Today, Tucson shooting victim Eric Fuller apologized for his outburst and perceived threat against Tucson Tea Party leader Trent Humphries. CBS posted it as though it was somehow expected and necessary — the right thing to do. Fuller apologized for his “misplaced outrage.” Fuller was one of 19 people shot when a gunman opened fire Jan. 8 at a meet-and-greet for Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. The congresswoman was critically injured and six people were killed. Fuller was shot in the knee and back, and drove himself to the hospital, where he spent two days. Deruyter said Fuller has no family or children, and was coping with the shooting almost entirely on his own and lost his temper. Notice how CBS made Humphries the victim: Trent Humphries, co-founder of the Tucson Tea Party who was the focus of Fuller’s outburst at a taping of ABC’s “This Week” Saturday, told the Associated Press he is worried about threats he is receiving. Humphries told the AP he was worried about Fuller’s threat, and the dozens of other angry e-mails he has received from people blaming right-wing political rhetoric for contributing to the assassination attempt on Rep. Gabrielle Giffords. As you might expect, I have an opinion on the whole fiasco. Let’s start with this: How on earth did James Goldston, producer of This Week , think it would a really GREAT idea to bring a guy on who had just witnessed a horrific scene and been injured himself to talk about gun control with a Tea Party leader? That’s idiotic, ignorant and opportunistic. Fuller hasn’t even started to process everything he saw and heard that day. He has been injured for the mortal sin of being at the supermarket that day. He has seen and heard things that human brains are not wired to see and hear, and there is absolutely no way he was in any shape to tackle a debate with anyone, much less someone as opinionated and rigid as Humphries. Emotional trauma after what Fuller has been through doesn’t go away in a week. Or a month. Or a year. Fuller is still wired in survival mode and will be for some time. The only good that may come from this weekend’s outburst is the mental health treatment he will now receive for the assault on his psyche, which may help to relieve inevitable PTSD later. While it’s too early for Fuller to be suffering from PTSD , the physical response (whether delayed or immediate) is something that doesn’t really ever go away. The best one can do is learn, over time, to manage the physical and emotional response that comes with it. My youngest child was run over by a van when she was five, right outside our front door. While she survived with no lasting or permanent injury (a miracle in itself), I still have a visceral emotional and physical reaction to anyone driving fast past my front window. Neighbors have seen me chase speeding cars on foot, yelling at them to slow the hell down on a private street with a 5 mph speed limit. If I manage to control that reaction, I just shake and cringe, waiting for the inevitable thud I fully expect to hear. Most of the time, I don’t remember what I said when it happens. It just hits you right in the gut and your mind goes to the place where you were when the first event happened and you lash out with rising dread that there will be yet another bleeding child left on the street. You relive it, one second at a time, while hoping this time is different. It’s irrational, it’s draining, and it’s real. In those seconds, you realize you have no ability to prevent or avoid a disaster. These physical and emotional responses still happen, nearly 12 years later. Had someone taken a moment to ask the question “Is it perhaps too soon to try to put these two together?”, they might have taken a pass on the entire segment. Humphries wasn’t going to change his mind about gun control. Fuller is still in the early stages of trying to sort all of this out and manage this horrible thing that had happened to him. It was irresponsible of that producer to even attempt such a thing, but not surprising, given the constant hunt for controversy and ratings. Given that it was attempted, however, the only one who should be apologized to is Mr. Fuller, who will now suffer humiliation and scorn for a reaction he could not control. For CBS to turn Humphries into a victim while reporting that Fuller has apologized just ignores the responsibility we all should share for this. Exploiting victims for 24/7 media cycles is as harmful to them as it is to the conversation.
Continue reading …Especially on Martin Luther King Day, it seems worth asking whether or not the assassinated civil rights leaders would have cared more about: Whether a talk radio host told his audience, in reference to the No Child Left Behind Act causing many school districts, including the Toledo Public Schools (TPS), to believe they must “teach to the test” to avoid serious sanctions: “teaching little monkeys to peel bananas and so on and then doing it correctly on cue, does not mean that they’ve learned everything except a funny parlor trick.” The fact that TPS is rated dead-last in its metro area , and
Continue reading …Former Senator George Allen — the once-leading religious-right candidate eyeing the run for the presidency in 2008, until his “macaca moment” lost him the election and his aspirations — is said to be running against Sen. Webb in 2012. Allen, the former U.S. senator and Virginia governor, plans to tell supporters within a week that he is mounting a campaign to retake the Senate seat he lost to Democrat Jim Webb in 2006, according to Politico . There was no mention of a possible run on Allen’s website Monday . But he did post his picks for this past weekend’s NFL playoff games. For Allen’s sake, we hope his political future fares better than his prognosticating skills. The son of the former Redskins coach went 1-3 in the weekend games, correctly picking only the Green Bay- Atlanta game. Allen, 58, has already begun to line up key staff members for his 2012 run, according to Politico . Webb beat Allen by only 1 percent (thanks in part to an insensitive comment Allen made at a campaign stop in southwest Virginia) and has sent mixed signals about whether he will seek re-election. But DNC Chairman Tim Kaine, a former Virginia governor who could be the Democratic nominee if Webb were to bow out, has been telling friends he thinks Webb will run, Politico reported. The Senator has a very checkered past when it comes to racism. Flags: Since there has been a lot of talk about George Allen’s fondness for the Confederate flag , I acquired this video that Ryan Lizza writes about. “It’s hard to make out, because the video is fuzzy. The copy I obtained was originally recorded off a television using VHS in 1993 and then transferred to a second tape, further degrading the quality. But, once you know what it is, it makes sense. It sits folded on a bookcase of trophies and bric-a-brac behind George Allen, who is seated at a desk in his home office. “It’s right there next to the fax machine. You can see the red field. You can make out the diagonal blue bar. And you can see what looks like a white star. It is the Confederate flag, and it appears in the very first ad that Allen broadcast in 1993, when he ran for governor…” Can you guys make it out? Update : Allen’s ad-maker confirmed to TNR that the Confederate flag is there, but denies it was done on purpose. I for one will welcome back a chance to go up against George Allen, formerly known as Senator Macaca.
Continue reading …Time magazine asked a panel of 16 experts to answer the question “Are We Becoming An Uncivil Society?” While Time's selected Republicans and conservatives (including Glenn Beck) stayed civil and didn't point explicit fingers at liberals for trying to smear the Tucson shooting on conservatives, leftist Daily Kos blogger Markos Moulitsas rudely predicted (again) that one side of the aisle, inspired by people like Beck, Sarah Palin, and Sharron Angle were going to get Americans killed: We have always been an uncivil society. Just ask John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. But being harsh and passionate in one's political discourse isn't the same as walking around with guns intimidating the opposition, or using apocalyptic and Armageddon-style rhetoric to paint your opponents as terrorists and enemies of democracy and freedom. Problem is, we now have a side that is gun-obsessed, whipping people up into a frenzy with lies about Obama taking their guns away and interning conservatives in FEMA concentration camps (to name just two conspiracy theories). When Sarah Palin tells her followers not to retreat, but to “reload,” when Sharron Angle says people should resort to “Second Amendment remedies” if they don't get their way at the ballot box, and when Glenn Beck spreads the latest insane conspiracy theory, well then, it's only a matter of time before people start getting killed. This is not an April Fools' Day joke. Time invited Markos Moulitsas to speak of civility in a civil tone. Were they shocked he just kept frantically slinging mud? Is the Kos Kommandant incapable of decorum even as his bete noire Beck accomplishes it? It seems bizarre to many that a forum on civility truly needs someone whose ethical views include “killing a defective infant is not morally equivalent to killing a person.”
Continue reading …A spokesman for Tunisia’s central bank denies a Le Monde report that the wife of ousted Tunisian President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali left the country with almost $60 million of Tunisia’s reserves. Below is a summary of the charges, which a bank spokesman denied. BBC: Citing French security sources, Le Monde reported that Leila Trabelsi went to the bank in December, the month when the protests against her husband’s government began. It said the bank’s governor refused her demand and asked for a written request for the gold, said to be worth 45m euros (£38m). It said the president initially refused to make such an order before giving in to his wife. The paper said she then left Tunisia before returning to the country, and that the gold bars were reportedly taken to Switzerland. Read more Related Entries December 27, 2010 Banking Regulation Team Pitches New Payment Rules November 29, 2010 WikiLeaks Going After Big U.S. Bank
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Divine inspiration from somewhere in the heartland. I’ll just let it speak for itself. And Sarah. Here are the lyrics: She’s a cold blast from Alaska Ingrained with common sense She’s not a Harvard lawyer But she knew what the Founders meant A cold blast from the north That freezes Congress in their tracks With God and the Tea Party She’s gonna take it back [Chorus] Sarah Palin, she won’t listen to their bunk Sarah Palin’s comin’ south to hunt some skunk Sarah Palin, she’ll throw them all in jail And when she gets to Washington It’ll be cold as hell Sarah has the wisdom To walk through an open door She is stomping out the wretches Where the evil lines are stored She will scrub the floors and sweep the riff raff into cracks With God and the Tea Party She’s gonna take it back [Chorus] [Spoken] Congress patted themselves on the back For some new bill they just passed I watch as my freedom slowly runs through an hourglass They think they spend our money better than we do But they can talk until they’re blue and old ‘Cause if they ever gave us anything They always wanted something in return Sarah knows. Sarah’s marching home YouTube version is here.
Continue reading …enlarge Charles and David Koch, using their money to make sure the only voices that count in a democracy are theirs. Don’t they look like the brothers from ‘Trading Places’? The Common Cause event will be held in Rancho Mirage , close to where the Koch brothers are holding their 2012 strategy session. Sounds like fun! Progressive and liberal activists are planning at the end of the month to confront the secretive billionaire family that finances the so-called Tea party movement and a host of other right-wing causes and institutions. “Our government is supposed to be of, by and for the people. So are you ready to take it back?” an invitation for the “Uncloaking the Kochs” event asked. The Sunday, Jan. 30 event thrown by Common Cause, a nonpartisan, grassroots organization, aims to educate attendees in California on the Koch brothers who will be strategizing nearby with their mega-wealthy allies to win the 2012 elections. Afterwards, activists will rally in Rancho Mirage. “We can’t sit back while a few billionaires destroy the fragile fabric of democracy and the protections that are so necessary for the health of our society,” Jodie Evans of CodePink told Alternet. “It is time for the progressive community to gather together and say no more, and what better place than where the Koch brothers are plotting their next moves.” Panel discussions will feature Robert Reich, former Labor Secretary; Van Jones, founder of Green for All; Erwin Chemerinsky, UC Irvine Law Dean; Lee Fang, Center for American Progress blogger and Koch Brothers expert; and DeAnn McEwen, co-president of the California Nurses Association. For the last 30 years, the Koch brothers, who inherited their wealth from their father’s oil interests, have funded a large portion of the conservative movement on issues that promote business over the environmental, labor, and public health concerns. Recently, David and Charles Koch through their network of foundations and nonprofits outspent ExxonMobile on astroturf campaigns to misinform the American public about climate change legislation .
Continue reading …No other company is as dependent on one man as Apple is on Steve Jobs. That’s the perception anyway, so when the Apple CEO announced another medical leave, the murmurs about the fate of the world’s second-most valuable company began immediately. The reality is that there are very capable people running the show, and in the coming year they’re expected to announce a new iPad, a new iPhone and plenty of other ways to redistribute your wealth in their direction.
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