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Russell Pearce gears up to push birthright-citizenship bill — while Arizona crumbles

Click here to view this media Our favorite neo-Nazi-friendly legislator , Arizona’s own Russell Pearce, has been hankering to revoke Latinos’ birthright citizenship for a long time. But now he’s actually the president of the Arizona State Senate — which means he has real power. And with SB1070 under his belt, he’s ready to roll — not just in Arizona, but nationally. Interestingly, a recent Arizona Republic editorial actually begged him not to, considering that it’s not going to do a thing to help Arizona get out of its budget crisis: With Arizona facing huge shortfalls, this is no time for distractions. It’s hard to imagine a worse distraction than trying to write our own rules on citizenship. Unfortunately, Senate President-elect Russell Pearce is a keen promoter of trying to reinterpret the 14th Amendment, which establishes birthright citizenship, through state law. Never mind that the U.S. Constitution is completely outside the jurisdiction of state legislators. Or that the state faces its worst financial crisis ever. This is like calling the fire department when your house is in flames – and the firefighters responding by rushing to Washington, D.C., to spray water on the Capitol. There are wiser perspectives among the incoming legislators. Some senators supported Pearce, a Mesa Republican, for the top leadership job with the understanding that he wouldn’t file a birthright bill. That was, it turns out, more than a bit naive. Because there’s nothing to stop someone else from dropping such legislation. “I never pledged not to hear the bill,” Pearce said in a recent Editorial Board meeting. “Will I facilitate it getting passed? Yes, I will.” Pearce claims that Arizona suffered no harm from Senate Bill 1070, his last do-it-yourself immigration-enforcement job. That’s not what business people say. Arizona is still suffering from the economic damage, not to mention the bitter divisions, of that misguided law. The consequences – the opportunities lost, the long-lasting stain on our image – will stretch on for years. In other words, Pearce pulled a fast one on his fellow Republicans in order to win the Senate presidency. Because yesterday, there he was on Fox’s Your World with guest host Brian Sullivan, not only touting the bill essentially as his project — and vowing to unveil it as a national project: SULLIVAN: You are not keeping this in the Arizona borders. You are announcing this at the National Press Club, right, next week. PEARCE: Yes. Yes. (CROSSTALK) SULLIVAN: Why do this on a national stage? PEARCE: Well, because we have about 18 states that have joined us in this effort, a coalition of 18 states that agree with us. Others do, too. They just don`t think they can pass it through their congress or — I mean, their legislative bodies. So we actually have the majority of Americans on this issue on our side, too. The polls show 62 percent to 70 percent of Americans know that birthright citizenship is unconstitutional, that the practice ought to be stopped. What you`re doing, you are inducing — it is against the law to enter the United States in violation of federal law. And it`s against law to remain here without permission. And yet we induce you to break the law. It is absolutely outrageous. The common sense… The best part is that Pearce openly admits that his strategy is intended to draw the state of Arizona into costly litigation when the inevitable lawsuits arrive, with the hope that they will be able to get the Supreme Court to overturn its previous rulings making clear the 14th Amendment grants citizenship to anyone born on American soil. As he told Sullivan: PEARCE: So we know they will sue. That is a given. They sue you on everything. They don`t want the laws enforced. Their support for anarchists and for the — and for destruction of the rule of law is outrageous. Somewhat secondarily, we all saw how the fight over SB1070 became a nexus for right-wing extremist activity, to the point that it’s now abundantly clear that Arizona has a white-supremacist problem, maybe even more substantial than Idaho’s in its heyday. This bill will only pour gasoline on that particular bonfire. All in the service of Russell Pearce’s self-promoting ego. Arizonans and their budget can go to the devil for all he cares. He has a national image to promote.

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Who Is James Cole? Why’s He So Blase About 9/11?

President Obama made a set of recess appointments to get around Senate confirmation yesterday, including a new ambassador to Syria, reversing the Bush administration's decision to withdrawn an ambassador after the assassination of Lebanese president Rafik Hariri. Obama also went around the Senate to give Attorney General Eric Holder a deputy, a number-two named James Cole. Who is James Cole? The networks never explored it — this Justice Department isn't the least bit newsworthy, compared to the complete pounding the networks gave Alberto Gonzales and John Ashcroft in the Bush years.On Fox, Sean Hannity warned about his views back on June 16: All right, this president sure knows how to pick them. The Anointed One's nominee to be the number two at the Department of Justice thinks that 9/11 is similar to any other domestic crime. In a 2002 article James Cole wrote, quote, “Our country has faced many forms of devastating crime including countless acts of rape, child abuse and murder. The acts of September 11th were horrible, but so are these other things.” I can hardly wait for this guy to get to the Department of Justice. read more

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Gov. Christie And His Lt. Gov Take Vacations In The Sun While NJ Digs Out From Massive Blizzard

enlarge Hey there, hi there, ho there, you’re as welcome as can be! (Pix by Driftglass) For someone who’s so very arrogant toward teachers and government workers for what he thinks are their shortcomings (remember when he told a teacher if the job was so tough, get another one?), NJ Gov. Chris Christie sure believes in minimal effort for himself. Knowing a major storm was bearing down on his state, he did what any Republican politician worth his salt would do : He took his family to Disney World! After all, why be in New Jersey during a crisis when you can simply phone it in? I guess he knew he could relax, knowing a Democrat was in charge! New Jersey is buried after an epic snowstorm. And Gov. Chris Christie is … at Disneyworld. Critics are blasting the Republican governor’s decision to remain on his Sunshine State vacation while New Jersey residents grapple with the aftermath of a devastating blizzard. To make matters worse, Christie’s Lieutant Governor Kim Guadagno is vacationing in Mexico, leaving Senate President Stephen Sweeny — a Democrat — in charge. “We clearly made a mistake if we created the office lieutenant governor and wasted money if the lieutenant governor is not going to be here when the governor is out of state,” New Jersey Democrat Sen. Raymond Lesniak told New Jersey’s Star Ledger. “It’s being handled very well by Sen. Sweeney, but you have to really question the purpose of the office.” Guadagno is the state’s first lieutenant governor. She was in Mexico when the blizzard hit. Christie left for vacation on Sunday — the same day Sweeney declared a state of emergency in New Jersey — with his wife and four children. He is expected to return on Thursday. Calls and e-mails to Christie’s office were not immediately returned. The governor’s spokeswoman, Maria Comella, told Politico that “snow in the northeast happens often,” and that the response to the snow is being handled by the acting governor, secretary of transportation, state police and the governor’s staff. “And like every other day, the governor was and continues to be in regular contact with his staff and cabinet officers,” she added. Compare and contrast Christie’s studied indifference to the eager-beaver style of Newark mayor Cory Booker, who’s been using his Twitter account to identify trouble spots and has been out shoveling since the storm , catching only a few hours’ sleep in three days. Even Time magazine noticed: enlarge If you’re a mayor of a northeastern U.S. city, you probably despise Cory Booker right now, because the tweeting mayor of Newark, N.J., is now a social-media superhero, able to move towering snowbanks in a single push — or by sending the shovels and plows your way. After a blizzard started blanketing the Northeast on Dec. 26, an event that earned the Twitter hashtag #snowpocalypse, Booker turned the microblogging site into a public-service tool . Residents of the city, which has a population of around 280,000, swarmed Booker’s account (@CoryBooker) with requests for help, and the mayor responded. He and his staff have bounced around Newark shoveling streets and sending plows to areas where residents said they were still snowed in. “Just doug [sic] a car out on Springfield Ave and broke the cardinal rule: ‘Lift with your Knees!!’ I think I left part of my back back there,” he reported in one message. One person let Booker know, via Twitter, that the snowy streets were preventing his sister from buying diapers. About an hour later, Booker was at the sister’s door, diapers in hand. By the way, it didn’t take a blizzard. Booker regularly checks in with constituent requests via Twitter — and he doesn’t berate them, either! My best friend lives in Monmouth County and she says it was a real nightmare , with seven-foot drifts through her neighborhood. She said cars and buses were stranded everywhere, even on the major highways: State Transportation Commissioner Jim Simpson said the storm was so intense that civilians were deputized on the spot as traffic monitors Sunday night. They helped state officials manage traffic and prevent 300 stranded cars on a steep upgrade of Interstate 280 in Essex County from becoming 3,000 stranded cars, he said. Shelters were provided, and drivers were asked if they wanted to leave their cars. NJ Transit had trains running on Monday and bus service restored by midnight that night. “If you take a look at the state in totality, we did a really good job,” Simpson said. He said factors ranging from spinouts to icing to whiteouts to sheer bad luck had ramps blocked throughout Route 18 in Monmouth County. “We had like nine or 10 plows that were stuck on 18,” Simpson said. “All of this happened because of this horrific, perfect storm.” In Neptune Township in Monmouth County, many streets remained unplowed today, forcing emergency workers to trek through 3 feet of snow to reach residents asking for help out of their homes to go to doctors’ appointments or pharmacies. enlarge

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Gas prices are “soaring” again, crossing the $3-a-gallon threshold on Dec. 23 for the first time since Oct. 17, 2008. Back then the benchmark was a relief as prices plunged from the highest price ever of $4.11. Pump prices have been climbing all month, yet network reports downplayed the pain and suffering of consumers. Jim Axelrod of CBS called it “bad news” after reporting some positive economic news on Dec. 28, but concluded “The economy's not great, says economist Dan Greenhaus, but not terrible either.” Compare that to past media exaggeration of gas prices. NBC's Anne Thompson said that “no matter what kind of gas is sold, today it's now unbelievably expensive” on Aug. 31, 2005. That day the national average for gasoline was $2.62 – but the gas price signs shown in Thompson's report were much higher at $3.49. read more

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Coffee Party 2.0: Similarities Between No Labels and Previous Incarnation Includes Extreme MSM Hype

Call it Coffee Party Redux. Before quickly fizzling out the Coffee Party received extreme media hype shorty after its birth last year and now its latter incarnation, No Labels is the recipient of the same kind of treatment in the mainstream media.

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Thom Hartmann: Blizzard in the Northeast Reminds Us of the Need for Well Funded Capable Government

Click here to view this media While discussing New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s political woes with their response to the Boxing Day Blizzard, progressive radio host Thom Hartmann was asked by Countdown substitute host Sam Seder if there’s anything in the Constitution that requires the government to do things like snow removal. Hartmann points out that actually, there is. Hartmann: The common welfare is cited twice in the Constitution Sam; in the preamble and in the body of the Constitution. And so you would think that clearing snow is part of the common… is part of the general welfare. […] The commons in general is what government was created to be responsible for; the roads that we travel on, the water that we drink, the air that we breathe. We’ve expanded it over the years… the safety of our food supply, the safety of our drugs, but it’s all about the commons. And that really is the purpose of democracy in America. We are the government. The government is us. Thom also reminded us of just what these believers in privatizing everything and the “free market” supposedly working its wonders are all about—making money.

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Pakistani Disappearances: C’mon Guys

Thursday’s New York Times headline on Pakistani disappearances and U.S. disapproval is just a bit too much to take. Difficult to believe that the Times could publish it with a straight face. “Disappeared with reported ties to Pakistan worries U.S.” WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is expressing alarm over reports that thousands of political separatists and captured Taliban insurgents have disappeared into the hands of Pakistan’s police and security forces, and that some may have been tortured or killed. According to the Times, many of those who have vanished have nothing to do with the Taliban, but are Baluchis, a restive people in Pakistan long intent on forming an independent state. Equally alarming, the Pakistani authorities are refusing to admit any knowledge about most of the cases. The matter has become so grave that the U.S. military is now actually refusing to train Pakistani military units that have been involved in torturing and killing detainees.

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Pakistani Disappearances: C’mon Guys

Thursday’s New York Times headline on Pakistani disappearances and U.S. disapproval is just a bit too much to take. Difficult to believe that the Times could publish it with a straight face. “Disappeared with reported ties to Pakistan worries U.S.” WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is expressing alarm over reports that thousands of political separatists and captured Taliban insurgents have disappeared into the hands of Pakistan’s police and security forces, and that some may have been tortured or killed. According to the Times, many of those who have vanished have nothing to do with the Taliban, but are Baluchis, a restive people in Pakistan long intent on forming an independent state. Equally alarming, the Pakistani authorities are refusing to admit any knowledge about most of the cases. The matter has become so grave that the U.S. military is now actually refusing to train Pakistani military units that have been involved in torturing and killing detainees.

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Truthdig Radio: Save the Internet, Enlist the Gays, Movies of the Year

Truthdig editors, contributors and collaborators share their insights into the corporate takeover of the free and fair Internet and the repeal of don’t ask, don’t tell. Plus: Richard Schickel’s picks for the best movies of the year. Related Entries December 30, 2010 Truthdig Radio: Save the Internet, Enlist the Gays, Movies of the Year December 29, 2010 O’Donnell Accused of Dipping Into the Campaign Till

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By E.J. Dionne, Jr. Was 2010 American liberalism’s Waterloo? If there is one thing the Obama White House most underestimates, it is the dispirited mood of its troops. Related Entries December 29, 2010 Gorbachev Takes Stock of New START December 28, 2010 ‘The Comeback Kid’ and the Kids Who Won’t

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