Boston, MA
Walters: Cancel culture mustn’t diminish Boston’s rich history
Having satisfaction in a single’s nation and its historical past is key to patriotism, but that is exactly what cancel tradition is attempting to destroy. A number of hundred protesters, together with New Democracy Coalition founder Rev. Kevin Peterson, gathered outdoors Boston Metropolis Corridor on Aug.10. Their objective is to rename Faneuil Corridor, Boston’s unique assembly place, because of Colonial service provider Peter Faneuil’s position within the slave commerce. They wore T-shirts with the slogan “Change the Identify.” It’s one other skirmish within the tradition struggle that’s raging in america. Boston is rapidly turning into a hotspot on this battle, with the renaming of Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples Day and the potential revision of the 122-year-old Massachusetts state seal.
All through historical past, no different nation has come near matching America’s stage of greatness. We in Boston have explicit satisfaction of place with the nation’s cradle of liberty proper in our yard. 5 gallant males laid down their lives in Boston on March 5, 1770, 252 years in the past — the primary martyrs within the struggle for American independence. One in every of them was Crispus Attucks, a Black man who was the primary particular person to be killed within the struggle for American independence. The Boston Tea Occasion, which befell on Dec. 16, 1773, was the primary public act of resistance in opposition to the oppressive guidelines of the British Empire. Though the primary pictures of the American Revolution had been fired in Lexington and Harmony, Boston received into the sport on June 17, 1775, with the Battle of Bunker Hill. It resulted in vital casualties for the British forces, and marked the start of the British military’s expulsion from Boston. Black and white males each fought in and died in these struggles for independence. Inspiring and energizing the remainder of the colonies to hitch the struggle. Boston set the stage for victory, and we reap this nice bequest.
Our nation’s founders, particularly the Colonial heroes of Boston, had been distinctive males who gave their all for a rustic whose full potential they by no means lived to see. We’ll at all times be grateful to them. The engagement in slavery, both as an proprietor or a dealer, was, nonetheless, one of many worst flaws amongst these in any other case nice males. Sadly, that observe was frequent in that period, leaving the individuals with a stain on their legacy. As historians, we’re conscious of those info however place extra emphasis on the contributions made by these essential figures to historical past and the event of our nation.
Though Boston has a wealth of historical past, it’s sadly no stranger to the waves of prejudice which have swept the nation. Within the early twentieth century, Italians in Boston had been subjected to excessive xenophobia and discrimination. Italian immigrants Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti had been each wrongfully tried, convicted and executed in 1927. Boston’s “No Irish Want Apply” signal was the welcome mat that greeted Irish immigrants within the 1840s and ’50s. In the course of the Seventies and Eighties, the Boston busing disaster made the town’s remedy of African People look worse than the Jim Crow South.
Regardless that these horrific occasions occurred, we mustn’t allow them to diminish our historic metropolis. Cancel tradition won’t ever repair the errors of the previous. Solely studying from our errors will try this.
Rasheed Walters is an entrepreneur, political commentator and historian. He’s a member of Challenge 21, and resides in Boston. Observe him on Twitter @rasheednwalters.
Boston, MA
Red Sox Icon David Ortiz Urges Boston To ‘Make It Rain’ For Free-Agent Slugger
The Boston Red Sox hive mind doesn’t always come to a perfect agreement on what they want the team to do. That is, of course, unless David Ortiz is asking for it.
A three-time World Series champion, Hall of Famer, and one of the most clutch players of all time, Ortiz is unquestionably on the Red Sox’s all-time Mount Rushmore. Even though he retired in 2016, he’s still closely woven into the fabric of the organization.
Ortiz sees what we all do: this Red Sox team is close to being ready to contend for the playoffs, but there’s one key ingredient missing. He made his feelings known about what he hopes the front office does between now and Opening Day to address that issue.
On Saturday, Ortiz relayed a simple message to the Red Sox: spend whatever it takes to get one more big bat.
“There’s still some guys out there that we can still go for, and I think we have a really good front office,” Ortiz said in an appearance on NESN. “To put a good lineup together nowadays is not that difficult. What you got to do is just make it rain, and you can go pick a few guys. Now pitching, on the other hand, is the toughest thing to put together.
“We got pitching. Pitching can always stop good offenses. The playoff is a playoff pitching (staff) we got right now. We line up a couple of thunders in the lineup to help (Rafael Devers) and the rest of them boys — one good bat would do.”
Ortiz and NESN host Tom Caron both strongly hinted at the end of the interview who that big bat could be: former Houston Astros All-Star Alex Bregman. Manager Alex Cora also signaled earlier in the day that Bregman would be a great fit in Boston.
Bregman isn’t quite Ortiz, but he does have one thing on him: the career record for OPS at Fenway Park. He has a wild 1.245 mark in 98 plate appearances in Boston throughout his career.
When David Ortiz asks for something, the Red Sox would usually be wise to follow through. And it seems he wants Bregman. Will that move the needle in the suites at Fenway?
More MLB: Red Sox Predicted To Land Ex-Padres $28 Million Gold Glover In Free Agency Surprise
Boston, MA
Greater Boston enjoys a light snow, travel not significantly impacted – The Boston Globe
The snow showers come from a weakening system approaching from the Great Lakes that tapped into some of the moisture from a strong storm passing south of New England.
The region was spared the worst precipitation of the storm thanks to persistent sub-freezing temperatures earlier this week, which pushed it south toward its current location off the coast of North Carolina, Nocera said. New England’s light snowfall is on the northern fringes of the storm.
Nocera added that this weekend’s “decorative snow” will not significantly impact ground travel.
The Massachusetts Port Authority issued a travel advisory for flight delays at Boston Logan International Airport. According to the flight tracking website Flight Aware, as of around 1:00 p.m. 212 flights were delayed at Boston Logan and another 15 were cancelled.
Margo Griffin, a teaching associate at the University of Cambridge in England, was initially worried about driving through the snow on her way to get coffee in Cambridge, but said the view from the Charles River was worth the trek.
“I thought it might be a problem, but I just decided to go ahead with the plan, and I’m enjoying walking through the snow,” Griffin said.
Other Boston-area residents who spoke to the Globe Saturday morning were happy to wake up to the winter scene on Saturday.
“I am feeling wonderful about the snow. I haven’t seen it in a long time,” said Barbara Delollis, a communications lead at Harvard Business School.
Delollis already made snow day plans.
“We want to go out and have some fun in the snow, and take a lot of pictures and just remember this moment, because we don’t know how much more snowfall we’re going to see in the Boston area anymore with climate change,” Delollis said.
Talia, a Cambridge resident, said that the snow had no effect on her plans to attend synagogue with her two-year-old son Saturday morning.
“It feels nice and seasonal, which is cool because climate change is terrifying,” she said.
Snowstorms can still occur, despite warming temperatures from climate change, Nocera said. Although Saturday’s snowfall cannot guarantee heavy snow this winter, there is a slightly higher chance of snow towards the end of the month as cold temperatures ease.
Materials from previous Globe stories were used in this report.
Boston, MA
Boston College drops Hockey East contest to Merrimack
The second-ranked Boston College men’s hockey team suffered its first home loss of the season, falling to Merrimack by a score of 5-2 in Hockey East action on Friday night at Kelley Rink. The Eagles jumped out to a 2-0 lead early in the second, but the Warriors scored the next five. BC falls to 12-4-1 overall and 6-3-1 in Hockey East, while Merrimack improves to 8-10-1 overall and 4-5-1 in league play. The Eagles opened the scoring midway through the first period when Oskar Jellvik one-timed the rebound off an Aram Minnetian shot that was saved by the Merrimack goaltender. Minnetian’s shot fell right into the path of Jellvik for the quick shot into the open net to put the Eagles in front. BC added to its lead shortly into the second period when Brady Berard scored a short-handed goal. Merrimack responded 32 seconds later with a power-play goal to get on the board, before scoring the game-tying goal less than one minute after that. The Warriors took the lead nearly three minutes later when Merrimack scored its third goal of the period. The Warriors scored twice in the third period to push their lead to three. Jacob Fowler made 23 saves while Nils Wallstrom had 27 stops for Merrimack.
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