What’s New

Jose Abreu moves into third on White Sox’ career home-run listJared Wyllyson August 15, 2021 at 11:40 pm

With his ninth-inning home run Saturday, Jose Abreu moved ahead of Harold Baines to third on the franchise list for career home runs, with 222.

“I am happy for this new mark I just reached.” Abreu said. “It wasn’t something I ever imagined, but my hard work and my family support as well as the help of my teammates and the White Sox made this possible.”

Abreu is behind only Frank Thomas (438) and Paul Konerko (432) on the Sox’ all-time list.

“It is very well earned and speaks to his impact on this organization,” Baines said. “All of us know, Jose is a great person and a great baseball player. The respect is truly mutual.”

Manager Tony La Russa said that Abreu deserves consideration as not only one of the best players in Sox history, but one of the best in baseball history.

“I think he’s on that list with the best run producers, home run/RBI guys in the game’s history and he’s still got a lot left,” La Russa said.

Abreu’s 86 RBI are tied with the Angels’ Shohei Ohtani for the third-highest in baseball this season, and his 757 career runs batted in are 23rd among active players. Abreu also ranks 23rd among active home run leaders.

Abreu is the only player on the active list of the top 50 RBI leaders and the top 25 home run hitters with less than nine years in the majors. He also stretched his current hitting streak to 12 games with a first inning single on Sunday.

No concern for Liam

Liam Hendriks has given up three home runs in his last two outings, costing the Sox in the late innings on both Thursday and Saturday. But La Russa is not concerned about his closer.

Some of Hendriks’ troubles might be because he has pitched in non-save situations, like Saturday, when Hendriks took the mound in the tenth inning with the game tied 4-4.

“It’s just a different mentality,” La Russa said.

Hendriks was not available for comment Saturday or before Sunday’s game, but La Russa said he had spoken with him, and Hendriks is still confident and eager to get back on the mound with a lead to protect.

“He’s just drooling and salivating and hoping to get another chance today,” La Russa said. “Smoke coming out of his ears and nose. He’s a very tough guy. He’s proven it and he’ll be ready.”

Rodon recovering quickly

Carlos Rodon was placed on the 10-day I.L. Wednesday with shoulder fatigue, but early reports are that he should be back on the mound quickly.

“The exam was encouraging. No damage, just tired,” La Russa said. “The soreness was there but it wasn’t anything that wouldn’t make us optimistic that at the end of 10 days he’ll be ready to pitch.”

Rodon has thrown 109 2/3 innings this season, the most for him since 2018. He pitched just 7 2/3 innings in 2020 because of shoulder pain.

Leury Garcia was placed on the 7-day I.L., retroactive to August 13, with a concussion after he ran into the outfield wall during the Field of Dreams game.

It’s possible Rodon could return to make a start in Toronto next week, La Russa said.

SOX VS ATHLETICS

Monday: Dallas Keuchel (7-6, 4.51) vs. Frankie Montas (9-8, 3.98), 7:10 p.m., ESPN, NBCSCH, 1000-AM

Tuesday: Reynaldo Lopez (1-0, 1.35) vs. Chris Bassitt (12-3, 3.06), 7:10 p.m., NBCSCH, 1000-AM

Wednesday: Lance Lynn (10-3, 2.26) vs. Cole Irvin (8-11, 3.52), 7:10 p.m., NBCSCH, 1000-AM

Thursday: Dylan Cease (9-6, 4.04) vs. TBD, 1:10 p.m., NBCSCH, 1000-AM

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Jose Abreu moves into third on White Sox’ career home-run listJared Wyllyson August 15, 2021 at 11:40 pm Read More »

Three takeaways from Cubs’ 4-1 loss to the MarlinsRussell Dorseyon August 15, 2021 at 9:12 pm

The Cubs were hoping their three-game series in Miami would yield some different results, but that wasn’t the case. Their 4-1 loss Sunday to the Marlins sent them to their second 11-game losing streak of the season.

Here are three takeaways from the series against the Marlins:

Opportunity knocks for Frank Schwindel

First baseman Frank Schwindel has been playing like a man possessed since the Cubs called him up from Triple-A Iowa. He has bounced around in his baseball career but has found himself in a nice groove with the Cubs.

Schwindel capped a great series at the plate with a tying home run in the sixth inning Sunday. The 423-foot shot was his second homer of the series. Since joining the Cubs on July 30, he’s slashing .367/.438/.708 with four homers and is hitting .382 in the last 10 games.

”I was obviously very excited to get picked up by the Cubs,” Schwindel said. ”First time in the National League, first time on this side of the country, really. But it’s just an awesome opportunity. They made a bunch of moves, which gave me the opportunity to show up and play. And I’m having a great time so far. Just want to keep it going.”

Rotation under construction

The Cubs’ rotation went through a minor overhaul in the last seven days with the addition of left-hander Justin Steele and the subtraction of right-hander Jake Arrieta, who was released Thursday. The team also will be without right-hander Adbert Alzolay for at least the next 10 days after he went on the injured list with a strained left hamstring Saturday.

The Cubs are going to need innings from their rotation after several blowout losses during their 11-game skid have taxed their bullpen. One way to do that is to get more starts such as right-hander Zach Davies’ outing Saturday. He allowed no earned runs in six innings.

”[We have] a lot of guys that are young, guys that don’t have a lot of time here,” Davies said. ”They’re seeing this version of our team where we can still battle. We can still fight and try and make it hard on teams that we do play that are in the playoff [chase] and make it a little bit more difficult to not just be another game.”

Weathering the storm

There was no doubt things were going to get more challenging for the Cubs after the trade deadline, and their 11-game losing streak has shown it.

The Cubs were in the game Sunday, trailing 2-1 in the seventh, before Jake Jewell allowed a two-run homer to Jesus Aguilar to make it 4-1.

The Cubs fell to 1-14 in August, including an 0-7 homestand last week, and pitching has played a big part in that. They have a 7.69 ERA this month.

”Obviously, losing is not fun,” said right-hander Alec Mills, who allowed two runs in 5? innings in the loss. ”Winning is a lot more fun. A bad stretch for us. I think we’re just trying to attack every day with positivity and really just trying to come together as a team.”

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Three takeaways from Cubs’ 4-1 loss to the MarlinsRussell Dorseyon August 15, 2021 at 9:12 pm Read More »

Ryan Reynolds explains the surprise ‘Free Guy’ cameos — like the only that took only seven minutesBrian Truitt | USA TODAYon August 15, 2021 at 10:10 pm

Spoiler alert! The following article discusses important plot points and details from “Free Guy.”

Ryan Reynolds’ new action comedy “Free Guy” introduces an original video-game world, though there are plenty of high-profile cameos and a couple fun Disney Easter eggs.

The film centers on a background video-game character, Guy (Reynolds), turning from mild-mannered bank teller to a heroic phenomenon in a crazy “Grand Theft Auto”-style online landscape when he meets the uber-cool Molotov Girl, an avatar for game programmer Millie (Jodie Comer).

The digital world of Free City is threatened by a greedy software mogul Antwan (Taika Waititi) and his upcoming “Free City 2” sequel, which will erase Guy and all his video-game friends.

When Guy’s exploits in the game prove popular in the real world, he even gets to be a “Jeopardy!” clue: “This colorful character in the video game ‘Free City’ has been turning heads by being the good guy.” In a cameo, the late Alex Trebek hints to Guy’s relative mystery for the general populace with the line, “Who is he or she indeed.”

Reynolds has been on the real “Jeopardy!” show a few times, including an appearance in Trebek’s last round of episodes before his death last November, and the actor wanted Trebek in “Free Guy.”

“I wouldn’t necessarily say I’m a friend of the show, but I’m friendly to the show,” Reynolds says. “And then weirdly in this moment, it was me asking Alex for a favor. He’s as gentlemanly and integrity-filled and as stalwart as you would imagine him to be in real life. He said yes right away, so we came in and grabbed our little cameo and I was super grateful for him for taking the time to do that.”

Trebek and Reynolds talked frequently, and shortly before his death, the host called Reynolds about a charity function he was doing. “The man was quite beautiful as far as human beings go, that’s for sure,” Reynolds says.

Many of Reynolds’ fellow A-list friends have roles to play in “Free Guy.” Channing Tatum steps up as Revenjamin Buttons, a dance-happy avatar with moves like the “Shaky Man” and “Thanos’ Glove,” while others have small voice-only parts: Dwayne Johnson plays a masked bank robber, Tina Fey is a vacuuming mom, John Krasinski is a silhouetted gamer, and Reynolds’ old pal Hugh Jackman is a masked mystery man in an alley quickly disposed of by Molotov Girl.

“I genuinely love Hugh for all of our silly rivalries and that sort of stuff. He’s one of my closest friends. I’m really lucky to be able to call him that,” Reynolds says. “Cameos are part of the showbiz ecosystem. I feel like when somebody asks you to do a cameo, unless you’re geographically unavailable, I’m pretty much always going to say yes.”

Although Reynolds is well known for his masked quip-meister Deadpool, he gets to borrow from another Marvel Comics character during the climactic “Free Guy” fight: As the whole world watches online, Guy tussles with Dude (also Reynolds), Antwan’s ultra-muscular, dimwitted upgrade of Guy. Just as Dude unleashes his “Deathblow” maneuver in their video-game brawl, Guy suddenly blocks it out of nowhere with Captain America’s shield. And in one of the movie’s funniest gags, the scene cuts to Chris Evans (a.k.a. movie Cap) in a coffee shop watching on his phone who then shouts, “What the (expletive)?!”

Evans was also in Boston when “Free Guy” was filming there, and Reynolds texted his friend to come by and do a scene. “He was incredibly kind and gracious,” Reynolds says. “I told him exactly what was happening and we were 100% ready for him before he ever even got close to set. He was in and out in about seven minutes.”

However, Reynolds confirms that it wasn’t one of Evans’ actual movie shields: He didn’t even know if Disney (which purchased 20th Century Fox in 2019 when “Free Guy” was in pre-production) “would say 100% yes until after we shot it. So we were leaving room to make that shield something else if we had to.” The Mouse House was also cool with the bit where Guy whips out a lightsaber on Dude and the “Star Wars” theme kicks in.

“It’s a pretty special feeling to be in a theater seeing that happen,” Reynolds says. “For all of our concerns and worries, (Disney) ended up being the most supportive partner you could ever imagine. They were pretty gung-ho about making an original blockbuster film in the summertime.”

Read more at usatoday.com

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Ryan Reynolds explains the surprise ‘Free Guy’ cameos — like the only that took only seven minutesBrian Truitt | USA TODAYon August 15, 2021 at 10:10 pm Read More »

Goodby to Afghanistan Terrorists/ Hello Chicago’s Terrorists/ There are no other words to describe them/ Homegrown Terroristson August 15, 2021 at 10:01 pm

JUST SAYIN

Goodby to Afghanistan Terrorists/ Hello Chicago’s Terrorists/ There are no other words to describe them/ Homegrown Terrorists

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Goodby to Afghanistan Terrorists/ Hello Chicago’s Terrorists/ There are no other words to describe them/ Homegrown Terroristson August 15, 2021 at 10:01 pm Read More »

Taliban holding talks for ‘inclusive’ government, US sending another 1,000 troops to AfghanistanAssociated Presson August 15, 2021 at 8:45 pm

KABUL, Afghanistan — A Taliban spokesman and negotiator tells The Associated Press that the militant group is holding talks aimed at forming an “open, inclusive Islamic government” in Afghanistan.

Suhail Shaheen spoke to the AP after the Taliban overran most of the country in a matter of days and pushed into the capital, Kabul, as the United States scrambled to withdraw diplomats and other civilians.

Earlier, a Taliban official said the group would announce a new government from the presidential palace, but those plans appear to be on hold.

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WASHINGTON — The United States is sending another 1,000 troops to Afghanistan, raising the U.S. deployment to roughly 6,000.

A defense official tells The Associated Press on Sunday that 1,000 troops from the 82nd Airborne are going directly to Kabul instead of going to Kuwait as a standby force. The defense official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a deployment decision not yet announced by the Pentagon.

On Saturday, President Joe Biden authorized the U.S. troop deployment to rise to roughly 5,000 by adding about 1,000. Since then, the Taliban have entered the capital of Kabul and Afghanistan’s president has fled the country.

Helicopters have been evacuating personnel from the U.S. Embassy, and several other Western missions also are preparing to pull their people out.

— Robert Burns

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KABUL, Afghanistan — The Al-Jazeera news network is airing footage of a large group of Taliban fighters inside the presidential palace in the capital of Afghanistan.

The Taliban are expected to announce their takeover from the palace, renaming the country as the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan. The militants have taken over most of Afghanistan in a matter of days as the U.S. scrambles to withdraw after 20 years of war.

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LONDON — Britain’s Defense Ministry says U.K. troops have arrived in Kabul to help evacuate remaining Britons there.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said after chairing a Cabinet emergency committee meeting Sunday that the priority is to get out British nationals, as well as Afghans who helped U.K. forces in Afghanistan over the past 20 years, “as fast as we can.”

“The ambassador is working round the clock, has been there in the airport to help process the applications,” he told Sky News. “We certainly have the means at the moment to get them out … It’s just a question of making sure that they’re able to do it over the next few days.”

The “vast bulk” of embassy staff and officials have already left Afghanistan, Johnson added.

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NEW YORK — The Latest developments on Afghanistan, where a Taliban blitz has taken large swaths of territory just weeks before the final pullout of American and NATO troops:

The U.N. Security Council will hold an emergency meeting on Afghanistan Monday morning (10 am EDT) at the request of Estonia and Norway.

Council diplomats said Sunday that U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will brief council members on the latest situation following the Taliban takeover of the capital, Kabul.

The U.N. chief on Friday had urged the Taliban to immediately halt their offensive in Afghanistan and negotiate “in good faith” to avert a prolonged civil war. He also said he is “deeply disturbed by early indications that the Taliban are imposing severe restrictions in the areas under their control, particularly targeting women and journalists.

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KABUL, Afghanistan — Senior U.S. military officials say Kabul’s international airport has been closed to commercial flights as military evacuations continue.

The suspension of commercial flights cuts off one of the last avenues to escape the country for Afghans fearful of Taliban rule. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing operations.

The Taliban captured most of the country in a matter of days and swept into the capital on Sunday.

Scenes of chaos played out at the airport earlier, as Afghans rushed to get on the last flights out of the country.

Videos circulating online showed airport personnel struggling to coral crowds boarding a plane on the tarmac, while a man with an injured leg lay on the ground. In the background, a U.S. Air Force plane was landing.

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KABUL, Afghanistan — A Taliban official says the group will soon declare the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan from the presidential palace in the capital, Kabul.

That was the name of the country under the Taliban government ousted by U.S.-led forces after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to brief media.

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KABUL, Afghanistan — The U.S. Embassy in Kabul has suspended all operations and told Americans to shelter in place, saying it has received reports of gunfire at the international airport.

The U.S. is racing to airlift diplomats and citizens out of Afghanistan after the Taliban overran most of the country and entered the capital early Sunday.

“The security situation in Kabul is changing quickly and the situation at the airport is deteriorating rapidly,” the embassy said in a statement.

“There are reports of the airport taking fire and we are instructing U.S. citizens to shelter in place. The U.S. Embassy in Afghanistan has suspended consular operations effective immediately. Do not come to the Embassy or airport at this time.”

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PARIS — France is relocating its embassy in Kabul to the airport to evacuate all citizens still in Afghanistan, initially transferring them to Abu Dhabi.

Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drain said in a statement Sunday that military reinforcements and aircraft would deploy in the hours ahead to the United Arab Emirates, “so that the first evacuations toward Abu Dhabi can start.”

Evacuations have been in progress for weeks and a charter flight put in place by France in mid-July. Since May, France has taken in Afghan employees at French structures under potential threat, with 600 people relocated to France.

France gradually pulled out troops from Afghanistan between 2013 and 2015, and since then former personnel who worked for the French Army and their families, some 1,350 Afghans, were brought to France, the statement said.

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KABUL, Afghanistan — Afghan leaders have created a coordination council to meet with the Taliban and manage the transfer of the power, after the religious militia’s lightening offensive swept to the capital, Kabul.

In a statement posted on social media by former president Hamid Karzai, he said the body will be led by the head of the High Council for National Reconciliation, Abdullah Abdullah, as well as the leader of Hizb-e-Islami, Gulbudin Hekmatyar, and himself.

The statement said the move was “to prevent chaos and reduce the suffering of the people,” and to manage peace and a “peaceful transfer.”

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BERLIN — The United Nations refugee agency says more than 550,000 people in Afghanistan have fled their homes due to the conflict since the start of this year.

A situational update published Sunday by Geneva-based UNHCR shows about 126,000 people were displaced in the previous month to Aug. 9, the most recent date for which figures are available.

A spokeswoman for UNHCR said that while the situation inside Afghanistan is fluid, “for now the displacement is largely internal.”

“There is a need to support the humanitarian response in the country,” Shabia Mantoo told The Associated Press. “If we do see cross border movement then additional support outside the country will be necessary too.”

The agency continues to have international and Afghan staff on the ground, she said.

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BERLIN — German media have issued an urgent appeal to Chancellor Angela Merkel and the country’s foreign minister for an emergency visa program to help local staff who worked for them to leave Afghanistan.

In an open letter Sunday, major German newspapers, public and commercial broadcasters, and the dpa news agency warned that “the lives of these freelance staff are now in acute danger.”

The media outlets stressed that reporting from Afghanistan over the past two decades would have been “unthinkable without the efforts and bravery of the Afghan staff who supported us on the ground: local journalists, stringers and translators.”

Citing several recent fatal attacks on journalists, the letter said that due to the advance of the Taliban “it must be feared that such murders will now dramatically increase – and many of our staff are at risk.”

“We are convinced: there is no time to lose now,” it adds. “Our staff who want to leave the country are at risk of persecution, arrest, torture and deaths. That is why we ask you act quickly.”

___

KABUL, Afghanistan — Afghan officials say embattled President Ashraf Ghani has fled the country as the Taliban moved further into Kabul.

Two officials speaking on condition of anonymity as they weren’t authorized to brief journalists told The Associated Press that Ghani flew out of the country. Abdullah Abdullah, the head of the Afghan National Reconciliation Council, later confirmed Ghani had left in an online video.

“He left Afghanistan in a hard time, God hold him accountable,” Abdullah said.

Ghani’s whereabouts and destination are currently unknown.

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TORONTO — Canada has suspended diplomatic operations in Afghanistan and Canadian personnel are on their way back to Canada.

Foreign Minister Marc Garneau said in a statement the decision to suspend operations is temporary and the embassy will reopen if the security situation allows staff to be safe.

Some 40,000 Canadian troops were deployed in Afghanistan over 13 years as part of the NATO mission before pulling out in 2014. More than 150 Canadian soldiers died during the Afghanistan mission.

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WASHINGTON — U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken says the U.S. is evacuating remaining staff at the U.S. Embassy in Kabul as the Taliban enter the Afghan capital. But he is playing down America’s hasty exit, saying “this is manifestly not Saigon.”

Speaking on ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday, Blinken said: “The compound itself, our folks are leaving there, and moving to the airport.”

Blinken also confirmed that U.S. Embassy workers were destroying documents and other items ahead of fleeing the embassy, but insisted “this is being done in a very deliberate way, it’s being done in an orderly way, and it’s being done with American forces there to make sure we can do it in a safe way.”

The evacuation of the U.S. Embassy in Kabul had U.S. military helicopters lifting off from embassy grounds Sunday, and sent puffs of black smoke up into the skies over Kabul as U.S. officials worked to keep sensitive material from falling in Taliban hands.

The scene comes after President Joe Biden earlier this year played down any idea that the Taliban could capture the country, or that the Afghanistan war would end up in scenes reminiscent of the Vietnam one, with military helicopters taking off from embassy rooftops.

Blinken defended Biden’s decision to end the nearly 20-year U.S. military mission in Afghanistan, saying Biden’s hands were tied by a withdrawal deal President Donald Trump struck with the Taliban in 2020.

If Biden had called off the withdrawal, “we would have been back at the war with the Taliban,” and forced to surge tens of thousands of American forces back into Afghanistan, Blinken said.

__ Ellen Knickmeyer in Oklahoma City.

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ISLAMABAD — A special flight of Pakistan’s national airline PIA has arrived in Islamabad carrying 329 passengers from Kabul, and another carrying 170 people will arrive later today. A spokesman for the airline said Saturday that the airline will operate three flights tomorrow to transport Pakistanis and other nationalities looking to leave Kabul.

PIA and other commercial flights from Kabul were heavily delayed Sunday due to a U.S. military transport plane that blocked the runway, the airline said.

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WASHINGTON — Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Army Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will brief House members on the situation in Afghanistan in an unclassified virtual conference on Sunday morning, according to an invitation obtained by The Associated Press.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi requested the meeting along with an in-person classified briefing when the House is back in Washington the week of Aug. 23.

— Mary Clare Jalonick in Washington

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BERLIN — NATO says that it is “helping to maintain operations at Kabul airport to keep Afghanistan connected with the world.”

In a statement it says that it would also maintain its diplomatic presence in Kabul. “The security of our personnel is paramount, and we continue to adjust as necessary,” it added.

NATO provided no details on its number of staff still in Afghanistan, but said it was “constantly assessing developments” in the country.

“We support Afghan efforts to find a political solution to the conflict, which is now more urgent than ever,” the statement said.

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ISTANBUL — Turkey’s president says his country will work for stability in Afghanistan along with Pakistan, in order to stem a growing migration wave amid the Taliban’s countrywide offensive.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Afghans were increasingly attempting to migrate to Turkey via Iran, urging an international effort to bring stability to the country and prevent mass migration.

Erdogan was speaking at a naval ceremony with Pakistan’s president. He said Pakistan had a “vital task” to bring peace and stability to Afghanistan, where clashes have intensified. Turkish-Pakistani cooperation would be needed for this, and Turkey would use all possibilities to do so, Erdogan added.

Erdogan did not mention any changes to a proposal for Turkey to secure and operate the airport in Kabul.

MADRID — Spain’s defense ministry says it has not yet begun evacuating Spanish nationals and Afghan staff including translators who are expected to be flown out alongside its citizens, but was speeding up its plans.

In an emailed statement it says that “the evacuation plan for Afghanistan is being accelerated to the maximum,” adding that “details are finalized on logistics and the people who will be evacuated,” but they cannot give more details for security reasons.

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WASHINGTON — A U.S. official says American diplomats in Afghanistan are being moved from the embassy in Kabul to the airport as the Taliban enter the capital.

The official says military helicopters are shuttling between the embassy compound and the airport, where a core presence will remain for as long as possible given security conditions.

The official was not authorized to discuss diplomatic movements and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Relocating a core group of embassy staff to the airport had been a contingency plan as the Taliban made dramatic territorial gains over the past several weeks before the final withdrawal of U.S. troops by Aug 31.

— Matthew Lee in Washington.

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VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis said Sunday that he shares “the unanimous concern for the situation in Afghanistan” as Taliban fighters sweep across the war-torn country.

He spoke as the Taliban entered the outskirts of Kabul, the Afghan capital, and said they were awaiting a “peaceful transfer” of the city.

From a window overlooking St. Peter’s Square, the pope asked for prayers “so that the clamor of weapons may cease and solutions may be found at the negotiating table.”

He added that “only in this way, may the battered population of the country — men and women, elderly and children — return to their homes and live in peace and safety, with full mutual respect.”

BERLIN — Germany is sending military transport planes to Kabul to begin the evacuation of its embassy staff Monday.

The German news agency dpa reported Sunday that the mission will include the evacuation of local Afghan staff working for the German embassy. A German official, speaking on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to be quoted, told The Associated Press that paratroopers will secure the operation.

The military planes are expected to ferry evacuees from Kabul to a base in Central Asia, from where charter planes will bring them to

— Frank Jordans in Berlin.

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MILAN — Italian media reported Sunday that most personnel at the Italian Embassy in Kabul are being transferred to the Afghan capital’s airport in preparation for evacuation.

The report Sunday by Corriere della Sera said the move affects some 50 Italian staffers and 30 Afghan employees and their families, along with Carabinieri paramilitary police protecting the embassy.

The Foreign Ministry confirmed that staff were being transferred to the airport, as other nations were in the process of doing, but could not give numbers or timing.

Italy’s defense minister has said that 228 Afghans and their families have already been transferred to Italy, calling it a “moral duty” to protect those who had worked with Italy and who would face reprisals by the Taliban.

The Italian agency LaPresse reported a flight carrying Italian embassy staff would depart Kabul Sunday evening.

MOSCOW — Russia’s state news agency reported Sunday that the Taliban promised to guarantee the safety of the Russian embassy in Kabul.

Tass quoted Suhail Shaheen, a spokesman for the Taliban’s political office, as saying that the organization has “good relations with Russia” and a “policy in general to ensure safe conditions for the functioning of the Russian and other embassies.”

The Kremlin’s envoy on Afghanistan said Sunday that there are no plans to evacuate the Russian embassy in Kabul. Zamir Kabulov told the Interfax news agency that Russia’s ambassador and its staff are “calmly carrying out their duties.”

The reports came as Taliban fighters entered Kabul after a week-long blitz ahead of the final pullout of American and NATO troops. The Taliban said they don’t plan to take the capital city by force.

MOSCOW — Uzbekistan’s Foreign Ministry reported Sunday that 84 Afghan servicemen crossed the border into Uzbekistan asked for assistance.

Uzbek guards detained the group of Afghan military when they crossed the border. The group included three wounded soldiers that needed medical help, the ministry said. The men were offered food and temporary accommodation in Uzbekistan, and the ministry was in touch with Afghan officials regarding the return of Afghan soldiers to their home country.

The announcement Sunday came as Taliban fighters entered Kabul after a week-long blitz ahead of the final pullout of American and NATO troops. The Taliban said they don’t plan to take the capital city by force.

—-

TIRANA, Albania — Albania’s prime minister says his country will temporarily shelter hundreds of Afghans who worked with the Western peacekeeping military forces and are now threatened by the Taliban.

On his Facebook page, Edi Rama said the U.S. government had asked Albania to serve as a “transit place for a certain number of Afghan political emigrants who have the United States as their final destination.”

“No doubt we shall not say no,” he said.

He added that the Albanian government has also responded positively to requests from two U.S. NGOs to shelter hundreds of Afghan intellectuals and women activists who have been threatened with execution by the Taliban.

The Albanian prime minister said that his country stands alongside the United States “not only when we need them for our problems … but even when they need us, any time.”

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LONDON — British media are reporting that the U.K.’s ambassador to Afghanistan is to be airlifted out of the country by Monday evening amid fears that the Taliban could seize the airport imminently.

The Foreign Office had intended for Laurie Bristow and a small team of officials to remain at the airport with other international diplomats. But the Sunday Telegraph reported that their departure had been brought forward. The Foreign Office declined comment.

Last week the defense ministry said 600 British troops were being deployed to Kabul to help evacuate some 3,000 British nationals and about 2,000 Afghans who worked with British forces.

A Royal Air Force Hercules aircraft was reported to have flown out of the airport on Saturday carrying diplomats and civilians.

Defense Secretary Ben Wallace defended Britain’s move to pull troops out of the country. Writing in the Sunday Telegraph, he said “we have not betrayed Afghanistan.”

He wrote that the U.K. could not “go it alone” after the U.S. announced its plans to withdraw. “It would be arrogant to think we could solve Afghanistan unilaterally,” he said.

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ISLAMABAD — Pakistan has closed the Torkham border point with Afghanistan after the Taliban took control of the Afghan border facility, the interior minister said Sunday.

Sheikh Rashid Ahmed said the decision to close the Torkhan border was taken due to due to an extraordinary situation on the other side. Ahmed told the local Geo television that the border was closed when Afghan police surrendered to the Taliban.

Ahmed said the Chaman border point with Afghanistan remains open.

Pakistan has already said that it cannot bear any load of new Afghan refugees in the wake of crisis in the war-torn country. Pakistan is about to complete fencing along the long, porous border, saying the step has been taken to check the militants’ movement across the border.

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ISTANBUL — An Afghan official and the Taliban say the militants have seized the provincial capital of Khost.

The capture Sunday makes the capital the latest to fall to the militants since they began their advance over a week ago.

A provincial council member confirmed the capture to the AP. The official spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.

It leaves Afghanistan’s central government in control of just Kabul and five other provincial capitals out of the country’s 34.

— By Rahim Faiez

___

TREBON, Czech Republic — Czech leaders have approved a plan to evacuate Afghan staffers at the Czech embassy in Kabul.

The Czechs already had evacuated their own diplomats from the embassy and transported them to Kabul’s international airport.

Czech Foreign Minister Jakub Kulhanek said Afghan staffers are at risk of “death and torture” if they stay, adding, “We simply can’t allow that to happen.”

The announcement Sunday came as the Taliban seized the last major city outside of Kabul held by the country’s central government, cutting off the capital to the east.

Defense Minister Lubomir Metnar said the Czechs will help those Afghans who worked with Czech troops during their deployment in NATO missions.

Metnar said his country is ready to take care of Afghan interpreters and their families. “We will relocate those who have asked, to the Czech Republic,” Metnar said.

The evacuation flights should take place in next days.

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Taliban holding talks for ‘inclusive’ government, US sending another 1,000 troops to AfghanistanAssociated Presson August 15, 2021 at 8:45 pm Read More »

2 girls shot, 1 fatally, in Belmont CentralSun-Times Wireon August 15, 2021 at 9:15 pm

A girl was killed and another was wounded in a shooting Sunday in Belmont Central.

The girls, 6 and 7, were sitting in a parked vehicle about 2:50 p.m. in the 6200 block of West Grand Avenue when someone opened fire, Chicago police said.

The 7-year-old was shot in the chest and torso and taken to Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood, where she was pronounced dead, police said. She hasn’t been identified.

The other girl was struck in the chest and armit and was taken to the same hospital, where she was stabilized, police said.

Area Five detectives are investigating.

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2 girls shot, 1 fatally, in Belmont CentralSun-Times Wireon August 15, 2021 at 9:15 pm Read More »

The ‘straw purchaser’ who bought the gun used to kill Officer French belongs in prisonLetters to the Editoron August 15, 2021 at 7:22 pm

The news in a Chicago Sun-Times report last week, “Judge orders release of man charged with straw purchase of gun allegedly used to kill Officer Ella French,” was infuriating.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Jeffrey Gilbert on Wednesday had ordered the release of an Indiana man charged by the feds with acting as the so-called straw purchaser of the gun that killed Chicago Police Officer Ella French. Shockingly, Gilbert didn’t think Danzy’s repeated illegal straw purchasing of firearms for criminals made him a “danger to the community.”

An illegal straw purchase is when a gun buyer lies on the federal background check form at a retail store in order to buy a gun for someone else who would fail the background check. Reducing illegal straw purchases of firearms is a major priority for the firearm industry.

The National Shooting Sports Foundation — the industry’s trade association — has a two-decade partnership with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to help educate firearm retailers to detect and avoid illegal straw purchases. It’s called “Don’t Lie for the Other Guy.”

SEND LETTERS TO: [email protected]. Please include your neighborhood or hometown and a phone number for verification purposes. Letters should be approximately 350 words or less.

NSSF, ATF and Department of Justice officials relaunched the campaign in Chicago earlier this summer, reminding the public that lying on a background check to buy a gun for someone who cannot legally do so themself is a serious felony with the possibility of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Firearm retailers take straw purchases seriously. It is their communities that are devastated when a straw purchase occurs, and the gun is used in a violent crime. Funded by NSSF, the “Don’t Lie” initiative is just one part of the industry’s overall Real Solutions campaign designed to help keep guns out of the wrong hands.

If convicted for his alleged crime, Jamel Danzy deserves to go to prison for a very long time. Unlike his bail, that will send a strong message to others about the consequences of illegally purchasing firearms.

Lawrence G. Keane
Senior vice president and general counsel for government affairs
National Shooting Sports Foundation, Washington, D.C.

Police officers, FOP shunning Mayor Lightfoot

The Chicago Police Department is being poorly served by the Fraternal Order of Police. In the midst of the crime and gun violence Chicago is enduring, must the FOP align itself against the city’s leadership? They are only promoting more divisiveness.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot is, in reality, pro-police. Let’s get down to business, forget all this phony posturing and get the weapons off our streets. True police reform supports officers who serve and protect.

Harriette Dawson, Glencoe

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The ‘straw purchaser’ who bought the gun used to kill Officer French belongs in prisonLetters to the Editoron August 15, 2021 at 7:22 pm Read More »

Cubs activate RF Jason Heyward from injured listRussell Dorseyon August 15, 2021 at 5:51 pm

The Cubs activated right fielder Jason Heyward from the 10-day injured list before Sunday’s game against the Marlins. Heyward had been on the IL since Aug. 6 with with left index finger inflammation.

Heyward has not had a strong season at the plate with a .198/.271/.322 slashline with six home runs in 83 games this season, but the Cubs are relying on Heyward’s leadership down the stretch with a young, inexperienced group of players at the big-league level.

Outfielder Greg Deichmann was optioned to Triple-A Iowa to make room for Heyward on the 26-man roster. Deichmann was the first position player in the team’s acquisitions at the trade deadline to make an appearance for the Cubs. He was acquired in the trade that sent lefty reliever Andrew Chafin to the Oakland A’s.

Deichmann, 27, was 4-for-23 in his first stint with the Cubs and while he had a calm approach at the plate, there’s likely still room for growth before he returns to the big leagues.

“He just needs to get more at-bats under his belt,” manager David Ross said before the game. “It looked like his at-bats got better as they went on. He had a real knack for simplifying things when he got behind in the count. Just trying to touch the baseball.

“Playing outfield at Wrigley Field can be a little tricky and I thought he made some nice plays. But continuing to work on his defense and his all-around game. He’s still gotta get some seasoning to do and get his at-bats, but there’s no doubt we’ll see him again.”

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Cubs activate RF Jason Heyward from injured listRussell Dorseyon August 15, 2021 at 5:51 pm Read More »

New skating rink could help get things rolling at decaying West Side retail stripCST Editorial Boardon August 15, 2021 at 6:34 pm

Though it’s been in distress since the 1960s, you can still tell the Madison and Pulaski shopping district on Chicago’s West Side was once a bustling mini-downtown with department stores, movie theaters and a big hotel, all doing business out of a stylish array of multistory buildings, many of which are faded but still standing.

The retail intersection still makes money, but the once wide range of businesses has thinned considerably since its heyday. There is also a crime issue that frightens off many potential shoppers and remains a barrier to significant redevelopment of the area.

Editorials

Here’s hoping a temporary outdoor roller skating rink that opened recently on an empty lot at 4008 W. Madison St. is the first step on the long road of bringing much-needed new and varied uses back to Madison and Pulaski.

“Allowing youth to utilize this facility is going to give them the voice to say, ‘We are here and we are taking back our empty lots,'” skater Mercedes Pickett told the Sun-Times.

That sentiment — as a prelude to significant reinvestment — is just the thing needed to rebuild this once-mighty West Garfield Park neighborhood intersection.

‘Doing nothing won’t solve anything’

The Garfield Park Community Plaza and Outdoor Roller Rink, which opened in late July, was built with cash from the state’s Cannabis Regulation Fund.

It’s a bright, colorful place on the otherwise gray street, with a white tent, green and orange umbrellas, and a rest area with benches.

Patrons can bring their own roller skates or borrow skates for free. Ald. Jason Ervin (28th) said the rink was built at the request of residents in the neighborhood. The facility also screens movies in the rest area.

The roller rink and plaza are the latest in a new spate of modest projects and initiatives aimed at bringing either social activity or commerce — and both, if possible — to vacant lots and underperforming spots on South and West side retail streets.

In the Washington Park neighborhood, for instance, a large and long-vacant lot on 51st Street between Calumet Avenue and the CTA Green Line tracks has been turned into Boxville, a retail market operating out of shipping containers.

The previously commercial dead zone is now home to merchants offering groceries, bike repair, haircuts, athletic wear and more.

Boxville, started by Bronzeville resident Bernard Loyd, has been in operation since 2014.

“The idea was always to have a community plaza with vending opportunities, something informal,” Loyd told Chicago magazine in 2017. “We’re trying to create a progression of spaces.”

Spaces like these can be transformative on business strips by bringing activity and use to vacant lots and storefronts.

“The jury is still out to see if this will work out,” Ervin said of the Garfield Park community plaza and outdoor roller rink. “If we have to regroup in a few weeks, that’s OK. But we know doing nothing won’t solve anything.”

New possibilities on West Side

The city says construction will start in the fall on a permanent rink on the West Garfield Park site. The facility could be completed by June of next year.

And that would be good news for the West Side, a section of the city that too often is shut out when the spoils are dealt. (We’re still troubled that Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s Invest South/West program — which promises $750 million to rebuild South and West side commercial areas — somehow left out the Madison and Pulaski intersection).

The rink, followed by targeted city investment, would be a good way to begin repairing that slight — and bring new life to this important retail corner.

Send letters to [email protected].

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New skating rink could help get things rolling at decaying West Side retail stripCST Editorial Boardon August 15, 2021 at 6:34 pm Read More »

Proud Boys flock to pro-Columbus statue rally in Little Italy as far-right ups profileTom Schubaon August 15, 2021 at 4:18 pm

A year after the Christopher Columbus statue in Arrigo Park was yanked down amid mounting protests, hundreds rallied at the same spot in the heart of Little Italy last month to demand the city restore that monument to the explorer and two others.

Billed as Italian Unity Day, the July 25 event included many with deep ties to the neighborhood. But it was also filled with members of a controversial western chauvinist group with a long track record of sowing division: the Proud Boys.

Members of the group — which figured prominently in the deadly “Unite the Right” rally in 2017 and at the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol — attended the rally and confronted counter-protesters. They also marched down the middle of a quiet residential street waving flags, flashing far-right hand-gestures and screaming obscenities at “antifa” — referring to the antifascist activists that serve as a perpetual thorn in their sides.

Now, weeks after the event, a neighborhood that was already torn over the fate of the Columbus sculpture is awash in debate again as the city decides what to do with the statue and other controversial monuments in the city.

“Definitely sad that the statue continues to bring hate and divisiveness to this community,” resident Ken Brown wrote on Nextdoor, a popular neighborhood social networking service. “This is America, everyone has the right to their views, but we all must continue to support, understand and love each other!”

Ald. Jason Ervin, whose 28th Ward includes the park, said late last week the Proud Boys’ presence, combined with their role in the Capitol insurrection, was concerning.

“Hate has no place in our community and anyone fomenting it will face the consequences,” Ervin said in a statement. “There’s a difference between open debate about whom we honor in our public spaces and fighting against the very government that protects those rights.”

The event also signaled yet another example of far-right groups increasing their activism in the Chicago area, experts said.

Hundreds of protesters surrounded the Christopher Columbus statue in Grant Park last summer. They attempted to pull the statue down and many battled with Chicago police officers.Alexander Gouletas/For the Sun-Times

Statues spark big debate

The simmering debate over city monuments came to a head amid the wave of protests that followed the police killing of George Floyd. The crescendo happened on July 17, 2020, when leftist and other demonstrators tried to pull down the Columbus statue in Grant Park, setting off violent clashes with police.

Citing the protests and the failed attempt to bring down the statue, Mayor Lori Lightfoot ordered its removal a week later, along with the Columbus statue in Arrigo Park. A third monument to the Italian explorer was later pulled from its pedestal in the South Chicago neighborhood.

The Lightfoot administration also launched an ongoing review of monuments that were flagged for a variety of reasons, like promoting narratives of white supremacy, presenting inaccurate or demeaning representations of Native Americans, and memorializing those linked to racist acts, slavery and genocide. Critics of Columbus say he’s a symbol of racism and imperialism, but many in the Italian-American community still regard him as an important historical figure.

The city has given no timeline for the project’s completion and no update on what actions it might take.

Mayoral spokesman Alex Murphy said the city has been “purposeful in engaging residents, community organizations and national experts to help guide the Chicago Monuments Project.

“At the conclusion of this deliberative process, the city will release a report summarizing this engagement and the committee’s recommendations,” Murphy said. “Ensuring that our city’s symbols represent inclusivity and uplift the stories of Chicago remains paramount.”

The Joint Civic Committee of Italian Americans planned the event in Arrigo Park last month on the one-year anniversary of the statues’ removal.

Ron Onesti, the group’s president, said the fight to bring back the Little Italy monument had become a multi-ethnic effort over the past year, and that every culture was welcomed to attend the event.

Witnesses said the event was largely peaceful, and images circulating on social media appear to show only minor skirmishes and arguments. No one was arrested, according to the Chicago Police Department, which witnesses said sent a large presence to keep the peace.

But video from a private Proud Boys Telegram channel shared with the Sun-Times also shows a few dozen demonstrators walking down the middle of Polk Street, away from the statue, in broad daylight.

Some are seen hoisting American flags, one of which appears to be emblazoned with a Gadsden rattlesnake, a symbol that dates back to the American Revolution but has been co-opted by the far-right. Many flash an “okay” hand gesture the Anti-Defamation has listed as a symbol of hate, along with the Nazi salute and Ku Klux Klan robes. And one of the marchers is seen wearing a shirt that appears to be associated with the Three Percenters, an anti-government militia movement that also played a role in the riot at the U.S. Capitol.

“F— antifa,” they’re heard chanting over and over again.

Edgar “Remy Del Toro” Delatorre was among the Proud Boys present for the rally. After popping up in photos and videos of the insurrection, he was later arrested in a dustup at a political rally in Schaumburg; the charges were ultimately dropped.

Edgar “Remy Del Toro” Delatorre (left), the former leader of the Chicago Proud Boys, marches alongside Enrique Tarrio, the Proud Boys’ chairman, during the Million MAGA March on Nov. 14, 2020, in Washington, D.C.

Despite the group’s track record and alignment with other extremists, Delatorre said he and other Proud Boys converged at the Italian Unity Day event because they’re members of “a diverse organization that doesn’t discriminate.”

“We went out there to support our Italian brothers and other Italians who feel wronged by the tearing down of their statue,” Delatorre said in a statement. ” … Today it’s Columbus, tomorrow it’s Dr. Martin Luther King.”

But antifascist activists present at the rally gave a different story, claiming members of the group were “yelling transphobic and racist obscenities” at both counter-protesters and passersby.

“They threw tiny rubber toy penises and beer cans at the counter-protesters while police watched,” according to the administrator of an antifascist Twitter account who documented the event and asked to remain anonymous. “When the counter-protesters left, a group of 20+ proud boys attempted to follow the group with the hope of instigating violence.”

Delatorre doesn’t appear in the video, but he denied that was the intent and claimed members of the Proud Boys were “marching away” from counter-protesters.

‘Risk of violence is very real’

David Goldenberg, the regional director of the Anti-Defamation League’s Midwest office, noted that similar events have turned ugly.

“The risk of violence is very real” when groups like the Proud Boys meet up with others advocating for a common cause, according to Goldendberg, who said the removal of monuments has “historically been a flashpoint for extremists.”

He specifically pointed to the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, where members of the Proud Boys converged with white nationalists to protest the proposed removal of a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee. It ended when a white supremacist intentionally drove into a group of counter-protesters, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer.

The statue of Christopher Columbus in Arrigo Park before it was removed. It was cast in Rome in 1893 for the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Sun-Times files

After the July 25 rally, even some who supported the statue’s return said they were abhorred by the presence of the extremists.

“I’d like to have the Columbus statue back, but don’t want the Proud Boys in the neighborhood,” a resident wrote on Nextdoor.

Onesti said he was unaware they were there.

“I am unfamiliar with the group. I do not support violence, destruction, racism, bigotry or disrespect of any kind,” he said.

Would he have asked the groups to leave the rally if he knew they had ties to the Capitol insurrection?

“It’s not my place to ask anyone to leave,” he said.

Kall Vee, a longtime resident of Little Italy, scoffed at that and noted that Onesti and many others pushing for the return of the statue no longer live in the neighborhood.

“You know how many times people who were against the statue were kicked out of the park or asked to stand across the street by those people over the past year?” Vee, 39, said. “The people behind the organization who are putting these rallies together, and the people who are attending these events are not even from Little Italy. What they are doing is dividing this community and not uniting it.”

The Joint Civic Committee of Italian Americans “made it political, and it is no longer about Italian people,” Vee said. “The whole reason people don’t want the statue is because he is a genocidal racist, and we want to honor indigenous people. When you begin talking about preserving your culture over other people’s culture you are literally advocating for white supremacy.”

He added: “So is it really a surprise the Proud Boys showed up?”

Other right-wing figures present

They weren’t the only polarizing figures in attendance.

John Catanzara, the president of the Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7, received an award honoring the officers who guarded the Grant Park Columbus statue during the standoff with activists last year. In a speech to the crowd, Catanzara reflected upon also being at the park with other police union leaders when city crews removed it.

“We were literally waiting around for the calvary to come,” he said. “I can tell you right now, if we had this kind of turnout in Columbus Park, [the statue] would’ve never came down.”

Catanzara, a well-known Trump supporter, went on to call the counter-protesters at the Little Italy rally “knuckleheads.”

The outspoken union boss, who has been stripped of his police powers, previously attended a rally in 2019 against Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx that also drew a contingent of Proud Boys. He was photographed there chatting with Brien James, a Proud Boys leader the Anti-Defamation League described as “a longtime Indiana white supremacist.”

He also showed up at a pro-cop rally in Grant Park shortly after the Columbus statue was removed. That event was the first organized by Ashley Ramos, an ally of Delatorre who also attended the recent Arrigo Park rally.

In a series of messages, Ramos said she was compelled to launch her nonprofit, Back the Blue Events, after watching “the cops being attacked” in Grant Park.

She has since developed into a sort of homegrown firebrand, appearing on conservative talk radio to advocate for teenage vigilante Kyle Rittenhouse and leading rallies trumpeting former President Donald Trump’s false claims of widespread voter fraud.

Ashley Ramos (front left, wearing a blue sweatshirt) and a group of “Stop the Steal” protesters walk toward Trump Tower after protesting in Millennium Park, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020.Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

At the same time, she has ingratiated herself with mainstream Republicans. Last August, Back the Blue Events held a candidate forum that included Mark Curran, a failed U.S. Senate hopeful, and Pat O’Brien, who unsuccessfully challenged Foxx.

She also acknowledged she has on multiple occasions worked with Delatorre, including at a “Stop the Steal” rally she organized downtown last Thanksgiving.

“[Delatorre] and I believe in holding police accountable, holding politicians accountable, freedom of speech, preserving freedoms, choosing if you should wear a mask or take a vaccine,” she said. “I can stand next to anyone and fight for these things.”

Meanwhile, Goldenberg warned that groups like the Proud Boys continue to exploit new “flash points,” like the city’s continuing debate over its monuments that spilled into the streets of Little Italy last month. Such opportunities, he added, also serve as fertile ground for indoctrination and recruitment.

“Jan. 6 was not the end,” he said of the continued threat of extremism. “It was just the end of the beginning.”

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Proud Boys flock to pro-Columbus statue rally in Little Italy as far-right ups profileTom Schubaon August 15, 2021 at 4:18 pm Read More »