LOS ANGELES, Calif. (SEND2PRESS NEWSWIRE) — Author Everette O. Lemons has taken the hit television series ‘I Dream of Jeannie’ and resurrected it, giving it fresh literary life. ‘Jeannie-Centristasis’ (ISBN: 978-0-557-19140-6; Lulu Press) is just as much fun as the Jeannie who once frolicked across America’s television screens, says Randall R. Radic, The US Review of Books. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Send2Press Newswire Discovery Date : 22/08/2011 20:58 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …Click here to view this media It looks like Tom Friedman has a new book to sell, so naturally that meant that Howard Kurtz just had to give him two full segments on this weekend’s Reliable Sources to sell the CNN viewers on some more of his Third Way nonsense that he and a bunch of Republicans and corporate Democrats are trying to push now that they realize the right wing of the Republican Party has taken them over to the point that they rightfully should find themselves going the way of the Know Nothings once the better part of the electorate finally starts waking up to just how extreme their ideology is. Never mind the fact that there’s barely a bit of difference between what these so-called “tea party” members that are nothing but the extreme right wing of the Republican base trying to re-brand themselves and the people that both Kurtz and Friedman identify as being somehow “moderates” here. I’ll give Friedman a small amount of credit for finally admitting that it is just one party we’ve got a problem with right now that’s obstructing everything that President Obama has tried to get pushed through the Congress to help create jobs in America, but the false equivalencies that went along with that are infuriating. That along with the people he’s willing to label as “moderate.” I’d say, by what definition? Someone tell me where there’s a hair’s bit of difference between the voting records of Lindsey Graham and his BFF John McCain in recent years, or any of the rest of them that they named off, and the United States Senate’s most extreme right winger, Jim DeMint? Friedman likes to opine for the good old days when we had what you’d call “moderates” in the Republican Party, but accepting that notion depends completely on what anyone would describe as their definition of a “moderate.” These days, that definition seems to mean either Blue Dog Democrats who are bought and sold by corporate America, and Republicans who might actually vote with Democrats once in a while, if those policies help corporate America. Their definition of an “extremist” on the left is what’s left of those in the Progressive Caucus in the House who are some of the few still remaining out there looking out for the working class. This just looked like another demonstration by Friedman with the help of Howard Kurtz, doing his best to move the Overton Window even further to the right and give more political cover to the Republican Party by pretending that they’ve ever been on the side of the working class for the last forty years plus or so. They’ve been wanting to dismantle everything FDR did and LBJ did to put the poor and middle class back on somewhat of an equal footing with the rich and with wanting equal rights for minorities in the United States and to dismantle the New Deal and the gains for civil rights that we saw under those administrations since they were enacted. But sadly, that’s about what I’d expect from Mr. Friedman Units who’s made it his job to give cover to Republicans so average Americans think they actually care about them for years now. Transcript via CNN : KURTZ: “New York Times” columnists serve up plenty of strong opinions about Democrats and Republicans. But Thomas Friedman is staking out some new territory, throwing his journalistic weight behind an effort to create a third party. Friedman is fed up with the idiocy of America’s two political parties and wants to blow open the system, an unusual stance, to say the least, from somebody occupying the coveted real estate of the country’s most influential paper. He’s the co-author of the forthcoming book, “That Used to Be Us: How American Fell Behind in the World it Invented and How We Can Come Back.” I spoke to him earlier here in the studio. (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE) KURTZ: Tom Friedman, welcome. TOM FRIEDMAN, COLUMNIST, “NEW YORK TIMES”: Good to be here, Howie. KURTZ: Now, “New York Times” columnists don’t endorse candidates. But you’re backing an outfit called Americans Elect. This is an outfit whose mission is to get third-party candidates on the presidential ballot in 50 different states. So, has Tom Friedman given up on the two-party system? FRIEDMAN: I haven’t given up on it, Howie, but I think that the two-party system. KURTZ: You’re frustrated. FRIEDMAN: Definitely frustrated. You can see that in the column. But definitely think the system needs a shock, that — you look at what’s going on today, Howie, it’s like we’re having an economic crisis and the two parties are having an election. And they barely meet. I mean, it’s sort of the economic crisis here, and it just overlaps sort of with their election over there. KURTZ: Well, it will overlap when the two parties seem unable to agree on a basic way to raise the debt ceiling and keep the country out of default. So that frustrated everybody. FRIEDMAN: Exactly. KURTZ: But this idea of a third party, it seems like pie in the sky in a way. FRIEDMAN: It certainly seems like pie in the sky to some. But the reason it’s been pie in the sky, Howie, is because it’s so difficult to get on the ballot. So that’s why third-party candidates have rarely carried states. I mean, George Wallace did. But if you have a third party that’s already on all 50 states, and then you have an Internet election that doesn’t turn out to be goofy, that doesn’t end up with Lady Gaga, but actually produces a serious candidate, I think it becomes very interesting. Because what’s the key? The key is to show the two parties that there is a constituency here for serious policies so they change. That’s the shock I think the system needs. And that’s why I find Americans find (ph) it interesting. KURTZ: And so you feel that given the current system, with the need to raise money and with the need to play to your ideological base on both sides, that the Democrats and Republicans essentially are not very good at governing? FRIEDMAN: Yes. I mean, you know, you look at what’s going on now, and you say, how could we actually be here today, Howie? We’re waiting until Thanksgiving for these two parties to solve this crisis. KURTZ: Meaning a super committee. FRIEDMAN: Absolutely. And the markets are just saying, oh, yes, we’ll wait. No problem. You get back to us on Turkey Day. You know what I mean? That’s part of a system that is so broken, it seems to me, that it’s now dangerously broken. A friend of mine on Wall Street said to me the other day — he said, “These politicians are dealing with the economy like it’s a football. It’s not a football. It’s actually a Faberge egg.” It may look a little bit like a football, but you drop it and you can actually break it. And I think that’s the frustration in the country today. KURTZ: The stock market might suggest that. You wrote a related column called “Bring Back Poppy.” You miss the first George H. W. Bush, who you covered. The press didn’t love him at the time. Remember those bumper stickers, “Annoy the media, reelect Bush”? FRIEDMAN: Absolutely. KURTZ: But now you’re nostalgic of him. FRIEDMAN: Absolutely. Well, you know, I was a reporter then, so I wasn’t writing columns. So I can’t tell you what opinions I had. I’m sure there were frustrations that I had at the time as a reporter. But what did I admire about him and one do I think we need right now? One is — first is that he believed in math. And it’s hard sometimes to find Republicans who believe in math these days. That is, when his aides came to him and said, Mr. President, we need to raise taxes, now you need to actually break that vow you made to the American people, “Read my lips, no new taxes.” He did the right thing. KURTZ: Possibly at the cost of his presidency. FRIEDMAN: Absolutely. It certainly contributed. It paved the way to the good economy of the ’90s. At the same time, he believed in science. People forget, George H. W. Bush was the father of cap and trade, which he invented and installed to deal with the acid rain problem. Incredibly successful. KURTZ: Which is anathema to the Republican Party. FRIEDMAN: Yes. KURTZ: But you also ask in one of your columns, Tom, “Where have the adults gone?” And you like Republicans like Dick Lugar, John McCain, Lindsey Graham, Colin Powell. And you’re not a fan of Michele Bachmann. Or you mentioned Rush Limbaugh, Palin, and Grover Norquist. But, you know, some of that sounds ideological. You like the moderate Republicans. But the center of gravity — I think the point you’re trying to make is the center of gravity in the party has shifted. FRIEDMAN: Yes, no question. I mean, in my next life, Howie, I want to come back as a member of the base. The base has all the fun, whether it’s the settlers in Israel or the Republican Party. And at some point someone has got to talk straight to these people. When you have a party where it is an act of courage, the ultimate act of courage, to say climate change may actually be real, OK, that’s nuts. OK? That’s so outside where the science is. And that’s a dangerous place I think for the Republicans to be. And the country can’t be serious if our biggest opposition party isn’t serious about these issues. KURTZ: If the Republican Party has been hijacked by what you call the extremist Tea Party — you argue that as a columnist — has the mainstream press, the regular news coverage, has it reflected that? FRIEDMAN: Oh, yes. I think certainly the commentary, when I see the columns and what other commentators raise, certainly. KURTZ: Right. But is it — in the straight reporting, is there a little bit too much he said/she said and not reflecting what some would say is a historical shift in the political center of gravity in the GOP? FRIEDMAN: You would be in a better position to judge that than me. I can’t say I’ve done any systematic survey of that. KURTZ: But now I bet you some people out there are watching and saying, well, you know, this is just a typical liberal media bias, back the Republicans, powered by Tea Party sentiment, won the election of 2010, captured the House of Representatives. And you, Tom Friedman, don’t like that. FRIEDMAN: Well, first of all, I’m not such a liberal. Let’s start there. OK? As the left will tell you. I’m a pretty centrist kind of person, number one. But, number two, everyone says, I won the election, now I’ve got a mandate. Let’s look what happened over the last decade. So George Bush Jr. wins the election, and he takes basically the Reagan revolution, tax cutting, to its logical extreme and beyond. And Obama comes in and he takes FDR’s New Deal in the form of health care to its logical conclusion, and some would say and beyond, to which I say, thank you very much. Both parties have now completed the agendas of their iconic leaders of the 20th century. Could someone please build a bridge to the 21st? KURTZ: Given the limitations that we’ve seen in President Obama’s governing style, the fact that he comes in late, his critics would say he’s too much of a compromiser, what does he stand for, all that, did the media blow it in the portrayal of candidate Obama in 2008? Did we — were we swept along by the emotion of the Obama oration? FRIEDMAN: Way too soon to tell that. KURTZ: Really? Almost three years in? FRIEDMAN: Yes. I really think way too soon. Yes. I think, look, what have I been calling for the president to — I mean, think there is — we so desperately need a grand bargain that involves restructuring of debt, raising of taxes, cutting of spending, and investing in the sources of our strength, OK, as a country, from everything from infrastructure, to government-funded research, to education. It’s so clear that’s what we need. My personal frustration with Obama has been that, while he certainly tried that grand bargain for a little bit, it just kind of went away. Well, it didn’t work. He said Boehner backed out. I don’t know who backed out. Whatever — KURTZ: It takes two sides to negotiate, yes. FRIEDMAN: Exactly. There’s no question. But if I were Obama right now, I would be out with the American people every day on that bus tour, “I am for this grand bargain. Here is what it means specifically. Here is why it will work. Here is why it’s the answer to our problem.” And my own frustration with Obama is that, as a commentator now who wants to get behind solutions, OK, and come out against obstruction, I don’t have a solution right now that I can say here is my guy who has got my plan out there — I mean, the plan I think will work best for the country. And I think there’s a lot of voters who feel that way as well, a lot of Obama supporters who want to be supporting the president, but they don’t quite know what it is. You know what I mean?
Continue reading …enlarge You know, contrary to what you might believe from hearing the panicked commentary from the media, there are solutions to our economic problems. Look at the report that came out this week from the New Bottom Line Campaign showing that at least 1,000,000 new jobs would quickly be created if we just forced the big banks to write down the mortgages of underwater homeowners to current market levels. Look at Rep. Jan Schakowsky’s new jobs bill , which would immediately create more than two million new jobs and pay for it by just taking taxes on wealthier Americans up to the levels they were after the big Reagan tax cuts in 1981. Look at the CPC’s budget , which sensibly brings us to a balanced budget faster than anything else than has been proposed by Republicans while still making the desperately needed investments we need to make in our future. Look at this report from The American Prospect on how the Obama administration could help rebuild the middle class through executive action, things they could do without waiting for Congress to act. CAF is doing a great new series of articles on how to create jobs. A task force I served on came up with a whole series of great ideas on how to rebuild America’s manufacturing sector. We have solutions to our economic problems, things that both help create millions of desperately needed jobs in the short run and lay the foundation for us, as President Obama likes to put it, to win the future. What we need is political leadership that stands up to the massive multinational conglomerates that are strangling our economy, and stops acting in panic and caving into the hostage takers willing to kill the economy in order to get what they want. Sometimes the hostage takers are politicians, and sometimes they are bankers, but either way, they need to be told no. Simon Johnson, former chief economist at the IMF, likens America to a third-world country taken over by a handful of corrupt oligarchs who have stripped their country’s economy dry, and don’t want to give up their power even as the country desperately turns to the IMF for bailouts. He is right about where we are: a tiny number of gargantuan companies have way too much market power and a vise grip on our politics as well. The problem with the sensible policy solutions to our country’s problems is that many of them would cost Wall Street and the other oligarchs money. We could create 1 million jobs overnight if the banks wrote down these underwater mortgages, and our regulatory agencies and state attorneys general could make them do it. We could create millions of new government or government contractor jobs overnight doing desperately needed work by taxing big banks, big oil companies, wealthy CEOs, and other mega-wealthy Americans. And we could do everything else mentioned in the reports and ideas mentioned above, but most of them cost some powerful, wealthy special interest some money, so too many politicians don’t want to do it. These oligarchs have us in a vise grip. So instead of talking about how to rebuild the middle class, we are taking about cutting money out of Social Security. Instead of talking about how to create good American jobs with good American wages and benefits, we’re talking about making seniors pay more for their health care costs and students not being able to get Pell Grants. Instead of talking about building infrastructure and invest in green jobs for the future, we are laying off teachers and seeing class sizes balloon into the 40s. And now in spite of all of our bailouts and all of our tax breaks and all of our looking the other way at their anti-trust and corporate fraud violations, companies like Bank of America are still in big trouble because of their own recklessness. Will we bail them out again because they are too big to fail? Will our solution to their failing be to help engineer another bank merger so that these too big banks get even bigger? Or will we once again help revive them rather than do what needs to be done and restructure them so that they become smaller and more accountable to all of us — their customers, their workers, and us taxpayers. We know the answer to these questions if policymakers keep the attitude they have had the past few years; that saving the banks and funneling more money to the super-rich is what saves our economy. But it doesn’t work: it saves the big boys’ hides and bonuses for another few years, but doesn’t do a damn thing for the rest of us. The only way we are going to turn this around is to demand a change, to create a mass movement so big it can’t be ignored, something my friend Wes Boyd calls a “revivalist Church For Progress”. Like the populist movement of old, we are going to have to have speakers’ bureaus and tent revivals. Like the student movement of the 1960s, we are going to need teach-ins. Like the labor movement of the 1930s and the civil rights movement, we are going to need direct action and sit-ins and people in the streets. We are going to need to take this to the streets because those in the halls of government aren’t paying enough attention. And we are going to need to take this to big corporate boardrooms and target them for action, because they clearly control government, so they need to hear what we are saying, too. What we need are jobs, not cuts. We need good American jobs with good American wages, jobs that strengthen the middle class, not the kind of minimum-wage jobs politicians like Rick Perry are so proud to brag about. And we don’t need any more cuts to things that middle-class and low-income folks rely on like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, student loans, and public schools. Good jobs, not more cuts — and no more bailouts for bankers or loopholes for GE. It’s time for a revivalist movement that will revive America.
Continue reading …On Saturday, Rep. Dennis Kucinich gave a rousing speech at … Hempfest. “Open up, America! Show yourself! Time for mass action! This is why, and how, recent movements for freedom in Tunisia and Egypt gained momentum,” he urged marijuana activists. “This is how Gandhi cast off the British Empire. This…
Continue reading …Take a look at the Martin Luther King Jr. memorial unveiled today, and one thing is immediately obvious: The famous black activist is white. To be precise, he’s more pinkish and “blush-colored,” carved from stone bearing “a striking resemblance to pale, freckled skin,” writes Blake Gopnik at the Daily Beast…
Continue reading …Finally, the FLOTUS is out! On Sunday night, Michelle Obama stepped out with the President to pick up dinner on the third night of their Martha’s Vineyard vacation. Unlike their Friday night date, when they dined together at The Beach Plum Restaurant in Menemsha, the First Couple took dinner-to-go from Nancy’s Restaurant in Oak Bluffs, Massachusetts, according to pool reports (see the menu here!). Ordering takeout to eat with friends, including Valerie Jarrett, at a private home nearby, the President and Michelle kept it casual: Barack wore a navy polo paired with khaki pants, while Michelle wore a simple black tank with a yellow, green and purple print skirt. Malia was also seen with her parents at Nancy’s, wearing summery white jeans and a tangerine cardigan. The quiet night in came after a full day, beginning with a stop for the whole family at South Beach for some sun and sand. Later, POTUS played a round of golf (wearing a class golf ensemble: a white polo and khakis) plus a few extra holes at the Vineyard Golf Club, joined by Chicago friend Dr. Eric Whitaker, UBS America executive Robert Wolf and White House trip director Marvin Nicholson. Click for photos below of the First Family’s low-key day at the Vineyard.
Continue reading …It’s been the GOP’s dominant meme after the 2010 midterm elections: cut government spending dramatically and endlessly cut taxes for the rich and corporations. They preach day after day that that’s the only true job creation scheme in which America should consider. They mask it with hazy words that cover up their real intentions like their latest bogus con called the “Cut, Cap and Balance” constitutional amendment. Frank Luntz must be proud to see that one phrase repeated over and over again no matter what further destruction and harm will come to the 98% of working Americans. Now as Labor Day approaches, Republicans are making it plain that they will not support extending the payroll tax holiday that will be proposed again by President Obama. Never mind that they had earlier called for it and it is in and of itself a Republican idea. The AP got a headline right for a change: GOP may OK tax increase that Obama hopes to block News flash: Congressional Republicans want to raise your taxes. Impossible, right? GOP lawmakers are so virulently anti-tax, surely they will fight to prevent a payroll tax increase on virtually every wage-earner starting Jan. 1, right? Apparently not. Many of the same Republicans who fought hammer-and-tong to keep the George W. Bush-era income tax cuts from expiring on schedule are now saying a different “temporary” tax cut should end as planned. By their own definition, that amounts to a tax increase. The tax break extension they oppose is sought by President Barack Obama. Unlike proposed changes in the income tax, this policy helps the 46 percent of all Americans who owe no federal income taxes but who pay a “payroll tax” on practically every dime they earn. There are other differences as well, and Republicans say their stand is consistent with their goal of long-term tax policies that will spur employment and lend greater certainty to the economy. And what’s the new rationale for the opposition? “It’s always a net positive to let taxpayers keep more of what they earn,” says Rep. Jeb Hensarling, “but not all tax relief is created equal for the purposes of helping to get the economy moving again.” The Texas lawmaker is on the House GOP leadership team. Say, what? On Friday, I caught Haley Barbour counting Karl Rove and other conservatives as being part of the “liberal media” who attack Christian politicians like Rick Perry . If that’s not Bizarro-world enough, now we have a new definition of what tax cuts are out. It’s a brave new world out there in GOPuniverse. It used to be that journalists beat this behavior down, but not really any longer. They’ve thrown good journalistic techniques aside for the much easier BSDI brand of reporting. (Both sides do it.) I was encouraged that the AP got it right in this instance. Let’s see what happens as the speech approaches and passes. And let’s face it, the Republicans have been getting away with so much since the madness of the August town halls on HCR that they probably will get away with it with the Villagers’ help. After watching David Axlerod on ABC Sunday, are you fired up about moving forward? Digby writes: I’d laugh if I I didn’t think they will get away with it. After all, nobody’s making a coherent case for anything so why should they even try to make sense? Axelrod called them hypocrites, which I’m sure was very painful for them to hear. But in the end, we’re left with an argument between Democrats as to which tax cuts are preferable at the same time they are both saying the looming deficit is the greatest threat the world has ever known. And Democrats are complicating this even more by insisting that we also must “invest” for the future. I think they’ll have to forgive the average person for not understand what the hell they are all going on about. And as for the inevitable critics who say that I’m being cruel and unfeeling by saying that Republicans don’t care about the pain of the average person, get a load of this: Republicans are also pushing back on Obama’s plan to extend emergency unemployment benefits. Gov. Bob McDonnell (R-Va.) said on Sunday that, while he would “consider” supporting the payroll tax cuts, he is less enthusiastic about unemployment insurance. “I don’t think that creates jobs,” he said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “It lessens the pain. The problem is we need to have things that create jobs, not just promote benefits for people that are not working.” The last thing you’d want to do is “lessen the pain” of the American people. Makes ‘em weak. Maybe we could institute a prospective tax for these lazy malcontents, in which we bill them later for taxes they should have been paying when they were unemployed. It’s the least they can do to repay the largesse bestowed upon them by the job producers who are being asked to pay taxes even though they feel oh-so-uncertain about the future. Steve Benen has a piece on this story and Kevin Drum adds a different flavor to the debate . John Cole writes : A Tax Cut They Don’t Like Charles Krauthammer is outraged when Obama tells Americans that Republicans are bad faith player . What they did on the debt ceiling cost this country a lot. I guess the truth does hurt Krauthammer after all.
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Rolling Stone Michelle Bachmann and many right leaning politicians have indicated their divine inspiration coming from the same three religious leaders: Francis Schaeffer, Loren Cunningham, and Bill Bright. In an article from the New Yorker Bachmann indicated she got involved in politics after being inspired by a video designed to bring people to a religious movement. After all – as a graduate of Oral Roberts University Law School – Bachmann is no stranger to “Christian Reconstructionism.” Their work began in the 70′s and 80′s when many of today’s Republican candidates were in college and first getting started. Those three religious leaders came from their own projects – Campus Crusade, Youth With a Mission, and Francis Schaeffer was the author of the Christian Manifesto (the Christian version of the Communist Manifesto) and many credit with being one of the fathers of the anti-choice movement. Their mutual project was called Reclaiming the 7 Mountains of Culture, in which their aim was to take over every element of our society with their right wing ideology. According to the video above, what these religious zealots believe is in a kind of war between good and evil that must be fought by them as part of a righteous army to save the souls of all people. Their souls, of course, can only be saved if this religious army takes over the seven elements of our culture to “shape and influence its destiny.” Government: which they say can either restrain evil or endorse it. Education: “Where truths or lies about God and His creation are taught.” Media: where they believe information can be interpreted through the lens of good or evil and then inevitably distributed to the sad lost souls they feel the need to save. Arts and Entertainment: the only place that values and “virtue” are either celebrated or distorted. Please note, values and virtue have no place in your home life or faith life – evidently they must be taught through arts and entertainment only…. Religion: “Where people worship God in spirit and truth or settle for a religious ritual.” Family: which can pass on either blessings or curses from generation to generation. Business: “Where people build for the glory of God or the glory of man.” The most surprising of these seven mountains is the final one which the video says is the most important and that each and all of these mountains depend on. Not faith, not religion, not family …. but business. Business is the mountain that holds up all other mountains. It’s business that holds up religion and faith, it’s business that holds up the family, and ultimately it’s business that holds up our government. Sounds a lot like a recent Supreme Court ruling doesn’t it? When our founders wrote the Preamble, these religious people would have us believe they actually meant “We the businesses, in order to form a more corporate union, establish Justice on the backs of the people we once insured domestic tranquility, as we provide for a profitable defense industrial complex, promote the Wall Street Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to only those who can afford it.” They believe the church retreated when they once held control (I’m not clear when this era was), they feel there has been a kind of void or darkness over our world since. “When we lose our influence, we lose our culture. And when we lose our culture we fail to advance the kingdom of God.” Essentially, this Holy War is the justification for the culture war that candidates like Michelle Bachmann and now apparently Rick Perry are attempting to tap into. They believe that an entire generation stands in “desperate need” but doesn’t clarify what that need is. The religious movement, like many movements, seems to be nested in vague concepts in efforts to cover the absurdity of the specifics. But if you want to see the specifics of a nation under leaders who follow this religious movement, you need only look at the Bachmanns of the world. These leaders hope to rewrite our Constitution with one that is derived of their own interpretation of the Old Testament. And these people aren’t merely running for office – the gold-loving, Federal Reserve-hating Glenn Becks of the world – the home school/charter school-loving Janet Barresis of the world, and pastors that litter the airwaves like a disembodied head shouting they’re the Great and Powerful Oz every Sunday morning. Some call it a kind of Christian Reconstructionism , which I alluded to in my Bachmann reference since she graduated from Oral Roberts. “Christian Reconstructionists, and their acolytes of the Constitution Party, believe America should be governed by biblical law. In her 1995 book, “Roads to Dominion: Right Wing Movements and Political Power in the United States,” Sara Diamond describes the most significant impact of Reconstructionism on dominionism: “the diffuse influence of the ideas that America was ordained a Christian nation and that Christians, exclusively, were to rule and reign.” While most Christian right activists were “not well-versed in the arcane teachings” of Christian Reconstructionism, she wrote, “there was a wider following for softer forms of dominionism.” For the Christian right, it’s more a political strategy than a secret “plot” to “overthrow” the government, even as some evangelists describe it in terms of “overthrowing” the powers of darkness (i.e., Satan), and even some more radical, militia-minded groups do suggest such a revolution.” While in the past we would have seen leaders try to mask their quest against an imagined evil, today it’s so overt you find stumps speeches dripping with the barely coded terminology of the “self-righteous.” Even now, in conservative states, you find Democratic candidates willing to adopt some of this rhetoric or some of these ideologies in efforts to appeal to more conservative voters. Regardless of the absurdity surrounding their quest, there’s a sad isolation for those who believe in a world filled with evil in need of making it good. Their entire movement is filled with people who ultimately see the glass as half empty. Or worse – maybe they see it as half full because they like to pretend they are thinking positively, but its half full with the juice of evil. No wonder they never have anything to lose.
Continue reading …People often complain about the madness of America’s leaders in Washington—but what if that madness is actually a good thing? After looking at famous leaders from Abraham Lincoln to Martin Luther King, Dr. Nassir Ghaemi has concluded that being manic or depressed often makes for better leaders, reports NPR…
Continue reading …What a bunch of weenies. A group of Italian restorers have been accused of scrubbing away several phallic symbols in a refurbished fresco. Some 25 penises and testicles appear to have gone missing from the medieval Tree of Fertility art work, reports the Telegraph . “Many parts of the work seem…
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