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AtLast 04-07-2011 01:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jesse (Post 315437)
Quake hit Japan today, 7.4 This was only moments ago. It is actually still considered an aftershock. Tsunami warning issued.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42473172...s-asiapacific/

Damn! Japan sure is getting big time after shocks. This would measure as some quake anywhere. I hope the hell nothing more happens to the nuke plant.

These could go on for months!

Corkey 04-07-2011 01:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AtLastHome (Post 315545)
Damn! Japan sure is getting big time after shocks. This would measure as some quake anywhere. I hope the hell nothing more happens to the nuke plant.

These could go on for months!

They are on the ring of fire, it will go on til the earth is no more.

AtLast 04-07-2011 01:56 PM

Glenn Beck's Fox show dropped as ratings sag

10:14 AM, Apr. 7, 2011

NEW YORK — Glenn Beck's talk show is being dropped by the Fox News Channel after sinking in the ratings and suffering financially due to an advertiser boycott.

Fox and Beck's company, Mercury Radio Arts, said Wednesday they will stay in business creating other projects for Fox television and digital, starting with some documentaries Beck is preparing.


Beck was a quick burn on Fox News Channel. Almost immediately after joining the network in January 2009, he doubled the ratings at his afternoon time slot. Fans found his conservative populism entertaining, while Comedy Central's Stephen Colbert described Beck's 'crank up the crazy and rip off the knob' moments.


He was popular with Tea Party activists and drew thousands of people to the National Mall in Washington last August for a 'restoring honor' rally.


Yet some of his statements were getting him in trouble, and critics appealed to advertisers to boycott his show last summer after Beck said President Barack Obama had 'a deep-seated hatred for white people.'


Beck said that he went to Roger Ailes, Fox News chairman and CEO, in January to discuss ways they could continue to work together without the daily show.


'Half of the headlines say he's been cancelled,' Ailes said. 'The other half say he quit. We're pretty happy with both of them.'


Beck said he noted on his show Tuesday that 'how many times can I tell the (George) Soros story,' referring the liberal donor that Beck has made a target of attacks.


'We felt Glenn brought additional information, a unique perspective, a certain amount of passion and insight to the channel and he did,' Ailes said. 'But that story of what's going on and why America is in trouble today, I think he told that story as well as could be told. Whether you can just keep telling that story or not ... we're not so sure.'


More than 400 Fox advertisers told the company they did not want their commercials on Beck's show. Beck's advertisers were dominated by financial services firms, many touting gold as an investment.


http://www.courierpostonline.com/art...yssey=nav|head

Corkey 04-07-2011 03:52 PM

One of our Pro-Life Senators voted to fund Planned Parenthood and Title X.
If the other one gets his head out of the tea party's ass he might survive a recall. Naaaaaa.

AtLast 04-13-2011 06:38 AM

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationwo...,2410014.story

Japan raises nuclear crisis rating to highest level
The level 7 rating for the crisis at the quake- and tsunami-stricken Fukushima power plant is based on the amount radiation released. A day earlier, three new quakes hit as Japan announces plans to expand the evacuation zone.



April 12, 2011
Reporting from Tokyo and Rikuzentakata, Japan— Japanese nuclear regulatory officials Tuesday raised the severity rating at the earthquake- and tsunami-damaged Fukushima Daiichi power plant to the highest level by international standards, equaling the 1986 Chernobyl meltdown in the former Soviet Union.

The country's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency announced that because of the amount of radioactive material released from the plant after the magnitude 9 earthquake a month ago, the rating would be changed to level 7, a "major accident" on the International Atomic Energy Agency's scale, up from a level 5, an "accident with wider consequences."


In a nationally televised news conference, the agency's spokesman, Hidehiko Nishiyama, said the decision was based on the amount of radioactive iodine and cesium spewed from the power plant in Fukushima, north of Tokyo.

Nishiyama stressed that the radiation from the Fukushima nuclear plant was 10% of the amount at Chernobyl. He also said that unlike at Chernobyl, there had been no deaths linked to the accident at Fukushima.

"At Chernobyl, the reactor itself exploded," he said. "At Fukushima some radioactivity has leaked from the reactor, but the reactor itself continues to keep most of the radioactive material inside. In that sense, this is different from Chernobyl."

Before the rating was elevated, the disaster had been rated at the same level as the 1979 Three Mile Island accident near Middletown, Pa.

But Minoru Ogoda of Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said the change in the severity rating came because "the impact of radiation leaks has been widespread from the air, vegetables, tap water and the ocean," the Associated Press reported.

Measuring severity on the international scale involves factors including the amount of radiation released, how wide an area it reaches and how long any problems may last.

Officials said the rating reflects the severity of the problem at the outset, when radiation levels were highest. Those levels have since fallen sharply, they said.

Experts, nevertheless, say it will take years to recover from the damage incurred at the Fukushima plant.
More than 27,000 people were left dead or missing as the disaster last month, centered in the northeast, destroyed fishing towns and caused severe damage to homes, businesses and almost everything else along more than 200 miles of coastline. The government has estimated economic losses of as much as $300 billion, not including costs such as the cleanup of the Fukushima plant, which is operated by Tokyo Electric Power Co.

The announcement by nuclear agency officials came the day after three powerful aftershocks struck already jittery northeastern Japan within the span of 10 minutes, as the government announced new plans to expand the evacuation area near the stricken nuclear plant due to high radiation levels.

Japan is trying to rebuild after the March 11 quake triggered a deadly tsunami that also left tens of thousands homeless. The tsunami has caused several fires and explosions at the Fukushima Daiichi plant, which has leaked dangerous isotopes into the air, soil and water.

The first of Monday's temblors, which trapped some victims in collapsed homes and vehicles, hit at 5:16 p.m. near the coast in Fukushima prefecture, registering a magnitude 7.1 at a depth of 6 miles underground, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency.

It was sizable enough to rock buildings in Tokyo, about 150 miles to the south. A magnitude 6 quake hit a minute later in the same area, followed by another temblor, measuring magnitude 5.6, nine minutes after that.

Aftershocks continued hours later, the agency said. In neighboring Ibaraki prefecture, one man died after falling and hitting his head during the shaking, according to the local Ryugasaki fire department.

The quakes also triggered a landslide that buried three homes in Iwaki city. Two people died in the landslide, including a 16-year-old girl, according to public broadcaster NHK. Three other men pulled from the rubble were unconscious and taken to a hospital, NHK said. Rescuers continued their efforts Tuesday.

Officials issued a tsunami warning after the quakes but later lifted it.

The quakes temporarily knocked out the power to the Fukushima plant and led to a 50-minute stoppage in the water-spraying operations to cool four of the plant's six reactors. Highways were closed, bullet train services to the region were halted briefly, and as many 220,000 homes in Fukushima prefecture were without power.

Tokyo Electric Power Co. said a fire broke out on the plant's premises Tuesday morning at a building where batteries are stored. Within minutes, firefighters put out the blaze, and there appeared to be no impact on workers' efforts to cool four of the reactors, the company said in a statement.

On Monday, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano said the government would expand a 12-mile evacuation area near the nuclear plant, adding to the ranks of the thousands who have already been told to leave their homes.

Unlike the government's previous evacuation orders, the new one is based on data that show higher than normal radiation levels extending to towns and villages that lie beyond the 12- to 18-mile zone around the plant. The government has advised residents in the zone to stay indoors.

It was unclear how many residents would be affected by the new order, which the government plans to carry out over the next month. Edano noted that the risk of a massive radiation leak from the Fukushima plant was "considerably lower."

Greyson 04-19-2011 01:41 PM

Your Federal Tax Dollars At Work For You
 
April 19 2011



Republicans paying $575 an hour to defend DOMA

House Republicans issued a contract today to pay former Solicitor General Paul Clement $575 an hour, up to $500,000 to defend the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act. Sacramento Rep. Dan Lungren, chair of the House Administration Committee and a big supporter of the idea, signed the contract.

Republicans claim they will take the money out of the Justice Department's budget, as if that will hold taxpayers harmless. But a cost is a cost and taxpayers will pay it either way. Any funds removed from DOJ are funds removed from other work.

Drew Hammill, spokesman for House minority leader Nancy Pelosi said, "The hypocrisy of this legal boondoggle is mind-blowing."

But it's great bait for social conservatives whose support the GOP needs to shore up.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/...#ixzz1K01vpraC

Greyson 04-19-2011 01:49 PM

Here Is More On the GOP Defense of DOMA
 
House GOP hires top-flight lawyer to defend DOMA

House Speaker John Boehner has hired former Bush administration Solicitor General Paul Clement to defend the Defense of Marriage Act, signaling a robust legal strategy and bid for his party's social conservatives, who have taken a back seat to the budget fight./p>

Clement argued the administration's cases to the Supreme Court as the nation's highest ranking lawyer. He is now a partner at King & Spaulding and won't come cheap. The defense could cost millions.

Human Rights Campaign chief Joe Solmonese said the pick means Boehner is "ready to go to great lengths, and the great expense of a high-power law firm, to try to score some cheap political points on the backs of same-sex couples. King & Spaulding were not required to take up this defense and should be ashamed of associating themselves with an effort to deny rights to their fellow citizens."

Boehner also wrote House minority leader Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco informing her that Republicans plan to defund part of the Justice Department because of its finding that DOMA is unconstitutional. Purportedly to offset the costs to taxpayers of high-priced outside defense counsel.

Notably, another (and more luminous) former Bush Solicitor General, Ted Olson, is fighting FOR same-sex marriage, teaming with Democrtic lawyer David Bois to fight California Proposition 8..
Brian Brown, head of the anti-gay-marriage National Organization for Marriage, said, "At last we have a legal eagle on this case who actually wants to win in court! Paul Clement is a genuinely distinguished lawyer...who we are confident will win this case....Speaker Boehner is also quite right that the money to defend DOMA should be deducted from the Justice Department's budget, since they will be doing the job DOJ should have done, but refused to do."

Pelosi again asked Boehner for an estimate of how much the defense will cost.

Ironically, the DOMA case at issue involves estate taxes, to which Republicans are opposed on principle, at least for straight couples.

The case of Edie Windsor is in federal court in New York. Windsor spent more than 40 years with her partner, Thea Spyer, before they were married in 2007. When Spyer died, Windsor was unable to claim the federal estate marital tax benefit because of DOMA and the federal government imposed estate taxes of more than $360,000 on the money left to her.

Can you say hypocrisy?


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/...#ixzz1K04TtFVn

dykeumentary 04-19-2011 10:16 PM

http://youtu.be/QWZbSB9k-w4
This links to a video we made exposing the racism behind Cornell University's decision to change the status of the Africana Center.
Read more about it here: http://saveasrc.blogspot.com/p/support-asrc.html

If identify as any kind of person who strives for justice, be aware: they will come for you.

Toughy 04-20-2011 10:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dykeumentary (Post 323610)
http://youtu.be/QWZbSB9k-w4
This links to a video we made exposing the racism behind Cornell University's decision to change the status of the Africana Center.
Read more about it here: http://saveasrc.blogspot.com/p/support-asrc.html

If identify as any kind of person who strives for justice, be aware: they will come for you.

While I understand and agree with the protest over the process and lack of involvement of the faculty and students in this decision, I don't understand why it's a huge problem to move the Center to the College of Arts and Sciences. It seems to be a logical place for administrative purposes.

I am surprised other minority groups, particularly Native Americans, have not wanted their own stand alone Center.

Anyone care to help me understand why this is a bad idea?

Nat 04-20-2011 03:44 PM

Roommate indicted in Rutgers University suicide case


(CNN) -- The roommate of the Rutgers University freshmen who killed himself after his sexual encounter with another man was broadcast online was indicted Wednesday on privacy and bias charges, the prosecutor of Middlesex County in New Jersey announced.

A grand jury indicted Dharun Ravi, 19, on 15 counts including invasion of privacy, bias intimidation, tampering with physical evidence, witness tampering, and hindering apprehension or prosecution.

Nat 04-20-2011 03:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nat (Post 323973)
Roommate indicted in Rutgers University suicide case


(CNN) -- The roommate of the Rutgers University freshmen who killed himself after his sexual encounter with another man was broadcast online was indicted Wednesday on privacy and bias charges, the prosecutor of Middlesex County in New Jersey announced.

A grand jury indicted Dharun Ravi, 19, on 15 counts including invasion of privacy, bias intimidation, tampering with physical evidence, witness tampering, and hindering apprehension or prosecution.

Question - filming a person having sex without their knowledge - is that not a sex crime?

MsDemeanor 04-21-2011 02:26 PM

Tennessee Senate being assholes

Bill seeks to make saying the words “gay” or “homosexuality” illegal in Tennessee schools.

Stupid homophobes

Kentucky Church not being assholes

Church refuses to sign marriage licenses until gays can wed.

Good for them!

AtLast 04-21-2011 02:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MsDemeanor (Post 324464)
Tennessee Senate being assholes

Bill seeks to make saying the words “gay” or “homosexuality” illegal in Tennessee schools.

Stupid homophobes

Kentucky Church not being assholes

Church refuses to sign marriage licenses until gays can wed.Good for them!

With all the garbage going on with Repug-i-Cons, Tea Party zealots and the TN, senate- this warms my heart!

Lately, I have a really difficult time even watching media that fights homophobia. What is wrong with people? Please tell me sane people get the nuttiness of this stuff!!

afixer 04-21-2011 02:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MsDemeanor (Post 324464)
Tennessee Senate being assholes

Bill seeks to make saying the words “gay” or “homosexuality” illegal in Tennessee schools.

Stupid homophobes

i'm sure it's so our kids don't go around calling each other gay and homo. ;)

Apocalipstic 04-21-2011 02:39 PM

Yeay again for my home state :|

MsDemeanor 04-21-2011 03:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by afixer (Post 324467)
i'm sure it's so our kids don't go around calling each other gay and homo. ;)

Hahahahaha. Yeah, right. From what I hear about how those words roll off of kids tongues these days, the line at the principal's office would be out the door every day.

Gemme 04-21-2011 04:28 PM

I don't know if it's breaking news, but it sure pisses me off..
 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/0...1_lnk3%7C57631

Darn. They moved it.

Try this:


mike.mcauliff@huffingtonpost.com

9/11 Responders To Be Warned They Will Be Screened By FBI's Terrorism Watch List (EXCLUSIVE)

First Posted: 04/21/11 04:24 PM ET Updated: 04/21/11 05:22 PM ET

WASHINGTON -- A provision in the new 9/11 health bill may be adding insult to injury for people who fell sick after their service in the aftermath of the 2001 Al Qaeda attacks, The Huffington Post has learned.

The tens of thousands of cops, firefighters, construction workers and others who survived the worst terrorist assault in U.S. history and risked their lives in its wake will soon be informed that their names must be run through the FBI’s terrorism watch list, according to a letter obtained by HuffPost.

Any of the responders who are not compared to the database of suspected terrorists would be barred from getting treatment for the numerous, worsening ailments that the James Zadroga 9/11 Health And Compensation Law was passed to address.

It’s a requirement that was tacked onto the law during the bitter debates over it last year.

The letter from Dr. John Howard, director of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, informs medical providers and administrators that they should begin letting patients know before the new program kicks in this July.

“This is absurd,” said Glen Kline, a former NYPD emergency services officer. “It’s silly. It’s stupid. It’s asinine.”

“It’s comical at best, and I think it’s an insult to everyone who worked on The Pile and is sick and suffering from 9/11,” said John Feal, a former construction worker who lost half a foot at Ground Zero and runs the advocacy group Fealgood Foundation.

The provision was added in an amendment by Rep. Cliff Stearns (R-Fla.) during the heated debate over the bill in the House Energy and Commerce Committee last May.

Sept. 11 responders in the committee room at the time mostly shook their heads at the move, which Democrats accepted on a voice vote after battling to bar other amendments on abortion and immigration that might have killed the bill.

But suddenly the point is no longer just a strategic concession to get a law passed.

As doctors and administrators begin acting on the federal instructions, participants in the 9/11 treatment and monitoring programs will soon be told that their names, places of birth, addresses, government ID numbers and other personal data will be provided to the FBI to ensure they are not terrorists.

Howard's instructions include a sample letter to responders designed to minimize alarm.

“Although neither we nor [the Centers for Disease Control]/NIOSH anticipate the name of any individual in the current Programs will be on the list, CDC/NIOSH is expressly required by law to implement this particular requirement of the Act,” it says.

“Thank you for your understanding. We look forward to working with you and ensuring that you continue to receive uninterrupted services under the new WTC Health Program,” it concludes.

Feal, who counts hundreds and first responders in his foundation's membership, predicted the letters would not go over well.

“When cops and firefighters get this at home, they’re going to hit the roof,” he said.

Kline, who sits on the Fealgood Foundation’s board, said he personally wasn’t offended, but couldn’t think of a good reason for cops and firefighters to be screened by the FBI in order to keep getting treatment.

“I mean, who are we even talking about -- the undocumented workers who cleaned the office buildings?” wondered Kline Thursday. “We know who all the cops, firefighters and construction workers were. They’re all documented.

“Is the idea that a terrorist stayed to help clean up? And then stayed all these years to try and get benefits?” he asked. “In all the things I’ve seen out of Washington, this probably takes the cake.”

Some are more understanding.

“Do we want terrorists getting money? No,” said Anthony Flammia, a former NYPD Highway Patrol officer and Sept. 11 responder. “How do you know if there were any terrorists there? Where they there as observers, watching? Probably.”

But he noted that his perspective likely would not be shared, especially if people whose names are similar to actual terror suspects get flagged, as happens with air travelers.

“I’ve got nothing to hide, so it’s no big deal for me, but there’s got to be safeguards in place to protect the people who are innocent,” Flammia said. “It’s going to be controversial,” he added. “It’s probably going to create an uproar, but I think it will dissipate. I hope they're ready to answer people's questions.”

Congressman Stearns said in a statement that his intent was to answer exactly the questions raised by Flammia.

“This amendment was adopted in the full Energy and Commerce Committee without opposition and it merely requires that the names of those receiving health benefits be cross-checked with the terrorist watch list to ensure that no terrorists get these benefits,” Stearns said.

“These benefits are not just for our first responders; nearly anyone who was in the vicinity or worked on a cleanup crew afterward is eligible,” he noted.

The prohibition is included in two parts of the bill. One specifically covers responders, while the other deals with all survivors, including office workers, bystanders and residents.

Feal acknowledged that the terrorist screening has to be done because it is the law, and that the letters have to go out.

But he holds Stearns responsible, as well as several other Republicans who were hostile to the 9/11 bill, and tried to tack all manner of amendments onto it.

“I think Congressman Stearns is stabbing at pettiness. He’s a buffoon,” Feal said. “We get sicker and die, and they’re going to disseminate a letter wondering whether we’re terrorists or not. ... I think everybody needs to start showing a little more compassion.”

Greyson 04-21-2011 04:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gemme (Post 324531)


I clicked on the link and it says, "Page Not Found." What was the story about?

Gemme 04-21-2011 04:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Greyson (Post 324535)
I clicked on the link and it says, "Page Not Found." What was the story about?

Sorry about that. It was there when I copied it but by the time I got the post up, they moved it. I edited my post to paste a copy of the article in.

Thanks for letting me know!

Greyson 04-21-2011 04:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gemme (Post 324537)
Sorry about that. It was there when I copied it but by the time I got the post up, they moved it. I edited my post to paste a copy of the article in.

Thanks for letting me know!



Thank you for posting it. I am shaking my head. IMO, Congressman Stearns is an idiot and so are all the cowards in Congress who passed it with a voice vote. Hence, no record of how they voted.

Gemme 04-21-2011 04:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Greyson (Post 324542)
Thank you for posting it. I am shaking my head. IMO, Congressman Stearns is an idiot and so are all the cowards in Congress who passed it with a voice vote. Hence, no record of how they voted.

I fully agree. It's a giant slap in the face to those who helped and especially those who are suffering due to illnesses related to the clean up.

dykeumentary 04-21-2011 06:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toughy (Post 323837)
While I understand and agree with the protest over the process and lack of involvement of the faculty and students in this decision, I don't understand why it's a huge problem to move the Center to the College of Arts and Sciences. It seems to be a logical place for administrative purposes.

I am surprised other minority groups, particularly Native Americans, have not wanted their own stand alone Center.

Anyone care to help me understand why this is a bad idea?

One aspect that I find complex is the question of whether schools "should" be run as if they are corporations. CEOs get to make decisions that effect their employees without consulting their employees, but is that what we can expect from education? CEOs get to use a budget as a justification for any change, but can we hold the academy to a higher standard? And this brings up the uncomfortable issues of whether a unit of the university that is critical of US capitalism (chattel slavery was a great way to keep labor costs down).... Would there be a reason for parties interested in consolidating their historical power to disempower a unit of the university that challenges white power?

It just all seems very suspicious. And that's just one aspect.

dykeumentary 04-22-2011 06:25 AM

Connection between Cornel and Arizonas 2281 ?
 
Save Ethnic Studies (from http://otterrealm.net/politics/ethnic_studies.php)

Ethnic Studies Programs Under Fire in Arizona

Teachers talking about César Chavez's legacy, introducing Magic Realism literature in the classroom or encouraging critical thinking among their Mexican-American students are not welcome in the Tucson public school system.

On Mar. 30, speaker Sally Rusk, representing the organization Save Ethnic Studies (SES), advocated for the continuity of the Ethnics Studies program in the Tucson Unified School District (TUSD). Cal State Monterey Bay (CSUMB) students, faculty and administrators gathered to understand and discuss why TUSD has chosen to eliminate the program and what may be done to cease its banning because, according to Sally Rusk, "we cannot allow a law that inhibits multi-cultural education."

Arizona Pueblo High School teacher Sally Rusk explained the history of both the ethnic studies program called Raza studies and the Arizona House Bill 2281 that attempts to ban the teaching of ethnic studies in the public school system. Though HB 2281 appears to be legislation for the entire state's school districts, the bill, according the Husk, "focuses primarily on the Tucson Unified School District."

Lawmakers are accusing faculty and administrators participating in the Ethnic Studies program of being anti-American and of promoting the division of races with courses specifically built around a particular ethnic group.

Rusk and SES disagree with the allegations arguing the elimination of ethnic studies courses would not only harm the Latino community, but also hinder academic freedom, school curriculum choice, development of authentic education, and student achievement.

The session at CSUMB began with introductory speakers including Liberal Studies lecturer Dr. Linda Bynoe, HCOM professor Dr. Maria Villaseñor, and CSUMB HCOM graduate Karina Hernandez. Hernandez said of the importance of ethnic studies, "it finally validated my life stories... it gave me confidence that before I didn't have as a student."

Rusk presented a clip of the documentary Precious Knowledge that depicts the fight of Tucson students and teachers to defend the right to learn and appreciate their own cultural roots. Professor Rusk showed how ethic studies program encourages students' confidence and solidarity as a community. Connections to any human being is core of their Ethnic Studies "You are my other self; an injury to one is an injury to all."


Contributing Authors: Fanny Shives, Martha Kirby, Nicole Marquez, Sam Pereira, Martin Wilson, Martin Hardenberger, Melissa Cooperman, Gabby Castaneda, Aya Kamata

AtLast 04-22-2011 01:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dykeumentary (Post 324902)
Save Ethnic Studies (from http://otterrealm.net/politics/ethnic_studies.php)

Ethnic Studies Programs Under Fire in Arizona

Teachers talking about César Chavez's legacy, introducing Magic Realism literature in the classroom or encouraging critical thinking among their Mexican-American students are not welcome in the Tucson public school system.

On Mar. 30, speaker Sally Rusk, representing the organization Save Ethnic Studies (SES), advocated for the continuity of the Ethnics Studies program in the Tucson Unified School District (TUSD). Cal State Monterey Bay (CSUMB) students, faculty and administrators gathered to understand and discuss why TUSD has chosen to eliminate the program and what may be done to cease its banning because, according to Sally Rusk, "we cannot allow a law that inhibits multi-cultural education."

Arizona Pueblo High School teacher Sally Rusk explained the history of both the ethnic studies program called Raza studies and the Arizona House Bill 2281 that attempts to ban the teaching of ethnic studies in the public school system. Though HB 2281 appears to be legislation for the entire state's school districts, the bill, according the Husk, "focuses primarily on the Tucson Unified School District."

Lawmakers are accusing faculty and administrators participating in the Ethnic Studies program of being anti-American and of promoting the division of races with courses specifically built around a particular ethnic group.

Rusk and SES disagree with the allegations arguing the elimination of ethnic studies courses would not only harm the Latino community, but also hinder academic freedom, school curriculum choice, development of authentic education, and student achievement.

The session at CSUMB began with introductory speakers including Liberal Studies lecturer Dr. Linda Bynoe, HCOM professor Dr. Maria Villaseñor, and CSUMB HCOM graduate Karina Hernandez. Hernandez said of the importance of ethnic studies, "it finally validated my life stories... it gave me confidence that before I didn't have as a student."

Rusk presented a clip of the documentary Precious Knowledge that depicts the fight of Tucson students and teachers to defend the right to learn and appreciate their own cultural roots. Professor Rusk showed how ethic studies program encourages students' confidence and solidarity as a community. Connections to any human being is core of their Ethnic Studies "You are my other self; an injury to one is an injury to all."


Contributing Authors: Fanny Shives, Martha Kirby, Nicole Marquez, Sam Pereira, Martin Wilson, Martin Hardenberger, Melissa Cooperman, Gabby Castaneda, Aya Kamata

This (proposed bills like this) just sickens me. And AZ is not the only state trying to pass this kind of garbage.

dykeumentary 04-22-2011 02:51 PM

I agree.

One of the reasons I posted that about AZ is to show it's relation to the Cornell thing. Xenophobia/racism gets spun in different ways -- in AZ it is more obvious and based in some sentimental notion of patriotism, and in areas where there is a wider range of ethnic backgrounds that might unite against such crappy policies, "economic austerity" is being used. Chilling.

Toughy 04-22-2011 08:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dykeumentary (Post 324628)
One aspect that I find complex is the question of whether schools "should" be run as if they are corporations. CEOs get to make decisions that effect their employees without consulting their employees, but is that what we can expect from education? CEOs get to use a budget as a justification for any change, but can we hold the academy to a higher standard? And this brings up the uncomfortable issues of whether a unit of the university that is critical of US capitalism (chattel slavery was a great way to keep labor costs down).... Would there be a reason for parties interested in consolidating their historical power to disempower a unit of the university that challenges white power?

It just all seems very suspicious. And that's just one aspect.

As I said, I agree there should have been serious discussion with those affected directly by the decision. It would have gone a long way towards having trust in the decision.

I also must point out that trying to balance a budget that is shrinking......happening in all levels of public and private education........is not (in my mind) running a school like a cold-hearted corporation. It's trying to keep the school running.

If the Provost was really interested in dis-empowering this particular group, he would have simply de-funded the Center. That would be running it like a business.

I also highly doubt this is the only group at Cornell that is critical of US capitalism and white privilege. Has the Provost moved on those other groups?

Just for the hell of it I went to the Cornell website and poked around. I just don't see this as a move to shut of black folks. Cornell is focused on education for everyone and it's strategic plan maintains the schools focus on multi-culturalism.

I just think this was a truly fucked up process on the part of the Provost. The road to hell is paved with good intentions.

The true holocaust in this country is what was and still is being done to our indigenious, first nation, native peoples.

EnderD_503 04-27-2011 08:43 AM

Last Gay Holocaust Survivor Knighted in France
 
Sorry, cannot find an English article but thought I'd post this anyways:

Quote:

(AFP) - Le Mulhousien Rudolf Brazda, 97 ans, probable dernier survivant des «Triangles roses» - ces victimes du nazisme qui furent déportées à cause de leur homosexualité - vient d'être nommé chevalier de la Légion d'honneur, a-t-on appris dimanche auprès de l'association «Les oubliés de la Mémoire».

M. Brazda, qui a survécu à 32 mois d'enfer à Buchenwald entre 1942 et 1945, fait partie de la promotion de Pâques de la Légion d'honneur. Il a été nommé sur le contingent du Premier ministre, a précisé à l'AFP Philippe Couillet, président de cette association qui milite pour la reconnaissance des souffrances des «triangles roses».

Cette distinction «marque un pas supplémentaire dans la reconnaissance par la nation de la déportation homosexuelle», a estimé M. Couillet.

M. Brazda n'a commencé à témoigner sur son expérience de déporté qu'en 2008, à l'occasion de l'inauguration d'un monument en mémoire des «Triangles roses» au coeur de Berlin. Il s'était fait connaître après avoir lu dans la presse que, selon les porteurs du projet, ce drame ne comptait plus de survivant.

Depuis, le nonagénaire, qui a grandi en Tchécoslovaquie et en Allemagne et vit près de Mulhouse depuis 1945, aime à «s'exprimer publiquement sur son vécu, dans les média, mais aussi auprès du grand public et des jeunes générations en particulier», selon M. Couillet.

Il recevra sa Légion d'honneur jeudi dans un collège de Puteaux (Hauts-de-Seine), à l'occasion d'une intervention devant les élèves. Sa distinction lui sera remise par Marie-José Chombart de Lauwe, ancienne résistante et déportée à Ravensbrück, aujourd'hui présidente de la Fondation pour la mémoire de la déportation.
http://www.lalsace.fr/actualite/2011...riangles-roses

Kobi 04-27-2011 09:20 AM

Birth Certificate
 


Obama finally released his birth certificate. Of course this will reassure some, convince a few, and add a new layer of distraction for those who will now bring up 'it wasnt released earlier because of some yet to be found deceit'.

Trump taking credit for bringing this to a head was kind of amusing in a sad sort of way. Then again, Trump would take credit for the sun rising if he could figure out a way to make it look belielievable.

Releasing this now, so late in the controversy, and at what looks like Trump's prodding, makes Obama look bad in a lot of ways. The timing of this, in my opinion, was a huge political error.

Now can we focus on the bigger, more important issues? And, send Mr. Trump, not the taxpayers, the bill for this enlightenment.





WASHINGTON – Responding to critics' relentless claims, President Barack Obama on Wednesday produced a detailed Hawaii birth certificate in an extraordinary attempt to bury the issue of where he was born and confirm his legitimacy to hold office. He declared, "We do not have time for this kind of silliness."

By going on national TV from the White House, Obama portrayed himself as a voice of reason amid a loud, lingering debate on his birth status. Though his personal attention to the issue elevated it as never before, Obama said to Republican detractors and the media, it is time to move on to bigger issues.

Citing huge budget decisions in Washington, Obama said, "I am confident that the American people and America's political leaders can come together in a bipartisan way and solve these problems. We always have. But we're not going to be able to do it if we are distracted."

Obama spoke shortly after the White House released a copy of the long form of his birth certificate, which contains more extensive data than a version released earlier.

The certificate says Obama was born to an American mother and Kenyan father, in Hawaii, which makes him eligible to hold the office of president. Obama released a standard short form before he was elected in 2008 but requested copies of his original birth certificate from Hawaii officials this week in hopes of quieting the lingering controversy.

[ For complete coverage of politics and policy, go to Yahoo! Politics ]


White House officials have said the issue was settled long ago. But so-called "birthers" opposed to Obama have kept it alive. Potential Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump recently began questioning why Obama hadn't ensured the long form was released.

From New Hampshire, Trump took credit for getting Obama to act.

"He should have done it a long time ago. I am really honored to play such a big role in hopefully, hopefully getting rid of this issue," Trump said.

Polls show large numbers of Republicans have continued to doubt Obama is a natural born citizen eligible to be president. Trump, the bombastic real estate mogul, has seized on the issue as he weighs a GOP candidacy.

While Obama and White House officials avoided mentioning Trump by name, officials said they released the birth certificate partially because the issue had moved beyond fringe discussion, and Obama criticized a media culture that had not let the story go.

"This issue has been going on for two, two and a half years now. I think it started during the campaign," Obama said. "I have watched with bemusement, I've been puzzled at the degree at which this thing just kept on going."

"We're not going to be able to solve our problems if we get distracted by sideshows and carnival barkers," the president said.

He did not take any questions and did not say why the document had not been released earlier.

Many Republican leaders have sought to distance themselves from the "birther" theory as a discredited notion not worthy of national public debate.

In a statement after Obama spoke, Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus called the issue a distraction — and yet blamed Obama for playing campaign politics by addressing it.

"The president ought to spend his time getting serious about repairing our economy," Priebus said. "Unfortunately his campaign politics and talk about birth certificates is distracting him from our number one priority — our economy."

The newly released certificate is signed by the delivery doctor, Obama's mother and the local registrar. His mother, then 18, signed her name (Stanley) Ann Dunham Obama.

The form says Barack Hussein Obama II was born at 7:24 p.m. on Aug. 4, 1961, at Kapiolani Maternity and Gynecological Hospital, within the city limits of Honolulu.

There's no mention of religion. It says his father, Barack Hussein Obama, age 25, was African and born in Kenya and his mother was Caucasian and born in Wichita, Kan. Obama's mother and the doctor signed the certificate on Aug. 7 and 8.

Hawaii's registrar certified the new photocopy of the document provided to the White House on April 25, 2011.

The White House also released a letter from the president on April 22 requesting two certified copies of his original certificate of live birth. Also released was a letter from Loretta Fuddy, Hawaii's director of health, approving the request.

The president's personal counsel, Judith Corley, traveled to Hawaii to pick up the documents and carried them back to Washington on a plane. The documents arrived at the White House around 5 p.m. Tuesday.

Toughy 04-27-2011 07:48 PM

just to be clear...........Obama released a short form birth certificate either during the campaign or just after he was sworn in. The short form is what most of us have. It's got your parents name, your name, place, date and time you were born. I think this is the only type of birth certificate availible if you are born today.

What is released today is the long form birth certificate which has more info like the doctor's signature etc. They stopped sending those out when they started using only short forms. It took a special request.

Frankly I don't think he should have done it..............he should have told them to go fuck off somewhere.

Curley 04-27-2011 11:59 PM

I'm not American however I agree with Toughy. And this has whole ordeal has got be one of the most asinine things I have seen in a long time

Toughy 04-28-2011 04:22 PM

I guess what pisses me off the most about this birther crap is that it is ALL based in racism. No way, no how can a black man be the legitimate President of this country.

It made me sick to watch racist mother fuckers make the black man dance and produce his papers. I can't even imagine how this tears at the heart and soul of all black folks......

And now the mother fucker Trump is saying his education was not legitimate....he got into Harvard because of affirmative action.....'his grades need to be checked'........

Racism is alive and doing pretty good in the USA.

AtLast 04-28-2011 05:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toughy (Post 329146)
I guess what pisses me off the most about this birther crap is that it is ALL based in racism. No way, no how can a black man be the legitimate President of this country.

It made me sick to watch racist mother fuckers make the black man dance and produce his papers. I can't even imagine how this tears at the heart and soul of all black folks......

And now the mother fucker Trump is saying his education was not legitimate....he got into Harvard because of affirmative action.....'his grades need to be checked'........

Racism is alive and doing pretty good in the USA.



Yes- there is no other way to cut it, every aspect from the start (back during his first running), it has been racism. I am disgusted and ashamed of the my country over this.

It isn't simply a "fringe" element behind this at all. And that is what bothers me the most- this is not the product of loonies, it is the product of a predominately racist country. This along with all that has been going on with anti-immigration sentiments and the like bring this home.

Trump's son-in-law bought his way into Harvard, as did "W" to Yale- but it is perfectly acceptable for rich white men to do this. Actually, the trump family history ought to be exposed entirely. Start looking up Fred Trump, his father. Donald is a trust fund brat and doesn't know the meaning of hard work. He walked right into his father's real estate empire. I’m sure there was one single thought in his upbringing about doing what it takes to overcome what Obama had to in order to accomplish what he has as a POC in the US.

I hate it that Obama caved to this too- but he had to feel it was necessary. Someday we will hear about Obama's real thoughts about his time in office about all of this.

Someone said in order for him to be elected he would have to walk on water- how true.

AtLast 04-28-2011 05:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Toughy (Post 328423)
just to be clear...........Obama released a short form birth certificate either during the campaign or just after he was sworn in. The short form is what most of us have. It's got your parents name, your name, place, date and time you were born. I think this is the only type of birth certificate availible if you are born today.

What is released today is the long form birth certificate which has more info like the doctor's signature etc. They stopped sending those out when they started using only short forms. It took a special request.

Frankly I don't think he should have done it..............he should have told them to go fuck off somewhere.

I agree with you- but then it would be... "Ah, Ha! He IS an angry black man!!"

Yet, Trump is not an angry person?

Jesse 05-04-2011 10:04 PM

"Indians say code name offensive but not surprising..."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110505/...laden_geronimo

Corkey 05-04-2011 10:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jesse (Post 333235)
"Indians say code name offensive but not surprising..."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110505/...laden_geronimo

It is offensive and of course racist, and really really disturbing to be yet again compared to terrorists.

Gráinne 05-14-2011 02:05 PM

Oh for Pete's sake:

http://xfinity.comcast.net/music/bli...esingerwasgay/

Ironically, If they want to get rid of everything created/written/anything by a gay/bisexual person, they'd have to do away with the Bible in the churches; it carries the name of the biggest Queen in history.

Sachita 05-14-2011 03:39 PM

anyone watching this or live close?

http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/05/14/flo...pt=T1&iref=BN1

Morganza, Louisiana (CNN) -- The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers opened the first of potentially several bays of the Morganza spillway on Saturday afternoon, a move intended to spare some areas from severe flooding while redirecting water into others.
"Protecting lives is the No. 1 thing we are looking for," Gen. Michael Walsh, president of the Mississippi River Commission, told reporters prior to the opening. "That's exactly what we're doing as we operate the different systems on the Mississippi River."

Hopefully it goes as planned.

AtLast 05-14-2011 04:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sachita (Post 338980)
anyone watching this or live close?

http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/05/14/flo...pt=T1&iref=BN1

Morganza, Louisiana (CNN) -- The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers opened the first of potentially several bays of the Morganza spillway on Saturday afternoon, a move intended to spare some areas from severe flooding while redirecting water into others.
"Protecting lives is the No. 1 thing we are looking for," Gen. Michael Walsh, president of the Mississippi River Commission, told reporters prior to the opening. "That's exactly what we're doing as we operate the different systems on the Mississippi River."

Hopefully it goes as planned.

Because I do still have "in-laws" in the South, I have been watching news about these horrific events. They are all fine physically, but one lost a home. The TV coverage of these floods is heartbreaking.

Tommi 05-14-2011 08:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AtLastHome (Post 339008)
Because I do still have "in-laws" in the South, I have been watching news about these horrific events. They are all fine physically, but one lost a home. The TV coverage of these floods is heartbreaking.

It seems so unreal to watch TV and see the grand Mighty Mississippi, so many miles, so many millions being affected for so many days. The memories of RiverBoats put aside for now, and prayers :candle: for the people, livestock, land and the river.

UofMfan 05-16-2011 11:20 AM

Donald Trump Not Running For President In 2012
 
I am glad, yet not surprised. Too many skeletons under that rug.

Full article below:


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/0..._n_862514.html


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