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It’s not easy denying evolution while championing Social Darwinism. The Republicans have a delicate two-step to perform: pro-some-Bible and pro-some-science. Despite a global scientific consensus on evolution, Republican politicians embrace a literal interpretation of the Bible when it comes to how we all got here. But their reading gets suddenly metaphorical when it comes to the parts in the Bible about helping the poor. Citing the Bible as an authority, the current incarnation of Grand Old Partiers tell Americans modern science doesn’t have enough evidence to prove things like evolution or global warming. But further tax cuts for the super rich? Bible is pretty clear about it being easier for a camel to pass through an eye of a needle than for a rich man to get into heaven. And the Republicans are pretty clear on ignoring that part. Liberals dismiss Republicans as Know Nothings and simpletons – not true. This anti-some-Bible and anti-some-science dance is very complicated. There’s a lot of nuance that can be summed up like this: The GOP is skeptical when it comes to things with which they disagree. Simple? Not at all. See, when Republicans talk about the “free market” and how the “greatest” is chosen by this fabled marketplace – that’s what Charles Darwin described in 1859 as “natural selection” in his book, Origin of the Species . So when evolution-denier Congresswoman Michelle Bachmann (R-MN) says she wants to repeal socialist Obamacare with “free market” solutions. She’s pleading for competition . A competition that, naturally, selects winners and losers. Republicans are not anti-science entirely, they’re anti…sometimes. How anti-science can you be with an iPhone in your pocket? It does take some specialization . A bit of partisan specialization. Like having seven out of eight GOP candidates proudly deny evolution as just a theory while debating in the hanger of Reagan’s Air Force One; never questioning aerodynamics or gravity —which are also, technically, just theories. Texas Governor Rick Perry proudly proclaims his belief in vaccinations to thwart cervical cancer – a very science-y stance — but not in laws to thwart climate change. Like I said, Republicans are not all-in on being against science. The GOP treats science as their illegitimate love child. They deny its existence for political purposes, while quietly funneling child support to it. The Republican Party is not trying to be Amish. Republicans are not Luddites. Republicans are for technology. They don’t want to actually live in the 18th century; they just want to idealize it. Those tri-corner hats were bought on the Internet. They boast proudly of having a bigger/better presence on Twitter and Facebook than Democrats. This is the party that sees endless uses for Predator drones and embraces all innovations with military applications. How exactly do you drug test welfare recipients without science? You don’t! How does one “drill, baby, drill,” frack or remove the tops of mountains without employing someone who knows their way around the periodic table? You don’t. Then, of course, they treat the Bible as their political wife dutifully standing by their side in photo ops, nodding in support of everything they say. And as much as the GOP has a reputation for pandering to churchgoers, their platform contradicts biblical teachings. Jesus was not a banker or a CEO. He was labor. He was skilled labor at that (think AFL-CIO). But Republicans claim a monopoly on Christianity and use it (as we saw with Perry’s Texas prayer rally) as a prop. It’s part of the stagecraft for their political image. But just like science, when the Bible has something in it they don’t like, they just deny it and move on. So Republicans do believe in science and they also believe in the Bible. They just believe in politics first. Cross posted at TinaDupuy.com

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Video: Bozell Discusses Media’s Disinterest in Jump in Poverty Under Obama

“To the degree” that the jump in the poverty rate in the United States is being reported, it “is being reported as a problem for Obama” and “not a problem caused by Obama,” NewsBusters publisher Brent Bozell told Fox Business Network's David Asman on the September 13 edition of “Nightly Scoreboard.” “His policies have nothing to do with the effect,” in the minds of liberal journalists, the Media Research Center founder argued. You can watch the full segment below the page break (video credit: MRCTV.org video producer Bob Parks):

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Palestinians on statehood: ‘We want action, not votes at the UN’

Villagers who have often been at the sharp end of Palestinian-Israeli relations are sceptical about the UN route Mohammed Hassan al-Atrash, a man whose life story is a microcosm of all that has befallen the Palestinian people over the past 63 years, smiles ruefully at the prospect of a Palestinian state winning the support of most countries in the world at the United Nations next week. “I am a simple man,” he says, leaning on his sturdy walking stick. “I don’t know about politics. But from my life experience, I don’t think we will gain anything. What is left, after the settlements, the military zones, the wall, the bypass roads? You think you can build a state on a few scattered villages? “If the UN is supportive of the Palestinians, they should stop Israel from doing all this. Talk is easy. What’s important is what is happening on the ground.” It is a view shared by many Palestinians. As world leaders engage in frantic last-minute diplomacy in an attempt to avoid a damaging car crash of competing interests in New York, Palestinians shrug and get on with lives governed by checkpoints, permits, house demolitions, land confiscation and harassment from Jewish settlers. A vote at the UN, they say, will not end Israel’s occupation. The story of Atrash, 68, and his village, al-Walaja, which perches on terraced hills between the ancient cities of Jerusalem and Bethlehem, is the history of the Palestinian people over more than six decades. It starts when the village was captured by advancing Jewish soldiers from the Palmach brigades in the war that followed Israel’s declaration of independence in 1948. Thousands of villagers fled and the armistice line – the Green Line – was drawn through their land, taking 70% of it into the new state of Israel. For the next few years, five-year-old Atrash and his family lived in a cave, from where they could glimpse their old home, before they moved in with relatives in the part of Walaja on the Palestinian side of the Green Line. The land was dry and difficult: almost all the village’s 30-odd water springs were across the valley in Israel. In 1967, after the six-day war, triumphant Israeli troops occupied the Palestinian territories, where they remain. The Israeli authorities redrew the boundary of Jerusalem, and half of Walaja’s remaining land was annexed to what Israel claimed as an undivided capital. A few years later, in 1971, the settlers came. More village land was swallowed up to build the colonies of Gilo, and later Har Gilo, illegal under international law. In the mid-1980s, the Jerusalem authorities began issuing demolition orders for scores of homes built by the villagers, who until then had not even known they lived inside the city boundaries. They were told they did not have the correct permission, and were billed for the destruction after it was carried out. And, now, bulldozers and diggers are swallowing up swaths of the village’s last lands for Israel’s separation barrier. When complete, the concrete and steel edifice will encircle Walaja, leaving a single entry and exit point controlled by the Israeli military. Every day, Atrash sees more of his land disappearing under the relentless march of Israel’s giant machines. The judder of the machinery is also disturbing, possibly fatally, the roots of an ancient olive tree, known as al-Badawi. Thought to have stood for up to 5,000 years, the tree’s knotted trunks and branches would serve well as an emblem of the incipient state of Palestine, whose demand for recognition at the United Nations next week is causing seismic waves in diplomatic and political circles. But for Walaja’s 2,300-strong population, the perspective is different. Deeply disillusioned after 20 years of negotiations that have failed to produce independence, and through which Israel has relentlessly built and expanded settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, many Palestinians have little faith in their political leaders to effect meaningful change. “We are suffering from a leadership crisis,” says Ahmad Barghouth, 64, a neighbour of Atrash in Walaja. “Our leaders are either fools or traitors. Throughout history I don’t think independence has been granted to a state with no land.” Barghouth, whose terraces of fig, plum, walnut and olive trees are also being churned up to make way for the barrier a few metres from his house, is scathing about the suggestion that a positive UN vote may open up recourse for the Palestinians to international legal bodies. The international court of justice ruled in 2004 that the construction of the West Bank barrier was illegal and should be halted. “Did anyone implement it? You see the wall before your eyes,” says Barghouth. The UN passed resolutions calling on Israel to end its occupation. “Have these been implemented?” asks Barghouth. “We want action on the ground, not votes at the UN. We want an end to it.” Despite such scepticism, and fears that the move towards a Palestinian state could effectively relinquish the right of refugees to return to their original homes, Palestinian leaders insist their strategy is correct in the context of two decades of failed negotiations. They say a positive vote on the issue of statehood will strengthen the Palestinians’ hand in negotiations. Such an act of political symbolism, while not immediately altering conditions on the ground, could change the paradigm of relations between Israel and Palestine, they argue. According to the national campaign, Palestine: State 194, the bid for membership of the UN is a step towards freedom and ending the occupation. “For almost seven decades now, the Palestinian people have been denied their natural and historical right to establish an independent state. The establishment of a sovereign and viable [state] is a debt owed by the international community to the Palestinian people that is long overdue,” it says. “Now it is Palestine’s time.” Veteran Palestinian politician Hanan Ashwari told western diplomats this week: “September is a historic test for the international community. We have reached a turning point, both in terms of possibilities for peace on the ground and in the light of democratic changes transforming the region as a whole.” Sheerin al-Araj, a member of Walaja’s village council, concedes that the approach to the UN may be a useful tool to bring pressure to bear on Israel. “But it’s not the end of the road,” she says. “It has to serve a bigger goal … I don’t trust [the Palestinian leadership] to have a back-up plan.” One option she favours would be for the Palestinian Authority, created under the 1993 Oslo accords, to “hand back the keys”. She says: “We should say to them if you don’t want us to have a state, take responsibility for your occupation.” Negotiations, she says, are pointless. “You can’t negotiate with someone who’s holding you by the throat.” Barghouth is also mistrustful of a leadership which, he says, is doing Israel’s dirty work. “The Palestinian security forces prevent any resistance while the settlers are carrying out atrocities against us, taking our trees, burning our mosques, humiliating our people. If we defend ourselves, Abu Mazen [Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas] condemns us to the Israelis.” More than 50 of Atrash’s olive trees and all of his 18 almond trees have been torn from the ground to make way for the barrier. Soon he will be left with two olive trees, with another 100 beyond reach on the other side. “My trees are like my children,” he says. “They are ripping my heart out when they uproot them.” He shakes his head at the thought of world leaders gathering in New York next week to discuss the fate of his land. “Doesn’t the UN know the Israelis are building settlements on someone else’s land? That they’re building a wall inside the West Bank?” What will happen in the coming months? “Only God knows,” he says. “We hope the future is good for the Palestinian cause. But if there’s unrest, the whole world will suffer.” Violence borne from a combustible mix of frustration and settler provocation is predicted by many, on both sides of the conflict. “The Israelis are closing off other options,” says Araj. “Violence is the last thing I want, but it’s coming.” Palestinian territories Israel Middle East Harriet Sherwood guardian.co.uk

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That’s the question asked by “Contagion: Not Just A Movie,” a new video released by Family Values @ Work as part of a campaign advocating for paid sick leave for workers. The group argues that the spread of diseases in recent years, such as the H1N1 virus, and potential contagious disease outbreaks in the future are greatly sped up by the fact that millions of workers arrive on the job with illnesses they spread to their co-workers because they can’t afford to stay home and lose the pay. According to Institute for Women’s Policy Research (IWPR), the occupations most likely to have regular contact with the public—­food service and preparation, and personal care and service—­are among those least likely to provide paid sick days. Dr. Robert Drago, research director for IWPR, says: The fewer the number of workers who are able to stay home when sick, the more likely it is that diseases will spread. Here are some other facts about paid sick days. -More than 44 million workers do not have paid sick days. -Workers earning low-wages are the least likely to have paid sick days. Only 19 percent of low-wage workers have access to paid sick days. -Many workers with a significant interaction with the public do not have paid sick days. This includes three in four food service workers, three in five personal health care workers and three in four child care workers. -One in 6 workers have been fired or threatened with being fired for taking time off work to care for a personal or family illness. Someone is trying to do something about it: Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.) and Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) have introduced the Healthy Families Act (H.R. 2460 and S. 1152), which would require businesses with more than 15 employees to provide workers with up to seven paid sick days a year to care for themselves or a sick child or spouse. There are also state and local efforts underway to win paid sick day laws.

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Tuesday's New York Times's “Check Point” was the latest liberally slanted fact check of a G.O.P. presidential debate, this time by two liberal reporters, Michael Cooper and Nicholas Confessore, “ Perry’s Criticism of Social Security as ‘Ponzi Scheme' Dogs Him in Debate. ” Confessore, who once worked for the liberal journals Washington Monthly and American Prospect, once again staunchly defended Social Security. In a December 2004 post for the Prospect , he praised the Times, the paper he was about to join, for its harsh coverage of President Bush’s attempt at free-market-based Social Security reform. As Gov. Rick Perry of Texas was assailed by some rivals for the Republican presidential nomination at Monday night’s debate for his exaggerated claim that Social Security is a “Ponzi scheme,” he also seemed to be debating himself at times. Mr. Perry used the debate to talk about the need to shore up Social Security, which politicians of all stripes agree is needed if the program is to continue paying out full benefits a quarter century from now. In making his case, Mr. Perry adopted a very different tone from what he did in his book “Fed Up” just a year ago, when he described Social Security as a failure that “we have been forced to accept for more than 70 years now.” …. While there are some superficial similarities, it is ultimately a misleading exaggeration to describe Social Security as a Ponzi scheme. Charles Ponzi was a Boston con man who promised investors impossibly high interest rates and who paid off his early investors by taking money from later investors — a pyramid scheme that can work only if an ever-increasing pool of investors puts in money. Social Security, by contrast, is a pay-as-you-go retirement system by design. Current workers and employers pay taxes that are used to pay benefits to current retirees. For many years, the program took in more money than it paid out. In 2010, Social Security began paying out more in benefits than it received in taxes. As more baby boomers retire, and the number of new workers does not keep pace, that shortfall is expected to grow. Cooper and Confessore seem unable to conceive that “Ponzi Scheme” is a (potent) metaphor for the unsustainable state of Social Security’s current financing trajectory (one that liberal MSNBC host Chris Matthews has also recently employed), meaninglessly faulting Perry for his comparison not being an exact match in all particulars.

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I want to tell you a story. It isn’t about Troy Davis , but it is about Troy Davis. It is about murder, loss, vengeance, and victims. It is about how our justice system treats defendants of color and about how our justice system does not necessarily deliver justice. It is my plea to you as a family member of a murder victim not to become what you loathe. On May 29, 1971, Charles Hayes got up, got dressed, brushed his teeth and kissed his wife goodbye. It was their 40th wedding anniversary that day, but he had a full day of work as a Southern Pacific railroad clerk in South Central LA to put in before they could celebrate that night. At 5:45 that evening, my grandmother called, hysterical. My grandfather, Charles Hayes, had not returned from work at 5:00 as he had every Saturday for 40 years. Something was wrong. I was 12 years old at the time. I handed the phone off to my parents, who suggested calling the police. You had to understand this about Charles — he was as reliable as the sunrise and sunset. He was a creature of habit, of routine. The only reason he would possibly have not been home on their 40th wedding anniversary was because something had happened, though we fiercely hoped it hadn’t. I was the only one of us to remember the license plate of his car. I remember it like it happened yesterday. The police were skeptical that a twerp kid would have a clue as to the license, but I still remember it. KAH204 . A brown Chevy Impala, the car he always wanted. Enough room for passengers, but lots of muscle, too. On June 1, 1971, the car was found several blocks away from where he worked, and so was he, or at least his body. Shot twice through the neck on one side and then the other, life drained away in the spare tire well of the trunk of his car. The world stopped for awhile. Nothing seemed especially right, but we spent a long time pretending it was anyway. We still moved through the days, pretended like it wasn’t really as awful as it was and tried to manage my grandmother, who quite nearly lost her mind. There were days where I hated that unknown person who had taken a gun and put it point-blank to my grandfather’s neck. The same man who had shown me how to hit a baseball and mow a lawn. The same man who could dance his way across a floor like he was still 20 and who had such a gentle laugh you had to lean in to hear it. They did arrest a man. They arrested him while he was in the process of kidnapping a woman and shooting her boyfriend. Ultimately they pinned three murders on him. The judge in the case railed against the jury for sentencing him to life in prison instead of the death penalty in January, 1972. The LA Times article I found 20 years later said the judge called his case “one of the most brutal, one of the most vicious cases ever to come to [his] attention. If ever there was a reason to justify capital punishment, this is the one.” Perhaps that judge was right, but the same jury who had convicted Hendrix of three premeditated, cold-blooded murders felt otherwise. There was something there, some reason which I will not ever know, that caused them to choose life over death. Over time, we got on with life, graduated from high school, went to college, had careers, but I was always haunted by the question of why . Detectives assured my parents that John Philip Hendrix was, indeed, the man who pulled that trigger twice. Case closed. Closure. If you think closure means accepting something without evidence, then yes. I suppose it was closure. Except it wasn’t. 20 years later, I did my best to track down the police records on the case, only to discover they had been destroyed. I went to the Los Angeles District Attorney’s office and begged them to pull the court records. Internet friends reached out to their contacts there, too, but as it turns out, the files were destroyed — court, police and evidence records. All gone. Since there was no direct linkage on the record from Hendrix to Hayes, my grandfather’s case was closed but not solved. Closed for them, but not for me. Not by a long shot. How could it be closed on the word of police who weren’t even part of the investigation or trial? Here is what remained: Nothing. No direct physical evidence. The little information I was able to get confirmed this much: No match between the gun and the wounds. No fingerprints. Nothing that said Hendrix pulled that trigger. Nothing. No relationship between his victims whatsoever, either physical or otherwise. Different locations, different cities, different ages, different ethnicities. Nothing in common. Zero. Here’s what Hendrix had that led the police to believe he was the shooter: He was black, he was arrested while committing a violent crime, and he had petty crimes in his background. He was 35 at the time of these crimes, but had no adult record prior to picking up a gun in May, 1971 and offing three people (according to police). This is their argument, and they seemed to have at least enough evidence to prove to a jury that Hendrix did kill three people, just not that he killed three others who were lumped together as victims by the police despite having even one common tie. I don’t believe them. I don’t have enough evidence to believe them. I don’t have enough evidence to believe that this man, who had not committed any crimes since he was a juvenile, who was employed , got up one morning and decided to start shooting people, execution-style, for wallets with five-dollar bills in them, if that. I don’t have enough evidence to logically connect the crimes to the one that changed me in ways I’m still learning to understand. John Philip Hendrix has evidently died a natural death in prison sometime between when I first looked into the details of this case back in the early 90s and now. He is erased from the California prison rolls as clearly as if he never existed. Were it not for those who remain with a memory, he would just be another dead prisoner. He might as well have not existed. This is good. But he did. He did exist, he served his life out in Vacaville and died. No one put a gun to his head. No one suffocated him. No one made the decision that they had authority over when he should die. He just died. Naturally, in his time, and the people of this state were spared the burden of murdering someone they condemned for murder. If I have these doubts, these deep doubts that I was told the truth, that the police told me everything, that the police even tried to find out who might have done this, that the police even tried to get physical evidence, then the very last thing on earth I would want is to know I lived in the state that strapped him to a table and suffocated him with lethal gas. I would be the murderer I loathe. I would be the person who decided I had the right to rob another human of their life. There is no “good murder.” There is only murder. There is no “justified murder.” There is only murder. And if the state of Georgia allows an agent of the state to pick up a vial of poison, put it in a syringe and inject it into Troy Davis on September 21st, the people of that state will become what they loathe. Murderers. They will have murdered someone as sure as if they’d put a gun to his neck and shot him, through and through. They will have robbed the family of that slain officer to ever learn the truth instead of the story they were told. They will have the same blood on their hands as the person who did murder him. We, the family members of beloveds lost because someone decided their lives were worthless, will be victims yet again. Executing Troy Davis is not justice. It is murder. The way back rests in clemency, in admitting mistakes. Will Georgia listen? To those readers who made it this far, thank you for listening. And sharing. [Note: The Amnesty International petition for Troy Davis is here . Please sign it, and share it with as many as you can. It matters, not only to Troy Davis but to all of us , who should not cheer the death of a likely-innocent man.] crossposted to odd time signatures

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Deficit ‘supercommitte’ Begins Its Work

Its task complicated by the cost and politics of President Barack Obama’s $447 billion jobs plan, a special House-Senate deficit-cutting panel worked Tuesday to find a bipartisan consensus on tackling the government’s fiscal woes. (Sept. 13)

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Leveson phone-hacking inquiry: JK Rowling among ‘core participants’

Judge names figures who will be able to give evidence to investigation into phone hacking and media ethics and practices Harry Potter author JK Rowling, who famously guards her privacy, is one of a number of prominent public figures expected to give evidence to Lord Justice Leveson’s judicial inquiry into phone hacking and media ethics and practices. Rowling is one of 46 celebrities, politicians, sportsmen, other public figures, and members of the public who believe they have been the victims of media intrusion granted “core participant” status in the inquiry by Leveson on Wednesday. This will mean Rowling and other core participants can give evidence personally, or via a lawyer, on her experience of alleged media intrusion to the inquiry, which begins in October at London’s Royal Courts of Justice. The Harry Potter author has previously expressed her displeasure with the press. In May 2008, she won a legal battle to secure the privacy of her children after photographs were published in the Sunday Express of her young son as he was wheeled down an Edinburgh street in a push-chair. Others on the list including Anne Diamond’s former husband, Mike Hollingsworth; former nurse turned model and TV presenter Abi Titmus; Sheryl Gascoigne; and Mark Oaten, the former MP who had to pull out of the Liberal Democrat leadership race after tabloid revelations about his sex life. The parents of murder victim Diane Watson also in Leveson’s initial core participants list, along with the parents and sister of teenage murder victim Milly Dowler, and the parents of Madeleine McCann. The son of mass murderer Harold Shipman is also on the list. Christopher Jefferies, arrested on suspicion of murdering Joanna Yeates in December but released without charge, has also been granted core participant status. He subsequently sued several newspapers successfully for libel. Several celebrities who have allegedly had their phones hacked, including Hugh Grant, Sienna Miller and Calum Best, are among the 46 named on Leveson’s list of core participants. MPs Chris Bryant, Tessa Jowell, Denis MacShane, Simon Hughes, and former Labour deputy leader Lord Prescott also feature, along with a smattering of sports stars including jockey Kieron Fallon and former Premiership footballer Gary Flitcroft. More details soon… •

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Deficit ‘supercommittee’ Begins Its Work

Its task complicated by the cost and politics of President Barack Obama’s $447 billion jobs plan, a special House-Senate deficit-cutting panel worked Tuesday to find a bipartisan consensus on tackling the government’s fiscal woes. (Sept. 13)

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Ron Reagan Asserts MSNBC Has ‘Some Fealty to the Truth,’ Unlike That Fox Propaganda

Ronald Prescott Reagan is again making silly noises. The Radio Equalizer blog listened in on the radio show Both Sides Now with Huffington and Matalin on Saturday, when Junior Reagan boosted MSNBC (where he recently substituted for Chris Matthews hosting 'Hardball') as “a news network that actually has some fealty to the truth, unlike Fox News, which is a propaganda outfit.” Blogger Brian Maloney said Reagan was filling in, because “with Arianna busy sacking bloggers and anyone else who dares to challenge her Majesty, there's little time for the talk show.”

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