By Deanne Stillman In light of a recent murder, and considering that we are about to ring in a new year, I think the time has come to reframe the border discussion. Related Entries December 30, 2010 A Recess Appointment That Makes Sense December 30, 2010 Pakistani Disappearances: C’mon Guys
Continue reading …By David Sirota “Welcome to the New Normal.” Those words should be displayed at New York’s airports as a welcome to bedraggled travelers during the Northeast’s latest “snowpocalypse.” Related Entries December 30, 2010 A Recess Appointment That Makes Sense December 30, 2010 Pakistani Disappearances: C’mon Guys
Continue reading …By Eugene Robinson New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie should ask former Washington Mayor Marion Barry what winter can do to one’s political ambitions. Related Entries December 30, 2010 A Recess Appointment That Makes Sense December 30, 2010 Pakistani Disappearances: C’mon Guys
Continue reading …Who would have thought that the political capital of Washington would be ahead of the entertainment capital of Hollywood when it comes to allowing gay folks to serve openly? Related Entries December 30, 2010 A Recess Appointment That Makes Sense December 30, 2010 Pakistani Disappearances: C’mon Guys
Continue reading …enlarge Vietnam in 1964 – a half serious aside the war could go on for 2,000 years. Click here to view this media Continuing our week of year-enders past. 1964 as seen by a group of correspondents from ABC Radio News. The view from Southeast Asia was pessimistic, and for good reason; we were slowly sinking into the quicksand of a protracted war and no one had much idea what the outcome would be. There was fear of a major confrontation with China because of Vietnam, and naturally the hawks were adamant that a war was inevitable because it was the only way to thwart Chinese domination of the region (aka: Domino Theory). Russia didn’t figure so prominently, probably because there was a huge power shift going on in the Kremlin, with Khruschev’s ouster and Brezhnev’s entrance. It was too early to tell how it would go with a new leader. But China was a big concern, since they had exploded their first Atomic bomb earlier in the year and they were accused of heavily aiding the North Vietnamese. The subject of German reunification was brought up, with thoughts that most of the former Allied nations would be in favor, but the major stumbling block was the Soviet Union and several of the Warsaw Pact satellites who were most severely affected by German occupation during the war. Speculation that 1965 would be a better year than 1964 were cautious everywhere except Vietnam. That was going to be the problem. And it was. This year-end report, A Look At The Year 1965 , was originally broadcast on December 28, 1964.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Last night, with Dana Perino filling in for Greta Van Susteren, Fox aired a genuinely creepy bit of fluff journalism from Griff Jenkins, heretofore best known for his Tea Party cheerleading schtick as well as his lame-ass ambush-journalism stunts . This time, he decided to tackle a story about vigilante border watchers in Arizona with the same kind of cheerleading zeal: GRIFF JENKINS, FOX CORRESPONDENT: Here along Arizona’s southern border, outside of Douglas (ph), Arizona, one of the nation’s most trafficked areas for illegal human and drug smuggling, one man, Lynn Kartchner, an Army veteran from Vietnam, a retired civil servant, keeps a watchful eye day and night, using only his resources. He’s not a part of any militia or any affiliated group. He’s not a part of the border patrol. He simply goes out with a few of his colleagues and tries to find illegal activity and report it to the authorities. So we traveled with only a camera to follow him on patrol to see what he could find. Tell me, what do you do out here, and why are you doing this? LYNN KARTCHNER, VOLUNTEER BORDER SECURITY: Well, there are a lot of gaps in the border patrol surveillance out here because they know they’ve driven most of the illegals, especially the drug smugglers, onto the ridgelines on both sides of the valley. And we’re here to maintain surveillance over the bottom of the valley and to keep the people herded into those narrow corridors where they can — where the border control can really concentrate on them. We watch them parade around with night-vision scopes mounted atop .50-caliber rifles, watching for anyone their searchlight beam turns up. Of course, no one is caught using these tactics, so the report concludes: JENKINS: It’s a few hours from dawn now. Lynn realizes that his bright beam certainly gives away his location of surveillance. However, after spending several hours through the night surveilling things, even with the border patrol actually on operation not far from here, he’s pretty sure that his light will serve as deterrent for any other foot or drug-smuggling trafficking in the area. Lynn, we didn’t see anything tonight. It’ll be dawn soon. What do you make of it? KARTCHNER: I think we’ve lit up and beat up the area enough here that we’re not going to see anything else. So it’s time to pack it up and go home. But we can say that at this place tonight, no criminal activity happened. JENKINS: What’s your message to the cartel guys on the other side of that border may be watching us? KARTCHNER: Well, this is our country, and we’re not giving it up, not without a fight. Makes you wonder if this crew had anything to do with those shootings of border crossers earlier this year, in an area about a hundred miles west of where Jenkins shot this segment: Tuesday, local Arizona news stations began reporting that a group of undocumented immigrants were shot at in an area of Parker Canyon located near Rio Rico Arizona on Friday. According to reports, a group of undocumented border crossers were shot at by two men wearing camouflage using high-powered rifles. One of the five immigrants was hit by a bullet in the forearm and treated at an area hospital for his wounds. The migrants also told authorities that they came across two dead bodies. … While little is known about the attackers, Sheriff Antonio Estrada has stated that “[i]t’s perturbing to hear of people with high-powered rifles and camouflage. It raises some real red flags.” He also told KVOA that the shooters might have been U.S. citizens. “I hate to think that is what we’re looking at but we’re not going to dismiss any possibilities,” Estrada stated. “They may be individuals who may be hunting illegal border crossers. That’s really a big concern for us.” Indeed, it’s been ironic how Arizonans have gotten worked up over supposed border violence , particularly the Bob Kercher case, when in fact the chief suspect in that murder is believed to be a U.S. resident — while ignoring the deaths of Lartinos on their border in increasingly mysterious circumstances. Especially in a state that’s developing a real white-supremacist problem. Makes you wonder, though, why Jenkins didn’t bother to profile that other group of vigilante border watchers down in Arizona — namely, J.T. Ready and his not-so-merry band of neo-Nazis. Guess they were a little harder to fluff. But it’s always worth remembering that we’ve already seen, with the case of Shawna Forde and her band of killer Minutemen, where this kind of vigilantism leads.
Continue reading …Lisa Murkowski can finally make it official, as her two-month struggle to clinch her write-in victory to reclaim her Senate seat on behalf of Alaska came to an end Thursday, when her state governor and lieutenant governor signed off on the paperwork.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Rolling Stone’s Matt Taibbi discusses Wall Street’s recent whining about how terribly the Obama administration is supposedly treating them that John wrote about here — Wall Street Masters still Whining about Obama’s words even after the bail out. It’s all GOP for them now . Since the story is as mutually beneficial to the administration as it is to the thieves on Wall Street, Taibbi thinks it easily could have been either of them that decided to plant the story with the hacks at Politico.
Continue reading …I don’t know when the practice began or who had the initial brainstorm, but it is now written in fiery letters that at the end of every year that movie reviewers must set aside the really fun stuff and spend a day or two tripping down short-term memory lane to concoct a list of the year’s 10 best movies. Related Entries December 28, 2010 Palin Trailin’ in 2012 Poll December 23, 2010 Santa Over Alaska
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Megyn Kelly got all worked up yesterday over Leo Laurence’s piece outlining an initiative by the Society of Professional Journalists’ Diversity Committee to, as they put it, “engage in a yearlong educational campaign designed to inform and sensitize journalists as to the best language to use when writing and reporting on people of different cultures and backgrounds”. (Notably, Kelly makes it sound as though this were some kind of active campaign, when in fact, as the SPJ notes, “The committee itself has taken no official initiative on the use of the phrase ‘illegal immigrant.’ “) So she brought in GOP operative Brad Blakeman and Jehmu Green from the Women’s Media Center to engage in a classic Fox ‘fair and balanced’ debate in which the host and the right-wing guest get to run roughshod on the token ‘liberal’. You could pretty much figure where Kelly was coming from when she lobbed this softball to Blakeman: Kelly: How far could you take this? You could say that a burglar is an unauthorized visitor. You know, you could say that a rapist is a non-consensual sex partner which, obviously, would be considered offensive to the victims of those crimes. Hey, nothing like a classic “fair and balanced” analogy to make the segment complete, eh? Memo to Megyn Kelly: You’re comparing violent criminal acts to a civil misdemeanor, which is what having undocumented status is. (More on that in a moment.) Obviously Kelly was quite enamored with the analogy, because she returned to it with Green: Kelly: What if there was a push by the criminal defense… bar to re-brand the use of the word rapist to nonconsensual sex partner? Finally, she wrapped it all up in a bow with one of the dumbest comparisons of 2010: Kelly: You know, we did a segment earlier in the year on how little people find the term midget offensive, and so you can’t say that anymore. There’s so many words that are suddenly becoming hurtful, and part of the group thinks it’s hurtful, and the other group doesn’t, and you’re left as a journalist saying, I don’t know what to do. Sigh. Well, we’ve explained this before : There’s a reason the National Association of Hispanic Journalists urges their colleagues to avoid dehumanizing terms like “illegals”: The term criminalizes the person rather than the actual act of illegally entering or residing in the United States without federal documents. Terms such as illegal alien or illegal immigrant can often be used pejoratively in common parlance and can pack a powerful emotional wallop for those on the receiving end. Moreover, as Eric Haas at the Rockridge Institute points out, it’s a grossly misleading phrase — and one that reveals a powerful xenophobia: But the phrase “illegal immigrant” is misleading. There’s a grain of truth, but the emphasis is only selectively applied — it’s misapplied — we don’t call speeders “illegal drivers” or people who jaywalk “illegals.” And that selective application to immigrants is harmful. Most people don’t understand that “illegal immigration” is in fact only a civil misdemeanor — which, as legal infractions go, places it on the same scale as speeding or illegal parking. Instead, we’ve managed to work it up in our minds that being undocumented in the United States is a big-time crime, and thus the undocumented are criminals. Thus we get Rep. Steve King saying this in response to the Democrats’ common-sense efforts: “If anybody can, with a straight face, advocate that we should provide health insurance for people who broke into our country, broke our law and for the most part are criminals, I don’t know where they ever would draw the line,” he said. I wonder if Steve King has ever exceeded the speed limit while driving on the freeway. Because, applying his own logic, he would himself also be “a criminal.” Moreover, nearly half of the undocumented workers in this country didn’t “break into” the country — they came here on legal visas that then expired, and they simply didn’t leave. Calling them “illegals” and “illegal immigrants” is a noxiously dehumanizing habit — one that only encourages hatefulness and violence against Latinos. It would always help, as Marisa Trevino at Latina Lista points out, if President Obama himself would stop using it. Because the logic of “illegals” eventually leads to a mindset like that noted by Albor Ruiz at the New York Daily News, describing the kind of commentary that usually accompanies discussions of immigration: “Save the taxpayers of this country a great deal of money and kill them [the undocumented immigrants] on the spot, along with those who think [they] deserve anything better,” he said as a reaction to “Immigration’s self-deportation program is a real government gem,” a column that ran in this space on Aug. 6. Ironically, the writer used the case of an illegal immigrant who committed murder in Texas to justify calling – patriotically, I guess – for a much more horrible crime, an “ethnic cleansing” of sorts against all immigrants and – why stop there? – thousands of people “who think these pieces of (I’ll spare the reader the disgusting epithet) deserve anything better.” If this guy and others like him had their choice, I and others like me would be well advised to “go back to where we came from.” Or else. That, of course, is classic eliminationism. It underlies the use of “illegals.” And that alone is reason for major-network TV anchors to stop using it. As Steve Benen observes : Here’s a tip, Megyn: call people whatever they want to be called. It’s really not that complicated; even Fox News personalities should be able to keep it straight. Ryan J. Reilly at TPM has more.
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