04-21-2019, 07:51 AM | #3781 |
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
jenny Preferred Pronoun?:
babygirl Relationship Status:
First Lady of the United SMH Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 5,445
Thanks: 1,532
Thanked 26,589 Times in 4,691 Posts
Rep Power: 21474856 |
Sri Lanka blasts: More than 200 dead in church and hotel bombings across country
(CNN)At least 207 people were killed and hundreds more wounded in a series of bomb blasts that hit luxury hotels and churches across Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday, leaving the entire country in a state of lock-down.I saw this on twitter before i went to bed and got up and turned on the news, expecting the coverage to be wall-to-wall like it was for New Zealand CBS was interviewing "K-pop sensations" BTS MSNBC was talking about Joe Biden CNN was talking about George Zimmerman being blocked from dating apps Why is this? My theory-- New Zealand is a white country. New Zealand's victims were Muslims, not percieved as white, but the country is white. Sri Lanka is not white. The targets were Christian, but they are not white Christians. If the perpetrators were attacking "western values" they failed, bc we don't care about that country at all, apparently
__________________
|
The Following 6 Users Say Thank You to dark_crystal For This Useful Post: |
04-21-2019, 08:04 AM | #3782 |
Practically Lives Here
How Do You Identify?:
Depends on the day. Preferred Pronoun?:
"I" and "we" Relationship Status:
Very good. Thank you for asking. Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Canada
Posts: 11,501
Thanks: 16,676
Thanked 15,261 Times in 4,345 Posts
Rep Power: 21474859 |
dark_crystal:
"Sri Lanka is not white. The targets were Christian, but they are not white Christians. If the perpetrators were attacking "western values" they failed, bc we don't care about that country at all, apparently" Would seem so but how better to keep local people away from Christianity and how better to keep "foreigners" away and perhaps ruin an economy including a newly burgeoning tourist trade which was opening the country to various new influences beyond what some considered traditional ? ___
__________________
______________________________ ______________________________ |
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to C0LLETTE For This Useful Post: |
04-21-2019, 08:11 AM | #3783 |
Practically Lives Here
How Do You Identify?:
Depends on the day. Preferred Pronoun?:
"I" and "we" Relationship Status:
Very good. Thank you for asking. Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Canada
Posts: 11,501
Thanks: 16,676
Thanked 15,261 Times in 4,345 Posts
Rep Power: 21474859 |
When you live outside the USA but watch USA news you'd quickly see how much of the world is ignored by USA news media. I suppose it's understandable.
Nothing special about Sri Lanka.
__________________
______________________________ ______________________________ |
The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to C0LLETTE For This Useful Post: |
04-21-2019, 08:18 AM | #3784 |
Timed Out - TOS Drama
How Do You Identify?:
... Preferred Pronoun?:
... Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: ...
Posts: 6,573
Thanks: 30,737
Thanked 22,958 Times in 5,020 Posts
Rep Power: 0 |
I saw the attack on Sri Lanka just this morning; I am still crying. I cry because my brothers and sisters were killed; Christian, Muslim, Jew, on and on...you should be free to worship ( or not) without facing death.
As to news coverage...we ( the US) are only concerned with things that directly effect us, or peoples that we consider to be close allies. The rest of the worlds problems? Unless they are sensational like a tidal wave, not so much. BTW, the article I found was from Al Jazarra |
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to MsTinkerbelly For This Useful Post: |
04-21-2019, 08:18 AM | #3785 |
Senior Member
How Do You Identify?:
Femme Preferred Pronoun?:
She Relationship Status:
Monogamously Attached to my boyfriend and future husband. Join Date: May 2010
Location: He’s usually with me unless I am with Him.
Posts: 15,085
Thanks: 35,994
Thanked 31,996 Times in 9,940 Posts
Rep Power: 21474865 |
Maybe it's not so much Western Values as maybe it could also be a form of denouncing any form of Imperialism?
Or maybe it could be viewed as a form of denouncing any form of rule which is shaped by forms of Authoritarian Rule? In my mind, Authoritarian Rule is always associated with forms of Fascism (generally speaking).
__________________
Kätzchen _____ ______ |
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Kätzchen For This Useful Post: |
04-21-2019, 08:35 AM | #3786 | |
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
High Femme Ma'am Preferred Pronoun?:
Ma'am Relationship Status:
widowed - involved, poly Join Date: May 2010
Location: Georgia
Posts: 5,665
Thanks: 37,079
Thanked 27,144 Times in 5,124 Posts
Rep Power: 21474855 |
Quote:
It's amazing what all goes on in the world that is completely ignored by the U.S. news media.
__________________
-GeorgiaMa'am It's been so lonely without you here Like a bird without a song Nothing can stop these lonely tears from falling . . . 'Cause nothing compares, nothing compares 2 U - Prince |
|
The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to GeorgiaMa'am For This Useful Post: |
04-21-2019, 08:40 AM | #3787 |
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
jenny Preferred Pronoun?:
babygirl Relationship Status:
First Lady of the United SMH Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 5,445
Thanks: 1,532
Thanked 26,589 Times in 4,691 Posts
Rep Power: 21474856 |
Further thoughts:
The New Zealand perpetrator was a white supremacist who implicated Trump. This was juicy. It may be that the mainstream media (not FOX, which i haven't checked) is "liberal" enough at this point to be more comfortable sensationalizing the Trump angle than they are with fueling more anti-Muslim sentiment. Right now it is a big assumption that the perpetrators were Muslim. Sri Lanka has only specified "religious extremists" There is a report that the government was warned last week that a group called "National Thowheeth Jama’ath" were planning to attack churches. National Thowheeth Jama’ath is made up of "Syria and jihad returnees" and first came to public attention "when it was linked to the vandalisation of Buddhist statues" I am getting that information from an article proclaiming their innocence on a Malaysian website, though, which is also underreporting the casualties at 135.
__________________
|
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to dark_crystal For This Useful Post: |
04-21-2019, 08:42 AM | #3788 | |
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
jenny Preferred Pronoun?:
babygirl Relationship Status:
First Lady of the United SMH Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 5,445
Thanks: 1,532
Thanked 26,589 Times in 4,691 Posts
Rep Power: 21474856 |
Quote:
__________________
|
|
The Following User Says Thank You to dark_crystal For This Useful Post: |
04-21-2019, 10:28 AM | #3789 | |
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
jenny Preferred Pronoun?:
babygirl Relationship Status:
First Lady of the United SMH Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 5,445
Thanks: 1,532
Thanked 26,589 Times in 4,691 Posts
Rep Power: 21474856 |
Quote:
__________________
|
|
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to dark_crystal For This Useful Post: |
04-22-2019, 10:34 AM | #3790 |
Practically Lives Here
How Do You Identify?:
Butch Relationship Status:
..... Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: 30 minute ferry ride from Seattle
Posts: 38,565
Thanks: 20,811
Thanked 33,586 Times in 14,918 Posts
Rep Power: 21474889 |
I know someone posted about this awhile back, so thought I'd add this update.
Fight over census citizenship question hits Supreme Court The battle over the Trump administration's efforts to add a question on citizenship to the 2020 census is hitting the Supreme Court. The justices will hear arguments on Tuesday over the administration adding the question, a controversial move that has sparked legal battles throughout the U.S. court system. The Commerce Department, which administers the census, is expected to argue that it has the authority to collect data on citizenship and that the question is needed to help with the Justice Department's enforcement of the Voting Rights Act. But opponents of the move, represented by the state of New York, will claim that adding the question will deter undocumented immigrants from filling out the survey, leading to an inaccurate count of the American population. Two other parties — House Democrats and a collection of immigrant rights groups led by the American Civil Liberties Union — will also be given a chance to argue to the justices that the addition of the question is unconstitutional. The Trump administration has repeatedly seen controversial policies shot down by federal judges but then supported by the Supreme Court. And with three lower court judges blocking the citizenship question from being added to the census, this week's arguments will present the justices with one of their biggest cases of the term. |
The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to homoe For This Useful Post: |
04-23-2019, 06:35 AM | #3791 | |
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
jenny Preferred Pronoun?:
babygirl Relationship Status:
First Lady of the United SMH Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 5,445
Thanks: 1,532
Thanked 26,589 Times in 4,691 Posts
Rep Power: 21474856 |
Quote:
A Sri Lankan government official says coordinated suicide bombings in the island nation on Easter Sunday, which killed more than 320 people, were carried out in retaliation for last month's mass shooting at mosques in New Zealand.That second graf is a notable caveat, but since the New Zealand shooter claimed to be inspired by Trump, doesn't Trump have some responsibility for Sri Lanka?
__________________
|
|
The Following User Says Thank You to dark_crystal For This Useful Post: |
04-23-2019, 06:51 AM | #3792 | |
Practically Lives Here
How Do You Identify?:
Depends on the day. Preferred Pronoun?:
"I" and "we" Relationship Status:
Very good. Thank you for asking. Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Canada
Posts: 11,501
Thanks: 16,676
Thanked 15,261 Times in 4,345 Posts
Rep Power: 21474859 |
Quote:
|
|
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to C0LLETTE For This Useful Post: |
04-23-2019, 07:13 AM | #3793 |
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
jenny Preferred Pronoun?:
babygirl Relationship Status:
First Lady of the United SMH Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 5,445
Thanks: 1,532
Thanked 26,589 Times in 4,691 Posts
Rep Power: 21474856 |
Also William Knox D'Arcy
__________________
|
04-26-2019, 03:13 AM | #3794 |
Timed Out - Permanent
How Do You Identify?:
gentle stonebutch [vanilla] Relationship Status:
single Join Date: Dec 2017
Location: canada
Posts: 497
Thanks: 906
Thanked 1,204 Times in 422 Posts
Rep Power: 0 |
Handsome Her
In Melbourne, Australia, a lesbian owned vegan café is closing after 2 years - they were known for "provoking a debate by offering women priority seating and charging men an extra 18% one week a month".
from Handsome Her: "We’ve never shied away from controversy in the spirit of social justice and it seems fitting that we go out in the same style in which we came in: a whirlwind of sad, angry male tears. A pretty decent spruik on The Daily Mail has set off a spate of love letters from adoring men worldwide, and yes it is sad but true; this Sunday is our final day. However let us assure you that we are not closing because of: "A) Male tears or misogynistic vitriol from men's rights activists. We’re lesbians, we’re quite used witnessing the fragility of the male ego which literally cannot compute the idea of a woman who is not interested in them. These abusive comments have been mostly amusing, only reinforced our views about how toxic sexism is, and great motivation for us to keep up the good work "B) Not making enough money. If you've been in you know we are doing just fine. Our fans and regulars can smell a rat when it comes to fake google reviews from #sadmen. Most of our male customers have happily paid above and beyond the optional surcharge (mantax) which we donate to charity. Handsome Her was somewhat of a social experiment for us outside of our professional realms, and we have seen that it works to put our politics to the forefront in life and in business "As much as people would love to believe it, sorry but the man tax did not run our business into the ground, we just don't want to own a cafe anymore... "For real though, we have sold the business because we are young, educated and off on our next adventure! For those of you who have run your own small business, you know how much time, blood, sweat and tears it takes, and we are looking forward to a slower, more deliberate way of living out in the world and putting our feminist, vegan, low-waste politics into practice. "We are open Friday, Saturday and Sunday so we will see you then! "We remain ever yours, the leftist, extremist, man-hating, vegan dykes of your worst nightmare xx much love to you all" I especially liked that last line - made my day, and made me smile and chuckle - so I placed that line in emphasis. Oh, to be young, lesbian, and adventurous!!! |
05-02-2019, 09:29 PM | #3795 |
Senior Member
How Do You Identify?:
Femme Preferred Pronoun?:
She Relationship Status:
Monogamously Attached to my boyfriend and future husband. Join Date: May 2010
Location: He’s usually with me unless I am with Him.
Posts: 15,085
Thanks: 35,994
Thanked 31,996 Times in 9,940 Posts
Rep Power: 21474865 |
NYT's Op-Ed by Neal Katyal
Why Barr Can't Whitewash The Mueller Report
We have a system in place for our government to uncover evidence against a sitting president. And it's working. by Neal Katyal (May 1st, 2019; The New York Times Op-Ed) Many who watched Attorney General William Barr’s testimony on Wednesday before the Senate Judiciary Committee, which followed the revelation that the special counsel Robert Mueller had expressed misgivings about Mr. Barr’s characterization of his report, are despairing about the rule of law. I am not among them. I think the system is working, and inching, however slowly, toward justice. When it comes to investigating a president, the special counsel regulations I had the privilege of drafting in 1998-99 say that such inquiries have one ultimate destination: Congress. That is where this process is going, and has to go. We are in the fifth inning, and we should celebrate a system in which our own government can uncover so much evidence against a sitting president. Some commentators have attacked the special counsel regulations as giving the attorney general the power to close a case against the president, as Mr. Barr did with the obstruction of justice investigation into Donald Trump. But the critics’ complaint here is not with the regulations but with the Constitution itself. Article II gives the executive branch control over prosecutions, so there isn’t an easy way to remove the attorney general from the process. Instead, the idea behind the regulations was to say, “We recognize the constitutional reality that the attorney general controls the prosecution power, so what else can we do?” My colleagues and I (a group that included many career officials at the Justice Department as well as bipartisan leaders in the House and Senate) settled on two things. First, provide a mechanism to enable an independent investigation, and thereby generate public confidence in the outcome of that investigation. Second, design that mechanism so that if the attorney general interferes with the special counsel’s inquiry, that interference would be reported to Congress and ultimately become public. The underappreciated story right now is that we’ve not only learned that it was Mr. Barr — and pointedly not Mr. Mueller — who decided to clear President Trump of the obstruction charges, but also discovered the reasoning behind Mr. Barr’s decision. The American public and Congress now have the facts and evidence before them. The sunlight the regulations sought is shining. Mr. Barr tried to spin these facts. He hid Mr. Mueller’s complaints, which were delivered to him in writing more than a month ago, even when Congress asked in a previous hearing about complaints by members of the special counsel's team. And the four-page letter that Mr. Barr issued in March and supposedly described the Mueller report omitted the two key factors driving the special counsel’s decision (which were hard to miss, as they were on the first two pages of the report’s volume about obstruction): First, that he could not indict a sitting president, so it would be unfair to accuse Mr. Trump of crimes even if he were guilty as sin; and second, Mr. Mueller could and would clear a sitting president, but he did not believe the facts cleared the president. These two items came out because the special counsel regulations allowed for public release of this information (and not, as Mr. Barr testified on Wednesday, because he “overrode” the regulations to give the information to the public). The attorney general was misleading through and through, not just about the investigation, but about the special counsel regulations themselves. What’s more, we now know about Mr. Barr’s reasoning to clear the president, which turns out to be painfully thin. When asked on Wednesday why he did so, Mr. Barr said the Department of Justice ordinarily issues “binary” decisions: indict or not indict. But Mr. Barr’s own view is that this case is anything but ordinary, because the president cannot be indicted. If Mr. Trump were an “ordinary” individual, he’d almost surely be looking down the barrel of a federal indictment right now. So how can Mr. Barr now use the “ordinary” rules playbook? This mishmash of legal arguments is absurd. No responsible scholar who thinks a sitting president cannot be indicted also thinks an attorney general can try to truncate a process of oversight — by Congress, for example — by “pre-clearing” the president in advance. The whole idea behind the notion that a sitting president cannot be indicted is that the responsibility lies in Congress. An attorney general shouldn’t put his thumb on the scale one way or the other. That’s why Mr. Mueller’s predecessors, Kenneth Starr and Leon Jaworski, simply served the evidence up to Congress; they didn’t try to exonerate the president in advance of it. And that brings us full circle to the special counsel regulations. We knew when we drafted them that we could have a nefarious attorney general (though, in fairness, we didn’t predict this amount of duplicity). But we also knew that the facts would ultimately be forced out into public view under the regulations. That is why the special counsel isn’t a regular Justice Department employee. The “break glass in case of emergency” option was that if the attorney general was interfering with the work of the special counsel and preventing it from becoming public, the special counsel could leave the department and testify. Mr. Mueller needs to testify and tell us whether he disagrees with Mr. Barr’s analysis and conclusions about obstruction of evidence; what he thinks about the attorney general’s reaching his decision without reviewing any of the underlying evidence; what Mr. Mueller thought of Mr. Barr’s characterization of their reported disagreements; whether there were other disagreements that have not been reported; and whether Mr. Mueller’s knowledge of what Mr. Barr has done leads him to conclude that the attorney general must recuse himself from the continuing Trump investigations. Mr. Barr’s deeply evasive testimony on Wednesday necessitates and tees up a full investigation in Congress. Those who say Congress shouldn’t do so because surveys show that the American public is not in favor of an impeachment inquiry must take into account the fact that the American people have been misled by Attorney General Barr’s characterizations of the report and its conclusions. These surveys are therefore not surprising. But there is no more sacred duty for Congress than getting to the bottom of whether our president has taken care that the laws of this country have been faithfully executed. ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** LINK: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/01/o...er-report.html
__________________
Kätzchen _____ ______ |
05-03-2019, 08:06 PM | #3796 | |
Senior Member
How Do You Identify?:
Butch Preferred Pronoun?:
Meh... I'm not very particular about this. Relationship Status:
Single Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: The south... bleh!
Posts: 1,744
Thanks: 5,316
Thanked 5,113 Times in 1,504 Posts
Rep Power: 21474845 |
Never heard of the place. Me thinks she/they doth protest too much regarding the cause. Still, pity they're closing... whatever reason.
Quote:
|
|
The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Lyte For This Useful Post: |
05-14-2019, 08:56 PM | #3797 |
Timed Out - Permanent
How Do You Identify?:
gentle stonebutch [vanilla] Relationship Status:
single Join Date: Dec 2017
Location: canada
Posts: 497
Thanks: 906
Thanked 1,204 Times in 422 Posts
Rep Power: 0 |
What's up with Alabama
Alabama has passed legislation to effectively ban abortion in that State. Apparently, the gov has yet to sign this law. With Kavanaugh in the Supreme Court and a majority "conservative" (Republican nominated) court, geez!!! So, Roe vs. Wade will come up again; I thought that was established/settled!!
My jaw drops as even rape or incest will not be an exception for this, only a mother's life. I really feel for all women who find their right to decide what happens to their body infringed by the religious right in that part of America. It just seems that certain parts of the U.S. (and in the world) are moving backwards in time. Am I imagining that? I live in such a different world that I find so much of what is happening in the States hard to fathom. (As an aside, a woman in our building who was suffering with terminal cancer made a decision to end that suffering, and in her apartment had a medical practitioner help her end that suffering with medically assisted suicide. I find so much of what is happening in the States so difficult to fathom and understand, considering how different we Canadians view medical situations - just saying!) And now there is this "trade war" initiated by the Americans, which I also find quite disconcerting. I think the Chinese will win this war, and the Chinese will become the most powerful nation on this planet in this coming century. Unfortunately, due to our proximity to the States, this "trade war" will effect us here in Canada. |
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to charley For This Useful Post: |
05-15-2019, 01:40 PM | #3798 |
Practically Lives Here
How Do You Identify?:
Depends on the day. Preferred Pronoun?:
"I" and "we" Relationship Status:
Very good. Thank you for asking. Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: Canada
Posts: 11,501
Thanks: 16,676
Thanked 15,261 Times in 4,345 Posts
Rep Power: 21474859 |
KELLY GRANT HEALTH REPORTER
PUBLISHED MAY 15, 2019 Globe and Mail. Physicians who object on moral grounds to providing health-care services such as assisted dying, abortion and birth control must offer their patients an “effective referral” to another doctor, Ontario’s highest court has ruled. In a unanimous decision released Wednesday, the Court of Appeal for Ontario reaffirmed a lower court’s conclusion that it was a reasonable limit on the religious freedom of doctors to require them to connect their patients with willing providers of medical assistance-in-dying (MAID) and other contentious health services. Vulnerable patients “seeking MAID, abortion, contraception and other aspects of sexual health care, turn to their family physicians for advice, care, and, if necessary, medical treatment or intervention,” Chief Justice George Strathy wrote. About one per cent of deaths in Canada medically assisted: Health Canada End-of-life commission sees ‘strong growth’ in number of Quebeckers seeking assisted death Opinion: On choices around death, Quebec offers a cautionary tale “Given the importance of family physicians as ‘gatekeepers’ and ‘patient navigators’ in the health care system, there is compelling evidence that patients will suffer harm in the absence of an effective referral.” The Court of Appeal for Ontario is now the highest court in the country to have ruled on the thorny question of how the conscience rights of doctors should be balanced against the rights of patients to access publicly funded health services – a question that became more pressing after the legalization of assisted dying three years ago. Around the time the federal law was enacted in June of 2016, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario (CPSO) – which licenses doctors and regulates the practice of medicine – adopted a MAID policy that made it clear that physicians who refused to provide assisted deaths were obligated to meaningfully connect their patients with doctors who would.
__________________
______________________________ ______________________________ |
05-15-2019, 03:58 PM | #3799 | |
Infamous Member
How Do You Identify?:
femme *blows a kiss off my finger tips ** Preferred Pronoun?:
~ hey girl ~ Relationship Status:
~ single & content ~ Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Massachusetts ~coastal
Posts: 7,905
Thanks: 22,958
Thanked 16,124 Times in 4,736 Posts
Rep Power: 21474858 |
~
Quote:
Charley ! stop bashing AMERICANS , did we as a nation implicate such imbesilic actions ? Concern yourself with your own government. Like yourself I exercise the freedom of speech , Please Shut Up !
__________________
~ Always, ocean |
|
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to ~ocean For This Useful Post: |
05-16-2019, 08:23 AM | #3800 | |
Member
How Do You Identify?:
Femme Relationship Status:
She's my mirror twin, my next of kin Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Entre Lajeunesse et la sagesse
Posts: 667
Thanks: 2,047
Thanked 1,855 Times in 564 Posts
Rep Power: 21474849 |
Quote:
Thing is, the Conservatives want to do the same thing right here in Canada. (And given how close Andrew Scheer is to becoming our next PM, I don't think our world will be that different at all.) https://north99.org/2019/05/15/repub...S1CXtZSbhTZufQ |
|
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Truly Scrumptious For This Useful Post: |
Tags |
breaking news, news |
|
|