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Randall Terry’s announcement that he will challenge Barack Obama in the Democratic primaries isn’t being taken seriously, but to me, it’s dangerous. Here’s an example of why: “America has never truly debated child killing, because America has never truly seen child killing,” insisted Terry. “We will use FEC and FCC laws for federal candidates to bring America face to face with this massacre of the innocents.” It’s not the threat of using FEC and FCC laws. It’s the “massacre of the innocents” language. This is a perfect example of how to stir up people who are already disturbed and incite them to violence . In a different time and place, it wouldn’t be quite so disturbing. But in today’s world, we have Fox News and a myriad of print/internet outlets willing to pretend Terry is a serious contender. All he wants is the platform, and challenging the president in Democratic primaries gives that to him. “Will I defeat Mr. Obama? I’m not delusional,” said Terry. “But while I may not defeat him, I can expose the genocide Obama promotes in America and around the world. ” Terry added that his campaign had two goals which were creating “a crisis of conscience for Americans regarding the slaughter of the unborn and thereby hasten the end of legalized child killing” and attacking “President Obama’s agenda starting with child killing, but also including our battle against socialism, our enslavement to debt, and more. ” Fighting words. Fire in a crowded room. Was there no lesson learned from the assassination of Dr. Tiller? Just to make sure he gets as much attention as possible, he’s planning to make his formal announcement in front of the Holocaust museum. No symbolism there, none at all. I’m certain Terry will actually get some assistance from the Catholic Church and Southern Baptists, which means that the 2012 campaign just got more dangerous for the president. But Fox News will surely be more profitable, so there’s that. Here’s a sample of Randall Terry quotes from the past. I’m sure we’ll get some really great ones in 2012, too. “I want you to just let a wave of intolerance wash over you… I want you to let a wave of hatred wash over you. Yes, hate is good… Our goal is a Christian nation. We have a biblical duty, we are called by God, to conquer this country. We don’t want equal time. We don’t want pluralism.” “When I, or people like me, are running the country, you’d better flee, because we will find you, we will try you and we will execute you.” ["reportedly said of doctors who perform abortions"]

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Media Reality Check: By 8-to-1 Margin, Networks Target Conservative Speech after Tucson Shooting

Almost immediately after the shooting in Tucson that killed six people and left Democratic Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords severely wounded, the media establishment linked the attack with a debate about “civility,” suggesting an association between Jared Loughner’s rampage and the words and phrases used in national political debates.

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Vatican Told Irish Clergy to Keep Abuse Reports From Police

According to an official letter issued by the Vatican in 1997, the Holy See issued a warning to higher-ups in the Irish Catholic Church, strongly suggesting that they keep reports of child abuse by clergy members from outside authorities or they could face “embarrassing” consequences.

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While the Villagers try to erect their own narrative about the Arizona shootings, and as right-wingers try to deflect the fallout from the Giffords shootings, something important is finally penetrating into the minds of Americans: Right wing vitriolic rhetoric that has permeated our airwaves is dangerous to our society. CNN: Blame Game in Arizona Shootings/a> 48% of the country believe the use of a harsh rhetoric and violent metaphors by politicians and commentators caused the Arizona shooting Only 32% believe they have no impact at all. And: 54% believe the use of a harsh rhetoric and violent metaphors by politicians and commentators would cause a future incident similar to the shooting in Arizona. That’s much bigger than I thought it would be. David and I took no pleasure when we came up with our book Over the Cliff , because this kind of violence is exactly what we had forecast. It’s not something we would wish on anyone, but we could not ignore what was happening to our country and we felt it had to be documented and discussed.

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FCC Approves Comcast/NBC Universal Merger

enlarge This is really a disaster. The FCC approved the merger of Comcast and NBC on Tuesday. The vote was 4 to 1, with Democratic commissioner Michael Copps casting the dissenting vote. The New York Times reports that the Justice Department, which also has to approve the deal, is expected to do so later on Tuesday. The Wrap quoting the sole dissenter, Michael Copps : The merger passed with votes from two the Democrats and two Republicans on the commission. The sole dissenter was Democratic Commissioner Michael J. Copps, who said in a statement that the transaction was “like no other that has come before this Commission—ever.” “It reaches into virtually every corner of our media and digital landscapes and will affect every citizen in the land,” he said. “It is new media as well as old; it is news and information as well as sports and entertainment; it is distribution as well as content. And it confers too much power in one company’s hands.” Specific conditions of the merger are here . They’re just a drop in the bucket, a nominal fee to pay for 7 years to own all of it, start to finish.

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Beck compares himself to Martin Luther King again. Again, he acts more like MLK’s persecutors

Click here to view this media Glenn Beck — who’s been doing his best to rip off Martin Luther King’s legacy for some time now — of course continued to do so in MLK’s birthday yesterday, claiming he has a special affinity with King. How, you may ask? Why, because King too was accused by leading papers of the day of fomenting violence associated with the Civil Rights movement: BECK: So here they are — blaming Martin Luther King — they’re blaming him for the violence! That’s the opposite of what he was. But this is the Establishment. This is the elitist view. It’s what they wanted to print at the time — that was the script. It didn’t matter what people were seeing on TV — it clearly was not Martin Luther King’s fault. It might have been Malcolm X — not related to the Martin Luther King movement. It was not William Ayers — I mean, William Ayers was doing it, but William Ayers was not connected to Martin Luther King. Black Panthers — not King. But that didn’t matter to the media. The media just stuck to what was previously written because the elites had their story. Of course, there’s an important component that Beck is omitting here: The violence that often accompanied civil-rights marches were called “race riots,” and they largely entailed assaults by angry conservative whites on the black marchers. This was the violence for which the editorialists in Chicago were absurdly blaming King. Which underscores the real context that Beck loves to omit from his Martin Luther King encomiums: The people who were attacking King, viciously and violently, were conservatives. The people who supported him and marched with him were progressives. Indeed, it wasn’t just elite white newspapers who were accusing King of fomenting violence — most notably, it was the deeply right-wing segregationists and race-baiters who were themselves the cause of so much of the violence around the marches who were then (in classic Southern “bloody shirt” style) claiming to be victims of black violence at hands of King and his marchers. These were the accusations the editorialists blithely picked up and ran with. As Rick Perlstein explains in his great history of that era, Nixonland : “The notion that Martin Luther King was seeding violent confrontation became a conservative article of faith.” Nixonland also makes clear just who in Chicago was responsible for the violence that the editorial writers were blaming on King (p. 119): August 5. Six hundred open-housing activists, ten thousand counter-demonstrators. Some wore Nazi helmets. Others waved Confederate battle flags, carried George Wallace banners, swastika placards that helpfully explained “The Symbol of White Power.” Martin Luther King, Mahalia Jackson by his side, led his legions forth: “We are bound for the promised land!” “Kill those niggers!” “We want Martin Luther Coon!” Police trying to keep the two sides apart were screamed at: “Nigger-loving cops!” “God, I hate niggers and nigger-lovers,” a reporter overheard an old lady say. Martin Luther King walked past. “Kill him! Kill him!” “Roses are red, violets are black, King would look good with a knife in his back.” Instead he got a baseball-sized rock above his ear. He slumped to the ground — the Gandhian moment of truth. “I think everybody in that line wanted to kill everybody that was on the other side of the line,” a marcher later recalled. King got up and kept on marching. We shall overcome. On the approach to Halvorsen Realty, someone did throw a knife at King’s back. It caught some white kid in the neck instead. King had marched six weeks earlier through the Mississippi town where the civil rights workers Goodman, Chaney, and Schwermer were murdered. He had called it the most savage place he had ever seen. Now revised his opinion: “I think the people of Mississippi ought to come to Chicago to learn how to hate.” Here’s a representative sample of the kind of things “elite” conservatives said about King at the time: As I explained previously : This, you see, was a flier that was distributed widely as part of a campaign to discredit King as a Communist. Among the foremost leaders in that campaign, especially among Mormons, was none other than the Church’s future president, Ezra Taft Benson . Here are some prime quotes from Benson: “LOGAN, UTAH-Former Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft Benson charged Friday night that the civil-rights movement in the South had been ‘formatted almost entirely by the Communists.’ Elder Benson, a member of the Council of the Twelve of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, said in a public meeting here that the whole civil-rights movement was ‘phony.’” (Deseret News, Dec. 14, 1963) “The Communist program for revolution in America has been in progress for many years and is far advanced. While it can be thwarted in a fairly short period of time merely by sufficient exposure, the evil effects of what has already been accomplished cannot be removed overnight. The animosities, the hatred, the extension of government control into our daily lives–all this will take time to repair. The already-inflicted wounds will be slow to heal. First of all, we must not place blame on the Negroes. They are merely the unfortunate group that has been selected by professional Communist agitators to be used as the primary source of cannon fodder. Not one in a thousand Americans–black or white–really understands the full implications of today’s civil-rights agitation. The planning, direction, and leadership come from the Communists, and most of those are white men who fully intend to destroy America by spilling Negro blood, rather than their own. Next, we must not participate in any so-called ‘blacklash’ activity which might tend to further intensify inter-racial friction. Anti-Negro vigilante action, or mob action, of any kind fits perfectly into the Communist plan. This is one of the best ways to force the decent Negro into cooperating with militant Negro groups. The Communists are just as anxious to spearhead such anti-Negro actions as they are to organize demonstrations that are calculated to irritate white people. We must insist that duly authorized legislative investigating committess launch an even more exhaustive study and expose the degree to which secret Communists have penetrated into the civil rights movement. The same needs to be done with militant anti-Negro groups. This is an effective way for the American people of both races to find out who are the false leaders among them” (Ezra Taft Benson, General Conference Report, Oct. 1967). See, in order for Glenn Beck to convince his fellow conservatives to claim the mantle of the Civil Rights movement, he essentially has to persuade millions of people who have opposed it with every fiber of their beings for most of their lives to completely reverse course and claim the opposite of their former beliefs. This is the juncture where Beck’s “Civil Rights” campaign runs smack into one of his own long-running threads — namely, he has doggedly accused the Obama administration of harboring “Marxists” and “Communists”: that was, after all, the predicate of his attacks on Van Jones. That happens to be consonant with Beck’s running espousal of the works of Mormon leader W. Cleon Skousen — a man who was in fact a close friend and ally of Ezra Taft Benson’s, and shared Benson’s belief that Martin Luther King was a secret Communist. Does all this talk of secret Communist affiliations sound familiar? It should — because one talk-show host in particular has been using it to smear, of all people, African American leaders, as a way to smear the nation’s first African American president: We saw how that turned out , didn’t we? Beck doesn’t remind us of Martin Luther King. He reminds us of the people who fomented lethal hatred against him. And then tried to claim that their violent and vicious rhetoric had nothing, nothing at all to do with his assassination. Seems like a good lesson to remember on his birthday.

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Palin Calls Out Media for Implicating Her in Tucson Shooting, CBS Has Amnesia

On Tuesday's CBS Early Show, congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes reported on Sarah Palin's first interview since the Tucson shooting: “She accused the Left and the news media of trying to destroy her message, trying to destroy her, said she was being accused of being an accessory to murder.” Cordes forgot to mention her role in furthering those accusations against the former Alaska governor. After playing a clip of Palin's Monday interview on Fox News' Hannity, Cordes mentioned: “The early response I'm hearing from some on the Left about this interview is, 'Look we never said she was an accessory to murder, we simply said she was an accessory to in-civility in politics.'” On the day of the shooting, reporting for the CBS Evening News, Cordes implied Palin played a role in inciting the violence: “Giffords was one of 20 Democrats whose districts were lit up in cross hairs on a Sarah Palin campaign Web site last spring. Giffords and many others complained that someone unstable might act on that imagery.” Introducing the segment with Cordes, co-host Chris Wragge declared: “This morning Sarah Palin isn't backing down from some controversial statements she made in the wake of the Tucson shootings.” Apparently, only Palin's defense of herself was “controversial,” not the media coverage that initially accused her of causing the tragedy. During a news brief in the 8AM ET hour, news reader Jeff Glor remarked that: “After the Tucson shooting, Sarah Palin was criticized by some.” Like Cordes, he forgot to mention that CBS News was one of those critics. He then noted how Palin “said her political action committee's use of cross hairs to identify swing districts, including Gabrielle Giffords, has been used before, she says, by Democrats….that Democrats have used cross hairs to target Republican districts on maps.” Despite the numerous times CBS reports in the wake of shooting displayed Palin's campaign map of targeted Democratic districts, Glor was unable to produce an image of the Democratic Leadership Council's 2004 map placing bull's eyes over Republican districts. Despite CBS's role in promoting uncivil and unproven charges against Palin, following his discussion with Cordes, Wragge suggested they were the arbiters of civil discourse: “It's going to be very interesting to see over the next couple of days just how civilized the tone in this new Washington is now.” Fellow co-host Erica Hill went further: “Yes, on both sides, how everyone can continue that pledge. We will be watching with a trained eye, that's for sure, as will Nancy and our folks in Washington.” Turning to the 7AM ET hour news headlines, Glor remarked: “Always civilized here, right guys?” Hill replied: “Always.” Here is a full transcript of Cordes's January 18 discussion with Wragge: 7:00AM ET TEASE: CHRIS WRAGGE: Not backing down. As Congress heads back to work with a vow to be more civil, Sarah Palin defends herself in her first television interview since the Tucson shootings. SARAH PALIN: I know that a lot of those on the Left hate my message and they'll do all that they can to stop me because they don't like the message. 7:07AM ET SEGMENT: CHRIS WRAGGE: This morning Sarah Palin isn't backing down from some controversial statements she made in the wake of the Tucson shootings. Meanwhile, the Republican-led House of Representatives gets back to work today, promising to be more polite but no less aggressive in trying to push their agenda. CBS News congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes is in Washington this morning for us. Nancy, good morning to you. NANCY CORDES: Good morning, Chris. [ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: Back to Work; GOP to Fight Healthcare In House] WRAGGE: Well, let me ask you, how are things going to be different on Capitol Hill now with this debate, these contentious debates, that take place in the wake of the tragedy in Tucson? CORDES: Well, I think you will see some changes, at least at first, Chris. The rhetoric has already been a little softer, a little more measured. There's this movement, as you've heard, to have Republicans and Democrats sit among each other at the President's State of the Union address instead of having one party on the left and the other party on the right. You've even heard Republicans praising the President's speech in Tucson, saying that he struck the right note there. So I think both sides are trying to be a little less caustic, we'll just have to see if it sticks. WRAGGE: The first order of real business, repealing health care. How tame a debate can people expect with two sides that are just so bitterly divided? CORDES: Yes, so this will really be a test of their new resolve, because there's almost no issue that divides them like health care. And the press releases are already flying in advance of this debate. The Democrats have even launched new ads attacking Republicans for trying to repeal the bill. So I expect that this debate will be a heated one. It just might not be as venomous as it would have been otherwise. WRAGGE: Let's talk about Sarah Palin here for a moment, she gave her first TV interview since the Tucson shootings to Fox News last night. What did she have to say? [ON-SCREEN HEADLINE: Not Backing Down; Palin Defends Tucson Comments In First Interview] CORDES: Well, she accused the Left and the news media of trying to destroy her message, trying to destroy her, said she was being accused of being an accessory to murder. She defended her use of those cross hairs, she defended her use of the term 'blood libel.' This was a 30 minute ranging interview. Let's listen to some of what she had to say. SARAH PALIN: That came up right away, that, 'Oh, it must be a cause of this horrendous evil act of this shooter that perhaps he saw that map and that incited him towards violence,' which of course is ridiculous and, again, it's not an original use of an icon or a graphic. I will continue to speak out. They're not going to shut me up, they're not going to shut you up or Rush or Mark Levin, or Tea Party patriots or those who, as I say, respectfully and patriotically petition their government for change. CORDES: The early response I'm hearing from some on the Left about this interview is, 'Look we never said she was an accessory to murder, we simply said she was an accessory to in-civility in politics.' Chris. WRAGGE: Well, we will hear a whole lot more about that all day today, I'm sure. Nancy Cordes in Washington for us this morning. Nancy, thank you very much. CORDES: Sure thing. WRAGGE: It's going to be very interesting to see over the next couple of days just how civilized the tone in this new Washington is now. ERICA HILL: Yes, on both sides, how everyone can continue that pledge. We will be watching with a trained eye, that's for sure, as will Nancy and our folks in Washington. WRAGGE: Want to get you a closer look this morning at some of the other headlines that we're following on this Tuesday. Jeff Glor standing by at the news desk. Jeff, good morning. JEFF GLOR: Always civilized here, right guys? HILL: Always.

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Do we still have to pretend that this isn’t one in a series of egregious and illegal acts by JP Morgan Chase in the mortgage foreclosure process — or are we still pretending none of these things are connected ? Just asking! One of the nation’s biggest banks — JP Morgan Chase — admits it has overcharged several thousand military families for their mortgages, including families of troops fighting in Afghanistan. The bank also tells NBC News that it improperly foreclosed on more than a dozen military families. The admissions are an outgrowth of a lawsuit filed by Marine Capt. Jonathan Rowles. Rowles is the backseat pilot of an F/A 18 Delta fighter jet and has served the nation as a Marine for five years. He and his wife, Julia, say they’ve been battling Chase almost that long. The dispute apparently caused the bank to review its handling of all mortgages involving active-duty military personnel. Under a law known as the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA), active-duty troops generally get their mortgage interest rates lowered to 6 percent and are protected from foreclosure. Chase now appears to have repeatedly violated that law, which is designed to protect troops and their families from financial stress while they’re in harm’s way. A Chase official told NBC News that some 4,000 troops may have been overcharged . What’s more, the bank discovered it improperly foreclosed on the homes of 14 military families. “We are deeply appreciative of those who fight to protect our country and Chase funds a number of programs that provide benefits to military personnel and veterans, and while any customer mistake is regrettable, we feel particularly badly about the mistakes we made here, ” Chase chief communications officer Kristin Lemkau said in a statement to NBC News. She said that beginning this week Chase will be mailing a total of about $2 million in refunds to families that may have been overcharged. She says most of the families improperly foreclosed on have gotten or will get their homes back. A bank official described what happened here as “grim,” but emphasized the mistakes were inadvertent, not malicious. Really? Are we talking about the same JP Morgan Chase, the one that illegally foreclosed on Florida homes , screwed the Denver school system , rigged municipal investment contracts , is being investigated by the SEC for rigging some CDOs , is alleged by a whistleblower to have fabricated and/or destroyed credit card records of customers, and bestowed us with President Obama’s new chief of staff? “Inadvertent,” my foot.

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Time for More Health Care Fun on Capitol Hill

After a break in routine operation following the Tucson shooting rampage, the House of Representatives was ready for another round of debate over health care reform on Tuesday, with the newly emboldened GOP at the ready to push for a repeal. But will they prevail?

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Sarah Palin tops the Lame List with her most pathetic, excuse-making, accusatory interview yet

Click here to view this media Boy, it really doesn’t get much more lame than Sarah Palin’s latest Hannity Job last night on Fox. Via Lynn Sweet : HANNITY: A lot of these initial stories, Governor, had to do with this map that your PAC had put up during the last campaign, and the fact that Congresswoman Giffords was one of the people on, quote, “the target list,” in the crosshairs that were there. What could you tell us about this map? And I’ll get into more Questions after that. PALIN: Well, that map wasn’t an original graphic. In fact, for many, many years, maps in political races have been used to target certain districts that people would feel that they can get into those districts and find someone whom they believe would represent the constituents’ will better than incumbent. And that is what this map represented that we used on my PAC. And the graphic that we used was crosshairs targeting the different districts. And, again, that’s not original. In fact, Democrats have been using it for years. In fact, Bob Beckel, I believe that he had bragged on your show, Sean, that he is the one who invented these crosshairs or these targets. So, you know, that came up right away, that, oh, it must be a cause of this horrendous evil act of this shooter, that perhaps he saw that map and that incited him towards violence, which, of course, is ridiculous. Again, it’s not an original use of an icon or a graphic. Of course, what had gotten a lot of people’s attention well before the Tucson tragedy was that Palin’s 2010 campaign was soaked in violent, gun-related rhetoric like this, including exhortations to “Take Them Out” accompanying the gunsight graphic, as well as her oft-repeated exhortation to followers to “Lock and Load” and “Don’t Retreat, Reload!” It just happened that Gabrielle Giffords was thus not just targeted by the graphic, but by Palin’s rhetoric. But doesn’t she just sound like she’s squirming like a seven-year-old, trying to explain to her teacher that honest, her dog really did eat her homework last night? It continued on in this vein, only getting much worse when they tackled the subject of her wildly inappropriate appropriation of the term “blood libel” to describe her own supposed martyrdom: HANNITY: And we are back with more of our exclusive sit-down interview with former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin. Governor, when you finally released your video, not surprising, more controversy involving you. I want to give you a chance to respond to this. One was the timing of the release of the video, which was I believe the day before the memorial. And the second one was the term — “but especially within hours of the tragedy unfolding, journalists and pundits should not manufacture a blood libel that serves only to incite the very hatred and violence they purport to condemn. That is reprehensible.” And, you know, some of your critics saying, you didn’t know the historical significance. Other people criticized you for that phrase. But I want you to address the timing and that phrase. PALIN: I don’t know how the heck they would know if whether I did or didn’t know the term “blood libel,” nobody has ever asked me. And “blood libel” obviously means being falsely accused of having blood on your hands. And in this case that’s exactly what was going on. And yes, the historical knowledge that people have of the term blood libel, it goes back to the Jews who were falsely accused back in medieval European times of using the blood of children. And you know, the criticism of even the timing of this statement is being used as another diversion, because I believe that there are many on the left, many critics, who don’t want, for instance, Congress, to buckle down, get back to work. There’s this trifecta thing going on in our country right now that’s going to bring America to her knees if Congress doesn’t start addressing the issues at hand. That being our growing debt, a looming energy crisis if we don’t start domestically developing our resources, and some of the national security policies that have been adopted and enacted, like the signing and the ratification of the START treaty that Russia’s Duma won’t even ratify because there are misinterpretations of what the preamble means. So, we have these things going on right now that have got to be addressed, and Congress has got to get back to work. And it’s just much easier, I believe, for critics of common-sense conservative agenda to try to divert and distract from the issues at hand, those tasks that must be addressed today. HANNITY: What did you think of the criticism of those, though, in the Jewish community about the use of that term? I know others came to your defense, but what did you think about the critics? PALIN: I think the critics, again, were using anything that they could gather out of that statement. And I’m, you know, you can — you can spin up anything out of anybody’s statements that are released and use them against the person who is making the statement. But, no, I appreciated those who understood what it is that I meant, that a group of people being falsely accused of having blood on their hands, that is what blood libel means. And just two days before I released my statement, an op-ed in the “Wall Street Journal” had that term in its title and that term has been used for eons, Sean. Seriously? Her best excuse was that noted right-wing moron Glenn Reynolds used the term a few days before? Why doesn’t she just admit that’s where she got it from in the first place? Guess it was more important to suggest that the attention paid to her idiocy was actually part of an insidious media plot to divert attention from the really pressing issues in Congress. Yyyyyyeah. OK. As they useta say at Almost Live: “Lame! Lame! Lame! Lame!” “Indescribably lame.” “L-L-A-A-M-M-E-E!” Click here to view this media

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