Here’s a startling statistic for you: Latino Americans get Alzheimer’s disease on average at rates almost seven years earlier than white Americans, a phenomenon the Alzheimer’s Association calls a “looming crisis” and that many attribute to economic concerns and access to health care. —JCL The LA Times: Arturo Reyes sat quietly as his family talked about traveling to Mexico over the holidays. Suddenly, he broke into the conversation. “We cannot do it; we are illegal,” his daughter Angelica Reyes-Servin remembers him saying. “If we leave, we may never get back again.” The room fell silent. Reyes and his family, who crossed the border from Mexico to Arizona more than three decades ago, have been U.S. citizens for more than 20 years. Read more Related Entries November 18, 2010 Look Who’s the Decider Now November 18, 2010 Recessions Are Not Good for Your Mind
Continue reading …What are you gonna do now? enlarge Looks like they’re ready to par-tay! And the guest of honor? Wait for it….President Barack Obama. That’s right, the man and the office they’ve tried to undermine with tons of undisclosed donations to Republican races . After months of all-out political war with the nation’s most powerful business lobby, President Obama appears to be on the verge of launching a dramatic peace offering to the president and CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Tom Donohue. Two sources familiar with the negotiations tell me that Obama was giving serious consideration to going into the lion’s den and delivering a speech at a Dec. 2 jobs summit hosted by Donohue, whose organization just spent tens of millions of dollars trying to bring the President’s agenda to a screeching halt by helping to elect more pro-business lawmakers in the midterm election. “It was my impression they were looking very favorably on the invite,” a senior Chamber official told me about the White House, and a senior administration official did not quibble with that account when I checked with the White House on Friday. I’m told that for logistical reasons, unrelated to Obama, the Chamber of Commerce had to cancel the December jobs summit. But the group is now planning a similar January event and wants Obama to be the headliner. Nothing like getting rewarded for stealing democracy away from American citizens.
Continue reading …The head of the Transportation Security Administration acknowledged that new full-body scanners and pat-downs can be invasive and uncomfortable, but he said that the need to stay a step ahead of terrorists rules out changes in airport screening. (Nov. 21)
Continue reading …September’s Afghan election was riddled with corruption, with as much as 25 percent of the votes cast believed to be bogus. Since then the rubber has hit the electoral road as the country’s election watchdog has disqualified 19 candidates for alleged fraud, seven of them current members of parliament. The BBC: Afghanistan’s election watchdog has disqualified 19 candidates who stood in the September poll for alleged fraud. Seven of them are current members of the 249-seat parliament. The disqualifications were announced after the UN-backed Election Complaints Commission found most of their votes were fraudulent. Read more Related Entries November 18, 2010 Look Who’s the Decider Now November 18, 2010 Recessions Are Not Good for Your Mind
Continue reading …Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich made a couple of rather startling comments on ABC's “This Week” Sunday. During the Roundtable segment, the devout liberal not only defended former governor Sarah Palin as a “realistic candidate” for president, but also questioned whether or not the government bailout of GM was necessary (video follows with transcript and commentary): read more
Continue reading …Looks like Jolicloud knows how to keep a product under wraps — just ten days after revealing the Jolibook to the world, it’s already on sale at a pair of e-tailers. Yes, it’s just a netbook, and a fairly standard one at that — you can cross the 10.1-inch WSVGA screen, Intel GMA 3150 graphics, 1GB of RAM, 250GB hard drive and 0.3 megapixel webcam right off your laundry list. But it does have the instant-on Jolicloud 1.1 OS on board, and a dual-core 1.5GHz Atom N550 processor to power through basic tasks, and for a confirmed
Continue reading …Justice Elyakim Rubinstein says segregation of sexes on haredi bus lines will be deemed voluntary
Continue reading …A woman and her three young children were found killed at a violent crime scene in a north Florida home on Saturday, and homicide detectives were out looking for whoever might have had a reason to harm them, police said. (Nov. 21)
Continue reading …Click here to view this media No big surprise here. Republicans want to use the recent outrage over the aggressive screening tactics being used by the TSA at airports as an excuse to privatize it. As Steve Benen noted this weekend , that of course doesn’t solve the problem and just brings with it a whole new set of concerns. Mica is poised to become chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, so he’ll be in a position to advance this issue. There are a variety of angles to consider here. Note, for example, that private companies that stand to benefit from privatization also happen to be generous campaign contributors to Mica’s re-election campaign. Even more importantly, several domestic airports already use private screeners, but it’s still the TSA that establishes mandatory security standards. If Mica or other Republicans want to have a conversation about whether those security measures are appropriate, that’s fine. But whether those doing the screening are public employees or private contractors doesn’t change the standards themselves. Selling this as some sort of cure-all for frustrated travelers is silly. As Josh Marshall joked yesterday, “Watching cable TV this morning it seems like the new idea is that this would all be better if private sector workers rather than government employees were inspecting Americans’ crotches, boobs, etc.” But via email, reader V.S. noted another angle that’s worth paying attention to: legal restrictions. Existing standards, as written by federal officials, have to take constitutional issues into consideration. If Mica scrapped the TSA and let airports hire Blackwater-style private security to screen passengers, it’s easy to imagine legal safeguards — against racial profiling, for example — suddenly being cast aside. Mica of course also blew off accusations that any of the companies that provide airport security that have made campaign contributions to him might be influencing his push to privatize airport security. As News 4 in Jacksonville noted : TSA spokesman Greg Soule would not respond directly Mica’s letter, but reiterated the nation’s roughly 460 commercial airports have the option of applying to use private contractors. Companies that provide airport security are contributors to Mica’s campaigns, although some donations came before those companies won government contracts. The Lockheed Martin Corp. Employees’ Political Action Committee has given $36,500 to Mica since 1997. A Lockheed firm won the security contract in Sioux Falls, S.D. in 2005 and the contract for San Francisco the following year. Raytheon Company’s PAC has given Mica $33,500 since 1999. A Raytheon subsidiary began providing checkpoint screenings at Key West International Airport in 2007. FirstLine Transportation Security Inc.’s PAC has donated $4,500 to the Florida congressman since 2004. FirstLine has been screening baggage and has been responsible for passenger checkpoints at the Kansas City International Airport since 2006, as well as the Gallup Municipal Airport and the Roswell Industrial Air Center in New Mexico, operating at both since 2007. Since 2006, Mica has received $2,000 from FirstLine President Keith Wolken and $1,700 from Gerald Berry, president of Covenant Aviation Security. Covenant works with Lockheed to provide security at airports in Sioux Falls and San Francisco. Mica spokesman Justin Harclerode said the contributions never improperly influenced the congressman, who said he was unaware Raytheon or Lockheed were in the screening business. “They certainly never contacted him about providing screening,” Harclerode said. No matter who’s doing these screenings I’m glad we’re seeing some push back on the tactics being used. From all I’ve watched on this over the last week or two, I don’t know why we’re not scrapping the machines and the pat downs for bomb sniffing dogs and questioning passengers who might actually pose a security risk. I would suspect the likes of Michael Chertoff and his ilk making money off of these scanning machines and still having too much influence over our politicians might have something to do with it.
Continue reading …Prime minister meets with Likud MKs in ongoing campaign to enlist his party’s support for additional halt in West Bank construction, demanded by US. ‘No good can come of our managing Jenin sewer system,’ he says
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