'Do you smell what Barack is cooking?'
41 seconds ago
Ken Pagano, the pastor of the New Bethel Church here, is passionate about gun rights. He shoots regularly at the local firing range, and his sermon two weeks ago was on “God, Guns, Gospel and Geometry.” And on Saturday night, he is inviting his congregation of 150 and others to wear or carry their firearms into the sanctuary to “celebrate our rights as Americans!” as a promotional flier for the “open carry celebration” puts it.Read More......
“God and guns were part of the foundation of this country,” Mr. Pagano, 49, said Wednesday in the small brick Assembly of God church, where a large wooden cross hung over the altar and two American flags jutted from side walls. “I don’t see any contradiction in this. Not every Christian denomination is pacifist.”
The bring-your-gun-to-church day, which will include a $1 raffle of a handgun, firearms safety lessons and a picnic, is another sign that the gun culture in the United States is thriving despite, or perhaps because of, President Obama’s election in November.
“I am not unaware of the controversies swirling around this dinner,” Biden said, “swirling around the speed -- or lack thereof -- that we’re moving on issues that are of great importance to you and, quite frankly, to me and to the President and to millions of Americans.”No, it's not the lack of speed. It's the fact that you compared us to pedophiles and incest. The fact that you're still kicking out two gay service members a day, and that you have the power to implement a stop-loss order immediately.
In a highly unusual move, Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio) on Friday launched a filibuster-like move to delay a vote on the Democrats' cap-and-trade bill.It looked and sounded like he was playing a game. The Republicans act pretty damn juvenile. One could easily forget that the GOP controlled the House from 1995 through 2007, yet never did anything of substance on energy. Seriously, Boehner sounded like a teenage punk with all his goofy gang members behind him, urging him on. Good god, they are useless. Speaker Pelosi turned down the opportunity for a speech and urged a vote.
The House minority leader is going through the bill page-by-page in a speech on the House floor to protest changes made to the measure at just after three a.m. on Friday.
Q You spoke about that it's going to be a salute to the accomplishment of gay and lesbian Americans. Is this a sign that the President is feeling political heat from this group, that he felt that he should schedule this?No. Got that. A one-word answer: No.
MR. GIBBS: No, this is an event scheduled around Pride Month.
Q Around Pride Month? And this is the first time that the White House has done that sort of event here.
MR. GIBBS: This will be the first time we've had Pride Month while we're in the White House.
Q I was just wondering what -- are we to expect any substantive announcements on the two issues that that community has right at the forefront right now -- Defense of Marriage and "don't ask, don't tell"?
MR. GIBBS: No.
Today's column is my last for The Washington Post. And the first thing I want to say is thank you. Thank you to all you readers, e-mailers, commenters, questioners, Facebook friends and Twitterers for spending your time with me and engaging with me over the years. And thank you for the recent outpouring of support. It was extraordinarily uplifting, and I'm deeply grateful. If I ever had any doubt, your words have further inspired me to continue doing accountability journalism. My plan is to take a few weeks off before embarking upon my next endeavor -- but when I do, I hope you'll join me.When I think about the Bush years, I think about the lies, too. And, I think about how many "real" reporters sat in the briefing room while George Bush and his minions lied to their faces. Those reporters knew it and dutifully regurgitated the lies back to us. It was sickening. But, at least we had Froomkin.
It's hard to summarize the past five and a half years. But I'll try.
I started my column in January 2004, and one dominant theme quickly emerged: That George W. Bush was truly the proverbial emperor with no clothes. In the days and weeks after the 9/11 terror attacks, the nation, including the media, vested him with abilities he didn't have and credibility he didn't deserve. As it happens, it was on the day of my very first column that we also got the first insider look at the Bush White House, via Ron Suskind's book, The Price of Loyalty. In it, former Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill described a disengaged president "like a blind man in a room full of deaf people", encircled by "a Praetorian guard,” intently looking for a way to overthrow Saddam Hussein long before 9/11. The ensuing five years and 1,088 columns really just fleshed out that portrait, describing a president who was oblivious, embubbled and untrustworthy.
When I look back on the Bush years, I think of the lies. There were so many. Lies about the war and lies to cover up the lies about the war. Lies about torture and surveillance. Lies about Valerie Plame. Vice President Dick Cheney's lies, criminally prosecutable but for his chief of staff Scooter Libby's lies. I also think about the extraordinary and fundamentally cancerous expansion of executive power that led to violations of our laws and our principles.
Vice President Biden, the author of the landmark Violence Against Women Act, announced today the appointment of Lynn Rosenthal as the new White House Advisor on Violence Against Women. Ms. Rosenthal is one of the nation’s foremost experts in domestic violence policy, and has worked at the local, state and national levels to create an environment where violence against women is not ignored and perpetrators are held accountable. This is a newly created position at the White House, dedicated specifically to advising the President and Vice President on domestic violence and sexual assault issues.Indeed, she will be an asset.
“My proudest legislative achievement in the Senate was passing the Violence Against Women Act. We’ve made great strides since its passage – shining a light on an all too silent issue and reducing violence against women in significant numbers. But we have to do more,” said Vice President Biden. “That’s why we’re here today – to do more. It’s an honor to announce the first ever White House Advisor on Violence Against Women, Lynn Rosenthal. Lynn is passionate about these issues and knows them backwards and forwards. And as a former director of a shelter, she’s also seen the human face of this tragic problem. She will be a leader in this White House in stopping the violence and sexual assault of women and will be an integral part of this Administration.”
“Lynn Rosenthal has been a life-long advocate for women and she has been a real leader in developing effective policies to combat domestic violence,” said Valerie Jarrett, Senior Advisor and Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Relations and Public Engagement. “She will be a tremendous asset to the President, Vice President and the entire Administration as we continue the battle against domestic violence and sexual assault.”
In a statement during his radio show today he appeared to back off, saying only that an unidentified person was researching publicly available information such as the group’s tax filings. Non-profit organizations must file IRS form 990 and are available for public inspection.Savage is a bully with a big megaphone. But, look what happened when Media Matters stood up to the bully. He ran away with his tail between his legs. Read More......
Apparently his call for right wing talkers and fellow travelers to rise up against this media watchdog was met with a resounding silence. His attempt to push back and silence his critics appears to be a failure. It is difficult for Savage to push back against reporting that includes recordings of his own words.
In today’s press briefing, David Corn of Mother Jones asked White House spokesman Robert Gibbs about the report and whether the Obama administration thinks this is “the way to go.” Gibbs largely dismissed CAP’s recommendations, saying that the White House is not interested in signing an executive order to temporarily halt DADT:There's that damn "durable" language. He's also used the word "sustainable." This White House could just come up with a practical plan that would stop destoying the lives of service men and women.GIBBS: Well, the President has had meetings about this, has talked with members of Congress. His staff has talked with members of Congress. All of them have talked to Pentagon officials and the administration believes that this requires a durable, legislative solution, and is pursing that in Congress.
Q: I understand that for the long-term solution, but what do you take issue with about signing an executive order that will suspend the separations before an endurable solution is reached through the slow legislative process?
GIBBS: I mean, I think there could be differences on strategy. I think our belief is that the only and best way to do this is through a durable, comprehensive legislative process.
Rep. Roy Blunt, the former House Majority Leader who is now a GOP candidate for Governor in Missouri, is no stranger to scandal, having gone through an affair, a public divorce and remarriage under the scrutiny of the press.Here's photographic proof:
Rep. Roy Blunt, the former House Majority Leader who is now a GOP candidate for Senate in Missouri, is no stranger to scandal, having gone through a public divorce and remarriage under the scrutiny of the press.Now, there was an obvious error in the original report. Blunt is running for Senate, not Governor. That got corrected. The affair part, however, wasn't wrong and certainly was relevant. Media Matters picked up this story, too:
"This can be a distraction," Blunt said of the Ensign and Sanford scandals. "But I think the issues are big enough that they will quickly overcome the distraction."
So, why was the story changed when it is demonstrably true that Blunt did have an affair with a tobacco lobbyist who would go on to become his current wife?Why indeed? Read More......
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In Vauban, a suburb of the university town of Freiburg, luxuriant beds of brilliant flowers replace what would normally be parking outside its neat, middle- class homes. Instead of the roar of traffic, the residents listen to birdsong, children playing and the occasional jingle of a bicycle bell.Read More......
"If you want to have a car here, you have to pay about €20,000 for a space in one of our garages on the outskirts of the district," says Andreas Delleske one of the founders and now a promoter of the Vauban project, "but about 57 per cent of the residents sold a car to enjoy the privilege of living here." As a result, most residents travel by bike or use the ultra-efficient tram service that connects the suburb with the centre of Freiburg, 15 minutes away. If they want a car to go on holiday or to shift things, they hire one or join one of the town's car-sharing schemes.
Because it has no cars, Vauban's planners have almost completely dispensed with the idea of metalled roads. Its streets and pathways are cobbled or gritted and vehicles are allowed in only for a matter of minutes to unload essential goods. Being virtually car-free is only the start of what has been hailed as one of Europe's most successful experiments in green living and one which is viewed increasingly as a blueprint for a future and perhaps essential way of living in an age of climate change.
As MPs rounded on the government over its handling of the inquiry, David Miliband responded to one of the main criticisms of the process when he said that the five-strong body would be free to write what it likes.Civil or criminal liability should not have been dismissed but this is still good news. Read More......
Miliband said the privy council inquiry, to be chaired by Sir John Chilcot, would not establish civil or criminal liability. But he added: "Everything beyond that will be within its remit. It can praise or blame whomever it likes and it is free to write its own report at every stage."
The concession was in sharp contrast to restrictions placed on the inquiry by Gordon Brown when he established it last week. He told MPs on 15 June: "The primary objective of the committee will be to identify lessons learned.
The committee will not set out to apportion blame or consider issues of civil or criminal liability."
A bird-bone flute unearthed in a German cave was carved some 35,000 years ago and is the oldest handcrafted musical instrument yet discovered, archaeologists say, offering the latest evidence that early modern humans in Europe had established a complex and creative culture.Read More......
A team led by University of Tuebingen archaeologist Nicholas Conard assembled the flute from 12 pieces of griffon vulture bone scattered in a small plot of the Hohle Fels cave in southern Germany.
Together, the pieces comprise a 8.6-inch (22-centimeter) instrument with five holes and a notched end. Conard said the flute was 35,000 years old.
I’m hoping you also heard about the list of priorities/accomplishments: 1) signed UN declaration on gay rightsYes, this would be the UN declaration that commits the Obama administration to push other countries to decriminalize homosexuality. Okay, I'm game. What's the Obama administration's "plan" for pushing other countries to decriminalize being gay? In Iraq, for example, we regularly read of atrocities against gays and lesbians. In Turkey too. So what has the administration actually donehttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gif to make the lives of gays and lesbians in Iraq and Turkey better? I know they signed a document promising to help, but what have they actually done to help, besides simply offer campaign-style promises?
2) moving forward with inclusive Hate CrimesAh, "moving forward." In fact, the hate crimes bill is moving backward. It was supposed to come up for a vote last week, and now we're told it's been postponed several months because they just can't all agree where to put the bill. This piece of legislation that passed both the House and Senate in the last congress, and even survived a filibuster in the Senate, is now stuck in the mud. It's not "moving forward" at all. And in any case, tell us exactly what the Obama White House has done to help it move forward.
3) federal benefits within allowances of DOMA & active support for Domestic Partners Benefits and Obligations ActWell, kind of. Those federal benefits already existed, and gay employees were already eligible to get them. But it was up to their supervisors whether to give them out. Second, the benefits don't include health care or retirement. Obama said DOMA stops him from giving those benefits. Gay lawyers I talk to say that this is a lie. In fact, we now know that when gay legal groups tried to sit down with the Obama administration in order to work out why Obama thought DOMA precluded healthy benefits, when the groups say it does not, the Obama administration refused to sit down, refused to provide any information that might have helped these groups create a work-around around DOMA.
4) proceeding with lifting HIV entry banProceeding? That's another of saying "we haven't done it yet."
5) developing a new national HIV/AIDS strategyMaybe they are, maybe they're not. Perhaps there's some massive inter-governmental effort to develop a new national strategy - if so, we'd like to hear more about this.
6) inclusion of LGBT counts in censusYes, that was very nice. Not on our radar, but very nice.
7) hiring & appointment of LGBT personnelAgain, very nice, but Bill Clinton in 1993 hired LGBT personnel, as did George Bush. In 2009, you don't credit for not discriminating against minorities in hiring UNLESS you break a glass ceiling, such as picking an openly gay person for your cabinet or for the Supreme Court. And it's clear that no openly gay person will be stepping into that cabinet room for a long time coming.
8) working toward repeal of DADTOkay, I'm game. Tell us all the "work" the Obama administration has done to repeal Don't Ask Don't Tell. Is part of that "work" refusing to issue a stop-loss order which would spare the careers of two gay service members a day?
9) full support for ENDA and work for its passageMy dog "supports" ENDA. We expect our president to lead, not follow. Support is something you do when you run for president. Actually work towards passage of legislation is something you do when you ARE president. What has Barack Obama done since taking office to advance ENDA?
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