Cory Booker finds love isn’t all he needs


Cory Booker

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Cory Booker speaks during the Iowa Democratic Party Black Caucus Reception on April 16 in Des Moines, Iowa. | Charlie Neibergall/AP Photo

2020 elections

New Jersey senator’s unity message is struggling to break through in the Trump era.

SIOUX CITY, IOWA — Sen. Cory Booker launched a bid for the White House in February on a message of love and unity, painting himself as an inspirational leader who would help a polarized America find common ground.

Just 10 weeks later, Booker is discovering that so far love just isn’t enough.

Story Continued Below

Polling in the single digits and lagging top-tier competitors in fundraising, Booker this week sought to reboot his campaign, launching a “Justice For All” two-week, national tour heavy on economic policy proposals and social justice messaging. In Iowa, he rolled out an expansive proposal for a new income tax credit and talked about the need for rural infrastructure investment. In Georgia, he unveiled a voting rights plan, vowing to make Election Day a national holiday and talked about restoring voting rights to ex-felons.

The recent steps aim to invigorate a presidential bid that has underwhelmed some Democrats who are questioning whether Booker’s message is one that resonates in the Trump era.

Booker kicked off his presidential bid on Feb. 1 framing his run on the proposition that the nation’s next leader needed to tap into ways to reunite an ever-divided country. Booker, who often references Martin Luther King Jr., is shaping his candidacy as one that seeks to bring back civic grace and discourse, saying that political tribalism in America runs so deep “we can’t even do the things that we agree on.”

“Right now what this country needs is not people having a race to the gutter, not a party that’s going to show the worst of who they are, not when they go low we go lower, not fighting fire with fire,” he said at a recent Iowa campaign stop.

It’s a tricky platform to execute, said Sean Bagniewski, chair of the Polk County Democrats. While he said Booker’s messaging is “compelling,” it comes at a political moment when the party is hungry for candidates to offer up evidence that they can defeat President Donald Trump.

“The Democratic base is angry as hell and we’re fighting for our lives,” Bagniewski said. “That’s how it feels every day. The primary voters are angry and they want to fight.”

At an Iowa town hall this week, one potential caucus-goer commented on Booker’s approach, telling him that “while we love your love message,” tackling issues like climate change “has to be our first priority.”

Even the senator acknowledged he’s been second-guessed on his messaging.

“‘That’s not a strategy to win, Cory. You’re fighting against Donald Trump. How you gonna to win?’” Booker said people will ask him. “And I say, ‘please, I’m the guy who beat this machine in Newark, New Jersey.’”

Booker told that Iowa crowd he believes the election has to be about something more than just ousting Trump from the White House.

“We have a choice in this election. To make it about one guy and one election and just get rid of him? I understand that call, but it’s got to be about something bigger than that,” Booker said. “We Democrats in this room, it can’t just be about beating Republicans, no. This is a moral moment in our country where it’s got to be about uniting Americans.”

A March Focus on Rural America poll in Iowa backs up Booker’s premise: 50 percent of those surveyed said it was “absolutely critical” that a 2020 candidate is “someone who can heal the racial, ethnic and partisan divide in our country.”

Still, as he moves into the second quarter of the most crowded and diverse Democratic presidential primary in history, Booker is finding that the skills he’s long tapped as an orator with a mayor’s flair for finding human connection so far hasn’t been enough to break through. On top of a slew of other U.S. senators in the race, fresh faces like former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke and South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg are deploying similar retail traits to dazzle prospective voters.

So far, according to polls, O’Rourke and Buttigieg have ranked above Booker, who also trails top tier candidates in the race including former Vice President Joe Biden, Sens. Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and Kamala Harris.

Booker’s first-quarter $5 million fundraising haul came in toward the low end of the expansive Democratic field and while his campaign says his polling numbers qualified him for the national debate stage, he’s trailing in the small-dollar fundraising contest that’s reflecting strength in many of his competitors’ campaigns.

With that in mind, Booker has shifted toward a more policy-heavy agenda in his two-week tour across the country that will take him to early presidential states and the South.

In an Iowa event on tax day, Booker unrolled an expansive income tax credit, proposing to raise the Earned Income Tax Credit by 25 percent, aiming to significantly reach more people.

“We should be having the biggest increase in the Earned Income Tax Credit and that’s what I’m proposing, by making sure that anybody who works gets back from the government – if you’re earning more than $50,000 a year, or if you’re a couple, $90,000 a year — you will get a tax credit in this country,” he said. Then he gently jabbed at the crowd for failing to react. “And by the way, before you even applaud, let me tell you,” he said to laughter.

Even as Booker sought a recharge in Iowa, he was overshadowed by Buttigieg, whose unexpected surge drew among the biggest crowds for Democratic 2020 candidates touring the first-in-the-nation primary state.

“I think part of it is the newness factor. We have a lot of great candidates in the field who are pretty well known. Pete’s bubbled up because he’s new and different. But also his demeanor, he’s very chill, has a great sense of humor but he’s very knowledgeable,” said Vanessa Phelan, chair of Northwest Des Moines Democrats.

Phelan noted that while Buttigieg’s crowd was unexpectedly large, she’s seen many of the same people attending events for 2020 candidates as they’re still shopping around. Asked if Democrats wanted to hear Booker’s message of love and unity, she said they do – but that they want more.

“What we all just really want is for the presidency to change hands,” she said. “I think there is a space for that message but I just don’t know if it’s resonating.”

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2ZpBFHZ
via IFTTT

Can Lebanon’s cedars outlive climate change and a pesky insect?

Beirut, Lebanon – In the Lebanese highlands overlooking the Qadisha Valley, north of Beirut, a small but thick cluster of long-lived cedars, some up to 3,000 years old, cling to a rugged limestone slope, keeping alive the memory of an era long past.

A staple of the country’s identity proudly featured in the national flag, its banknotes currency and the national anthem, these looming evergreen trees once blanketed most of Lebanon‘s upper reaches.

Now they can hardly be seen across the country. For centuries, Egyptians, Phoenicians and Sumerians chopped cedar trees for construction, shipbuilding and ceremonies, depleting the national forest stock. Ottoman Turks axed many of the surviving cedars for trade, while British troops used cedar bwood to build railroads during wartime.

Only 17 square kilometres, 0.4 percent of the estimated ancient cover, of cedars remain in Lebanon nowadays, hanging on in a few scattered redoubts. The tree is listed as vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s red list of threatened species.

But while these coniferous trees outlasted empires and centuries of relentless exploitation, they might not survive the last on a string of threats to their existence: climate change.

Hotter and drier

In order to grow, cedars need humid, calcareous soil with a certain level of moisture. They also require cold temperatures, and a minimum amount of rain and snow to regenerate naturally.

As temperatures rise across the eastern Mediterranean country, cedars are retreating to higher altitudes in search of the distinct climatic conditions they need to thrive.

This migration is already an evidence in the Shouf Biosphere Reserve, home to a quarter of the remaining cedar population. But south of Beirut, where the reserve is located, mountains average between no more than 1,800 metres, the upper limit of cedars’ ecological comfort zone. “There isn’t much higher the trees can go here,” told me Joe Rahmeh, an eco-tour guide at the reserve.

“Climate change has disrupted weather patterns in this region,” said Nizar Hani, director general of the Shouf Biosphere Reserve. Here, temperatures increased by 0.7 degrees as compared to the annual average.

A few decades ago, rain or snow fell for more than 100 days or so a year. Cool temperatures kept the snow on the ground for three to four months up in the mountains. Last winter, rainfall was less than half the average, and snowpack lasted only a month.

As weather patterns become more erratic, cedar saplings, which usually germinate in May, are finding the conditions to come up earlier and earlier. “This increases the risk of losing the new seedlings to cold snaps and pest outbreaks,” said Hani.

The Lebanese government estimates that temperatures in the country will rise from around 1 Celsius degree on the coast to 2 Celsius degrees in the mainland by 2040, while rainfall is projected to decrease by up 20 percent. Snow cover could decrease by 40 percent around the same time.

And if warming continue as expected, experts predict that cedars may be able to grow in only three refugial areas in the northern tip of the country, where mountains are higher, by the end of this century.

Only 17 square kilometres, 0.4 percent of the estimated ancient cover, of cedars remain in Lebanon nowadays [File: Getty Images] 

Tiny insect, big damage

The combination of drier and hotter conditions has boosted the rise of a further threat for the cedars: the proliferation of the cedar web-spinning sawfly, or Cephalcia tannourinensis, a tiny green grub that feeds off the trees’ young needles.

“The origin of the outbreak is directly tied to climate change,” explained Nabil Nemer, a forest entomologist at Lebanon’s Holy Spirit University of Kaslik who helped discover the insect after an epidemic killed swaths of the Tannourine Cedars Forest Nature Reserve, Lebanon’s densest and largest cedar patch, in the late 1990s.

Normally, the adult sawflies emerge in spring, said Nemer, laying their eggs on the cedar trunks. As they spring out, the larvae eat cedar needles before burying themselves into the earth for up to four years and surface again as adult sawflies with wings.

But as snow melts earlier and the soil becomes less humid, larvae are emerging every year and in larger numbers, feeding on new shoots and preventing them from making novel needles.

“A repetitive attack of three years on the same branch or tree will lead to its death,” said Nemer. The sawfly killed more than 7 percent of the Tannourine forest’s trees over the last two decades, and more that 70 percent are now affected, he said.

In the past, the pest was contained by sprinkling pesticides from the above. But with the use of chemicals barred in protected areas – the reserve was established soon after the discovery of the sawfly – scientists are now resorting to native microorganisms that naturally kill the larvae to restrain the spreading.

The method, however, has its flaws. “We depend on the university laboratories to produce these control agents. But there’s not enough funding, space and manpower to produce sufficient quantities to cover the whole cedar surfaces,” said Nemer. “We started to have a new rise in the sawfly population three years ago.”

A gleam of hope

As scientists fight to preserve the dwindling cedar population, conservationists are trying to understand if cedars can survive above their natural range. Meanwhile, the Beirut government is seeking to replenish the country’s depleted forests.

Five years ago, the Ministry of Agriculture began a reforestation scheme to plant 40 million native trees, including some cedars, by 2030. But with a lingering sectarian power-sharing system making the government too weak to deliver even basic reforms, enforcement is weak. So far, less than three million were planted under the scheme.

A cedar sapling being planted as part of a government-back reforestation scheme [StaticShare.America.gov]

Civil society organisations are trying to fill the gap. Jouzour Loubnan, a no-profit, has managed to plant 300,000 new trees in a decade. Separately, the Lebanon Reforestation Initiative, a partnership between grassroots organisations and the US Agency for International Development, planted more than 600,000 trees since 2010.

In Arz al-Rab, a local body has planted more than 100,000 trees in a number of parcels around the Cedars of God forest, Lebanon’s most iconic cedar stretch, since it was added to Unesco World Heritage list two decades ago.

But here, as elsewhere, there are hurdles. Most cedar patches are isolated and their ability to enlarge is limited. In the Bsharri District, where the Cedars of God forest lies, most of the utile land for afforestation has already been planted, said Charbel Tawk, head of the Friends of the Cedar Forest Committee.

The cedar forest in Bsharri in Lebanon [File:Getty Images]

In other regions, he added, plots of land where the cedars could naturally spread and connect are privately-owned, or entitled for other uses. Even when belonging to the public, municipalities are not always willing to allocate the land for afforestation, preferring tourism development.

Even so, Lebanese are bullish on the chances of the cedars to stand the test of climate change, seeing in the tree a powerful metaphor of the country’s ability to survive the challenges of history.

“They fought against whatever threat you can imagine. And they kept reproducing and giving siblings that thrived,” said Magda Bou Dagher, a plant geneticist who is also Jouzour Loubnan’s president.

“Despite how hard human made their live, they are still harbouring in their genes the potential to overcome environmental crisis,” she said.

“We just have to give them this small push by reconnecting their populations and then stay aside and let them accomplish their fate.”

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2Xvq4FA
via IFTTT

Loud explosion, gunfire rock downtown Kabul: officials

The blast followed several months of relative calm in Kabul [Al Jazeera]
The blast followed several months of relative calm in Kabul [Al Jazeera]

An explosion followed by gunfire hit the centre of the Afghan capital Kabul, close to one of the city’s main hotels and the communications ministry building, officials said.

“Around 11:40 am (0710 GMT), an explosion heard near the communication ministry, and sporadic fires have also been heard in the area,” interior ministry spokesman Nasrat Rahimi said on Saturday.

Intermittent firing could be heard more than 30 minutes after the blast, and the area had been cordoned off by security forces, the AFP news agency reported.

The communications ministry is located in Kabul’s second police district, one of the busiest spots in the city, about 2km from the green zone.

The explosion was also close to the heavily fortified Serena Hotel, one of the few hotels still used by foreign visitors, in one of the main commercial areas of the city.

There was no immediate word on the cause of the blast or of any casualties. No group has claimed responsibility yet.

The blast followed several months of relative calm in Kabul, which coincided with talks between the United States and Taliban officials aimed at opening the way for formal peace negotiations to end more than 17 years of war in Afghanistan.

While heavy fighting continues across Afghanistan and Taliban fighters have announced their now customary spring offensive, there have been no large scale attacks on civilian targets in capital Kabul in recent weeks.

SOURCE:
News agencies

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2GwLnR6
via IFTTT

India elections: Will farm crisis be PM Narendra Modi’s undoing?

Mandya/Koppal, Karnataka – It is a discomfiting question to pose to residents of Volagerehalli, a village in Mandya district in the southern Indian state of Karnataka: “Why are farmers in your village committing suicide?” They’re unaware that Volagerehalli reported five suicides in two years between 2015 and 2017, but not shocked to hear this.

But one suicide, that of Srinivasu on April 1, is still fresh in their minds. The 45-year-old farmer, who defaulted on $7,000 in loans, left behind his aging mother, wife and young son.

Last year, he borrowed from family, friends and moneylenders in the village to meet the costs of his daughter’s wedding. He borrowed some more this year to invest in a paddy crop on his one-acre farm. His hopes of repaying the loans evaporated when he sold his crops for a price that was well below what he had invested.

But Srinivasu’s death did not make it to the agriculture department’s statistics on farm suicides. To be counted and compensated by the state, an autopsy would have to be conducted. His family, like many others, refused to allow the procedure for cultural and sentimental reasons.

Unaccounted suicides like Srinivasu’s mean that the actual number of farm suicides in India exceeds the annual figures compiled by the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB).

 

Although less than accurate, the NCRB data was the only reference for activists and policy makers until 2016. Since then, Prime Minister Narendra Modi‘s government has refused to release suicide statistics.

This is part of a larger pattern, where “inconvenient” data, such as levels of unemployment or economic growth have been suppressed or tweaked to suit the political narrative of the Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government. In 2017, for instance, the government stopped releasing crime-related statistics altogether.

The NCRB data is an indicator of distress in the countryside, where 69 percent of India – nearly 830 million people – resides. In the two decades before 2015, at least 321,407 farmers took their lives, according to the NCRB.

The data also speaks to a crisis that goes beyond the incumbent BJP.

The Modi government was voted into power in 2014 by peasants and agricultural workers sold on the promise of a rural “revolution”, but the crisis in the countryside has only intensified.

In 2014, the BJP manifesto promised farmers 50-percent profits on their production cost. As he seeks another term, Modi has asked voters to give him till 2022 to double farm incomes, a promise reiterated in the BJP’s 2019 election manifesto. Read against this promise, the macro data on the agricultural sector is hardly flattering.

The Gross Value Added (GVA) in agriculture – an indicator of economic activity in the sector, at constant prices – grew at an average of 2.8 per cent in 2014-19, when the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance [NDA] was in power. This was significantly lower than the growth rate during the two successive terms of the Indian National Congress-led United Progressive Alliance governments, UPA1 (2004-2009) and UPA2 (2009-2014)

The growth in rural wages for men and women in agriculture, in real terms, also declined in recent years.

Contours of the crisis in villages

While the statistics bear out the mismatch between the BJP’s promises and its performance, to not see the rural crisis as a structural one would be to miss the woods for the trees.

The situation in Volagerehalli – a village where most of the land is channel-irrigated and farmers grow paddy, sugarcane and mulberry – serves to illustrate this.

Interactions with families of the five farmers who committed suicide between 2015 and 2017 unveil human tragedies that expose the fault lines in the political economy of rural India.

 

All five farmers – Jayaramu M, 36, Madhukar, 40, Naathappa, 46, CM Sampathu, 37, and Marigowda, 50 – owned less than two acres each, below the national average of 2.7 acres. Their families also worked as agricultural labour on other farms.

All five farmers failed to make a profit and were neck-deep in debt. They borrowed to meet expenses varying from healthcare and weddings to farming investments.

The bulk of their borrowings were from neighbourhood moneylenders, not banks; interest rates were as high as five percent a month. Sanamma, 58, whose son Jayaramu killed himself in July 2015, said that the state government’s compensation could only cover the interest portions on her son’s outstanding loans.

Madhukar, a Dalit, was charged a higher interest rate of nearly nine percent; he had borrowed to pay rent for the one-acre tenancy he had recently taken up. This is common because moneylenders consider Dalits and other landless poor to be high-risk borrowers without the assets to secure their usually small loans.

 

After Madhukar committed suicide, his widow Sunanda, 30, says she was forced to sell their half-acre farm to repay his debts. The family now owns no land and she works in a garment factory to make ends meet.

The government categorises the men who killed themselves in Volagerehalli as “small and marginal farmers” in the agricultural census. They are 86 percent of the Indian farming population, says the census, but own only 47 percent of agricultural land.

It is this 86 percent that bears the brunt of the Indian farm crisis. As farming suffers, Indian farms become more fragmented with each passing generation. The inequity in the distribution of land has also intensified.

Large parts of India, including Mandya, witnessed a drought for two consecutive years since 2014. Yet, none of the families received any drought relief from the central government.

The village accountant for Maddur Taluk attributed their exclusion to procedural issues such as improper land documentation or farmers not updating their bank accounts with their biometric identification numbers, or Aadhaar.

 

They were not even covered by the Modi government’s flagship crop insurance scheme, the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana, which requires both the state and central government pay part of the premium along with the farmer.

Farmers in Volagerehalli said the scheme was not useful because it allows insurance claims only if the entire village faces crop failure. Moreover, the scheme does not cover cash crops, leaving out all those who cultivate sugarcane here.

The scheme, which accounted for over a quarter of Modi’s 2018-2019 Agricultural Budgetary allocations worth 576bn rupees ($8.2bn), is illustrative of how government spending increasingly ends up benefitting corporates.

Of 18 insurers under the scheme, 13 are private companies, all subsidiaries of some of the biggest business conglomerates in India, including the Reliance Group, Tata Sons, Bajaj Group and Bharti Enterprises.

A cross-section of non-BJP ruled state governments have accused the central BJP government of playing politics with drought relief.

“There’s glaring disparity – in 2018-19, Maharashtra [where the BJP is in power] got an allocation of 4,700 crore rupees ($676m) for drought relief. But Karnataka, which is experiencing a most severe and extensive drought, only got 949 crore rupees ($136.5m). It is inhuman to play politics with drought relief,” Karnataka’s rural development minister and Congress party candidate for the Bangalore North parliamentary constituency, Krishna Byre Gowda, told Al Jazeera.

The BJP’s DV Sadananda Gowda, union minister for statistics and planning and former chief minister of Karnataka, refuted the charges.

“This is bundle of lies. The devolution of funds from the central government to Karnataka in the past five years was 2.4 lakh crores ($34.5bn), three times more than what the Congress gave.”

Farmers claim that the price they get for their produce has remained unchanged in recent years. This is consistent with markers such as the Wholesale Price Index (WPI) for primary food articles, an indicator of how much farmers are actually being paid for their produce. WPI has been declining or stagnant since 2013-14.

The problem of prices

Politicians often blame the rain for the farm crisis, but for farmers in the Mandya, Koppal and Kolar districts of Karnataka, the crux of the agricultural crisis is prices.

The prices farmers receive for their crops are seldom remunerative and, adding to the uncertainty in the farmers’ lives, they fluctuate.

Chikkathayamma, 42, whose husband Marigowda, 50, ended his life on his paddy field, says: “We’ve seen many droughts over the years, we know nature does as it pleases. But what my husband couldn’t bear is that he had to sell his paddy at a cost that wouldn’t even recover the cost of fertiliser and manure that year.”

After his death, she and her son switched to a cash crop, sugarcane, on their two-acre farm. They sold their recent crop for 2,400 rupees ($69) per metric tonne.

It was 350 rupees ($5) below the government-set Fair and Remunerative Price (FRP), the minimum price that sugar factories are legally mandated to pay farmers. And even that payment was delayed by the factory by four months.

“By the time the payments arrived, interests had piled up on the loans we had taken for the crop. The FRP itself is lower than our input costs. And, we have sold for a price lower than the FRP,” explained Chikkathayamma.

The central government claims that the FRP it fixes is 77 percent higher than the cost farmers incur to raise their crop, a claim refuted by every sugarcane farmer interviewed. The government formally withdrew from the market when the sole public sector sugar factory in the district closed up shop in 2013.

During the cane crushing season in 2017 and 2018, farmers took to the streets in large numbers in Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra and Punjab.

The government has been more responsive to demands by sugar industry lobbies – many of them owned or controlled by politicians.

As sugar prices in the global market fell, India, the second largest sugar producer in the world, scrapped export duties on sugar. Earlier this year, the government also approved soft loans of up to 105bn rupees ($1.5bn) for sugar mills.

 

The BJP has been accused of reneging on its promise to farmers. The Minimum Support Price (MSP) – the price at which the government buys from the farmer – was stagnant for the first four years. The MSP is the government’s main instrument to ensure price stability by setting a floor price in the market.

This was official policy as the government told the Supreme Court, in an affidavit in 2015, that “mechanical linkage between MSP and cost of cultivation may be counterproductive” and would “distort the market”.

It was not until 2018 that Modi announced what he termed an “historic” increase in MSPs, which he claimed fulfilled his poll promise to ensure 50 percent profits over farmers’ production costs.

But the increase was not just four years too late but also insubstantial as it calculated production costs without considering land rents. This left out large numbers of tenant farmers who cultivate hired land.

According to reports from many Indian states, the MSP failed to impact prices as government procurement was delayed and inadequate.

Paddy growers in the Mandya and Koppal districts of Karnataka say government procurement processes started only 45 days after harvest. Small farmers said they cannot afford to sell to the government as it delays payments, sometimes for months together. 


So, they had no option but to sell their produce to private traders at a price at least one-third below MSP.

Liberalised trade policies have added to the crisis. In commodities such as wheat, pulses and milk products, indiscriminate imports have contributed to the uncertainty in prices.

In Volagerehalli, it is the sericulturists who are directly exposed to the caprices of the international market.

Sarasamma’s world turned upside when the government reduced the import duty on raw silk in 2015. In January 2016, her husband Nathappa sold his cocoons for Rs 80 per kg ($1.15), a quarter of what he would usually make. “He took his own life within the week,” the 37-year-old widow recalls.

Demonetisation a body blow

The drought-hit countryside was limping back to normalcy in November 2016 when Modi delivered a monetary shock to the Indian economy.

Overnight, about 85 percent of the national currency was demonetised in a “note ban” that he said would crack down on unaccounted or “black” money and starve “terrorists” of cash.

Two years later, India’s agriculture ministry admitted to a parliamentary panel that demonetisation disrupted agricultural markets. Indeed, demonetisation couldn’t have been timed worse: farmers were either selling their monsoon crop (kharif) or purchasing seeds and inputs to sow their winter crops (rabi). Cash shortages stalled both activities.

 

The note ban effectively disrupted agricultural supply chains. The government backtracked from its assessment within a week with a fresh report hailing demonetisation for “formalising the agricultural sector”.

Government verdicts notwithstanding, every farmer interviewed had a tale of hardship to tell about the time cash was sucked out of the economy.

Prices fell steeply and farmers sold in panic at two-thirds the market price. But it was the hardest on small and marginal farmers, who borrow to raise money to purchase seeds and fertiliser. Moneylenders withdrew from the market fearing a crackdown by authorities.

Agricultural labour was also hit hard. It was harder to find work as farmers couldn’t pay workers.

When work dries up in the village, agricultural workers typically move to towns and cities to work in India’s booming construction industry, which employs around 50 million workers.

But demonetisation and the roll-out of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in 2017 slowed down construction sector activities. This meant that this vital escape hatch was shut. In Koppal in north Karnataka, hundreds returned home to their villages.

 

“Work is hard to come by in the village as farmers are switching to machines, and fewer crops are cultivated,” Malaksaab, 37, a landless worker from Koppal’s Kushtagi, said.

“This was like rubbing salt in our wound…we couldn’t return [to construction work] for six months!”

The government also failed to scale up or ensure implementation of its flagship employment guarantee scheme, the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS). The government delayed payments routinely. What could have been an important lifeline for the rural poor in the wake of such a wide collapse of livelihoods languished.

Farmers fought back

In recent years, the crisis in rural India has often spilled over onto its urban streets. Sporadic protests where farmers burn or destroy their produce to protest crashing prices have made for alarming visuals.

Incidences of riots due to agrarian distress increased fourfold from 628 in the previous year to 2,683 in 2015. This nearly doubled in 2016, the last year for which national crimes data is available.

But the protests also got more organised. Till 2017, farmers’ organisations held large marches and protests in federal state capitals. Demonetisation, and the ensuing intensification of the crisis in prices, shifted focus to the central government.

That year, around 150 farmers’ organisations formed the All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee, demanding remunerative prices and a waiver on outstanding loans. The wave of protests reached India’s capital New Delhi with four massive rallies in 2018.

These agrarian protests are also distinctive because they represent a wide social coalition.

“It is significant that our mobilisations drew participation that cut across diverse strata of rural society,” Vijoo Krishnan, joint secretary of the All India Kisan Sabha, a peasant organisation with over 16 million members, said.

“Landless agricultural workers, peasants, tenant farmers, Adivasis [scheduled tribes] and Dalits [scheduled castes] joined the protest in large numbers.”

The rural vote

The BJP’s electoral losses in three key states in 2018 were widely attributed to the rural vote. Since then, state governments cutting across party lines have announced loan waivers and cash transfer schemes for farmers.

In February this year, the BJP rolled out a national cash transfer scheme of Rs 6,000 ($86) a year for small and marginal farmers. The Congress manifesto promised a minimum income guarantee of the same amount every month to 50 million poor Indians.

National and regional political parties have released manifestos laden with promises to the farmer. The BJP also promised interest free loans up to Rs 1 lakh ($1,445) and pensions for small and marginal farmers. The Congress promised a nationwide waiver on outstanding farm loans and a separate budget for farmers.

Whether the rural voter will weigh these promises against a longer-term assessment of how political parties have handled the decade-long festering crisis remains to be seen.

For now, not all farmers in Volagerehalli are buying it.

“What about prices? How does money [cash transfers] ensure that the next time I sell my produce, I am not going to come back and kill myself? How do I know the next time you’re here, you’re not going to be talking to my family?” asks 32-year-old farmer, Umesh, visibly wounded from having lost yet another village-mate to what he calls an “endless man-made tragedy”.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2KTj0kD
via IFTTT

Russell Westbrook, Thunder Hold Off Damian Lillard, Trail Blazers to Win Game 3

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - APRIL 19: Russell Westbrook #0 of the Oklahoma City Thunder goes to the basket against the Portland Trail Blazers during Game Three of Round One of the 2019 NBA Playoffs on April 19, 2019 at Chesapeake Energy Arena in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images)

Joe Murphy/Getty Images

The Oklahoma City Thunder got on the board with a 120-108 victory over the Portland Trail Blazers in Game 3 on Friday as the series shifted to Chesapeake Energy Arena in OKC.

Russell Westbrook led the way for the Thunder with 33 points, 11 assists and five rebounds. Paul George added 22 points, six assists and six rebounds.

Damian Lillard had 32 points and six assists for the Trail Blazers in a losing effort, and CJ McCollum contributed 21 points, seven assists and seven rebounds.

Steven Adams Provides Thunder Necessary Depth to Rally

Oklahoma City will only go as far as Westbrook and George can carry it, but Steven Adams’ play could go a long way in determining if the Thunder can rally from an 0-2 series hole.

As George and Westbrook struggled to find their respective shots early on, Adams provided OKC with stability. He dropped eight points in the opening two quarters while shooting 4-of-5 from the field.

OKC THUNDER @okcthunder

Russ & Steve 🔥 https://t.co/zMN53TKM4V

OKC THUNDER @okcthunder

There’s the Big Kiwi at the rim again. He’s got 6 points. @RealStevenAdams https://t.co/10xcXWKxhZ

The rest of the Thunder shot just 39.3 percent in the first half.

Adams finished the game with 10 points and seven boards. That comes after he averaged 16.5 points and nine rebounds in the first two games. He is shooting 71.4 percent through the front three games.

He gives the Thunder a major paint presence while taking some of the pressure off George and Westbrook. With the 7’0″, 265-pound center playing at a high level, it creates space for others to get shots up on the outside.

Jerami Grant (4-of-5) and Terrance Ferguson (3-of-4) combined to make seven three-pointers Friday.

In a series that is being billed as Westbrook and George versus Lillard and McCollum, Adams has the ability to make an impact as a big man. Portland center Enes Kanter recorded a defensive rating of 111.5 between the Trail Blazers and the New York Knicks this season—and he has done little to slow down his former teammate to this point.

Hero ball has not worked for the Thunder in the post-Kevin Durant era, as Oklahoma City won just three playoff games the last two years. With Adams playing the role of a reliable third option behind George and Westbrook, OKC has enough firepower to potentially get out of the first round for the first time since 2016.

Road Woes Could Derail Trail Blazers’ Postseason

Portland may have one of the best one-two punches in all of basketball in Lillard and McCollum, but that hasn’t resulted in much postseason success to this point.

And it’s all because of the team’s inability to win away from the Moda Center.

Portland tied for the third-best home record (32-9) in the NBA during the regular season and defended home court in the first two games of this series. On the flip side, though, the Trail Blazers went just 21-20 on the road during the regular season, which put them in a tie for the third-fewest among Western Conference playoff teams.

While they gave it a good fight Friday, they once again came up short in an opponent’s arena. 

The Trail Blazers have now lost eight consecutive postseason road games dating back to 2016. Since McCollum entered the league in 2013, the Trail Blazers have made the playoffs six consecutive seasons and have only managed to win three games away from during the postseason:

  • 2014: 2-4
  • 2015: 0-3
  • 2016: 1-5
  • 2017:0-2
  • 2018: 0-2
  • 2019 0-1 (so far)

Road wins are undoubtedly tough to come by in the playoffs, but championship teams find a way to at least steal a game here and there. That’s something that has eluded Portland for the most part in recent years.

The Trail Blazers dug themselves a double-digit deficit early on by shooting just 37.5 percent from the floor during the first half while committing 14 turnovers and 15 fouls. While they shot 55.8 percent and had just four turnovers in the second half, they couldn’t quite complete the comeback.

Not even Lillard’s 25-point third quarter was enough:

  1. McCollum and the Blazers Snapped Postseason Losing Streak for “Jennifer”

  2. Stars Invest in Plant-Based Food as Vegetarianism Sweeps NBA

  3. The NBA Got Some Wild Techs This Season

  4. Jarrett Allen Is One of the NBA’s Hottest Rim Protectors

  5. Wade’s Jersey Swaps Created Epic Moments This Season

  6. Westbrook Makes History While Honoring Nipsey Hussle

  7. Devin Booker Makes History with Scoring Tear

  8. 29 Years Ago, Jordan Dropped Career-High 69 Points

  9. Bosh Is Getting His Jersey Raised to the Rafters in Miami

  10. Steph Returns to Houston for 1st Time Since His Moon Landing Troll

  11. Lou Williams Is Coming for a Repeat of Sixth Man of the Year

  12. Pat Beverley Has the Clippers Stealing the LA Shine

  13. LeBron Keeps Shredding NBA Record Books

  14. Young’s Hot Streak Is Heating Up the ROY Race with Luka

  15. LeBron and 2 Chainz Form a Superteam to Release a New Album

  16. Wade’s #OneLastDance Dominated February

  17. Warriors Fans Go Wild After Unforgettable Moments with Steph

  18. Eight Years Ago, the Nuggets Traded Melo to the Knicks

  19. Two Years Ago, the Kings Shipped Boogie to the Pelicans

  20. ASG Will Be Competitive Again If the NBA Raises the Stakes

Right Arrow Icon

As the third seed, Portland can advance to the conference semifinals just by protecting home court. However, barring any upsets in the other series, they will have to find a way to win on the road if they hope to get past the second round for the first time since 2000.

What’s Next

Oklahoma City will have the opportunity to try to even the series Sunday, with Game 4 being played at 9:30 p.m. ET.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2IPewJb
via IFTTT

Kyrie Irving, Celtics Take Commanding Series Lead with Game 3 Win vs. Pacers

INDIANAPOLIS, IN - APRIL 19: Kyrie Irving #11 of the Boston Celtics handles the ball against the Indiana Pacers during Game Three of Round One of the 2019 NBA Playoffs on April 19, 2019 at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2019 NBAE (Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images)

Jeff Haynes/Getty Images

The Boston Celtics continued their domination of the Indiana Pacers with a 104-96 win Friday night to boost their series lead to 3-0 at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. 

In the first half, both teams played their best offensive ball of the series before things stalled out in the second half. It seemed like neither squad could miss. However, the second frame looked much more like the first two games of this series. Both offenses—particularly Indiana’s—struggled mightily. 

Tim Bontemps @TimBontemps

Five minutes into the second half, the Celtics are 2 for 10, and the Pacers are 1 for 8. This looks much more like the first two games of this series than the first half’s track meet did.

Tim Bontemps @TimBontemps

The Pacers have — to put it mildly — had their chances in this series. They are now 5-for-13 in the fourth quarter, and 10-for-36 in the second half. They’ll leave thinking they could’ve won for the third straight game — but will be down 3-0 in the series.

Opposite to the flow of the game, it took until the second half for Celtics All-Star point guard Kyrie Irving to get going. Once he did, the Celtics pulled away. The 27-year-old finished with 19 points, 10 assists and five rebounds.

Boston guard Jaylen Brown led all scorers with 23 points on 8-of-9 shooting from the field. The Pacers’ leading scorer came off the bench. Guard Tyreke Evans bucketed 19 points and was 4-of-6 from three-point land.

What’s Next? 

Game 4 will tip off Sunday at 1 p.m. ET from Indianapolis and will be broadcast on ABC. The Celtics can clinch the first-round series and get some rest before facing either the Milwaukee Bucks or Detroit Pistons in the Eastern Conference Semifinals.

This article will be updated to provide more information on this story as it becomes available.

Get the best sports content from the web and social in the new B/R app. Get the app to get the game.

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2XtMerG
via IFTTT

Game 3 Live: Blazers vs. Thunder

  1. Russ’ Lucky Nutmeg 😂

    NBA on ESPN @ESPNNBA

    Westbrook getting things done 😤 https://t.co/r6lyxyDoot

  2. Game 3 Live: Blazers vs. Thunder 🍿

    via Bleacher Report

  3. Caption This 😂

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    Unbothered https://t.co/yJuCpEqFYT

  4. OKC THUNDER @okcthunder

  5. Rip City Project @ripcityproject

  6. Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

  7. The Render @TheRenderNBA

  8. Joe Freeman @BlazerFreeman

  9. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  10. FOX Sports Oklahoma @FOXSportsOK

  11. Danny Marang @DMarang

  12. Welcome To Loud City @WTLC

  13. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  14. NBA @NBA

  15. Trail Blazers @trailblazers

  16. Up The Thunder @UpTheThunder

  17. FOX Sports Oklahoma @FOXSportsOK

  18. Pinwheel Empire @pinwheelempire

  19. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  20. OKC THUNDER @okcthunder

  21. Danny Marang @DMarang

  22. kerry eggers @kerryeggers

  23. Brett Dawson @BDawsonWrites

  24. Trail Blazers @trailblazers

  25. Welcome To Loud City @WTLC

  26. Kevin Pelton @kpelton

  27. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  28. Welcome To Loud City @WTLC

  29. Cliff Brunt @CliffBruntAP

  30. Dwight Jaynes @dwightjaynes

  31. Erik Horne @ErikHorneOK

  32. Cliff Brunt @CliffBruntAP

  33. Royce Young @royceyoung

  34. Joe Freeman @BlazerFreeman

  35. OKC THUNDER @okcthunder

  36. Up The Thunder @UpTheThunder

  37. NBA @NBA

  38. FOX Sports Oklahoma @FOXSportsOK

  39. kerry eggers @kerryeggers

  40. Brett Dawson @BDawsonWrites

  41. Danny Marang @DMarang

  42. Joe Freeman @BlazerFreeman

  43. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  44. FOX Sports Oklahoma @FOXSportsOK

  45. Jamie Hudson @JamieHudsonNBCS

  46. Pinwheel Empire @pinwheelempire

  47. kerry eggers @kerryeggers

  48. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  49. Erik Horne @ErikHorneOK

  50. Brett Dawson @BDawsonWrites

  51. OKC THUNDER @okcthunder

  52. Welcome To Loud City @WTLC

  53. Danny Marang @DMarang

  54. Royce Young @royceyoung

  55. kerry eggers @kerryeggers

  56. FOX Sports Oklahoma @FOXSportsOK

  57. Trail Blazers @trailblazers

  58. Welcome To Loud City @WTLC

  59. Trail Blazers @trailblazers

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2VUJMtH
via IFTTT

Game 3 Live: Blazers vs. Thunder

  1. Russ’ Lucky Nutmeg 😂

    NBA on ESPN @ESPNNBA

    Westbrook getting things done 😤 https://t.co/r6lyxyDoot

  2. Game 3 Live: Blazers vs. Thunder 🍿

    via Bleacher Report

  3. Caption This 😂

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    Unbothered https://t.co/yJuCpEqFYT

  4. OKC THUNDER @okcthunder

  5. Rip City Project @ripcityproject

  6. Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

  7. The Render @TheRenderNBA

  8. Joe Freeman @BlazerFreeman

  9. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  10. FOX Sports Oklahoma @FOXSportsOK

  11. Danny Marang @DMarang

  12. Welcome To Loud City @WTLC

  13. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  14. NBA @NBA

  15. Trail Blazers @trailblazers

  16. Up The Thunder @UpTheThunder

  17. FOX Sports Oklahoma @FOXSportsOK

  18. Pinwheel Empire @pinwheelempire

  19. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  20. OKC THUNDER @okcthunder

  21. Danny Marang @DMarang

  22. kerry eggers @kerryeggers

  23. Brett Dawson @BDawsonWrites

  24. Trail Blazers @trailblazers

  25. Welcome To Loud City @WTLC

  26. Kevin Pelton @kpelton

  27. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  28. Welcome To Loud City @WTLC

  29. Cliff Brunt @CliffBruntAP

  30. Dwight Jaynes @dwightjaynes

  31. Erik Horne @ErikHorneOK

  32. Cliff Brunt @CliffBruntAP

  33. Royce Young @royceyoung

  34. Joe Freeman @BlazerFreeman

  35. OKC THUNDER @okcthunder

  36. Up The Thunder @UpTheThunder

  37. NBA @NBA

  38. FOX Sports Oklahoma @FOXSportsOK

  39. kerry eggers @kerryeggers

  40. Brett Dawson @BDawsonWrites

  41. Danny Marang @DMarang

  42. Joe Freeman @BlazerFreeman

  43. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  44. FOX Sports Oklahoma @FOXSportsOK

  45. Jamie Hudson @JamieHudsonNBCS

  46. Pinwheel Empire @pinwheelempire

  47. kerry eggers @kerryeggers

  48. Casey Holdahl @CHold

  49. Erik Horne @ErikHorneOK

  50. Brett Dawson @BDawsonWrites

  51. OKC THUNDER @okcthunder

  52. Welcome To Loud City @WTLC

  53. Danny Marang @DMarang

  54. Royce Young @royceyoung

  55. kerry eggers @kerryeggers

  56. FOX Sports Oklahoma @FOXSportsOK

  57. Trail Blazers @trailblazers

  58. Welcome To Loud City @WTLC

  59. Trail Blazers @trailblazers

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2VUJMtH
via IFTTT

Game 3 Live: Celtics vs. Pacers

  1. Kyrie Chasedown Block 🖐

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    Kyrie chasedown block 😳

    (via @NBA)
    https://t.co/NN3ztMIubU

  2. Celtics Make 8 Threes 🔥

    NBA @NBA

    The @celtics connect on 8 threes in the opening frame of Game 3! #Celtics #NBAPlayoffs #NBAonABC https://t.co/kNDksyxcWW

  3. JB Takes Off for the Slam ✈

    Celtics on NBC Sports Boston @NBCSCeltics

    Kyrie finds Jaylen Brown, JB slams it HOME 🤯 https://t.co/pwgXVuaSOU

  4. Celtics Shooting Lights Out

    Bleacher Report NBA @BR_NBA

    Celtics had 41 in 1st, Jaylen is 3/3 from deep with 12 https://t.co/nPWJoXmXcX

  5. Mark Montieth @MarkMontieth

  6. Indiana Pacers @Pacers

  7. Abby Chin @tvabby

  8. Cuaght Tatum Slipplin’

    Bleacher Report NBA @BR_NBA

    Don’t blink in front of Darren Collison 💨

    (via @NBATV)
    https://t.co/ilP7mfWb2C

  9. Tatum Iso Is Dangerous 💰

    Bleacher Report NBA @BR_NBA

    Tatum out here dancing

    (via @NBA)
    https://t.co/s0HTLg9sFj

  10. Live: Pacers Battling Back vs. Celtics

    via Bleacher Report

  11. gary washburn @GwashburnGlobe

  12. Indy Cornrows @IndyCornrows

  13. NBA on ESPN @ESPNNBA

  14. Dipo Won’t Be at Game 3

    Indiana Pacers @Pacers

    ☹ @VicOladipo will not attend tonight’s game due to weather delays with his flight.

    But he is expected to be here for Game 4 on Sunday. 🙌 https://t.co/3zWHiXLgWU

  15. Kyrie’s Growth in the Clutch 🗡

    NBA TV @NBATV

    Kyrie explains how his ability to score down the stretch has improved since his first few years in the league.

    #NBAPlayoffs https://t.co/e0Box9J9ZS

  16. Tony East @TEastNBA

  17. iPacers.com @iPacersblog

  18. FOX Sports Indiana @FSIndiana

  19. Tony East @TEastNBA

  20. Indiana Pacers @Pacers

  21. NBA TV @NBATV

  22. Dime @DimeUPROXX

  23. Indy Cornrows @IndyCornrows

  24. Boston.com Celtics News @BDCCeltics

  25. The Ringer @ringer

  26. FOX Sports Indiana @FSIndiana

  27. Brian Robb @BrianTRobb

  28. Gregg Doyel @GreggDoyelStar

  29. 8 Points, 9 Seconds @8pts9secs

  30. Jeremiah Johnson @JJFSINDIANA

  31. Brian Robb @BrianTRobb

  32. Boston Celtics @celtics

  33. gary washburn @GwashburnGlobe

  34. Tony East @TEastNBA

  35. SLAM @SLAMonline

  36. J. Michael @ThisIsJMichael

  37. Indy Cornrows @IndyCornrows

  38. A. Sherrod Blakely @ASherrodblakely

  39. Michael Pina @MichaelVPina

  40. iPacers.com @iPacersblog

  41. 8 Points, 9 Seconds @8pts9secs

  42. Jeremiah Johnson @JJFSINDIANA

  43. 8 Points, 9 Seconds @8pts9secs

  44. Indy Cornrows @IndyCornrows

  45. A. Sherrod Blakely @ASherrodblakely

  46. Marc D’Amico @Marc_DAmico

  47. NBA on ESPN @ESPNNBA

  48. FOX Sports Indiana @FSIndiana

  49. J. Michael @ThisIsJMichael

  50. Chris Forsberg @ChrisForsberg_

  51. 8 Points, 9 Seconds @8pts9secs

  52. Gregg Doyel @GreggDoyelStar

  53. J. Michael @ThisIsJMichael

  54. Indiana Pacers @Pacers

  55. NBA @NBA

  56. Boston Celtics @celtics

  57. Indy Cornrows @IndyCornrows

  58. Michael Pina @MichaelVPina

  59. CelticsBlog @celticsblog

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2ULwJ1b
via IFTTT

Game 3 Live: Celtics vs. Pacers

  1. Kyrie Chasedown Block 🖐

    Bleacher Report @BleacherReport

    Kyrie chasedown block 😳

    (via @NBA)
    https://t.co/NN3ztMIubU

  2. Celtics Make 8 Threes 🔥

    NBA @NBA

    The @celtics connect on 8 threes in the opening frame of Game 3! #Celtics #NBAPlayoffs #NBAonABC https://t.co/kNDksyxcWW

  3. JB Takes Off for the Slam ✈

    Celtics on NBC Sports Boston @NBCSCeltics

    Kyrie finds Jaylen Brown, JB slams it HOME 🤯 https://t.co/pwgXVuaSOU

  4. Celtics Shooting Lights Out

    Bleacher Report NBA @BR_NBA

    Celtics had 41 in 1st, Jaylen is 3/3 from deep with 12 https://t.co/nPWJoXmXcX

  5. Mark Montieth @MarkMontieth

  6. Indiana Pacers @Pacers

  7. Abby Chin @tvabby

  8. Cuaght Tatum Slipplin’

    Bleacher Report NBA @BR_NBA

    Don’t blink in front of Darren Collison 💨

    (via @NBATV)
    https://t.co/ilP7mfWb2C

  9. Tatum Iso Is Dangerous 💰

    Bleacher Report NBA @BR_NBA

    Tatum out here dancing

    (via @NBA)
    https://t.co/s0HTLg9sFj

  10. Live: Pacers Battling Back vs. Celtics

    via Bleacher Report

  11. gary washburn @GwashburnGlobe

  12. Indy Cornrows @IndyCornrows

  13. NBA on ESPN @ESPNNBA

  14. Dipo Won’t Be at Game 3

    Indiana Pacers @Pacers

    ☹ @VicOladipo will not attend tonight’s game due to weather delays with his flight.

    But he is expected to be here for Game 4 on Sunday. 🙌 https://t.co/3zWHiXLgWU

  15. Kyrie’s Growth in the Clutch 🗡

    NBA TV @NBATV

    Kyrie explains how his ability to score down the stretch has improved since his first few years in the league.

    #NBAPlayoffs https://t.co/e0Box9J9ZS

  16. Tony East @TEastNBA

  17. iPacers.com @iPacersblog

  18. FOX Sports Indiana @FSIndiana

  19. Tony East @TEastNBA

  20. Indiana Pacers @Pacers

  21. NBA TV @NBATV

  22. Dime @DimeUPROXX

  23. Indy Cornrows @IndyCornrows

  24. Boston.com Celtics News @BDCCeltics

  25. The Ringer @ringer

  26. FOX Sports Indiana @FSIndiana

  27. Brian Robb @BrianTRobb

  28. Gregg Doyel @GreggDoyelStar

  29. 8 Points, 9 Seconds @8pts9secs

  30. Jeremiah Johnson @JJFSINDIANA

  31. Brian Robb @BrianTRobb

  32. Boston Celtics @celtics

  33. gary washburn @GwashburnGlobe

  34. Tony East @TEastNBA

  35. SLAM @SLAMonline

  36. J. Michael @ThisIsJMichael

  37. Indy Cornrows @IndyCornrows

  38. A. Sherrod Blakely @ASherrodblakely

  39. Michael Pina @MichaelVPina

  40. iPacers.com @iPacersblog

  41. 8 Points, 9 Seconds @8pts9secs

  42. Jeremiah Johnson @JJFSINDIANA

  43. 8 Points, 9 Seconds @8pts9secs

  44. Indy Cornrows @IndyCornrows

  45. A. Sherrod Blakely @ASherrodblakely

  46. Marc D’Amico @Marc_DAmico

  47. NBA on ESPN @ESPNNBA

  48. FOX Sports Indiana @FSIndiana

  49. J. Michael @ThisIsJMichael

  50. Chris Forsberg @ChrisForsberg_

  51. 8 Points, 9 Seconds @8pts9secs

  52. Gregg Doyel @GreggDoyelStar

  53. J. Michael @ThisIsJMichael

  54. Indiana Pacers @Pacers

  55. NBA @NBA

  56. Boston Celtics @celtics

  57. Indy Cornrows @IndyCornrows

  58. Michael Pina @MichaelVPina

  59. CelticsBlog @celticsblog

Read More

from Daily Trends Hunter http://bit.ly/2ULwJ1b
via IFTTT