don’t impair you. Marijuana does.”

James says limiting the proposal to 10 sites makes it easier to regulate and monitor, and a state-run control board will be able to increase that number later on.

And the big money, he says, allows them to run a big campaign.

“We are Ohio, folks. We’re not a blue state or a red state. We’re a very purple, middle-of-the-road state,” James says. “And that requires that you have a middle-of-the-road approach that doesn’t always sit well with the right and it doesn’t always sit well with the left.”

The investors are a notable group: It includes former NBA star Oscar Robertson, NFL player Frostee Rucker, Nick Lachey from the boy band 98 Degrees and two Cincinnati-based relatives of the late President William H. Taft.

Sri Kavuru, president of Ohioans To End Prohibition, says he agrees that it’s time to legalize marijuana — but thinks this is the wrong approach.

“I don’t think auctioning off the Ohio Constitution is the only way to do that,” Kavuru says.

So his group of would-be supporters is trying to pass a different amendment next year, one that would create a free market for growers.

Big Money In ‘A Few Pockets’

And pot opponents likely won’t embrace either move. Republican Secretary of State Jon Husted included the word “monopoly” in the issue title that’s supposed to go on the ballot this fall.

“You could call it a duopoly, a oligopoly or a cartel, which are other words that we could’ve chosen, but we figured that monopoly was the most easily understandable,” he says.

ResponsibleOhio has taken that wording to court. James, the group’s director, argues it’s an unfair characterization.

“It’s certainly not a monopoly when thousands of Ohioans will be able to own and operate their own retail stores, their own testing facilities, their own manufacturing facilities,” he says.

If the measure passes, James says, the amendment will create 10,000-plus jobs, and more than $500 million a year in tax revenue for the state.

Samantha Van Ness — the young pot supporter who’s against the amendment — says she’d love to see the tax revenue from a thriving weed business, too.

But “not at the cost of putting that squarely into a few pockets. That’s just as bad as it is right now, where the money’s already in a few people’s pockets,” she says.

The big money in this campaign is already showing up: The TV ads have started, and they even have a mascot: Buddie, a muscular green guy who’s touring college campuses in a bus.

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Former NFL Player Lawrence Phillips Charged With Murder

Lawrence Phillips, seen here in a 2005 photo, has been charged with murder while serving a prison sentence for assault and other charges.

Lawrence Phillips, seen here in a 2005 photo, has been charged with murder while serving a prison sentence for assault and other charges. Anne Cusack/AP hide caption

itoggle caption Anne Cusack/AP

He was already serving a lengthy prison sentence; now onetime St. Louis Rams running back Lawrence Phillips is being charged with murder in the death of his cellmate. Phillips was convicted of assaulting his girlfriend and other charges in 2006.

The new charges against Phillips, 40, stem from the death of his fellow inmate at the Kern Valley State Prison in California this past spring. Officials are accusing Phillips of strangling Damion Soward, 37.

The AP reports, “Phillips is serving a sentence of more than 31 years. He was convicted of choking his girlfriend and later of driving his car into three teens after a pickup football game.”

Phillips played in the NFL for three seasons; he had been a first-round pick out of the University of Nebraska.

During his college career at Nebraska, Phillips was an integral part of two national championship teams, in 1994 and 1995. But he also embroiled the school in controversy over its handling of his off-field behavior. When Phillips became an NFL player in 1996, he was on probation for assaulting his ex-girlfriend.

During his NFL career, Phillips ran for 1,453 yards. Perhaps his most important role in the league was as a catalyst that led the St. Louis Rams to trade another running back, Jerome Bettis, to the Pittsburgh Steelers.

In addition to the Rams, Phillips played for the Miami Dolphins and San Francisco 49ers.

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Today in Movie Culture: Meryl Streep's Lifetime Channel Biopic, Disney's 'X-Men' and More

Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:

Wes Craven Tribute of the Day:

More videos in memory of Wes Craven are coming in, like this supercut of screams from the horror-meister’s movies from Screen Crush:

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Actress Parody of the Day:

Watch Christina Applegate portray Meryl Streep for a fake Lifetime Channel biopic from Funny or Die:

Fan Art of the Day:

Maybe one day if Disney and Marvel Studios ever get the rights to X-Men movies, they can do an animated feature and it will look like these Disney-inspired drawings by Randy Bishop (via Geek Tyrant):

Movie Takedown of the Day:

Speaking of Disney Animation, Honest Trailers roasts the short film Frozen Fever and boy does it burn:

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Video Essay of the Day:

The latest episode of Frame by Frame looks at two set pieces to show how the first two Terminator installments define action movies:

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Anniversary Movie Poster of the Day:

You can almost hear the painful screeching of nails on the chalkboard when you look at Scott Woolston’s new Jaws poster, which celebrates the film’s 40th anniversary (via Bloody Disgusting).

Vintage Film of the Day:

Edwin S. Porter parodied his own famous silent film, The Great Train Robbery, with The Little Train Robbery, which debuted 110 years ago today. Watch it in full below.

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Alternative Poster Art of the Day:

Big Eye Agency has created minimalist-design character posters for The Breakfast Club, including the one for Claire “The Princess” (Molly Ringwald) below. See the others at the Big Eye website (via Paste).

Star Wars of the Day:

Here’s a parody of the Batman: Arkham Origins commercial (see it here) with Darth Vader instead of the Dark Knight (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

Today is the 10th anniversary of the Venice Film Festival premiere of George Clooney‘s Best Picture-nominated Good Night, and Good Luck. Watch the original trailer for the film below.

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U.S. Stock Markets Tumble By Nearly 3 Percent As China Worries Renew

Both the Nasdaq and the Dow Jones index were hit by losses Tuesday, as concerns again rose about China’s economy. The Dow is now down nearly 10 percent in 2015, after falling 469 points Tuesday to close at 16,058.

Markets in Europe and Asia also suffered, after renewed worries about a slowdown in China, the world’s second-largest economy.

“The latest evidence is China’s purchasing manager’s index,” NPR’s John Ydstie reports, “which shows the country’s manufacturing sector contracting.”

John says, “Another jolt for the market was a comment from the head of the IMF that growth in Asia could slow even more. The irony is that while U.S. stocks are tanking, estimates of U.S. growth have been upgraded, U.S. auto sales are strong and consumer spending is rising.”

For U.S. stocks, today’s losses were spread around many sectors. Bloomberg News reports:

“Energy shares fell for the first time in five sessions as oil retreated after the commodity’s strongest three-day rally since 1990. Exxon Mobil Corp. and ConocoPhillips slumped more than 2.8 percent. Banks were among the hardest hit, with Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. losing at least 4.1 percent. Apple Inc. and Microsoft Corp. sank more than 3.9 percent to drag down technology shares. Copper producer Freeport-McMoRan Inc. dropped 8.2 percent.”

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Mob Museum Unveils FIFA Corruption Exhibit

The Mob Museum’s new exhibit highlights the “rampant corruption that plagues” the world soccer governing body, FIFA. It opened Tuesday. The Mob Museum hide caption

itoggle caption The Mob Museum

Take a trip to The Mob Museum in Las Vegas and you’ll find exhibits on gangsters, corruption, killers, crime bosses, drug traffickers — and, now, the international governing body of soccer.

Tuesday, the much maligned FIFA Congress finds itself alongside the likes of the Mafia and drug cartels, thanks to the opening of a new, temporary exhibit called “The ‘Beautiful Game’ Turns Ugly.”

“This is good, old-fashioned corruption,” the museum’s director of content, Geoff Schumacher, said of FIFA’s operations that resulted in the May indictment of 14 officials. “Organized crime has always thrived on corruption: bribes, kickbacks and influence that get you what you want.”

According to a press release about the exhibit, the aim is to provide “a breakdown of the kickbacks, secrecy and match-fixing” that led to the charges against the FIFA officials.

“While allegations of corruption have been made about FIFA for more than a decade, its activities were finally confirmed by U.S. FIFA representative Chuck Blazer in 2013. Blazer admitted to taking bribes to ensure South Africa would host the 2010 World Cup and agreed to wear a wire to record FIFA conversations. As a result of his cooperation, a May 2015 indictment by new U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch charged 14 top-ranking soccer officials and sports marketing executives with taking more than $150 million in bribes and kickbacks over 25 years.”

Schumacher told NPR that the museum, also called the National Museum of Organized Crime and Law Enforcement, began planning the exhibit following the May 27 announcement of the indictments.

“There was such big media coverage,” says Schumacher. “But it was also very quick to tie the FIFA scandal into organized crime, and we recognized that immediately as an opportunity for us.” Schumacher says the museum also considered the exhibit’s appeal for international visitors. “Soccer is growing as a sport in the United States but it is the thing in the rest of the world, so this FIFA scandal is always front page news.”

The exhibit, which comprises photographs, media clippings and cover stories, is the first in what the museum envisions as a series on contemporary organized crime.

“One of the things we are interested in doing is using it as an educational tool to talk about what organized crime looks like today versus 30, 50, 100 years ago,” Schumacher said. “It is a history museum. But in the old days when people wore fedoras and carried tommy guns, that’s not how it looks today.”

So what’s next in the series?

“We think the next exhibit will be on the El Chapo prison escape in Mexico,” Schumacher said.

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Pope Francis Announces Window To Forgive Women Who Had Abortions

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Pope Francis is giving all priests a window of discretion to forgive women who have had abortions. The window is during the upcoming holy year, which will begin in December.

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Today in Movie Culture: 'Superman Lives' Trailer, The Sound of 'A Nightmare on Elm Street' and More

Here are a bunch of little bites to satisfy your hunger for movie culture:

Filmmaker Tribute of the Day:

In honor of Wes Craven, who died over the weekend, supercut master Jacob T. Swinney showcased the sounds of A Nightmare on Elm Street:

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Alternate Dimension Movie of the Day:

Inspired by the recent documentary The Death of “Superman Lives”: What Happened?, here’s a fan-made trailer for what Superman Lives might have looked like had Tim Burton been able to actually make it, with Nicolas Cage, Sandra Bullock and Kevin Spacey (via Geek Tyrant):

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Movie Mashup of the Day:

Vulture has remade the Suicide Squad trailer by turning it into a mashup with The Dirty Dozen (via /Film):

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Movie Retelling of the Day:

Here’s how Ancient Egyptians enjoyed the Avengers movies. They even had some coming attractions at the top (via Design Taxi):

Movie Prequel of the Day:

The final Guardians of the Galaxy origin story for the new animated series is for Gamora, but it also stars Nebula and Korath:

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Vintage Image of the Day:

Grab a drink and toast Ingrid Bergman, whose 100th birthday was this past Saturday. Here she is having one with Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca:

Classic Cartoon of the Day:

Another title for the classic Walt Disney animated short Pluto’s Judgment Day could be “Pluto Goes to Hell.” But that might not be as family friendly. Not that it won’t already give kids nightmares. Watch the cartoon, which turns 80 years old today, in full:

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Filmmaker in Focus:

The latest video essay from Jorge Luengo showcases the close-ups of Alfred Hitchcock movies:

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Star Wars of the Day:

This video puts the original Star Wars trilogy side by side with the prequels to prove the Star Wars Ring Theory, which says that the two parts of the franchise mirror one another (via Cinematic Montage Creators):

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Classic Trailer of the Day:

This week marks the 10th anniversary of the Venice Film Festival premiere of the iconic cowboy love story Brokeback Mountain, starring Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal. Watch the original trailer below.

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Uber Faces $300,000 Fine, Court Case From Philadelphia Regulators

Despite being declared illegal in the city, Uber has been operating in Philadelphia for 10 months.

Despite being declared illegal in the city, Uber has been operating in Philadelphia for 10 months. NPR hide caption

itoggle caption NPR

The ride-hailing service Uber has served more than 1 million customers in Philadelphia, despite operating under disputed terms for nearly a year. Now the city’s regulators are taking the company to court.

Uber says it doesn’t plan to stop operating in the city where it first launched service last October.

Last November, Pennsylvania’s Public Utility Commission went against the preliminary recommendation of two judges to grant Uber a two-year license in the state. Philadelphia’s regulators didn’t agree with that — and they’ve imposed a $1,000-a-day fine on Uber for operating in the city.

From Philadelphia, Bobby Allyn of member station WHYY reports for our Newscast desk:

“Uber is legal everywhere in Pennsylvania but Philadelphia, where authorities are calling the app-based taxi enterprise an ‘illegal hack cab company.’

“Vince Fenerty, who heads the Philadelphia Parking Authority, says the city has impounded dozens of Uber vehicles in undercover stings.

” ‘The cars are not inspected; the drivers are not vetted,’ he says. ‘We don’t know who’s driving the cars; the criminal histories have not been checked by any regulatory agency.’

An Uber spokesman says city regulators are trying to ‘protect an entrenched taxi system that doesn’t want to compete with change.’

Uber says it plans to fight the $300,000 fine, which has accumulated since city officials have been trying to shut down the company for the past 10 months.”

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Some Veterans Affairs Reforms Undermine Medical Recruitment Efforts

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The Department of Veterans Affairs is suffering a shortfall of physicians, especially in mental health. A steady flow of scandals and attempts at strict reform by Congress may be hurting recruitment.

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

A 66-year-old Vietnam veteran drove to the parking lot of the VA Hospital in Bay Pines, Fla., last week and killed himself with a handgun. The very same day, the inspector general of the VA reported the department hasn’t done enough to recruit psychiatrists. And it’s not just mental health practitioners. The VA has a shortage of doctors and nurses across the board. NPR’s Quil Lawrence reports that some of the attempts to reform the department may be hurting recruitment.

QUIL LAWRENCE, BYLINE: VA Secretary Bob McDonald started visiting medical schools within days of taking the job last year. He’s reportedly given his cell number to med students and called them personally to pitch a job at the VA.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

BOB MCDONALD: As you know, we’re recruiting. I’ve been to over a dozen medical schools myself, recruiting mental health professionals and primary care physicians. There’s a shortage in the country, but we’re making great progress.

LAWRENCE: That was McDonald speaking this month at a special field hearing of the Senate Veterans Affairs Committee held in Gainesville, Ga.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

MCDONALD: I’ve got gaps I’m trying to fill. I’m hiring 1,100 new doctors. I’m hiring 4,000 new nurses.

LAWRENCE: Congress passed a VA reform bill last year with funding for about 10,000 new hires. But Congress has also been trying to make it easier to fire VA staff. Firing someone with a federal government job can take months. Even the VA employees at the center of recent scandals have usually been transferred or put on paid leave instead. But singling out the VA that way, McDonald says, is hurting his recruitment drive.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

MCDONALD: We can’t hire the people when members of Congress are going to somehow differentiate the VA versus other departments of government. That doesn’t cause people in government to want to work for the VA.

LAWRENCE: Georgia Republican Johnny Isakson was unconvinced.

JOHNNY ISAKSON: Not wanting to be treated differently is a good statement to make, and I understand that. I think it’s also critical to understand that we’ve had some unique problems within the VA that we need to find a way to deal with.

LAWRENCE: Isakson says the best way to get quality workers at VA is to fix what he called systemic failures at the department. Isakson supports a bill that would make it simple and quick to dismiss VA employees. That won’t make the VA attractive in a job market where hospitals are already competing for doctors and nurses, says Marilyn Park. She’s with the AFGE, a union that represents many VA employees.

MARILYN PARK: It’s scaring them off because if you’ve put all that time into training and you’re early on in your career, why would you go somewhere where you’re set up fail by Congress and the media looking for everything that’s a failure? I mean, I don’t know a health care system that hasn’t had problems, incidences that need to be reported and corrected.

LAWRENCE: The VA is pushing ahead with other ways to recruit, including partnerships with medical schools and a raise in the base pay for some doctors and dentists. So far, they’ve hired about 6,400 of the 10,000 positions Congress funded a year ago. Quil Lawrence, NPR News.

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Brady, Goodell Don't Reach Deal; Judge Will Rule On 'Deflategate'

Courtroom artist Jane Rosenberg presents a more pleasant sketch of New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brad. An earlier sketch of Brady by Rosenberg caused a sensation on Twitter and beyond.

Courtroom artist Jane Rosenberg presents a more pleasant sketch of New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brad. An earlier sketch of Brady by Rosenberg caused a sensation on Twitter and beyond. New York Daily News/NY Daily News via Getty Images hide caption

itoggle caption New York Daily News/NY Daily News via Getty Images

After a last-ditch effort to reach a settlement in the legal dispute over the NFL’s four-game suspension of quarterback Tom Brady, a federal judge says he’ll issue his ruling on Brady’s appeal on either Tuesday or Wednesday.

On Monday morning, Brady and NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell attended discussions about a possible settlement. But after it became clear that the two sides don’t intend to give ground, District Judge Richard Berman held a brief hearing to announce that he’ll rule on the case early this week.

In another development, Jane Rosenberg, the courtroom sketch artist whose vision of Brady at an earlier appearance in Manhattan Federal Court sparked a flood of interest and commentary, issued a new sketch of the quarterback Monday. The earlier sketched sparked a slew of memes on Twitter.

The Brady Bunch by @Jeffalfonso pic.twitter.com/WqjyGW8R8B

— Only In Boston (@OnlyInBOS) August 12, 2015

Both Brady and the New England Patriots have insisted that they didn’t tamper with the inflation levels of footballs used in the AFC title game. In May, the NFL suspended the quarterback and levied a $1 million fine on his team, which also lost several draft picks.

From Boston’s member station WBUR, criminal law professor Robert Blecker writes today about the Patriots’ “false appearance of guilt” in the case.

Like others, Blecker notes that Brady’s punishment was doled out after the NFL-sponsored Wells report found “it is more probable than not that Tom Brady was at least generally aware of the inappropriate activities.”

“No eyewitnesses, and no real proof,” writes Blecker, who also says he isn’t a Patriots fan. “No matter. The league would manufacture it, and suspend the quarterback for being ‘generally aware’ of something that most likely never happened.”

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