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The Common Cure For Heroin Addiction Is Also A Magnet For Police Harassment

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The first time the team from Manhattan North Narcotics rolled up on Betty, she was about 20 feet from her methadone clinic. The program is in Washington Heights, Betty's neighborhood, and she had just come from getting her daily dose upstairs. She crossed the street to watch her friend's car while he went in to take his medication; he was double-parked, and when you're a methadone patient the last thing you need is to give the police a pretext to question you.

Her friend and his wife came back downstairs, and the three of them talked for a minute when something caught Betty's eye. “There was this black dude who just kept patrolling up and down the block,” she recalls. “And I'm like, 'Something's not right.'” The guy was in plainclothes and he approached the group to ask what they were doing. Betty, who asked me only to use her first name for this story, asked her friend in Spanish if he knew the guy; he didn't. Then, she saw a white guy, also in plainclothes, approaching from the other end of the street. She told her friend to get in the car and leave, but before he could the two officers flashed their badges. The police, presumably, thought they had seen a drug deal go down. Or, perhaps, that's what they wanted to have seen. Either way, they used that pretext to pat her friend and his wife down, and found a bottle of pills Betty said he had a prescription for and were in his name.

As that pat-down was happening, the sergeant pulled Betty aside, across the street from the clinic. He frisked her too, and after pushing her on whether she knew anything about her friend's pills, he made her an offer: Become a criminal informant, or CI. She'd get $25 or so to set someone up. The area, according to Betty and others I interviewed, is crawling with informants.

Betty

David Bertozzi / BuzzFeed News

Betty said no thanks. Her friend got a ticket and said the cops walked off with $60 and a handful of pills. Betty walked away free, but it wouldn't be the last time that team found her in their sights. A few weeks later, the same team stopped her again — mere steps from her program. She didn't have any illegal drugs on her. “Same fucking white guy,” she says, referring to the officer. “He just wants me to work with him.” She was stopped a third time, just a few weeks after that, blocks from the program, and questioned by the same team. She was detained on the street corner for about an hour, in part because she had an extra “take-home” bottle with her since the clinic would be closed the following day, July 4. (The New York Police Department did not respond to repeated requests for comment for this story, nor did the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene.)

Though BuzzFeed News could not independently verify Betty's claims, numerous methadone patients in New York City tell stories of being harassed outside their program, stopped, questioned, frisked, and arguably entrapped into making drug sales they wouldn't have made otherwise — all because police were surveilling their clinic. A 2011 survey conducted by VOCAL-NY, an advocacy group that focuses on poor people and drug users, found that nearly 4 in 10 methadone patients in New York City have been stopped and frisked by police outside their clinic, while 7 in 10 had seen someone else get stopped and frisked.

There has never been a nationwide study into the police practice of surveilling methadone clinics looking for — and sometimes creating — illegal activity, so the scale of the issue remains unknown. In two dozen interviews, however, strong evidence emerges to suggest methadone patients all over the country face stigmatization and risk of profiling by law enforcement to varying degrees. These patients tend to be poor, and the clinics are often ghettoized to low-income neighborhoods. The result is that cops can lurk outside what are essentially specialized doctors’ offices and target people, like Betty, based on the medication they’re taking — to virtually no public outcry or oversight.

Now, as the United States faces epidemic levels of abuse of prescription drugs, and a skyrocketing heroin fatality rate, the use of methadone itself is also on the rise, meaning even more are vulnerable to this potentially deadly police harassment. And as misconceptions about methadone continue to run rampant throughout the criminal justice system, addicts trying to kick their habit can find themselves walking around with a target on their back.

A client drinks his dosage of methadone at the Vincent Dole methadone clinic in Brooklyn, New York.

Bebeto Matthews / AP Photo

If heroin is the most stigmatized illegal drug, methadone is the most stigmatized drug treatment. Bob Newman knows this well. Newman is considered a methadone guru because of the role he played in establishing treatment programs in the early 1970s. He says police harassment of this nature is nothing new. “We used to be plagued by this in the early to mid-'70s,” he says. “For over 40 years that has been a problem facing methadone programs and methadone patients.” Though Newman acknowledges the problem has actually improved over time, he still says police harassment is “very, very frequent.”

The problem, he and others contend, remains ignorance on the part of police — and society at large. “In general there is a very strong antipathy toward methadone patients, toward methadone treatment, toward methadone providers, based on the totally incorrect assumption that methadone maintenance, for addiction, is given and used in order to get high,” says Newman. Myths about methadone are rampant even in drug-using communities: It makes your teeth fall out, weakens your bones, gives you a hunchback. Some people think methadone is a conspiracy to keep former users under government control.

The truth about methadone is far duller. When administered in the correct way, it — along with buprenorphine — is the most effective known treatment for opiate addiction, including addiction to heroin and prescription pain pills. Though some studies show that buprenorphine, which is combined with naloxone to make the drug called Suboxone, may one day eclipse methadone as the preferred medicine, methadone remains “the gold standard,” says Bill Piper, the director of national affairs at Drug Policy Alliance. It is one of the most clinically studied drugs in the world, yet remains one of the most misunderstood.

It makes some sense that misinformation reigns; to need methadone isn't something people are necessarily proud of. As Dan Bigg, director and co-founder of the Chicago Recovery Alliance, puts it, "Even people who work in methadone treatment are in a sense ashamed that people take methadone. They're desperately hoping they can get people off methadone. That's their goal."

BuzzFeed News

Methadone, when it is prescribed to heroin users, is one of the most tightly regulated legal drugs in the United States. It can only be dispensed from specially certified treatment centers, often only in daily doses for the first three months of treatment. Many advocates feel the tight regulatory regime places undue burdens on people who want to kick heroin. Bigg says such restrictions are “more burdensome than any other treatment in medicine." As he sees it, "They're worried about having the tightest control possible on this medicine.”

Police surveillance outside methadone clinics isn't the only way in which authorities can prevent or deter addicts from obtaining this potentially life-saving medicine. Patients are overwhelmingly denied methadone treatment while incarcerated, a practice some courts have found constitutes cruel and unusual punishment, according to a report from the Legal Action Center. The same report found that drug courts in the U.S. regularly mandate that patients begin detoxing from methadone, sometimes due to “a lack of understanding of the nature of addiction and MAT (medication-assisted treatment), including the belief that MAT is ‘substituting one addiction for another.’” A separate study focusing specifically on New York state drug courts found judges and other court officials “often don’t know enough about addiction treatment to escape the same prejudices that affect other people, and they demand abstinence-only approaches even when better alternatives exist.”

Orlando Chavez, a former methadone patient and activist in Oakland, echoes a complaint heard over and over again from proponents of methadone therapy: Cops don't have enough education about the drug to properly understand how it works. “They can't really tell the difference between someone that's taken their dose and legally medicated, and someone who's not,” says Chavez. “So, from their perspective, everybody is under the influence. They don't really grasp the concept of methadone maintenance very well.”

“The police do tend to accost people when they're leaving the clinic,” he tells me. “Run warrant checks on them, search them. I've seen years of it.” He also says that he's personally aware of several people who have been ensnared by undercovers or informants into selling their take-home bottle, and guesses that there are many, many more instances he isn't aware of. Like the other patients I spoke with, he suspects some of the harassment is due to cops feeling pressure to make quotas. “We're easy targets,” he says.

Neill Franklin, a retired former undercover narcotics cop and executive director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP), says if this is happening, it makes sense to him: “When we go to a place where we think the hunting is going to be good, we refer to it as a duck pond,” he says. “We know that some [methadone patients] do sell and engage in other drug activity. You stop enough people … and you know what, you're going to be able to make some arrests. It's just that simple.”

Methadone 10 mg

Joe Amon / The Denver Post / Getty Images

Randy Kovach, 31, who goes to a methadone clinic in Pittsburgh, says that Port Authority police there harass patients all the time. Like Betty, Kovach has observed Port Authority cops camped out down the street from the clinic he goes to, watching patients enter and exit. “What do you do, call the cops?” says Kovach. “He is the cops.”

Kovach was arrested in 2013 by Pittsburgh Port Authority police and charged with possession of a controlled substance and intent to deliver. He says he was waiting for a bus outside his program, and the arresting officer, William Luffey, pulled him out of the powered wheelchair he regularly uses. “I was new to the whole methadone thing,” Kovach tells me over the phone, so when Luffey asked Kovach if he could search him, Kovach said it was fine. “They found my medication, Xanax, and arrested me. They said because I was on methadone I must've been selling my Xanax.” Kovach, who has prior convictions, later took a plea and got 18 months probation.

His ex-boyfriend, William Ura, says the officer who arrested Kovach has a history of targeting methadone patients. “He goes pretty much after anyone he knows is either in the methadone clinic or that is on any kind of prescription drugs,” Ura tells me. He says Luffey continued to stop Kovach repeatedly over the course of a month following the arrest. “But it was like every time he saw him he was constantly harassing him, stopping him, searching him,” says Ura. “He'd even search me also because I was with him.”

Kovach says the Port Authority police in Pittsburgh offered him a deal if he'd work with them but Kovach turned them down. Ura says that kind of thing happens a lot, and the targets are often the drug users deepest in the hole of addiction. “I know this one kid I used to be friends with that's actually a CI for Port Authority,” says Ura. “And they picked him to work for them because they know that everybody knows that he buys pills off of everybody.”

Both Kovach and Ura also say that Pittsburgh Port Authority police keep books full of photographs of patients who attend clinics, a charge the Port Authority denies. The two of them say they saw the book for one of the clinics after responding to a bulletin Port Authority released following an assault on a bus driver. They recognized the suspect from their methadone program, and went to the Port Authority police station to make a statement.

“We knew what clinic [the suspect] went to, so they gave us the book for that clinic and had us look through the book and point the guy out to them,” Ura tells me. Both Ura and Kovach independently described the book they were shown as not only containing mugshots from arrests, but also photographs of patients simply walking around town. “They know what clinic they go to and the whole nine yards,” says Ura. “It encourages the officers to harass anybody that's on methadone, because they think we're doing stuff we shouldn't be doing and not trying to get our life together and not trying to better ourselves.”

In a letter denying an open records request filed by BuzzFeed News, a Port Authority official offered a different explanation. Bryan Campbell, assistant general counsel at the Port Authority of Allegheny County, wrote, “The book of photographs referenced in your request is actually an array of arrest photographs of several individuals that was utilized in the past for investigative and identification purposes.” Campbell later clarified that by “arrest photographs,” he meant only mugshots, contrary to Ura and Kovach's allegations.

“Port Authority police do not maintain the type of photo book that you’ve described,” says Jim Richie, a Port Authority spokesperson. “With regard to your question about where Port Authority police conduct surveillance or patrol, the Authority would not disclose that type of specific information as it potentially could jeopardize the safety of our officers and/or the outcome of potential investigations.” (The head of security for the clinic Kovach and Ura attend, who is a former Pittsburgh police officer, was denied permission by clinic management to discuss the allegations.)

Randy Kovach in his home.

Michael Henninger for BuzzFeed News

Authorities aren’t wrong to be worried about methadone ending up in the illegal market. In addition to its use as a treatment for narcotic addiction, it can also be used as a pain medication. Paradoxically, when prescribed for pain, methadone is subject to significantly fewer restrictions than when it’s used as a treatment for narcotic addiction. Any physician can apply for a schedule II license from the DEA to prescribe methadone for pain, and since it is a generic, and therefore cheap, option, many insurance plans list it as a preferred medication. Over the last decade, prescriptions for methadone for pain skyrocketed — and with them, so did overdoses. One reason for that is methadone's unique chemical makeup, and the fact that it can build up in a person's body over time. As a result, a person can overdose on a consistently taken amount of medicine if the initial dosage is too high.

The abuse of methadone prescribed as a pain medication is increasing at an alarming pace. A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study from 2012 found that “six times as many people died of methadone overdoses in 2009 than a decade before.” The same study found that about 5,000 people a year die of “overdoses related to methadone,” and that “methadone contributed to nearly 1 in 3 prescription painkiller deaths in 2009.” This is due in part to methadone bought and sold illegally.

Crucially, evidence suggests that illegal methadone isn't coming from maintenance clinics. Bradford Stone, a spokesperson for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, says diversion of methadone is a serious public health concern. “SAMHSA has conducted three national assessments of methadone-related mortality and in each case concluded that federally certified opioid addiction treatment programs is not a major source of diverted methadone,” says Stone.

And yet the rise in pain-prescribed methadone overdoses has almost certainly negatively impacted methadone patients looking to stay off heroin, creating a need for stricter policies. “I believe, firmly, that the prescribing of methadone in such a wide quantity for such a long period, over a decade, for pain management, has done great damage to the perception and integrity of how methadone is used in treating opiate addiction,” says Mark Parrino, the president of the American Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence. “And no one wants to take responsibility for that.”

Kovach outside Tadisco Inc., a methadone clinic on Pittsburgh's North Side.

Photograph by Michael Henninger for BuzzFeed News


"Birdman" Director Alejandro González Iñárritu Called For Respect For Immigrants During The Oscars

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While accepting the Academy Award for Best Film, the director dedicated the Oscar to people in Mexico and those who immigrated to the United States.

Birdman director Alejandro González Iñárritu accepts the award for Best Picture

John Shearer / AP

Birdman won Best Original Screenplay, Best Cinematography, and Best Director, at the 2015 Oscars, but while accepting the biggest award of the night, Best Picture, the film's Mexican director Alejandro González Iñárritu called for a better Mexico and for better treatment of immigrants in the United States.

"The ones who live in Mexico, I pray that we can find and build the government that we deserve," Iñárritu said. "The ones that live in this country, who are just part of the latest generation of immigrants in this county, I just pray they can be treated with the same dignity and respect as the ones who came before and built this incredible immigrant nation."

View Video ›

buzzfeed-video1.s3.amazonaws.com

But the subject of immigration came up before Iñárritu even took the stage. Just before presenter Sean Penn, who starred in the director's movie 21 Grams, read his name, he said, "Who gave this son of a bitch his green card?"

When Iñárritu was in the press room following his win, he said he found Penn's joke "hilarious." "Sean and I have that kind of brutal [relationship]," he said. "When I was directing him in 21 Grams, he was always making jokes like that. … I thought it was very funny."

Still, Penn's comment ignited some major backlash on Twitter.


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Australia Only Had One Beach In The World's Top Ten And Here's Why

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The beaches are disgusting down under.

Travel website Trip Advisor released its choices for the world's top ten beaches at it's 2015 Travellers’ Choice Awards.

Travel website Trip Advisor released its choices for the world's top ten beaches at it's 2015 Travellers’ Choice Awards.

Anna Mendoza / Via tripadvisor.com.au

Look closely... Australia only has ONE beach in the top ten. ONE!

Look closely... Australia only has ONE beach in the top ten. ONE!

Anna Mendoza / Via tripadvisor.com.au

Australia is surrounded by over 10,000 beaches, so shouldn't we smash this list?

Australia is surrounded by over 10,000 beaches, so shouldn't we smash this list?

Anna Mendoza + Tanya Puntti / Via Getty Images

Apparently not. Maybe the reason is because our beaches really do suck! For example, look at how disgusting Wineglass Bay in Tasmania is.

Apparently not. Maybe the reason is because our beaches really do suck! For example, look at how disgusting Wineglass Bay in Tasmania is.

Tonyfeder / Via Getty Images


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The 27 Most Important Moments From The Oscars

Jon Stewart Has Found Himself In A War Of Words With A WWE Wrestler And It's Epic

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Two worlds collide in a historic battle for the ages.

Last week on WWE Raw, WWE Superstar Seth Rollins took a jab at The Daily Show and its host Jon Stewart.

Last week on WWE Raw, WWE Superstar Seth Rollins took a jab at The Daily Show and its host Jon Stewart.

Watch the full video here.

WWE

Jon Stewart replied with a video saying Rollins has made the biggest mistake of his life by coming after him.

Jon Stewart replied with a video saying Rollins has made the biggest mistake of his life by coming after him.

Watch the full video here.

TMZ

Speaking to TMZ, Rollins hit back at Stewart inviting him to WWE's Fastlane this Sunday.

Speaking to TMZ, Rollins hit back at Stewart inviting him to WWE's Fastlane this Sunday.

Watch the full video here.

TMZ

FYI for non-wrestling fans, Seth Rollins can do things like this.

FYI for non-wrestling fans, Seth Rollins can do things like this.

WWE


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Sydney Siege Report Proves Domestic Violence Is Real Emergency

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Report exposes horrific crimes against women committed by gunman Man Monis.

The joint government report into the Sydney Siege found gunman Man Monis was not deemed to be a terror threat by authorities, despite his long history of violent crimes against the women around him.

The joint government report into the Sydney Siege found gunman Man Monis was not deemed to be a terror threat by authorities, despite his long history of violent crimes against the women around him.

Dean Lewins / AAP

The "Martin Place Siege Joint Commonwealth - New South Wales review" is being used by Prime Minister Tony Abbott to push for a total overhaul of counter-terrorism procedures to keep Australia safe from extremism.

But the report also included a detailed timeline of the vicious crimes Monis committed against women over the course of 13 years.

Monis allegedly committed sexual assault in 2002.

Monis allegedly committed sexual assault in 2002.

dpmc.gov.au

And it was not until 2014 that the full extent of these assault charges were known.

And it was not until 2014 that the full extent of these assault charges were known.


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Crowdfunding Success For Indigenous LGBT Mental Health Org

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Black Rainbow found their pot of gold.

"For Aboriginal lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex [LGBTI] people, one of the biggest problems is that there is nothing reflected in the world around them nothing that says, 'It's OK to be you', " Bonson told The Guardian Australia.

On the fundraising page, Black Rainbow draw attention to the high suicide rates of LGBTI people and of Indigenous Australians, highlighting a need for more information catering to people who are part of both groups.

With only three days and about $14,000 to go, things were looking tight for Black Rainbow.

With only three days and about $14,000 to go, things were looking tight for Black Rainbow.

Black Rainbow / Via Facebook.com


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Why Is John Travolta Kissing Scarlett Johansson On The Cheek?

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Help us caption this WTF red carpet moment.

A weird thing happened on the Oscars red carpet tonight.

A weird thing happened on the Oscars red carpet tonight.

Kevin Mazur / WireImage

John Travolta leaned in and gave Scarlett Johansson a kiss.

John Travolta leaned in and gave Scarlett Johansson a kiss.

Kevin Mazur / WireImage

"BUT WHY?" you're probably thinking.

"BUT WHY?" you're probably thinking.

Kevin Mazur / WireImage


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Jimmy Barnes Speaks Out For Marriage Equality

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Cheap wine and a three-day… wedding?

Samesame.com.au reported that Barnes described marriage equality as "a basic human rights issue" and "something that should be a reality".

He also gave the 'Equality Calling' campaign a ringing endorsement, encouraging people to leave messages for their local MPs and Senators, urging them to support marriage equality.


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23 Pictures That Show The Devastation Of This Winter On The West Coast

The Director Of “Birdman" Came Up With A Really Weird Condom Analogy At The Oscars

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“Fear is the condom of life.”

At the 87th Academy Awards, Birdman won four Oscars, including Best Picture.

At the 87th Academy Awards, Birdman won four Oscars, including Best Picture.

Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

"You know, actually, I think... It's a good question, because I haven't figured out why I did what I did in this film, why I took those chances. I think it's when you lose fear.

"I think fear is an incredible... Fear is the condom of life, you know. It doesn't allow you to enjoy things, so certainly when you fucking get the condom out, then you say, 'OK, probably get it or not, but at least that's what it's...'

"So I did it without and this is the result. It was real. It was making love for sure."

Via oscars.org

Errrrrrrmmmmmmmmmmm whattttttttttttt??????

Errrrrrrmmmmmmmmmmm whattttttttttttt??????

ABC / Via buzzfeed.com

LINK: “Birdman” Director Alejandro González Iñárritu Called For Respect For Immigrants During The Oscars


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The Men Of The 87th Academy Awards Ranked From Fizzle To Sizzle

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From just meh to totally drop dead amazing.

Will Varner / BuzzFeed

Eddie Redmayne's Acceptance Speech Was One Of The Sweetest Moments Of The Oscars

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“We have a new fella coming to share our apartment.”

Eddie Redmayne's reaction to winning Best Actor for his performance as Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything at the 2015 Oscars was perfect.

Eddie Redmayne's reaction to winning Best Actor for his performance as Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything at the 2015 Oscars was perfect.

He rolled to the side so much during the envelope opening, it looked as if the other nominees had noticed and were congratulating him on it.

ABC

He then kissed his wife, Hannah Bagshawe, like this.

He then kissed his wife, Hannah Bagshawe, like this.

ABC

Opened his mouth like this.

Opened his mouth like this.

And then dived in for a hug with presenter Cate Blanchett.

ABC

He then reacted like this when he said "Oscar".

"WWWOOOOOOWWWWWWWW."

vine.co


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Why I'm Moving Back To South Africa

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Award-winning journalist Jonny Steinberg on the man who inspired him to write his new book, A Man of Good Hope, as well as return to his home country.

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed

I am not a person prone to smugness. When I say that my life is the sanest and gentlest a person in our times can hope to live, it is with gratitude, not self-satisfaction. My house is near the center of Oxford, a famously old and beautiful city, and I commute to work each morning on a bicycle alongside a quiet canal. The journey takes no more than seven minutes — eight or nine if I stop to admire the swans; I hardly remember what it is like to sit in traffic or to grind against a stranger on public transport.

I teach at Oxford University where I have a tenured job — a rare privilege in this day and age. The students are clever and hardworking, my colleagues considerate and sane, my days never less than interesting.

Work seldom ends after 7 p.m. On summer evenings, my partner and I often stroll along the Thames into Port Meadow, cross its 300 acres of ancient pasture, and eat in the village on the other side. The light in the meadow is gorgeous from May through September, turning the grass a luminous green I last saw in childhood dreams.

I have just resigned from this job and am giving up this life. In a couple of months, my partner and I will be moving to Johannesburg, South Africa, where I was born. It is a city that heaves with umbrage. "There is a daily, low-grade civil war at every stop street," the artist, William Kentridge, recently remarked. Sometimes, the war moves up a grade; many friends and family members have stared down a gun barrel over the years, and each act of violence is relived in conversation a hundred times over. It is a city where being white or well-heeled attracts some to beg from you and others to insult you, where life is so palpably unfair that the rich live in a state of astonishing denial while among the poor antipathy runs so deep that if you listen you can hear it hum.

Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed

Make no mistake: I am not going to a life of hardship. I will have another tenured job at an institute staffed by some of the smartest people I know; the work is bound to be fulfilling. Labour in South Africa being cheap, we will employ somebody to dust our furniture and polish our floors. And, yet, what we are doing goes against the grain. Between my siblings and my first cousins, there are 11 of us in my generation and nine live abroad, all in rock-solid places like Canada and Australia. I am a Jew. My kind tends to sniff out trouble generations in advance. We like the foundations beneath our feet to run deep. While my move is by no means crazy, I am swimming in the opposite direction.

None of us understands ourselves especially well. We are dark inside and were we to light the whole place up we would go mad. My reflections on my move are no doubt riddled with self-justifications of which I'm barely aware.

There is nonetheless something for which I know I ache, and it is only to be found in my native land. When I lock eyes with a stranger on Johannesburg's streets, there is a flicker, a flash communication, so fast it is invisible, yet so laden that no words might describe it. This stranger may be a man in a coat and tie, or a woman who wears the cotton uniform of a maid, or a construction worker stripped to the waist. Whoever he is, he clocks me as I pass, and reads me and my parents and my grandparents; and I, too, conjure, in an instant, the past from which he came. As we brush shoulders the world we share rumbles around us, its echoes resounding through generations. He may look at me with resentment, or longing, or with the twistedness that comes with hating; he may catch me smiling to myself and grin. I am left with a feeling, both sweet and sore, that I am not in control of who I am. I am defined by the eyes that see me on the street. I cannot escape them. I cannot change what they see. We may one day fight one another or even kill one another, yet our souls are entwined because we have made another.


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Leader Of German Anti-Muslim Group Reinstated After Hitler Photo Controversy

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Lutz Bachmann had resigned from Pegida in January after a photo of him styled as Hitler was published.

Bachmann had also taken heat for disparaging statements he reportedly made about immigrants and asylum-seekers.

When the photo was published in the Dresden Morgenpost, Bachmann said it was taken at a hairdresser's and was intended as a joke.

"You need to be able to joke about yourself now and then," Bachmann told the German tabloid Bild.

But last week, the Sächsische Zeitung reported that the mustache was added after the photo was taken. In an interview with The Guardian on Monday, Bachmann said he didn't raise the fact at the time because "no one would have believed me at that moment."

"On the original photo, I did not have a moustache," he said. "Since then, it has been revealed as a forgery, but in that moment, it simply wasn't possible to refute it, and in order to avoid damage I stepped down – but only as chairman. I never left the organization."

Organizer Lutz Bachmann, left, at a news conference of the group "Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West" in Dresden, Germany.

Jens Meyer / AP

Pegida — short for "Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West'' — burst onto the scene in Germany last year with weekly rallies that at one point attracted tens of thousands who carried signs bearing slogans against immigrants and multiculturalism, such as "Islam doesn't belong in Germany."

Those rallies, though, have since waned in size and local media have reported that the movement appears to be losing steam.

While Bachmann is widely seen to be the face of Pegida, in his interview with The Guardian, he stressed that he should not be considered a leader of the group.

"There is a club, there are seven members, and each person has the same power," he said. "The board chairman post is just because German law requires a board chairman on paper for any club. There is no leader."


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20 Times Australia Proved It Has The Most Beautiful Skies On Earth

Which Lady Gaga Era Are You?

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You were born this way.

Interscope Records/ Christian Zamora / BuzzFeed

26 Julianne Moore Reaction GIFs For Every Award-Winning Occasion

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Bow Down, Bitches. Julianne Moore will rule us all.

When you're getting ready for what could potentially be the biggest night of your life.

When you're getting ready for what could potentially be the biggest night of your life.

I woke up like this, #flawless

Artina Films / Depth of Field / Via media.giphy.com

BOOM — you're sexy and you know it. Red carpet slay.

BOOM — you're sexy and you know it. Red carpet slay.

Ghoulardi Film Company / Lawrence Gordon Productions / Via tumblr.com

You're up for an award and you know you're gonna get it.

You're up for an award and you know you're gonna get it.

*queue sexy hair and lip lick...

Carousel Productions / Via media.giphy.com

Wait, you are going to win, right? Is the lip lick sexy?

Wait, you are going to win, right? Is the lip lick sexy?

#StillFlawless

Via cdn2.crushable.com


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ISIS Trolls The U.S. By Showing Off Alleged Vaccination Campaign

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In between beheading people and setting others on fire, ISIS appears to have found the time to administer vaccinations.

Instead of images of dead bodies, in what appears to be its latest news release, ISIS's media team has posted images of children receiving vaccines.

Instead of images of dead bodies, in what appears to be its latest news release, ISIS's media team has posted images of children receiving vaccines.

ISIS Media / Via nasher.me

The pictures — which were posted onto nasher.me, an easy upload website that has posted many images appearing to have been taken inside ISIS-controlled areas — claim to show children being vaccinated in the Damascus suburb Al-Hajar al-Aswad.

The pictures — which were posted onto nasher.me, an easy upload website that has posted many images appearing to have been taken inside ISIS-controlled areas — claim to show children being vaccinated in the Damascus suburb Al-Hajar al-Aswad.

ISIS Media / Via nasher.me

Although Damascus isn't under total ISIS control, experts from the Brookings Institute and the Institute for the Study of War say the group has maintained strongholds in the city's southern suburbs, including where these photos were allegedly taken.

Although Damascus isn't under total ISIS control, experts from the Brookings Institute and the Institute for the Study of War say the group has maintained strongholds in the city's southern suburbs, including where these photos were allegedly taken.

Institute for the Study of War / Via iswsyria.blogspot.com

In the images, a group of girls and boys appear to be receiving an oral vaccine. The liquid in the syringe is pink in color, which, according to the World Health Organization, is the color of the oral polio vaccine.

In the images, a group of girls and boys appear to be receiving an oral vaccine. The liquid in the syringe is pink in color, which, according to the World Health Organization, is the color of the oral polio vaccine.

ISIS Media / Via nasher.me


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