Police in Aurora, Colo., searching for suspected bank robbers stopped
every car at an intersection, handcuffed all the adults and searched
the cars, one of which they believed was carrying the suspect.
Police said they had received what they called a “reliable” tip that
the culprit in an armed robbery at a Wells Fargo bank committed earlier
was stopped at the red light.
“We didn’t have a description, didn’t know race or gender or
anything, so a split-second decision was made to stop all the cars at
that intersection, and search for the armed robber,” Aurora police
Officer Frank Fania told ABC News.
Officers barricaded the area, halting 19 cars.
“Cops came in from every direction and just threw their car in front
of my car,” Sonya Romero, one of the drivers who was handcuffed, told
ABC News affiliate KMGH-TV in Denver.
READ MORE
A collection of articles defining our times. The pages contain clickable links, don't let the titles fool you, some of the best articles have very non-descript titles and there are usually more articles on the matters in the days and week pages the links land on so it's a sort of treasure hunt through history, Enjoy!
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Wednesday, June 6, 2012
New Pew Survey: Only 40% of Republicans Support Safety Net Programs
By Blue Texan
I've been arguing for some time now that the current crop of radicalized Republicans don't just want to "reform" social safety net programs like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security -- they want to get rid of them entirely.
Well, a new extensive Pew study on partisan polarization validates this view.
I've been arguing for some time now that the current crop of radicalized Republicans don't just want to "reform" social safety net programs like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security -- they want to get rid of them entirely.
Well, a new extensive Pew study on partisan polarization validates this view.
Since 2007, Republican support for the safety net has declined significantly even as Democrats continue to support government assistance to the poor and needy as they have over the last 25 years. As a result, although the safety net has long been one of the areas where the opinions of Republicans and Democrats most diverge, the current party gap is now larger than ever.Majorities of Republicans now say they disagree that the government should guarantee every citizen enough to eat and a place to sleep (36 percent agree, 63 percent disagree) and take care of people who can’t take care of themselves (40 percent agree, 54 percent disagree). As recently as 2009, Republican opinions on these questions were more evenly divided. READ MORE
Mike Huckabee Accidentally Tells The Truth About Fox News
By karoli
Oops! This slipup by Mike Huckabee accidentally reveals the truth about our favorite non-news channel. In this clip, he declares that the nation would think Barack Obama was doing just fine if it weren't for Fox News. Boy howdy, I'll bet he feels like a weight has lifted from his shoulders after that confession.
Raw Story:
Oops! This slipup by Mike Huckabee accidentally reveals the truth about our favorite non-news channel. In this clip, he declares that the nation would think Barack Obama was doing just fine if it weren't for Fox News. Boy howdy, I'll bet he feels like a weight has lifted from his shoulders after that confession.
Raw Story:
Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee (R) had an oops moment on his radio show Monday, and this one’s going to leave a mark.Speaking about America’s media landscape in general, Huckabee suggested that without Fox News acting as a counterweight to “mainstream media,” most Americans “will assume that Obama really is just doing a great job and he just can’t get those crazy Republicans to help him out.”READ MORE
Catholic Bishops Go After Girl Scouts
A Girl Scout cadet with Troop 4458 adjusts her sash during an awards ceremony at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis, 04/03/12. (photo: Lisa Johnston/St. Louis Review) |
By Mary E. Hunt, Religion Dispatches
05 June 12
Bishops search for condoms in cookie boxes.
he United States Conference of Catholic Bishops is having a Saturday Night Live moment. Emboldened by the Vatican's hostile takeover of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, the gentlemen have shown their prowess by choosing to investigate the Girl Scouts of the USA. Which would be comical - first the nuns, now the Girl Scouts - if the goal were not so pernicious and the outcome so damaging, especially to the bishops.
The tactics against the girls and the women are taken
from one playbook, the goal of intimidation is the same, and the
pushback in both cases is distracting from more pressing problems at
hand. Still, you wonder who does their public relations, as the bishops
are now about as popular as a recession.
The apparent goal of this exercise of "investigating"
gender female persons is to set up and enforce a male-defined model of
girlhood/womanhood. A Vatican-, or in this case, USCCB-launched
investigation is what Sister Sandra Schneiders, IHM, calls the
equivalent of a grand jury investigation.
There is the presumption that
something is wrong, not something right, that there is guilt to be
uncovered, not virtue to be unleashed. What is wrong seems to be women
and girls thinking for themselves and acting for the common good. READ MORE
How Republicans Prevented Thousands of Wisconsin Students From Voting
Student voters cast their ballots in the Wisconsin presidential primary at Memorial Union's Tripp Commons at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, 02/19/08. (photo: Bryce Richter) |
By Scott Keyes, ThinkProgress
05 June 12
oter ID will not be in effect for today's recall vote in Wisconsin, but that won't stop last year's anti-voter bill from disenfranchising thousands of students across the state.
A year ago, Wisconsin Republicans pushed through Assembly Bill 7, which enacted one of the worst forms of voter ID in the nation. Since then, two state judges have blocked
voter ID from taking effect because the Wisconsin state Constitution
guarantees that "every United States citizen age 18 or older who is a
resident of an election district in this state is a qualified elector of
that district," regardless of whether or not they have an ID.
However, a little-noticed provision in AB 7 will
likely prevent thousands of college students from voting in today's
recall election. READ MORE
Want to Find an Expert on "The War on Women?" Media Chooses Men
Are you a lady with lady opinions on issues that affect ladies?
Then
shut your stupid ladyhole, stupid lady, because no one cares what you
think about that lady stuff. At least, that's what the traditional media
thinks, according to an analysis by The 4th Estate and shown in the infographic above.
The
numbers are stark, but not exactly surprising. When it comes to
coverage of issues that directly affect women, the beacons of
traditional journalism—the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Sunday talk shows—clearly subscribe to the Darrell Issa school of thought: that the people best qualified to talk about women are, in fact, men.
Rep.
Issa, you may recall, held a congressional hearing in February about
the president's new policy mandating that health insurance providers
cover birth control without copays. This, as we know, made Issa and his
fellow Republican men in Congress, as well as his friends at the U.S.
Conference of Catholic Bishops (aka, the Catholic wing of the Republican
Party), have a very sad sadness of sad. So sad that they needed to have
an all-male hearing to share their sad feelings and console one another
about how women's access to affordable birth control will
simultaneously destroy the republic and bring forth armageddon. And,
most importantly, make them very sad. READ MORE
Increase In Multiple Amputations For Troops In Afghanistan
The Army Surgeon General’s office data reveals that amputations resulting in multiple limb-loss rose for
U.S. troops serving in the Afghan war. Nearly half of last year’s
record 226 combat amputations ended with the troop losing two or more of
their arms and legs, compared with only a quarter in 2009. Bigger
improvised explosive devices (IED) targeting U.S. forces and better
techniques for hiding them alongside roads led to the increased
limb-losses, said a former top military doctor. USA Today prepared this
chart to go along with its report on the trend:
By Ali Gharib | Sourced from Think Progress
By Ali Gharib | Sourced from Think Progress
Posted at June 5, 2012, 12:25 pm
Anti-Choicer Threatened to Blow Up Doctor's Car, Now Countersuing Because 'God Told Her to Do It'
Angel Dillard was arrested for sending threatening letters to Dr. Mila Means |
But now Dillard is taking a new approach. She is counter-suing and now claims God was speaking to her.
Dillard
responded with a lawsuit saying the government's suit violates her
freedom of speech and religion. Government lawyers have criticized her
arguments and asked the court to dismiss her counterclaim. Her attorney
asked the court Friday allow her to amend her lawsuit to address "any
pleading defects" and support its allegations.
"Angel
Dillard believed she was inspired by God to send a letter to Dr. Means
in an attempt to convince her not to pursue her plan to abort babies in
Wichita," attorney Donald McKinney said. "Angel Dillard wrote the letter quickly, in a matter of minutes, and believed that her message was divinely inspired."
Goldman Sachs CEO Describes 'Secret Meetings' at Insider Trading Trial
Blankfein, Lloyd CEO Goldman Sachs |
The chief executive
took the stand for the second time in as many years to testify about
Gupta, accused in one of the highest profile insider trading cases for
years.
Talks at board and
committee meetings on which Gupta sat -- before allegedly passing
insider tips to hedge fund manager Raj Rajaratnam -- were not for public
consumption, Blankfein said.
"You're not supposed to discuss," he said.
Referring
to a 2008 strategy meeting held by the powerful US bank in Saint
Petersburg, Russia, he said: "The fact it was in the board meeting meant
it was confidential."
Blankfein
is one of the biggest witnesses prosecutors are using against Gupta, an
Indian-born immigrant who reached the pinnacle of US business. The
former Goldman board member was also on the board of Procter &
Gamble and the director of McKinsey & Co. READ MORE
Senate Republicans Block Vote on Paycheck Fairness Act
Senate Republicans block paycheck fairness bill |
Today, in yet another volley in the
war on women, Senate Republicans blocked voting on the Paycheck
Fairness Act. Proponents of the bill needed 60 votes in order to break a
G.O.P. filibuster, but were able to muster only 52. Some 47 Republicans
voted against a floor vote.
Because women continue to
be paid less than men in similar positions, making just 77 cents to the
dollar, the legislation was an effort to increase protections for women
suing for gender discrimination. Businessweek described the legislation this way:
The bill, sponsored by Senator Barbara Mikulski, a Maryland Democrat, would increase potential damages to plaintiffs in pay- discrimination suits and enhance the legal burden on employers to show that pay disparities aren’t gender-based. It would create a grant program to train women on how to negotiate with employers on their pay.
From the Maddow Blog: READ MORE
Affluenza Afloat: The Dangers of Supersized Cruise Ships in Our Peak-Oil World
Photo Credit: Royal Caribbean |
Recent news that the 2,600 passenger Grand Princess cruise
ship will be docked in San Francisco one year from now has unleashed a
titanic blast of excitement. Naturally, the thrill of thousands of
passengers and crew routinely disembarking at the pier is music to the
ears of struggling retailers and restaurateurs. In the meantime, avid
cruise fans enticed by dramatic discounts can sail from the Bay and save on airfare for voyages to Alaska, Hawaii, Mexico and the California coast.
“Having
the ship sail under the Golden Gate Bridge and berth at the foot of
Coit Tower will be spectacular, both for the guests on board and the
people of San Francisco,” raves Monique Moyer, Executive Director of the Port of San Francisco.
But
critics of the supersized cruise ship trend are signaling foggy
conditions ahead for accessing the country’s needs to keep its affluenza afloat.
Habitual over consumption and the demand for cool aqua parks and live
theaters on billion-dollar high rise vessels comes at a huge cost to
both the environment and the widening schism between rich and poor.
This, amid a growing discontent among the masses worldwide and a
contagious occupy mentality. Will occupy the Grand Princess be next?
Americans Love Class War!
June 5, 2012
Americans still hate the rich, according to yet another poll. And not just godless secular liberals! Pew’s major Trends in American Values poll shows class resentments bridging the partisan divide: “Majorities
in all educational and income groups agree that ‘today it’s really true
that the rich just get richer while the poor get poorer.’ In the
current survey, 76% of the public agrees with this statement, about the
same as the 74% that agreed in 1987.”
Even
the moderate pundit crowd’s beloved independents agree: Our ruling
classes are worthless parasites. A mere 22 percent of “swing voters”
“admire the rich.” (How many Romney supporters “admire the rich,” you
ask? Thirty-eight percent. No one likes rich people.)
As Elspeth Reeve puts it, succinctly and correctly, “swing
voters are not libertarians.” They’re also not “socially liberal and
fiscally conservative,” like the vast majority of our well-off media
elites tend to consider themselves. READ MORE
How Israel's Fear of Arab Democracy Leaves the Jewish State More Isolated
Photo Credit: Gigi Ibrahim/Flickr
|
As the struggle for democracy and
dignity in the Arab world rages on in countries like Tunisia and Egypt,
the Israeli establishment’s response has been to disparage the revolts
and hunker down.
Ayn Rand Thinks He's a Parasite, But My Brother Kevin Contributes Greatly to Our Society
Ayn Rand cashed her disability checks |
At my father's funeral, the
presiding minister, Ebb Munden, was a man who had been one of my dad's
closest friends. Ebb talked about how the last time he had gone to see
my dad before he lost consciousness, he had been very emotional, but
that my dad had comforted him by gripping his hand and telling him it
would be all right; that he was at peace and Ebb should be, too.
The
lesson was that even at our physically weakest, we could still help
other people and make things better in the world.
He came to my family when we were both 11 years old, and has been not only my brother but one of my closest friends ever since. As an adult in recent years, his body has continued to betray him as he is hard of hearing, can't see well, and has muscular dystrophy. Recently, he had to go into the hospitial for major surgery and then developed pneumonia – his muscular dystrophy makes it especially tough to recover from all this. READ MORE
Inside the Fearful Conservative Mind: The Right-Wing's Latest Race Terrors
Bill O'Reilly |
The conservative media has invented a new terror in their imagined race war: hordes of black people coming after innocent white folks.
A
while back Bill O’Reilly, the most watched TV personality on Fox News,
ran a series of stories on what he suggests is a “racially motivated”
attack on two white journalists in Norfolk, Virginia that he claimed was
covered up by the local press. As Buzzfeed’s McKay Coppins details, the
facts reveal a different reality: a rock was thrown at a car, the
occupants had an argument with a group of men and a fight ensued. The
reporters were not severely injured. Although an unfortunate incident in
a city that is struggling with violent crime, it was neither
particularly noteworthy or an anomaly. In fact, the newspaper for which
the journalists worked thought the event was a non-story. This did not
deter Bill O’Reilly. He could frame the story as part of a national race
war by introducing one fact--the victims of the assault were white and
the perpetrators were black.
The National Review’s Thomas Sowell legitimated
this narrative of a race war against whites in a column which
circulated widely throughout the Right-wing media and blogosphere. There
he listed a series of such assaults in major cities such
as Chicago, New York, Cleveland, and Los Angeles, which involved groups
of young black people committing random assaults on pedestrians, robbing
people of their cell phones and Ipods, and fighting on beaches and in
malls. READ MORE
Progressive Movement Rises Up But Can't Oust Walker From Wisconsin Governorship
Walker outspent Barrett eight-to-one, but Democrats may have regained control of the state Senate.
June 5, 2012
A
fifth race may offer some consolation to progressives. It appears that
Democrat state senate candidate John Lehman beat the incumbent
Republican Sen. Van Wanggaard by 779 votes out of more than 71,000 cast,
according to late-breaking unofficial returns. Should Lehman's victory hold up when the final count is certified, the Democrats would become the majority party in the state Senate, breaking the GOP's lock on legislative power. READ MORE
June 5, 2012
Progressives held their breaths and
grimaced Tuesday evening as the trickle of Wisconsin recall election
returns showed that anti-labor Republican Gov. Scott Walker – and four
senior GOP state officials – were not going to be removed from office,
despite overwhelming turnout in the state’s Democratic urban
strongholds.
With
99 percent of the state’s 3,424 precincts reporting, Walker led Barrett
53 to 46 percent, a lead of nearly 173,000 votes out of 2.5 million
votes cast. Barrett told reporters that he called Walker, “and
congratulated him on his victory tonight. We agreed that it is important
for us to work together.”
Sandusky allegedly wrote 'creepy' love letters to victim
BELLEFONTE, Pa. – Jerry Sandusky
allegedly wrote "creepy" love letters to one of his victims, and they
will be read in testimony once the child sex abuse trial into the former
Penn State assistant football coach begins Monday, ABC News reported, citing sources close to the case.
The love letters were allegedly written to "Victim 4," one of eight accusers set to testify against the 68-year-old.
Victim 4 is set to be the first witness to testify and is also expected to show gifts that Sandusky allegedly gave him, including a set of golf clubs.
The letters are allegedly handwritten by Sandusky and one of them entails a story written in the third person.
Victim 4, now 28, met the coach through Sandusky's charity, the Second Mile.
The love letters were allegedly written to "Victim 4," one of eight accusers set to testify against the 68-year-old.
Victim 4 is set to be the first witness to testify and is also expected to show gifts that Sandusky allegedly gave him, including a set of golf clubs.
The letters are allegedly handwritten by Sandusky and one of them entails a story written in the third person.
Victim 4, now 28, met the coach through Sandusky's charity, the Second Mile.
Sandusky trial: nine jurors selected, three (and alternates) to go
Connections to Penn State weren't necessarily keeping prospective jurors from being chosen Tuesday to decide former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky's fate on child sexual abuse charges.
The jurors and four alternates could be selected as early as
Wednesday, with opening statements not scheduled to begin until Monday.
Sandusky is fighting dozens of criminal charges that he abused 10 boys
over a 15-year period.
In the first questioning of 40 prospective jurors, about half said they or immediate family members worked at Penn State or were university retirees. One woman rented apartments to college students. Four knew Sandusky, a former Penn State assistant football coach. Two knew his wife.
Sandusky's lawyer won the right to have jurors chosen from the local community, and prosecutors had concerns that Centre County might prove to be nearly synonymous with Penn State. Sandusky had helped build the football team's reputation as a defensive powerhouse known as Linebacker U, his arrest toppled Joe Paterno from the head coaching position just months before his death from cancer and prosecutors say some of the attacks on children occurred inside university showers.
One of the first jurors to be seated wasn't just a season ticketholder since the 1970s: She said John McQueary — a possible trial witness and the father of a key witness — once worked with her husband. READ MORE
Several of the nine jurors who have been seated have links to Penn State as students, alumni or supporters.
By
Genaro C. Armas and Mark Scolforo, The Associated Press /
June 5, 2012
Connections to Penn State weren't necessarily keeping prospective jurors from being chosen Tuesday to decide former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky's fate on child sexual abuse charges.
In the first questioning of 40 prospective jurors, about half said they or immediate family members worked at Penn State or were university retirees. One woman rented apartments to college students. Four knew Sandusky, a former Penn State assistant football coach. Two knew his wife.
Sandusky's lawyer won the right to have jurors chosen from the local community, and prosecutors had concerns that Centre County might prove to be nearly synonymous with Penn State. Sandusky had helped build the football team's reputation as a defensive powerhouse known as Linebacker U, his arrest toppled Joe Paterno from the head coaching position just months before his death from cancer and prosecutors say some of the attacks on children occurred inside university showers.
One of the first jurors to be seated wasn't just a season ticketholder since the 1970s: She said John McQueary — a possible trial witness and the father of a key witness — once worked with her husband. READ MORE