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Liberal columnists who were reliably opposed to Republican presidents warring against Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein (see Bush I and II) often do an about-face and strike up a martial tune when it's a Democratic president dropping bombs. Ask former New York Times columnist and good liberal Anthony Lewis, who pushed the Clinton administration to intervene in Bosnia-Herzegovina. The reliably dovish Times columnist Nicholas Kristof wrote from Cairo on Thursday to take the pro-war side in Libya – “ Hugs From Libyans ” – announcing that (to coin a phrase) we’re being welcomed as liberators in Benghazi. This may be a first for the Arab world: An American airman who bailed out over Libya was rescued from his hiding place in a sheep pen by villagers who hugged him, served him juice and thanked him effusively for bombing their country. Even though some villagers were hit by American shrapnel, one gamely told an Associated Press reporter that he bore no grudges. Then, on Wednesday in Benghazi, the major city in eastern Libya whose streets would almost certainly be running with blood now if it weren’t for the American-led military intervention, residents held a “thank you rally.” They wanted to express gratitude to coalition forces for helping save their lives. Doubts are reverberating across America about the military intervention in Libya. Those questions are legitimate, and the uncertainties are huge. But let’s not forget that a humanitarian catastrophe has been averted for now and that this intervention looks much less like the 2003 invasion of Iraq than the successful 1991 gulf war to rescue Kuwait from Iraqi military occupation. Kristof eventually addressed the obvious question – his fierce opposition (see third item) to the 2003 invasion of Iraq – while dismissing the concerns over constitutional propriety so vital to liberals during the Bush years. I opposed the 2003 Iraq invasion because my reporting convinced me that most Iraqis hated Saddam Hussein but didn’t want American forces intruding on their soil. This time my reporting persuades me that most Libyans welcome outside intervention. (Kristof merits a significant footnote in the debate over Iraq – it was a May 6, 2003 Kristof column , which used serial anti-war misleader Joseph Wilson as a then-anonymous source, that eventually led to Plame-gate, the so-called scandal that served as convenient tool for the media against the Bush administration and the war effort before it fizzled out into nothingness.) Kristof also wrote Thursday: Some Congressional critics complain that President Obama should have consulted Congress more thoroughly. Fair enough. But remember that the intervention was almost too late because forces loyal to Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi were already in Benghazi. Indeed, there was a firefight on Sunday right outside the hotel in Benghazi where foreign journalists are staying. A couple of days of dutiful consultation would have resulted in a bloodbath and, perhaps, the collapse of the rebel government.

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The Captain America problem

If this superhero performs badly due to anti-American feeling it will be a pity, because it’s starting to look rather decent There’s nothing like a good comic book origins story to ramp up excitement levels. The moment where Superman first outpaces a speeding train in Richard Donner’s 1978 film; the bit in Spider-Man where Tobey Maguire stands in front of the mirror and flexes his new-found muscles; the segue in Daredevil where Ben Affleck first dons that purple gimp suit (OK, maybe not so much the latter). Superhero stories speak to the child in all of us, the small boy or girl dreaming of growing up to be something bigger and better. The sense of anticipation that adulthood may open up boundless possibilities is at the heart of our fascination with the form. Captain America: The First Avenger, for which the first full trailer dropped this morning, wisely pitches its own moment of metamorphosis. Steve Rogers (a digitally shrunken Chris Evans) is introduced as a scrawny weakling turned down by the US army, before being transformed into the world’s first “super soldier” via a serum developed by German scientist Stanley Tucci (who seems to be channelling Werner Herzog) to help him fight the Nazis. Riffing off the aspects of Captain America’s origins story, which speak to the universal desire within all of us to be special, was always going to be a smart move for Marvel and director Joe Johnston. And yet if the film’s producers hope to really engage worldwide audiences, they are going to need to sidestep something we’ll call the “Captain America problem”. It ought not to be all that difficult. Put simply, it’s the name. Try as one might to ignore it, it hints at the worst reaches of US nationalism, the gung-ho attitude parodied in films such as Trey Parker and Matt Stone’s wonderful Team America . After eight years of Dubya, the world at large is not exactly primed to wrap itself up in the old red, white and blue, and Captain America is even being titled The First Avenger in some territories in an attempt to sidestep anti-US sentiment. Yet it’s worth remembering that historically the character is no rightwing stooge. Captain America was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby partly as a polemical device to argue for the US intervention in the second world war at a time prior to Pearl Harbor, when many were arguing that the country should avoid fighting the Nazis. The first instalment even featured Rogers punching Hitler in the face – Quentin Tarantino, eat your heart out. While the 1950s Captain America did briefly get caught up in the anti-communist fervour of the time as “Captain America: Commie Smasher”, Marvel later “ret-conned” the entire period to suggest that an insane imposter had been wearing Rogers’ costume, a move that mimicked America’s own shame over McCarthy-era persecution. Later on, Rogers almost hung up his suit following the Watergate scandals, and, recently, Marvel has been accused of leftwing bias by the likes of Fox News, following an edition of the comic book in which a raging mob were apparently compared to the Tea Party movement . If Johnston is looking to avoid upsetting those with anti-American sentiments, he ought to keep the character’s liberal origins in mind, because nobody wants “Captain America: fuck yeah!” Thanks to the period setting, it should not be too hard to play down his “Americanness” as a product of wartime patriotic fervour, rather than a conduit for the grimmer realms of US nationalism. In many ways, Rogers is more a man of the people than, say, Superman or Batman, because in theory he might easily have been any one of us. Simon and Kirby conceived him as a character who would fight for all those who believe in what is right and true, not just the Sarah Palin brigade. If the movie does end up performing weakly outside the US due to anti-American sensibilities, it might just be a pity, because Johnson’s film is starting to look rather decent. While it’s always hard to judge these things based on a trailer, I’m liking the heavily filtered, stylised look (even if it screams Zack Snyder’s Watchmen ). It used to be that period movies were shot in black and white in an attempt at authenticity: these days it seems that boosting the teal and tan in post-production is the accepted method for convincing us we’ve slipped back in time. Furthermore, who wouldn’t enjoy Tommy Lee Jones’s gruff and grizzled US army officer – the veteran actor doing a far better job of that particular Hollywood cliche than Brad Pitt ever managed in Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds . Based on the new trailer, how does Captain America: The First Avenger strike you? And would the name put you off? Action and adventure Comics and graphic novels Ben Child guardian.co.uk

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The Captain America problem

If this superhero performs badly due to anti-American feeling it will be a pity, because it’s starting to look rather decent There’s nothing like a good comic book origins story to ramp up excitement levels. The moment where Superman first outpaces a speeding train in Richard Donner’s 1978 film; the bit in Spider-Man where Tobey Maguire stands in front of the mirror and flexes his new-found muscles; the segue in Daredevil where Ben Affleck first dons that purple gimp suit (OK, maybe not so much the latter). Superhero stories speak to the child in all of us, the small boy or girl dreaming of growing up to be something bigger and better. The sense of anticipation that adulthood may open up boundless possibilities is at the heart of our fascination with the form. Captain America: The First Avenger, for which the first full trailer dropped this morning, wisely pitches its own moment of metamorphosis. Steve Rogers (a digitally shrunken Chris Evans) is introduced as a scrawny weakling turned down by the US army, before being transformed into the world’s first “super soldier” via a serum developed by German scientist Stanley Tucci (who seems to be channelling Werner Herzog) to help him fight the Nazis. Riffing off the aspects of Captain America’s origins story, which speak to the universal desire within all of us to be special, was always going to be a smart move for Marvel and director Joe Johnston. And yet if the film’s producers hope to really engage worldwide audiences, they are going to need to sidestep something we’ll call the “Captain America problem”. It ought not to be all that difficult. Put simply, it’s the name. Try as one might to ignore it, it hints at the worst reaches of US nationalism, the gung-ho attitude parodied in films such as Trey Parker and Matt Stone’s wonderful Team America . After eight years of Dubya, the world at large is not exactly primed to wrap itself up in the old red, white and blue, and Captain America is even being titled The First Avenger in some territories in an attempt to sidestep anti-US sentiment. Yet it’s worth remembering that historically the character is no rightwing stooge. Captain America was created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby partly as a polemical device to argue for the US intervention in the second world war at a time prior to Pearl Harbor, when many were arguing that the country should avoid fighting the Nazis. The first instalment even featured Rogers punching Hitler in the face – Quentin Tarantino, eat your heart out. While the 1950s Captain America did briefly get caught up in the anti-communist fervour of the time as “Captain America: Commie Smasher”, Marvel later “ret-conned” the entire period to suggest that an insane imposter had been wearing Rogers’ costume, a move that mimicked America’s own shame over McCarthy-era persecution. Later on, Rogers almost hung up his suit following the Watergate scandals, and, recently, Marvel has been accused of leftwing bias by the likes of Fox News, following an edition of the comic book in which a raging mob were apparently compared to the Tea Party movement . If Johnston is looking to avoid upsetting those with anti-American sentiments, he ought to keep the character’s liberal origins in mind, because nobody wants “Captain America: fuck yeah!” Thanks to the period setting, it should not be too hard to play down his “Americanness” as a product of wartime patriotic fervour, rather than a conduit for the grimmer realms of US nationalism. In many ways, Rogers is more a man of the people than, say, Superman or Batman, because in theory he might easily have been any one of us. Simon and Kirby conceived him as a character who would fight for all those who believe in what is right and true, not just the Sarah Palin brigade. If the movie does end up performing weakly outside the US due to anti-American sensibilities, it might just be a pity, because Johnson’s film is starting to look rather decent. While it’s always hard to judge these things based on a trailer, I’m liking the heavily filtered, stylised look (even if it screams Zack Snyder’s Watchmen ). It used to be that period movies were shot in black and white in an attempt at authenticity: these days it seems that boosting the teal and tan in post-production is the accepted method for convincing us we’ve slipped back in time. Furthermore, who wouldn’t enjoy Tommy Lee Jones’s gruff and grizzled US army officer – the veteran actor doing a far better job of that particular Hollywood cliche than Brad Pitt ever managed in Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds . Based on the new trailer, how does Captain America: The First Avenger strike you? And would the name put you off? Action and adventure Comics and graphic novels Ben Child guardian.co.uk

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The Racial Biases of Duke Hating

First, a disclosure: I’m a Duke Blue Devils fan. I didn’t attend the university, and I’ve been told by someone from the South that I would have fit in better with the student body on the rival Chapel Hill campus than I would have with the one in Durham. (I think she meant that as a compliment, and as a lifelong state-school guy, I take it as such.) But I can’t help it; I simply enjoy watching Mike Krzyzewski’s team win year after year by playing disciplined, fundamentally strong basketball while avoiding the showboating and individual-over-team play, not to mention the NCAA violations, that often mar the college game. And as a Duke fan, I’ve become quite familiar with Duke Hating, a favorite pastime of fans of pretty much every other college team in the country. I’ve heard all the reasons why we should hate Duke: Duke is to be hated for its success — though, for some reason, we need not hate other winning programs like UCLA or North Carolina. Duke is to be hated because it’s a private school — though, for some reason, not other private schools like Syracuse or Wake Forest. Or the four-time national champions are to be hated because they’re perpetually “overrated” and “get all the calls” — something that has yet to be quantified, but which seems to stem from a fuzzy conspiracy involving the referees, the Selection Committee, Dick Vitale, and, I think, Oswald’s ghost. (For a good piece on the history of Duke hating, see Mike Kline’s column for Bleacher Report.) Duke has been this generation’s most successful men’s college team, so haters come with the territory. But what’s increasingly disconcerting is the racial element that often seems to be at the heart of antipathy toward Duke. Over the past two decades of Duke dominance, the haters have had one thing conspicuously in common: The slick-dishing Bobby Hurley? Hustling overachiever Steve Wojciechowski? Sharp shooter J.J. Reddick? Duke haters especially hated these guys. Yet you almost never heard the haters go after a Grant Hill or a Chris Carrawell or a Nolan Smith. It’s been the white players at Duke who’ve usually drawn the most venom… especially from white fans. White-on-white fan crime in college hoops is not without precedent. I remember fans at Rutgers would taunt the point guard of the opposing team with chants of “Dork!” — if and only if he was white. (One television color commentator, so to speak, misunderstood or perhaps intentionally misunderstood this practice and told viewers the home fans were jeering the opposing player because he was a freshman.) This was in the days when hip-hop culture spread into the suburbs and white kids began fronting as ghetto “gangstas.” (Straight outta Middletown, yo.) In this climate, Duke’s white players would make politically correct targets. Within the past year, however, we’ve heard some race-based comments from black sports commentators directed at Duke players. The day after last year’s classic championship game between Duke and Butler, ESPN’s Rob Parker and Skip Bayless spoke about the unusual number of white players in the game, which boasted (gasp!) five white starters. The Hated vs. The Hoosiers had more than lived up to its billing in showcasing two teams playing tough, smart basketball in a closely fought battle that came down to the last shot as Duke squeaked out a 61-59 victory. It was widely acclaimed as one of the best title games of all time. The nation’s First Fan, President Obama, was inspired to call both teams in their locker rooms to congratulate them. But in the context of this discussion of the game’s “whiteness,” Parker labeled this one-for-the-ages final as being one of the worst NCAA championships ever. Not content with that statement, he added that if Butler — the mid-major team with two Academic All-Americans that had captured the hearts of every non-Duke fan along with at least one Duke fan in yours truly — had won the game, they would have been the worst championship team ever. His synopsis seemed a pretty clear code for racial preference: Parker didn’t like how these white guys played the game. Lest you think I’m reading into his comments, Parker drew criticism in March 2008 for questioning the NBA potential of then-prospects Tyler Hansbrough and Kevin Love based on their being white. Although Hansbrough has been slow to establish himself with the Indiana Pacers, Love made the All-Star team as a member of the Minnesota Timberwolves this year. Fast forward to March 2011. In his self-produced documentary for ESPN on his old “Fab Five” team at Michigan, Jalen Rose made a pointed statement about the team that drubbed his Wolverines by 20 points in the 1992 title game: “I hated Duke and I hated everything I felt Duke stood for. Schools like Duke didn’t recruit players like me. I felt like they only recruited black players that were Uncle Toms.” When later pressed to expand upon his comments, Rose explained, “Certain schools recruit a typical kind of player whether the world admits it or not. And Duke is one of those schools. They recruit black players from polished families, accomplished families. And that’s fine. That’s OK. But when you’re an inner-city kid playing in a public school league, you know that certain schools aren’t going to recruit you. That’s one. And I’m OK with it. That’s how I felt as an 18-year-old kid.” In a response published in the New York Times, former Duke and current NBA star Grant Hill effectively rebuked Rose’s words: “In his garbled but sweeping comment that Duke recruits only ‘black players that were ‘Uncle Toms,’ Jalen seems to change the usual meaning of those very vitriolic words into his own meaning, i.e., blacks from two-parent, middle-class families.” Four days after Hill’s response, William Rhoden of the Times noted the eloquence of Hill’s letter but nevertheless invoked the language of the slave system to liken elite universities such as Michigan and Duke to symbols of plantation culture: “The reality is that, by the strict standards of black empowerment, neither Hill nor the Fab Five did the black community any favors. Uncle Tomism notwithstanding, Hill and the Fab Five both elected, for their own reasons, to play in the big house.” In the most insightful piece I’ve seen so far on the ESPN doc and the Rose-Hill feud, Jason Whitlock for Fox Sports agreed that Duke did indeed recruit a certain type of student, though he saw it in more pragmatic terms: “Coach K recruited kids who had every intention of staying in school for four years [and] who had a good chance of competing academically at Duke and could meet the standardized test score qualifications for entrance.” (Imagine, a high-ranking academic institution recruiting students who had a good chance of competing academically!) The Fab Five, meanwhile, “stated it was their intention to win a national championship and turn pro as a group after their sophomore season.” For Whitlock, Rose and crew were only on “the cutting edge of America’s unashamed embrace of style over substance,” known for their “baggy shorts, black socks, bald heads and trash talk” while never winning a conference championship let alone a national title for their own elite school. (Even their two Final Four appearances have been wiped off the books because of a booster scandal that involved Chris Webber, the best of the Fab Five at Michigan.) Whitlock describes their story as that of “Five super-talented black kids enrolled at a prestigious, white university… and, 20 years later, had the audacity to embark on a media tour preaching about black Duke players being Uncle Toms.” Let’s be fair to Rose: He was describing how he felt as a teenage recruit, not today — even if he didn’t exactly back off his “Uncle Tom” comment when asked for clarification in subsequent interviews. We also cannot fault Rose, either then or now, for commenting on the unfairness of a world in which some kids are born into poverty while others into a life of significant advantages. Certainly, the story of kids who aren’t from “accomplished” families despising those who are is an ageless one, and a very human one. But in describing the black players on Duke as “Uncle Toms,” Rose left himself open to deserved criticism. The term points to a destructive narrative that has become sadly ingrained in our culture: the notion that blacks who are too “polished” or “accomplished” are somehow betraying their race. This, too, is racial code: They are selling out their race. They aren’t “black enough.” They’re “acting white.” As Ron Christie demonstrates in his recent book, Acting White: The Curious History of a Racial Slur, the notion that blacks who sought social, cultural or intellectual advancement were “acting white” was a slur that originated during slavery and Reconstruction as a way for whites to keep down so-called “uppity” blacks. (Second disclosure: I was the editor of Christie’s book.) Since then, the stereotype of “acting white” also has taken hold within the African-American community as a form of black-on-black rhetoric that threatens to subvert the social and economic gains for which generations of blacks have fought. A successful political strategist who happens to be black, Christie writes that he himself has been labeled as someone who “acts white” because he is well-dressed and well-spoken. In one instance while volunteering as a tutor and mentor for at-risk elementary children, one student asked him, “Is it cool to study and act white like you do?” When Christie asked the student what he meant, the student explained that everyone in his school knew that “if you study, pay attention in class, and do well, you’re ACTING WHITE.” Christie and Obama are on opposite ends of the political spectrum, but they share an interest in dispelling the stereotype of “acting white.” In addressing the Democratic National Convention in 2004, then-senator Obama urged that we “eradicate the slander that says a black youth with a book is acting white.” His presidential win four years later was hailed, naively, as signaling the beginning of a “post-racial America.” But as long as being “polished” or “accomplished” is viewed as the sole domain of white students and families in America, and as long as black students striving for academic success are branded sellouts for going to so-called “white” universities, we will never see a post-racial America. Sport fan allegiances can run deep; so too can fan hate. It’s a fan’s right to hate, and for the most part, it’s a harmless kind of hate. You might hate Duke because you didn’t go there, or because you know someone you did. You might resent them their success on the court or in life, or that the school was endowed with tobacco money. Or you might not care for devils, or the color blue. But if you hate them because they are an integrated team with “too many” white players or because their white players are “too white” or because their black players aren’t “black enough,” that kind of hatred isn’t the innocent hatred of sports rivalries. It’s a much more real kind of hate, and it ultimately says more about where we are as a society than it does about sports.

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Threat of America’s nativist far right

While Peter King holds hearings on homegrown jihadists, the growing menace of white supremacist terror goes unremarked As emerging reports would have it, Kevin William Harpham, 36, who is accused of setting a bomb to go off at the Martin Luther King Jr Day parade in Spokane, Washington, was yet another “lone wolf” terrorist, acting at his own behest and on his own behalf. Even groups on the racist, radical far right that so clearly inspired him are rushing to disown and denounce the indicted man. Regardless of whether he was a “member” of an organised group, there can yet be no doubt that Harpham saw himself as part of a movement – one that has an especially broad reach in the age of Obama, and roots as deep as American culture itself. The vision of a black president has given the racist far right one of its biggest boosts since the civil rights era of the 1960s. Figures toted up by the Southern Poverty Law Centre suggest a dramatic rise in the numbers of organized groups : their numbers grew by 40% from 2008 to 2009, and an additional 22% from 2009 to 2010, bringing the total to 2,145 groups. It’s difficult to know precisely what these numbers mean, since these groups are constantly changing names, dissolving, reforming or springing up, and few of them maintain public membership rolls. What is nonetheless clear is that a strong far right movement has re-emerged, and what unites it is the age-old American doctrine of nativism, born out of fear of some dark outsider sneaking in to steal the white man’s homeland and his hegemony. Nativist thinkers are spread all over the map, but the strongest current comes in the form of the Sovereign Citizen movement , or what used to be called the Posse Comitatus and before the posse, the Silver Shirts . For the old Posse adherents and their contemporary progeny, the white Aryan man is the only true “sovereign” over his land and his life. White women serve beneath him; black and brown “mud people” are menials worthy only of disdain; and Jews (who do not qualify as white) are usually behind it all, running the economic and financial systems through a worldwide Jewish conspiracy. They do not admit to being subject to the laws and dicates of the US government; they eschew social security, cars and drivers’ licences, and won’t pay taxes. For the true sovereign, the sheriff is the highest legitimate law enforcement official in the land, and a jury of his (white male) peers the only legitimate government body. These beliefs are underpinned by the religion of Christian Identity , which claim white sovereigns are the direct descendants of the lost tribes of Israel, who on their long trek out of the Middle East made their way up through Scotland and Ireland over to the United States. Different facets of the nativist movement have enjoyed periodic heydeys in 20th-century America – first in the 1910s and 20s, when anti-immigrant sentiments were rife and membership in the Ku Klux Klan reached more than 2m. In the 1930s and 1940s, they penetrated the edges of the political mainstream through figures like Father Charles Coughlin, who was the Glenn Beck of his day . A Catholic priest and radio personality, Coughlin was at once enormously popular and virulently antisemitic and anti-New Deal. His ally Gerald LK Smith, leader of the Share Our Wealth campaign, was evocative of some of today’s more extreme Tea Party candidates. The Klans and related groups had another resurgence in response to the civil rights movement of the 1960s. In the 1980s, groups like the Posse, which drew together white supremacy and Christian Identity with anti-government “patriot” sentiments, found particularly fertile ground for recruitment among dispossessed Midwestern farmers. While figures like David Duke ran for political office, others, like the violent group The Order , carried out bombings, bank robberies and murders, and engaged in blazing shootouts with federal agents, all in service of their plan to build a white homeland. After the Oklahoma City bombing, with its perpetrators’ ties to the militia movement (and, most likely, to other far right groups as well), the movement tended to dig in further underground. Just as Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols were deemed to be acting alone, the periodic bursts of far right violence – whether they be an attempted bombing, the murder of an abortion doctor, attacks on undocumented immigrants or on Muslims, or the shooting of a congresswoman – are attributed to “lone wolves” rather than to organised plots by any particular group. Yet the distinction belies the reality of a movement that has long encouraged its adherents to act in “leaderless resistance” cells or carry out one-man guerrilla attacks (and become celebrated as “Phineas Priests”, named for the Bible story of a man who executed an interracial couple). The alleged MLK Day parade bomber, Kevin William Harpham, may or may not have consider himself a lone wolf if, as he is accused, he put together a backpack bomb laden with shrapnel dipped in rat poison to induce bleeding and placed it on the route of the parade. But there can be little doubt as to where his inspiration came from. Bill Morlin, formerly a reporter for the Spokane Spokesman-Review and now an independent investigator, traced Harpham’s background in a comprehensive report for the publication Hatewatch . In the military, Harpham was stationed at Fort Lewis in Washington, home base for 320 far right wingers. He was once a member of the racist far right National Alliance, and had left various postings on extremist websites suggesting he had had enough of the “international Jewish conspiracy”, which, among other things, he held responsible for 9/11. Leonard Zeskind, a leading expert on the radical far right and author, says that today, “the main tendency of organisations is mainstreaming … The movement imperative is towards the Tea Parties, running for office, anti-immigrant mongering – not roadside bombs.” None of this, of course, prevents people from being “recruited” to their ideas and choosing to act on them. One far right leader said much the same in an interview following the attempted bombing in Spokane. “There are many aspects to the white supremacist movement,” Shaun Winkler, Imperial Wizard of the White Knights of the KKK in Idaho, told a local television station . “There are those of us that are on the political side, and there are those of us that are revolutionary. It sounds as if this individual was on the revolutionary end rather than the political. And there are a lot of lone wolves out there. People that are sympathetic to us, but people that we don’t know.” Historically, federal law enforcement has given little credence to the power of the nativist current in American society, and has paid relatively little attention to the activities of nativist groups. That has perhaps changed since the election of Barack Obama, whose presidency has so focused and emboldened the racist far right. Yet, despite their obvious threat, there are no competitors to Peter King, holding congressional hearings on the recruitment of homegrown jihadist terrorists . The far right Global terrorism Tea Party movement US immigration Race issues Washington state James Ridgeway guardian.co.uk

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Hoax or not, no apologies from Arizona State Senator Klein for ‘racist’ letter

Click here to view this media There was this letter. A letter purportedly written by an Arizona substitute teacher complaining about the Hispanics in his classroom. The entire text of that letter is on David’s earlier post . There are things that bother me about that letter. Like this: I am compelled to write to you about a recent event that occurred to me . This person was substitute-teaching a language arts class. Really? And this: The teacher’s instructions were for the students to read a few pages and answer the questions regarding Mark Twain in their history textbook and to finish their final drafts to Senator Steve Gallardo thanking him for his position on Illegal Immigration rights. I did find a textbook used in Arizona that has a section on a Mark Twain short story, but didn’t find any related material in the Social Studies textbook. But really? Would a teacher of 8th grade Hispanic kids assign a paper thanking Steve Gallardo for his position on immigration rights? Presumably it isn’t “illegal immigration rights”, since the last time I looked there’s no right to illegal immigration. By the way, that “position” was to argue for the withdrawal of Pearce’s anti-immigration legislation because of the detrimental impact it would have on Arizona. This “substitute” goes on to say he provided paper and pencils to the students. Unless Arizona schools are much different than other public schools, this surprises me. By 8th grade, students are expected to be responsible for bringing their own paper and pencils to class. But here’s where my eyebrows go even higher than Megyn Kelly’s: The students’ final drafts that I read were basically the same. Most of them stated they were in the country illegally, White Americans are racist, and that they came here for a better life. I asked the class if America adopted Mexico immigration laws would Americans still be consider racist? It is unusual, to say the least, for any student to state in writing that they’re in this country illegally. But for “most of the students” to say so is nothing short of amazing. My radar was going off so loudly it could be heard on Mars, I’m sure. For the sake of argument, let’s assume it was written by a Tea Party member and sent to King Racist, Russell Pearce. And let’s assume for the sake of argument that he read it and said, “Hot damn, this is exactly what we need to read on the floor of the Senate!” Is it coincidence that it was read right after Pearce’s anti-immigration racist teabagging immigration bills were withdrawn from consideration by Arizona’s legislature? Could it be that someone thought writing a letter like this might re-stir the controversy? Well, if Senator Laurie Klein is to be believed, it doesn’t really matter whether it’s true or not. Megyn Kelly sets this up by claiming Democrats are demanding an apology for reading such a racist letter in the floor of the Senate. Klein’s response? There’s no apology necessary . Unfortunately today in our classrooms here in Arizona, California — I’ve had letters from all over the country as well as other teachers here in Arizona applauding that I had the courage to read the letter. Because we do have a problem. We’re educating and spending millions of dollars in our state, and if this is where our money is going our taxpayers have a right to know that this kind of behavior which is not acceptable from any race is happening in our schools. Keep in mind, the discussion is taking place as though this letter has been authenticated and verified, so up to now, no mention of the possibility that it’s anything other than genuine. Now as it happens, Klein is also advocating for a bill that would call for identification and “counting” of illegal immigrants, because (concerned face) “taxpayers deserve to know.” How convenient. Finally, Megyn gets around to the possibility the letter is a fake. KELLY: There are questions about whether this guy, Tony Hill, who claims to be the substitute teacher, exists. Now some are raising questions about it. This local news agency called five school districts in Glendale — that’s where he claimed he was from — and all five said he never taught here, he’s never been a substitute teacher here at all. And he also said — he made claims about the students not wanting to read Mark Twain and the school district says we don’t even have the kids read Mark Twain in 8th grade. So, what are your thoughts on that? KLEIN: Well, the gentleman does exist, he’s spoken with our Senate President [Russell Pearce]. He is a substitute teacher, he’s on record as such, he’s married to a Hispanic, by the way, so he’s not a racist. But he identified a problem that we face. We have an organization here called La Raza which is a far leftist racist organization that is inciting young Hispanics to act out, not say the Pledge, spit on America and say it’s our right to take America back. And this is really creating a problem here. KELLY: Just so our viewers know, those are some of the allegations that Mr. Hill raised in this letter — that they won’t say the pledge, that they say we’re Mexicans and Americans stole our land, that they say that they’re in the country illegally, Americans are racists and so on. The things you just listed are in this letter. So, to review. The only person who knows this Tony Hill is Russell Pearce, who is a known racist xenophobe who has an agenda aimed at Hispanics, legal or otherwise. And this Tony Hill just happens to report 8th graders behaving in a way which exactly dovetails with efforts to pass legislation to identify and count illegal immigrants in Arizona schools so taxpayers can “know.” Oh, and this Tony Hill is married to a Hispanic so he’s for sure not racist. As it turns out, the Glendale School District has now confirmed a substitute teacher by the name of Anthony Hill, but they’re not quite as quick to confirm other “facts” as stated in his letter. It seems that Mr. Hill was hired via a private service which the district uses when their contract substitutes are unavailable or assignments exceed the available number of substitute teachers. The district records show Hill worked as a substitute at three different schools, but only two were with eighth graders: on March 9, when he substituted for an art teacher at Challenger Middle School, and on March 8, when he substituted for an eighth-grade reading, writing and social studies teacher at Harold W. Smith Elementary School. The district interviewed students and the teacher at Harold W. Smith Elementary School. “The district believes that the statements made by Mr. Hill in regard to our students and school were not accurate,” according to the release. “Students who were interviewed did not recall making or hearing any of the inflammatory statements attributed to them by Mr. Hill, and students also said they stood for the daily recital of the Pledge of Allegiance.” Mr. Hill has substituted on nine days for that school district. I would like to recommend that he not be called to substitute for any more, not only because of his xenophobic views, but because anyone with such miserable spelling and grammar needs to take an 8th grade class rather than teach one.

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Except for Qatar, Arab nations that called for action against Gadhafi are missing in action

WASHINGTON – As America’s NATO allies shoulder a greater share of the air war in Libya, the Arab countries that urged the U.N. Security Council to impose a no-fly zone are missing from the action. Except for the small Persian Gulf nation of Qatar, which is expected to start flying air patrols over Libya by this weekend, no other members of the 22-member Arab League have so far publicly committed to taking an active role. The U.S. has sold many of these countries, including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, billions of dollars in sophisticated military gear over the past decade to help counter Iran’s power in the region. Nearly a week into the campaign to prevent Libyan leader…

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Teddy Roosevelt

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Teddy Roosevelt

Rex Ryan Compares Himself to Teddy Roosevelt, Babe Ruth Roosevelt National Park Edmund Morris on NEW YORK NOW teddy roosevelt | TRENDS GOOGLE Theodore “ Teddy” Roosevelt (pronounced /?ro?z?v?lt/ ROH-z?-velt; October 27, 1858 – January 6, 1919) was the 26th President of the United States (1901–1909). He is noted for his energetic personality, range of interests and achievements … Where was Teddy Roosevelt when we needed him? | Hot News Today Where was Teddy Roosevelt when we needed him? Posted on March 24, 2011 in: Hot News. Easy AdSense by Unreal. Theodore Roosevelt was explicit in his assertion of an American right to use military force against other countries for ethical … teddy roosevelt former U.S 26th President | World latets breaking news teddy roosevelt former U.S 26th President Teddy Roosevelt ”, was the 26th President of the United States. A Nobel Peace Prize winner, an accomplished author, hunter, explorer, Teddy Roosevelt mastered many arts during his lifetime. … teddy roosevelt | Daily Tweet News Recent Twitter Tweets About teddy roosevelt . Sexy 1pc Revealing Hearts Teddy – Red Reviews http://goo.gl/fb/FhRcU. @alanamaslowx3 uqhh right I’d love to know same for @1LoganHenderson teddy bear! HBD to My lil Sis Cristal and this teddy … teddy roosevelt 26th U.S. President | Hollywood celebrities and … teddy roosevelt 26th U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt (October 27, 1858–January 6, 1919) was born in New York into one of the old Dutch families which had settled in America in the seventeenth century. At eighteen he entered Harvard … alisonwhites says: Has anybody actually any info on #india vs australia quarter final and also #teddy roosevelt – See it here

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Captain America Throws His Mighty Shield a Bit Early

As predicted, the Captain America trailer was begotten to the internet a full day and a half before it comes to theaters. That wasn’t much of a shock, really, but I tell you what is — that thanks to this trailer, I’m officially looking forward to Cap more than Thor . I don’t know exactly why this is — I mean, half this trailer is about 80-lbs. weakling Chris Evans, who looks incredibly freaky –… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Topless Robot Discovery Date : 24/03/2011 00:42 Number of articles : 7

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Ed Schultz: Three GOP Governors Down in Polls – ‘It’s a Turning Point in American History’

MSNBC's Ed Schultz on Wednesday claimed that recent polls finding that three newly-elected Republican governors wouldn't win if elections were held today represented a turning point in American history. Not surprisingly, his far-left guests from the Nation magazine quite agreed with him (video follows with transcript and commentary): ED SCHULTZ, HOST: But, this is the story that has me fired up first tonight, folks: American voters are having, I think, buyers’ remorse with radical Republican governors in key parts of the country when you look at 2012. If the elections were held tonight, Republican Governors Scott Walker, John Kasich and Rick Snyder, they would all be out of a job. Last November, Walker in Wisconsin defeated Tom Barrett 52-46 percentage-wise. Walker would now lose to Barrett by seven points. In Ohio, John Kasich — well, he defeated incumbent Ted Strickland 49 to 47. And at this point, Strickland — well, I guess you could say he would just smoke Kasich by 15 points. And in Michigan, Rick Snyder, very radical, very anti-public education, walked to an 18-point victory over Lansing Mayor Virg Bernero last fall. In a hypothetical do-over — I like do-overs — Bernero would now beat Snyder, 49 to 47 percentage-wise. Now, in less than five months, has the light bulb gone on? Voters have quickly pivoted away from these radical Republican governors. This shift is taking place because Walker, Kasich and Snyder’s radical priority list is being played out right in front of our eyes and it’s getting attention. Scott Walker, he didn’t run on ending collective bargaining for public employees, but now that he’s shown his cards, he stands a real chance of being recalled. Now, 57 percent of Wisconsin voters oppose Walker’s radical policy. Only 39 percent support it. In Ohio, Kasich ran on job creation and low taxes — you know, the normal Republican thing. Now, he wants to sell state prisons, the state liquor licenses, and maybe even turn over the Ohio turnpike to the private industry. Well, but his attack on collective bargaining is really tanking him in the polls — 54 percent of Ohio voters are against Kasich’s attack on labor, and only 35 percent support it. Now, former Gateway CEO, Rick Snyder, sold Michigan voters on the fact that he was a job creator. Take a look at this. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) GOV. RICK SNYDER (R), MICHIGAN: Fifty percent of the jobs lost in America in the last 10 years were lost in Michigan. How did that happen? Politicians gave us the worst business tax in the country. And regulations that made creating jobs almost impossible. I’ve created thousands of jobs. We’ll dump that tax. Thin the regulations. And jobs will come back. C.J. LEE: Rick is our one chance for jobs. (END VIDEO CLIP) SCHULTZ: One chance for jobs? How many jobs have they created? We’ll get to that story in future shows. Isn't that great? “How many jobs have they created?” They've been in office less than three months and this so-called journalist is asking how many jobs they've created. But that's just the beginning: SCHULTZ: Michigan has been killed by Republican policy that led to thousands of jobs being shipped overseas. Um, Ed – the previous governor was Jennifer Granholm, a Democrat that raised taxes and drove the state into the ground. But that's not important, because Snyder's been in office for almost three months: SCHULTZ: Ever heard of manufacturing in China? When Snyder was on the board at Gateway, they shut down plants in America and shipped those jobs to China. Snyder’s plan for labor? Well, you know what it’s going to do? It’s going to bring Chinese wages back home to the great state of Michigan. I bet they can’t wait for that. Almost 60 percent of voters in Michigan are against Snyder’s plan to strip public workers of collective bargaining rights. Now, get this number — if 300,000 people sign a petition in the state of Michigan, Snyder could be recalled as early as June. I tell you, it’s in the air, isn’t it? All of these governors got elected by talking about jobs and the economy. Obama wasn’t any good. They had all the answers. Well, now the pushback is very clear. And I think that this is a political turning point. I think that this is a moment that voters aren’t going to forget, because it’s a consolidated, concerted effort by these right-wing Republican governors to butcher — to butcher — labor in this country and in their states. Get your cell phones out. I want to know what you think about this. Tonight’s question: can Democrats capitalize on reaction to the radical GOP governors in the 2012 election? Text “A” for yes, text “B” for no to 622639 — or go to our new blog tonight at Ed.MSNBC.com. And I’ll bring you the results later on in the show. Joining me now is John Nichols, Washington correspondent for “The Nation.” Is this a political turning point in American history? I mean, you can’t tell me that all of a sudden there’s a group of Republican governors that are tanking in the polls, there’s demonstrations abound in all of these states. What do you think, John? Yep – some polls in three states concerning governors in office for less than three months are a turning point in American history. Not surprisingly, his guest from the Nation agreed: JOHN NICHOLS, THE NATION: Well, I think there’s no question, Ed. In fact, we’ve already reached a turning point. It’s just a question of how big a turning point it is. Yep – we've already reached a turning point. These polls on these three governors mean that the entire country has in less than five months shifted back to the left despite rising gas and food prices, exploding debt, a new war, plummeting home values, and continued unpopularity of ObamaCare. Republicans oughtn't even run candidates in the November 2012 elections – conservatism has ended in this nation because these three new governors have seen their poll numbers drop. But there was still more, because Schultz's next guest, Katrina Vanden Heuvel of the Nation – isn't it marvelous how he brought on two folks from the country's most left-leaning magazine rather than anyone that might actually challenge his cockamamie premise?!? – who after agreeing with him broadened the conservative bashing: ” We are witnessing a possibility of these House extremists taking us back to a time when we didn`t have child labor laws, or safety or clean water or clean air .” Yep – that's what Republicans are all about. They want to get rid of child labor laws as well as those involving clean water and clean air. And this is what passes for journalism on MSNBC.

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