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Today on Beacon Hill

10:00am

MassHealth Public Hearing

Via Zoom
10:30am

Mass. Student Government Day

Great Hall, State House, Boston
11:00am

Executive Office of Health & Human Services Public Hearing

Via Zoom
1:00pm

Panel on Justice-Involved Women Meeting

Via Microsoft Teams
5:00pm

Close of Comment Period for Department of Elementary and Secondary Education Proposed Regulatory Changes

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Quote of the Day

This week’s tariff madness and the effect it will surely have on the American Republic and the rest of of the world has made many (myself included) reappraise the film, and recognise that it is perhaps quite prescient. Lucas’s obsession with the taxation of the Republic can be seen less as a creator losing themselves in the minutiae of their own creation, and more as a warning of how trading systems can be weaponised. The stranglehold that the Trade Federation places on Naboo is similar to the one the current American government is threatening over the economies of developing countries like Lesotho and Vietnam. In this context, previously weak lines take on new meaning. Early on, before the negotiations turn violent, Liam Neeson’s Qui-Gon Jinn murmurs, “I sense an unusual amount of fear for something as trivial as a trade dispute” – deftly pointing out that when trade disputes are used to impoverish and starve one’s enemies as a proxy for war, there’s nothing trivial about them.
The idea that Darth Vader, arguably the most iconic villain of all time, could be birthed from something as mundane as a trade dispute on Planet Naboo seemed ridiculous. And then, as with so many things that seemed ridiculous, along came Donald Trump.

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