If Gov. Pat Quinn, a Democrat, signs off on the legislation, Illinois will become the 16th state to eliminate the death penalty. The state has not executed anyone since 1999, after it was discovered that innocent convicts had been put to death. Reuters: Governor Quinn’s spokeswoman, Annie Thompson, said the governor plans to review the legislation once it arrives at his desk. Quinn has said he supports the death penalty for the worst crimes. He has also said it is important that innocent people are not executed and that he would keep the moratorium in place. State Sen. Jeffrey Schoenberg, a Democrat who supported the ban, said he believes Quinn will “likely sign” the ban. Read more Related Entries January 8, 2011 Israel’s Hope Kindergarten December 27, 2010 Jon Stewart: Shades of Edward R. Murrow?
Continue reading …The View's Whoopi Goldberg on Tuesday compared today's political environment to that of when she was a child, talk that led to people get “lynched.” Discussing Last week's Arizona shooting, she warned, ” When I was growing up, people talking and saying things, whipping folks up, caused a lot of people to get lynched. ” Continuing this theme, she added, “Now, had those people not done all that, would it have happened any way? It may have. I don't know. But I do know that sometimes we, as a society, have to sort of be aware of what we are doing.” (Of course, Goldberg's historical analogy falls apart when you consider the fact that she was born in 1955 and grew up in the '60s, a time when lynchings were at a historical low .) The normally conservative Elisabeth Hasselbeck even inquired if Sarah Palin's career might be over as a result of the cross hairs ad her political action committee released in 2010. read more
Continue reading …I dislike Rep. Peter King as much as any Republican in Congress, but I guess the Giffords tragedy has him very afraid. He’s actually bucking the NRA company line. Rep. Peter King, a Republican from New York, is planning to introduce legislation that would make it illegal to bring a gun within 1,000 feet of a government official, according to a person familiar with the congressman’s intentions. King is chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee. The proposed law follows the Saturday shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.) and a federal judge that left six dead , including the judge, and 14 wounded. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, one of the nation’s most outspoken gun-control advocates, is backing King’s measure and is expected to put the weight of his pro-gun-control organization behind it. “Yesterday everyone here joined in observing a moment of silence on behalf of the victims of the shooting, and today we come together to speak up for ways to prevent tragedies like this from occurring in the future, by adopting commonsense fixes to some of our broken gun laws,” Bloomberg said Tuesday. “Civil debate is important, and I’ve long spoken out in favor of more cooperation and less antagonism, but I think it’s true that the more we learn, the more it becomes clear that this case is fundamentally about a mentally ill drug abuser who had access to guns and shouldn’t have.” A spokesman for King wasn’t immediately available for comment. In 2009, Bloomberg’s pro-gun-control organization specified 40 ways President Obama could rein in illegal gun use without passing any new legislation. At a press event in Manhattan on Tuesday, Bloomberg added three steps to the list, including revamping the system of federal background checks on gun buyers, sharing information between gun background check databases, and appointing a head of the federal law enforcement agency responsible for controlling gun crime , which has operated without a director for almost five years. The NRA isn’t going to be happy with this because they believe strapping on high-powered weapons anywhere in the country is their God-given right for profit-making. In the above video, Lawrence O’Donnell has a great segment which focuses on high-capacity magazines that are available for sale. Loughner legally purchased a Glock 19 semi-automatic for $500.00. I guess they are really good for hunting rabbits. Loughner then bought bullets at a Wal-Mart . The Wall Street Journal reports that Loughner was not refused but left the store before making a purchase: “Loughner tried that morning to buy bullets at a Wal-Mart store but was turned away, and then purchased some at another Wal-Mart, say people familiar with the matter, who relayed the preliminary findings of law enforcement officials. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. said Loughner wasn’t turned away from the first store but left before completing his purchase. “We stand ready to provide any information or video surveillance footage we may have to investigators,” the company said in a statement.” It’s a 33-round magazine, the kind that once was banned. It’s no surprise that Loughner fired almost all of the rounds during his assault on Giffords and her accompanying crowd. Rep. Carolyn McCarthy joined O’Donnell, and is introducing legislation to ban high-capacity clips. She lost her husband to a fatal shooting incident in 1993. Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D-N.J., and Rep. Carolyn McCarthy, D-N.Y., with the backing of gun control groups, are drafting a bill that would ban the sale of high-capacity magazines such as the one that was used allegedly Saturday by Jared Lee Loughner, the man accused of murdering federal Judge John Roll and trying to assassinate Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., according to two gun-control activists working with McCarthy’s staff. Gun-control proponents are hoping to move rapidly on the measure in the wake of reports that Loughner’s access to high-capacity, 33-round magazines substantially increased the lethality of his attack, the activists said. An Arizona law enforcement official confirmed to NBC News on Monday that Loughner had actually gotten off at least 31 shots during the Saturday shooting, not the 20 that were first reported. He was emptying his first high-capacity magazine and was trying to reload with another high-capacity magazine (with another 30 rounds) when he was wrestled to the ground, the official said. Good luck, and may the Caprican Gods go with you. It’s also good to see that gun control is still part of the Democratic Party platform although there are too many Democrats who bow down to the almighty NRA. Reauthorize assault weapons ban, close gun show loophole We will protect Americans’ Second Amendment right to own firearms, and we will keep guns out of the hands of criminals and terrorists by fighting gun crime, reauthorizing the assault weapons ban, and closing the gun show loophole, as President Bush proposed and failed to do. Source: The Democratic Platform for America, p.18 Jul 10, 2004 Strengthen gun control to reduce violence Democrats passed the Brady Law and the Assault Weapons Ban. We increased federal, state, and local gun crime prosecution by 22 percent since 1992. Now gun crime is down by 35 percent. Now we must do even more. We need mandatory child safety locks. We should require a photo license I.D., a background check, and a gun safety test to buy a new handgun. We support more federal gun prosecutors and giving states and communities another 10,000 prosecutors to fight gun crime. Source: Democratic National Platform Aug 15, 2000
Continue reading …From the dawn of time, or somewhere around there, everyone from Uncle Mike to that friend of a friend of someone in accounting has been certain that next month Verizon will get the iPhone. For the first time ever, they’re right . Verizon’s iPhone will be exactly like AT&T’s iPhone, only it will be able to make phone calls (har har). Actually, there are only two differences reported so far. The buttons have moved ever so slightly (thanks to different antenna requirements), meaning if you switch you’ll probably need a new case. More importantly, the iPhone on Verizon will have the ability to act as a wifi hotspot for other devices, a feature many Android phones on Big Red already have. A word of caution: Apple will almost certainly announce a new version of the iPhone this summer, leaving early switchers stuck in a 2-year contract with an outdated device. Also, Verizon is in the process of launching its new 4G LTE network, which is much faster than Sprint’s wimax network and the imposter “4G” of AT&T and T-Mobile (what those two call 4G is really more like 3G-plus). Verizon is set to release a number of very exciting 4G handsets and the iPhone is not one of them. If you want to take advantage of Verizon’s fast new network and do FaceTime, you’ll have to wait. More info about the new iPhone can be found here .
Continue reading …After the contemptible jerks at Westboro Baptist Church announced their plan to picket little Christina Taylor Green’s funeral this week, Tucson residents came up with a plan to block them from view of people attending. CNN: They’re planning an “angel action” — with 8-by-10-foot “angel wings” worn by participants and used to shield mourners from pickets. The actions were created by Coloradan Romaine Patterson, who was shocked to find the Topeka church and its neon signs outside the 1999 funeral of Matthew Shepherd, a young gay man beaten and left on a fence to die in Laramie, Wyoming. “We want to surround them, in a nonviolent way, to say that our community is united,” Gilmer said. “We’re a peaceful haven.” “You don’t mess with Tucson,” said Gilmer, 26, who described it as “a little dot of blue in a sea of red.” Good for them. They’ve gotten a huge response from the community, too: But political persuasions don’t matter, she said. Republicans, Democrats, independents, right, left and center — they’ve all offered their support. Forty-two people have signed up on a Facebook page called “Build Angel Wings for the Westboro Funeral Counter-Protest and Meeting” and more than 4,500 have signed up on another page to “Show Support for the Families of the Tucson Shooting Victims.” “People, businesses, they’re all donating material and money to build the angel wings,” said Gilmer, who is helping organize the action. And, she added, they’re donating to a fund created to help pay for services for the victims of the shooting. Here’s the Facebook page if you want to show your support for them.
Continue reading …One of the reasons that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and his legal team are fighting his extradition to Sweden, where he stands accused of sexual misconduct, is that he is concerned about winding up in the U.S., or at Guantanamo Bay, and facing much more severe forms of punishment, according to The New York Times. The New York Times: In a 35-page outline of their case against extradition, released on the WikiLeaks Web site, Mr. Assange’s lawyers said: “It is submitted that there is a real risk that, if extradited to Sweden, the United States will seek his extradition and/or illegal rendition to the U.S.A., where there will be a real risk of him being detained at Guantánamo Bay or elsewhere.” The document also cited statements by senior American politicians calling for the execution of those who leaked the State Department documents as proof that he could face the death penalty. “Indeed, if Mr. Assange were rendered to the U.S.A. without assurances that the death penalty would not be carried out, there is a real risk that he could be made subject to the death penalty.” Read more Related Entries January 8, 2011 Israel’s Hope Kindergarten December 27, 2010 Jon Stewart: Shades of Edward R. Murrow?
Continue reading …Is it wrong to make connections between the charged political climate in the U.S., stoked by divisive rhetoric, and the deadly shooting last weekend in Arizona? Some right-leaning politicians and pundits are saying so in its aftermath.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media As Think Progress noted, Joe Scarborough probably didn’t make a whole lot of right wingers happy with this segment on Morning Joe, but they left out a whole lot of caveats and false equivalencies that went along with this admission. Scarborough On Giffords Shooting: ‘Is This Not A Time For People, Like Sarah Palin…To Apologize?’ : Conservatives and tea party activists have reacted with rage to what they view as accusations from the left that they are somehow responsible for this weekend’s massacre in Arizona that targeted Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ). In reality, progressives are not trying to assign blame or argue that shooter Jared Lee Loughner — who seems to possess no coherent political ideology at all — is a member of any popular political movment, but rather to point out that words have consequences . Political and pundit leaders need to be aware that their words will reach the “serious and delirious alike ” and that their rhetoric should not serve to inflame ignorance. Some conservatives understand this. An unnamed “senior Republican senator” told Politico yesterday that “there is a need for some reflection here — what is too far now?” And on MSNBC this morning, former GOP congressman Joe Scarbrough and conservative stalwart Pat Buchanan agreed that right-wing firebrands like former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) should “apologize” for their violent rhetoric — not to assume any culpability for the tragedy, but to simply acknowledge that “they’ve been irresponsible in their rhetoric”: SCARBOROUGH: So Pat, is this not a time for people, like Sarah Palin, who have used violent imagery – she just has. I know some of my conservative friends and family members won’t like that reality. Or, Michele Bachmann, who said she wants Minnesotans armed and dangerous. Isn’t this an opportune time for them to apologize -– not saying that it led to anything — but just saying that they’ve been irresponsible in their rhetoric and they’re going to be more careful moving forward? […] I am just saying though, I mean, God, you’ve worked for two presidents. Would you not be in there if you were working for Sarah Palin right now, saying, go out and say it had nothing to do with this shooting, but you understand that it was irresponsible, and you’re going to be more careful moving forward. Wouldn’t you give her that advice if you were her aide? PAT: Well, I certainly would. I would give everybody the advice to tone down the rhetoric and get away from military and the armed metaphors and things that a lot of us have used in campaigns, especially at a time like this. You know, I sure would Joe. I’d have thought a little more of this admission if we didn’t have so much of the “all sides do it” false equivalencies nonsense. As Think Progress noted in the portion of the post I did not quote here, Michelle Malkin came out with a list of claims that liberals have been acting as badly as conservatives when it comes to the over heated rhetoric after this tragic shooting in Arizona. When that list includes Democrats in our government or leadership positions calling for their political opponents to be shot or afraid to come out of their homes, you can tell me that all sides are equal in this debate. As to the Morning Joe interview, I’m frankly surprised Scarborough got Palin fan-boy Buchanan to admit that he’d tell his girlfriend to lay off the “armed metaphors”. It’s a step in the right direction for both of them, which is welcomed, but I’m quite sure it won’t mean any less typical political hackery from either of them on a daily basis or the need for them to be called out for it.
Continue reading …By Bill Boyarsky Covering the statehouse or city hall is regarded as the minor leagues of political journalism. But this year, these too-often-unappreciated scriveners are in the middle of one of the most important domestic stories in decades. Related Entries January 11, 2011 ‘Surely Some Revelation Is at Hand’ January 10, 2011 Fox Appears to Censor Vigil in Order to Protect Palin
Continue reading …“Is it time to rethink the Second Amendment?” MSNBC anchor Richard Lui asked viewers of the January 11 “Jansing & Co.” on the way to commercial break around 10:15 a.m. EST. [Video after page break; MP3 audio available here ] Lui was teasing an upcoming segment in which MSNBC anchor Chris Jansing would interview House Intelligence Committee chairman and former FBI agent Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Michigan) about what measures Congress could or should take to explore greater security measures for congressmen and/or gun control legislation. “Every recent gun control law has passed after a high-profile shooting,” Jansing noted before starting her interview with Rogers later that hour. read more
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