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Continue reading …SNL Zach Galifianakis Scared Straight skit season 36 episode 17 SNL Zach Galifianakis opening monologue season 36 episode 17 Saturday Night Live Episode 18 Season 36 'Saturday Night Live': Zach Galifianakis shaves again (we think … Galifianakis engaged in some more hair-related shenanigans in an episode that went downhill quickly after “Weekend Update.” 'Saturday Night Live' recap: Zach Galifianakis , bursting with wit … I think we have a new candidate for the Saturday Night Live best-host hall of fame: Zach Galifianakis turned in a pretty flawless succession of performances this week. And the man sure knows how to make the most of the show’s final … 'SNL' With Zach Galifianakis : What Were the Best and Worst Skits … From Movieline.com’s tube-obsessed Louis Virtel…. BREAKING: Zach Galifianakis is much funnier than Miley Cyrus. Nice recovery, SNL. The Hangover star. SNL: Zach Galifianakis as Annie Lip-Syncing 'Tomorrow' | Gotcha Media SNL: Zach Galifianakis as Annie Lip-Syncing … Zach Galifianakis ends his monologue by stripping down to a Little Orphan Annie costume to make some political statements about gay marriage and legalizing marijuana. … Zach Galifianakis ' Qualified Support For Gay Marriage / Queerty Zach Galifianakis , the most awkward person in America, took a bold stand on marriage during last night’s Saturday Night Live opening monologue. Vanda1129 says: Zach Galifianakis Hangs Over Saturday Night Live
Continue reading …The same hawks who drummed America into a “cakewalk” war in Iraq now want to march right in and liberate Libya, even though, in the case of Paul Wolfowitz, one “would think” he’d “have the good manners to shut up and take up horticulture,” writes Maureen Dowd in the New…
Continue reading …Right-wing propaganda aside, America’s teachers are underpaid and need to make more if the United States is to compete internationally, writes Nicholas Kristof at the New York Times . “We should be elevating teachers, not throwing darts at them,” he says. In 1970, a starting public school teacher earned just $2,…
Continue reading …Article by WorldNews.com Correspondent Dallas Darling. “The prospect of spending time with big-money men fills me with frank horror.” -President Theodore Roosevelt in a letter to a friend. With news barely trickling out of America’s corporate owned media outlets regarding how Wisconsin demonstrators were forced out, and then locked out, of their own Statehouse, and with the Congressional Budget Office data showing that workers for the past 20 years have been subsidizing rich monopolists and multi-millionaires; is it time for President Barack Obama to sail in uncharted waters and start using the terms “Nationalize” and “Peopleize”? Only one President, Theodore Roosevelt who was a reluctant…
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your weekly podcast with The Professional Left, our own Driftglass and Bluegal . Related Links below the fold. Open Thread below…: 1. Amendment 14 (Citizenship Rights), Section 4 : 4. The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned. But neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave; but all such debts, obligations and claims shall be held illegal and void. 2. Robert Bork and the Saturday Night Massacre . You can listen to the archives at http://professionalleft.blogspot.com/ and you can also make a donation there to keep these going. And a note from Bluegal there: SEND THE PROFESSIONAL LEFT TO NETROOTS NATION 2011 Blue Gal is applying for a Democracy for America Scholarship to help defray the costs of sending your favorite podcasters to Netroots Nation. Click here to vote for Blue Gal. And thanks!!!
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Bill O’Reilly has been sneering all week at the notion that the threat of terrorism from the American radical right is, in terms of domestic terrorism, of greater significance than that from homegrown Islamic radicals — even after the most recent case of domestic terrorism to hit the news this week involved the arrest of a neo-Nazi for the attempted Martin Luther King Day parade bombing in Spokane. Of course, O’Reilly is in deep denial about this reality, as is Rep. Peter King, whose “Muslim radicalization” hearings have been the talk of Fox all week. Indeed, when Geraldo Rivera pointed it out to O’Reilly on his Fox show Friday, O’Reilly acted as though it was the first he’d heard of the matter. That’s some knowledgeable insight on domestic terrorism, eh? RIVERA: He’s got a point. You know, I understand his point. His larger point, which I totally endorse, is that it is unfair, as you mention in your lead-in, to single out this one group. O’REILLY: OK. Now, I didn’t say it was unfair. I said some people, like you, crazy left wingers, think it is. (CROSSTALK) RIVERA: Can I tell — it’s not 126. That’s Eric Holder’s number of the people prosecuted for terrorism. But your audience has to know that of the 126, we’re talking about 50 American citizens. The vast majority of the 50 American citizens are like the knuckleheads from Newberg, entrapped into doing terror with co-conspirators who are really FBI agents leading them down the primrose path. O’REILLY: If you look — if you look at the totality of the problem, in the world, not the United States, it is Muslim-jihad generated. Congressman Green has the nerve to foist upon the American public that the KKK should be equally looked at when the KKK hasn’t had any — any kind of impact on this country for decades. So you’re saying to yourself… RIVERA: I don’t think so that’s true. I think the KKK — O’REILLY: Do you think the KKK has any influence in this country right now? RIVERA: Let me — let me tell you and your audience that January 17, the last act of attempted terror in the United States, that was a neo-Nazi, that guy in Spokane, Washington, who planted a weapon of mass destruction on the route of the Martin Luther King Day parade march. And that was terrorism. This was a neo-Nazi. And why wouldn’t a hearing on domestic terror include a heinous act like that? O’REILLY: Was he associated with a group? RIVERA: Yes. He was a neo-Nazi, I forget — which — which of the… O’REILLY: According to the Spokane police, he was a lone crazy nut. RIVERA: That’s not true. He is definitely a neo-Nazi. The National Alliance. I have a note. The National Alliance. O’REILLY: The National Alliance. Look, I’m not opposed to having hearings about these people, but to raise… RIVERA: Peter King is a great guy. O’REILLY: … them to the equivalency of the jihad is insane. Wanna know what’s insane? The fact that we have 23 identifiable instances of serious right-wing domestic terrorism of the past two and a half years, and guys like O’Reilly can just whitewash it away: Know what else is insane? That guys like O’Reilly can keep citing utterly discredited misinformation such as Frank Gaffney’s utterly nonsensical claim that “85 percent of mosques” in America are radicalized — and can simply get away with it — because they’re too big to care. Yep, there’s plenty of “insane” to go around on Fox.
Continue reading …On Thursday's Newsroom, CNN's Ali Velshi claimed that Rep. Peter King has a ” seemingly strange obsession with Islam and Islamists, or whatever you want to call it ,” given the lead up and the first day of hearings looking into the radicalization of American Muslims. Velshi also bizarrely stated that ” I don't quite understand how when you put an -ist at the end of it [Islamism], it changes the subject .” The anchor discussed the hearings with former FBI agent Foria Younis, CNN national security analyst Peter Bergen, and former Catholic turned Episcopal priest Rev. Alberto Cutie during the last segment of the 2 pm Eastern hour. Midway through the panel discussion, Velshi turned to Cutie and made his claim about the New York congressman, along with his doubt about the validity of “Islamist” as a term: VELSHI: Let's put aside Peter King's seemingly strange obsession with Islam and Islamists, or whatever you want to call it. I don't quite understand how when you put an -ist at the end of it, it changes the subject. But let's just say, putting that aside, should Muslims be looking more carefully at themselves? Is there something that law-abiding American Muslims should be doing simply- to be doing to satisfy this call to action that Peter King has put out? Perhaps he doesn't understand that Islamist is a synonym for a radical Muslim, and that the term, in its current usage, has been around for decades, and has its origin in French academia . As you might expect, Cutie spouted the liberal talking point about not singling out one community and the need to examine extremism outside the Muslim population: CUTIE: Well, listen, in my conversations with the ecumenical community, with rabbis, with imams, with pastors, and then priests, everybody agrees that the big problem for some people is that Muslims have not come out in thousands and thousands of numbers marching down the street, maybe in New York City or other places, and saying, we are against terrorism. This is what some people need and want. I'm not sure that that's going to do anything. I think that the sheriff said it right. My concern is the radicalization of people in all faith groups. I think we have to be very careful when we single out one group. Certainly, when are you in charge of Homeland Security, you are worried about terrorism. We're all worried about terrorism. But how are we going to end this stigma of Muslim equals terrorist? Earlier, the CNN anchor asked Younis, “Are Muslims in America and mosques and imams, are they reluctant and not cooperative with the U.S. government, when it comes to ferreting out radicals and terrorists?” The ex-law enforcement officer contended that ” over the last ten years, many, many more Muslims are communicating with law enforcement, and I think that's really in part due to a lot of the law enforcement activity in trying to bring all members of the community into their fold, so that they can all work together to deal with any issues in the community .” Bergen reenforced Younis's point and disputed one of Rep. King's points about the Muslim community: BERGEN: One of the principal claims that he's made in the run-up to this hearing is that the American Muslim community isn't cooperating with law enforcement, and, in fact, that is simply a false assertion . The New America Foundation, where I work, and also, Syracuse University, has just released a study, which is on CNN's website, and we looked at 175 jihadi terrorism cases since 9/11. We found, using a conservative methodology, that one in five of those cases had originated because of a tip of the Muslim community, all because of the cooperation of a family member turning in someone they thought was becoming increasingly militant or radical. So, just one of the principal, kind of underlying ideas of this hearing is just factually incorrect. Whether the American Muslim community is actually cooperative is actually debatable, as the New York Daily News (which is no conservative publication) reported on Tuesday that ” cops and federal agents agree with Rep. Pete King that they don't get a lot of tipsters from the Muslim community – but they say that's true of many other communities.” Velshi followed up with Younis on this subject later in the segment: “If you are trying to gain the cooperation or greater cooperation of an identifiable group, like Muslims in America, is this a good step in the right direction, or are there more effective ways for law enforcement to do this?” The former FBI agent sided with those on the left who claim that the hearings may actually end up causing further radicalization in the Islamic community: YOUNIS: …The fact of the matter is, Ali, there may be some radicalization issues out there. They may be very minor. They may be larger than we think. But these type of hearings, all they produce is alienation even further . I think there's proper ways to do this. There's proper ways to collect this information. Peter Bergen just quoted some of his research and his statistics. Those are the ways to do it. By producing a hearing like this, you are actually doing probably more harm than good, and that is pushing people from communities further away, because they feel they are being judged as a whole … if there is any radicalization in the community, which I believe there may be minor pockets , what we need to do as a larger community is work with these parents, work with these community leaders and try to identify these issues with the assistance of the community, not pushing them up against the wall where you almost are going to have a counter-effect. In his last question to Bergen, the CNN anchor asked, ” Aside from the fact we're discovering that American Islam seems to need a better PR effort, is there some degree of apologism going on for Islam in America in this debate? Do Muslims need to come out and say, maybe there is a greater instance of radicalization or extremism in the community, or is it not the responsibility of American Muslims to do that?” The analyst took a more balanced approach than he did earlier in his answer: BERGEN: There is a problem. I mean, to pretend that there isn't would be equally wrong to say as, you know, to say that the sky is falling. You know, certainly, there's been an uptick in cases in 2009 and 2010, and the Muslim American community is well aware of that. At the end of the day, if there is an attack, they're going to suffer the most. So, they have the highest possible motivation to make sure that, if there are militants in their midst, to basically raise their hands, and they're doing that. — Matthew Balan is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here .
Continue reading …This is really interesting. I wonder what’s going on. And in other news (see video), Anonymous threatens to post private info of Manning’s guards online: Hillary Clinton’s spokesman has launched a public attack on the Pentagon for the way it is treating military prisoner Bradley Manning , the US soldier suspected of handing the US embassy cables to WikiLeaks. PJ Crowley, the assistant secretary of state for public affairs at the US state department, said Manning was being “mistreated” in the military brig at Quantico, Virginia. “What is being done to Bradley Manning is ridiculous and counterproductive and stupid on the part of the department of defence,” he said. Crowley’s comments signal a crack within the Obama administration over the handling of the WikiLeaks saga in which hundreds of thousands of confidential documents were handed to the website. As news of the remarks rippled through Washington, President Obama was forced to address the subject of Manning’s treatment for the first time. Asked about the controversy at a White House press conference, Obama revealed he had asked the Pentagon “whether or not the procedures that have been taken in terms of his confinement are appropriate and are meeting our basic standards. They assure me that they are.” I found the president’s reaction oddly incurious. “Oh no, Mr. President, we’d never do anything that was against the rules and might land us in court!” Very strange that he’d take their word for it. Obama would not respond specifically to Crowley’s comments, which are the first critical remarks from within the administration about the handling of Manning. The prisoner is being held for 23 hours in solitary confinement in his cell and stripped naked every night. Until now the US government had presented a united front, promising to aggressively pursue anyone involved in leaking state secrets. Clinton herself described the WikiLeaks material as “an attack on America” and said “we are taking aggressive steps” to hold those who leaked it to account.
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