2011 ACM Award Winners (Annual Academy Of Country Music Awards) ACM Awards Song of the Year: A Win for Miranda Lambert (VIDEO) Miranda Lambert: ACM’s Female Vocalist of the Year (VIDEO) Miranda Lambert and Blake Shelton charm at the ACM Awards 2011 … Lambert took home Single Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Video of the Year, matching her total wins from last year’s event. 2011 ACM Awards: Miranda Lambert and Lady Antebellum Lead Early … Lambert’s ‘The House That Built Me’ has won three awards so far, while Hillary Scott’s band get two prizes at the April 3 prize-giving event. Academy Of Country Music Awards 2011 Winners List: Lady Antebellum … LAS VEGAS — “The House That Built Me” helped Miranda Lambert quickly match her win total from last year’s Academy of Country Music awards on Sunday night, while Lady Antebellum took home three trophies, including as artist and producer … Miranda Lambert : ACM's Female Vocalist of the Year | GossipCenter … Miranda Lambert news and pictures from the 2011 Academy of Country Music Awards. Battle of the Blonds: Carrie Underwood, Miranda Lambert , Taylor … It was a good night to be young and blond in the world of country music. SoundMonitorinG says: I
Continue reading …Desperate Housewives Season 7 Episode 17 (Part 2/4) Desperate Housewives Season 7 Episode 17 (Part 2/4) Desperate Housewives Season 7 Episode 17 (Part 1/4) Article Directory Free » Watch Desperate Housewives Season 7 … Sign up to the Desperate Housewives in Wisteria Lane to enjoy the best way Bree, Susan plus the entire housewives fishing tackle obscurity, humourous in addition to charming dilemma. The revolutionary anxiety attack is Desperate … Desperate Housewives S07E17 HDTV XviD-LOL | IRFree.com Desperate.Housewives .S07E17.HDTV.XviD-LOL XviD | MP3 VBR | 350MB Season 7, Episode 17 – “Everything’s Different, Nothing’s Changed” Paul Young. Watch Desperate Housewives Season 7 Episode 17 “Everything's … Sign up to the actual Desperate Housewives in Wisteria Lane to be able to enjoy the way in which Bree, Susan also, the other countries in the housewives sport fishing tackle mystery, humourous together with pleasurable performance. … Watch Desperate Housewives Season 7 Episode 17 “Everything's … Link up with the particular Desperate Housewives in Wisteria Lane to be able to enjoy the simplest way Bree, Susan also, the other countries in the housewives. Desperate Housewives S07E17 720p HDTV X264-DIMENSION | IRFree.com Desperate.Housewives .S07E17.HDTV.XviD-LOL XviD | MP3 VBR | 350MB Season 7, Episode 17 – “Everything’s Different, Nothing’s Changed” Paul Young. christianL_ says: Fuck it, I'm watching desperate housewives
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) worried Sunday that the government might be shut down if Republican leadership continued to be cowered by the tea party movement. “The Republican leadership in the House has to make a decision whether they’re going to do the right thing for the country or do the right thing for the tea party,” Reid told CBS’ Bob Schieffer. “The tea party, you see, they spent weeks organizing here. The day came for their demonstration a couple days ago. They didn’t have thousands of people there. They didn’t have hundreds of people. They had tens of people. If you really stretch it, you might have had 150 people there. The tea party is is not looked at very strongly around the country. The only attention they get is in the House of Representatives. They shouldn’t be getting that attention,” he said. “Are you saying that Speaker Boehner and the Republicans who have been here for a while are afraid of the tea party? Is that what’s going on here?” Schieffer asked. “That’s a pretty good choice of words. The answer is yes. The tea party is dictating a lot that goes on in the Republican leadership in the House. They shouldn’t,” Reid explained.
Continue reading …In his new book, The Good Book: A Secular Bible, the philosopher sets out his manifesto for rational thought. He talks about why religion angers him, the power of philosophy – and his mane of hair In the unholy trinity of professional atheists, AC Grayling has always tended to be regarded as the good cop. Less coldly clinical in tone than Richard Dawkins , less aggressively combative than Christopher Hitchens , Grayling approaches the God debate with a gently teasing charm that could almost – but should never – be mistaken for conciliation. “Yes, I’m the velvet version,” he chuckles. So he insists that his new book does not belong in the same canon as Dawkins’s The God Delusion and Hitchens’s God Is Not Great. “No, because it’s not against religion. There’s not one occurrence of the word God, or afterlife, or anything like that. It doesn’t attack religion, it’s a positive book, there’s nothing negative in it. People may think it’s against religion – but it isn’t.” But then he says, with a mischievous twinkle: “Of course, what would really help the book a lot in America is if somebody tries to shoot me.” With any luck it shouldn’t come to that, but Grayling is almost certainly going to upset a lot of Christians, for what he has written is a secular bible. The Good Book mirrors the Bible in both form and language, and is, as its author says, “ambitious and hubristic – a distillation of the best that has been thought and said by people who’ve really experienced life, and thought about it”. Drawing on classical secular texts from east and west, Grayling has “done just what the Bible makers did with the sacred texts”, reworking them into a “great treasury of insight and consolation and inspiration and uplift and understanding in the great non-religious traditions of the world”. He has been working on his opus for several decades, and the result is an extravagantly erudite manifesto for rational thought. In fact everything about Grayling is extravagantly erudite. We meet at his south London home, where he sits surrounded by teetering piles of books, great leaning towers of learning, and the conversation frequently detours into donnish tutorial mode. Spotting me glance at one of the volumes, which bears the title Epiphenomenalism, he launches at once into a detailed explanation of the concept – but then breaks off in delight as his dog trots in and rolls at his feet. “Ooh, look at you, Misty!” he gurgles, bending to rub her stomach. “Ooh, you like that, don’t you! Why don’t you play outside? Oh, you want to stay and be interviewed? Ooh, you’d make an interesting interviewee, wouldn’t you!” Then, moments later we are back in a tutorial. “If you’re not careful,” he smiles, “I’ll explain the inter-substitutivity of co-referential terms salva veritate ,” and sure enough he does. Who does he think will read The Good Book? “Well, I’m hoping absolutely every human being on the planet.” He’s sure that a lot of people will wonder just who he thinks he is, to have written a bible, but doesn’t appear particularly troubled by this prospect. “The truth is that the book is very modestly done. My wife did give me a card,” he giggles, “that said, ‘I used to be an atheist until I realised I am God’. And I know that on Monty Pythonesque grounds there’s a good likelihood that in five centuries time I will be one, as a result of this.” He lets out another little chuckle. “But I certainly don’t feel like one now, that’s for sure.” The little jokes and kindly bearing can make Grayling sound quite benignly jovial about religion at times, as he chuckles away about “men in dresses” and “believing in fairies at the bottom of the garden”, and throws out playfully mocking asides such as, “You can see we no longer really believe in God, because of all the CCTV cameras keeping watch on us.” But when I suggest that he sounds less enraged than amused by religion, he says quickly: “Well, it does make me angry, because it causes a great deal of harm and unhappiness.” He is very cross, for example, with the question in the current census that asks: “What is your religion?” The British Humanist Society has just conducted a poll that asked those surveyed if they were religious – to which 65% said no. But when asked, “What is your religion?” 61% of the very same people answered Christian. “You see, they say, ‘Oh well, nominally I suppose I’m Christian.’ But two-thirds of the population don’t regard themselves as religious! So we have to try to persuade society as a whole to recognise that religious groups are self-constituted interest groups; they exist to promote their point of view. Now, in a liberal democracy they have every right to do so. But they have no greater right than anybody else, any political party or Women’s Institute or trade union. But for historical reasons they have massively overinflated influence – faith-based schools, religious broadcasting, bishops in the House of Lords, the presence of religion at every public event. We’ve got to push it back to its right size.” Atheists, according to Grayling, divide into three broad categories. There are those for whom this secular objection to the privileged status of religion in public life is the driving force of their concern. Then there are those, “like my chum Richard Dawkins”, who are principally concerned with the metaphysical question of God’s existence. “And I would certainly say there is an intrinsic problem about belief in falsehood.” In other words, even if a person’s faith did no harm to anybody, Grayling still wouldn’t like it. “But the third point is about our ethics – how we live, how we treat one another, what the good life is. And that’s the question that really concerns me the most.” It’s only in the past decade that these three strands of thought have developed into a public campaign against faith – but it wasn’t the atheists, according to Grayling, who provoked the confrontation. “The reason why it’s become a big issue is that religions have turned the volume up, because they’re on the back foot. The hold of religion is weakening, definitely, and diminishing in numbers. The reason why there’s such a furore about it is that the cornered animal, the loser, starts making a big noise.” Even if this is true, however, the atheist movement has been accused of shooting itself in the foot by adopting a tone so militant as to alienate potential supporters, and fortify the religious lobby. I ask Grayling if he thinks there is any truth in the charge, and he listens patiently and politely to the question, but then dismisses it with a shake of the head. “Well, firstly, I think the charges of militancy and fundamentalism of course come from our opponents, the theists. My rejoinder is to say when the boot was on their foot they burned us at the stake. All we’re doing is speaking very frankly and bluntly and they don’t like it,” he laughs. “So we speak frankly and bluntly, and the respect agenda is now gone, they can no longer float behind the diaphanous veil – ‘Ooh, I have faith so you mustn’t offend me’. So they don’t like the blunt talking. But we’re not burning them at the stake. They’ve got to remember that when it was the other way around it was a much more serious matter. “And besides, really,” he adds with a withering little laugh, “how can you be a militant atheist? How can you be militant non-stamp collector? This is really what it comes down to. You just don’t collect stamps. So how can you be a fundamentalist non-stamp collector? It’s like sleeping furiously. It’s just wrong.” If Grayling does have one fundamentalist article of faith, it is that all of us are capable of understanding philosophy. He grew up in a colonial family in what is now Zambia, where the grownups’ chief preoccupation was adultery, leaving him free to bury himself in books. He first read Plato at 12, and says enthusiastically, “Anybody could read Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics in the bath, it’s great stuff!” – although I suspect his idea of an easy read may not be the same as yours or mine. The author of 30 books, he is a professor of philosophy at Birbeck College in London, and a supernumerary of St Anne’s College, Oxford, as well as a UN human rights activist. But he is probably best described by that phrase that tends to make the British uncomfortable – a public intellectual. “I spent the first half or more of my career in the ivory tower writing technical philosophy, but I recognised very early that academic philosophy is a very narrow part of the field. This is one of my big things: that philosophy belongs to everybody. Until 100 years ago philosophy did belong to everyone. Today, unfortunately, it’s become very jargon-laden and scholastic, so it’s become very specialised. But a lot of the stuff I’ve written has been trying to show people that this is part of the conversation mankind has with himself, about all the great questions. We’re all intelligent monkeys, 99% of us are perfectly capable of understanding this, and I feel reasonably confident that given enough time and typewriters I could explain most of what goes on in technical philosophy to someone who has no background in it at all.” Is there a sniffy faction within the world of philosophy that takes a dim view of attempts to make the subject more widely accessible? “Oh, I’m absolutely sure of it. But I also think that attitude has moderated considerably over time. Ten to 15 years ago, when I started to try to do this, I’m pretty sure there was a lot of sniffing going on.” He does a bit of his own sniffing, though, a moment later, when I mention the popularity of bestselling writers whom he has described as quasi-philosophers. “Hmm, yes, the [Alain] de Bottons and so on,” Grayling murmurs rather sorrowfully. “He’s a perfectly nice fellow, but it’s not philosophy. It’s cream-puff stuff. What worries me is that someone will go to it thinking, ‘Ooh, this is an opportunity to think and find out something’, and then they find that it’s actually very shallow and doesn’t have deep roots. And I do think that people who do this kind of thing should really have done some work and got engaged in something serious, and then they won’t make too many mistakes when it comes to trying to introduce others to it.” Nobody could doubt that Grayling has “really done some work”. He first had the idea for The Good Book as an undergraduate, and it certainly reads like the opus of an out-and-out workaholic. “I think all of my family would say I was to some extent a workaholic,” he agrees, smiling wryly. He lives with his second wife, a novelist, and their 11-year-old daughter, but also has two grownup children from his first marriage, and one can’t help suspecting that they all help him connect with a world that wasn’t reading Plato at 12. He attributes his workaholism to the death of his sister, who was murdered in South Africa in her 20s. His feelings towards the continent of his childhood, and of his sister’s death, are so painfully tender that it’s only in the last year that he has been able to eat any tropical fruit at all. “I’ve just been able to start eating some mango,” he says quietly. It’s a rare moment when Grayling’s scrupulously rational mind allows for a glimmer of something more emotionally subjective. But, of course, most people’s lives and judgments aren’t really guided by rigorous reason at all – which must be maddening to him. So I wonder what he makes of humankind’s perverse attachment to non-rational impulses. “I think they are failing in their responsibility to themselves as intelligent beings. By not being sufficiently reasonable. If you really press them, just ask them, aren’t you glad that the people who built the aeroplane you fly in used reason? Aren’t you glad that the pilots were trained according to reason? Aren’t you glad that your doctor or train driver thinks about what they do and uses reason? And they will say yes. Then you say, ‘Well, OK, if that’s the case then how about applying it to your own life as well?’” We’ve come to the end, and I have one more question. Can I ask, I venture tentatively, about your hair? “Oh God, my hair.” He is invariably described as the lion-maned philosopher, so I’m curious to know how he maintains his magnificent locks. “Well, I don’t really use very many products,” he says. “It must look very artificial, but it isn’t, and I do get a lot of stick for it. I put a bit of sticky stuff just to hold it up there – I don’t know what the brand is, it’s a sort of little thing of hairspray. I mean any sticky thing will do just to keep the front up.” It must require a lot of attention, though, doesn’t it? “No, it doesn’t really, but I do get a lot of stick for it. You see, I used to have very, very long hair in the 60s, so this is very restrained for me. But I said to my kids a few years ago, I’m going to shave all my hair off, I keep getting all this stick about it – I’m going to shave it all off. They said: ‘No! You won’t look the same, it won’t be you.’” He says he isn’t remotely vain, but he does look like someone who cares a great deal about his appearance. “Ooh, well, that’s very kind of you to say,” he smiles. “I’m not self-conscious or aware of myself. I just give the wrong impression with this hairstyle. This may seem an odd thing to say, and I’m sure psychologists would pounce on this, but actually – well, actually, I don’t sort of exist. The rest of the world does, and I’m really interested in it. If there’s a group of people sitting round, and I think about it afterwards, I always fail to remember that I was there, if you see what I mean.” So when he sees himself in group photographs? “Oh, I’m surprised to see there I am! Yes, very surprised.” Philosophy Religion Decca Aitkenhead guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) said Sunday that the GOP 2012 budget will exceed even the $4 trillion in spending cuts over the next decade recommended by President Barack Obama’s debt commission. But Ryan wouldn’t commit that his new budget would follow the debt commission’s lead and cut corporate welfare for oil and gas companies. “Widely reported that your budget will cut spending by $2 trillion over the next decade. True?” Fox News Chris Wallace asked Ryan during their Sunday interview. “Well, it’s more than that,” Ryan said. “Quite a bit more than that.” “$4 trillion?” Wallace wondered. “Looking at more than that right now. We’re fine-tuning the numbers. Congressional Budget Office literally today, over the weekend. We’ll cut more than that,” Ryan explained. “We will be exceeding the goals that were put out in the president’s debt commission,” he added. “You talk about the president’s debt commission. They got $1 trillion from closing a lot of tax loopholes, ending a lot of tax deductions. Do you do that?” Wallace asked. “Not only do we want to cut spending, not only do we want to reform government spending, we want economic growth. We want job creation. Pro-growth tax reform is a key ingredient to getting this economy working again, getting the economy growing again. The way to do that — and we agree with the direction of the fiscal commission — lower tax rate and broaden the tax base. And those are the things we’ll be proposing.” “Democrats are already saying, even before they’ve seen your budget, you do all this balancing of the budget on the spending side and unlike the president’s debt commission, you don’t do it on the revenue side,” Wallace noted. “Do you eliminate tax breaks and bring in new revenue by eliminating tax breaks for oil companies, for instance?” “We don’t have a tax problem,” Ryan declared. “The problem with our deficit is not because Americans are taxed too little… and so we’re not going to go down the path of raising taxes on people and raising taxes on the economy.” “Does it mean you won’t eliminate tax breaks for big oil and gas?” Wallace pressed. “Those are the kinds of details that you’ll come out later with, that the Ways and Means Committee will work on. We don’t go into the detail of which tax expenditure goes or stays. We’re going to lower tax rates and broaden base. You’ll see more details Tuesday.” “We are giving [Democrats] a political weapon to go against us,” Ryan later admitted. “But they will have to lie and demagogue to make that a political weapon.” ADDENDUM : (Nicole) Of course, it’s so typically Republican to put the burden of their years of reckless spending on the backs of seniors and protect oil companies. The DCCC put out a fact sheet on Ryan’s draconian plans: “Paul Ryan made clear that the Republican budget will protect Big Oil companies subsidies over seniors health care,” said Jesse Ferguson of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. “It’s already becoming clear who will be the priority in the House Republican budget – special interests, not middle class families. Background No Ending Subsidies. When challenged by Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace about whether his budget will include reductions in Oil and Gas subsidies like the Presidents Fiscal Commission did, Ryan responded that “we don’t have a tax problem”. [Fox News Sunday, 4/3/11] House Republicans Cutting Medicare and Medicaid. Chuck Loveless of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees said anything approaching a $1 trillion cut over 10 years would have “devastating consequences for the disabled, the working poor and children” as well as seniors who rely on long-term care. “It shines a bright light, we think, on what the House Republican leaders are attempting to do in these various budget discussions as we go forward. They’re seeking to savage the safety net for the most vulnerable in our society and a time when corporations are enjoying record profits.” [POLITICO, 3/31/11 ] The largest oil companies have made $485 billion in profits. The Democratic Steering & Policy Committee held a hearing on the issue of Oil and Gas subsidies and noted that from 2005 to 2009, the largest oil companies have made $485 billion in profits. [climateprogress.org, 3/01/11 ] Obama’s budget plan targets oil, gas tax breaks. “President Obama’s proposed 2010 budget takes pointed aim at oil and gas companies, eliminating myriad tax breaks and proposing new fees on the providers. The plan put out Thursday would repeal tax breaks intended to spur oil and gas exploration and penalize companies that don’t develop wells on land leased from the government. It could raise tens of billions of dollars the next decade.” [USA Today, 2/27/11 ] Last month, House Republicans opposed a measure that would ensure no “tax benefit” could go to a “major integrated oil company.” [HJ Res 44, Vote #153 , 3/01/11]
Continue reading …Isn’t this interesting? Wisconsin’s Senate majority leader knew he couldn’t legally order state troopers to go after the senate Democrats — but he did it anyway! You’ll notice you hear very little from Republicans about “the rule of law” these days: Wisconsin Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald was warned by legal representatives of three separate state agencies that ordering state troopers to forcibly return senate Democrats to Madison would place his actions in a zone “outside the law”, according to the Wisconsin State Journal . The Journal has obtained memos and e-mail from Fitzgerald’s office and the office of Sergeant-at-Arms Ted Blazel through a public records request.Fitzgerald now admits in an interview with the Journal that his efforts to compel the Democrats back to the State House were “a mess” and that when he tried to give a statewide order for law enforcement to arrest the missing lawmakers, “There was no cop in the state that would enforce it.” It was Fitzgerald who issued the controversial “call of the House” on February 17th, when Democratic senators fled the state to avoid a vote on Governor Scott Walker’s bill curbing the collective bargaining rights of public employees. Three days after the walkout, Fitzgerald ordered state troopers to the residence of Senate Minority Leader Mark Miller, who wasn’t at home. This prompted a dialogue between Fitzgerald’s office and Wisconsin’s Legislative Council and Legislative Reference Bureau concerning the legality of the Fitzgerald’s actions.The Majority Leader’s office, however, sent troopers to state senators homes again four days later. It was when Fitzgerald attempted to use statewide police warrant verification network to issue an official “Order to Detain” the Democrats that the Wisconsin Department of Justice urged the Majority Leader and the Senate to drop the order rather than force law enforcement personnel to carry out acts that would ultimately prove to be illegal. The State Journal : “We would strongly recommend that you attempt to get the Senate’s Order to Detain out of the system, i.e. to the extent possible indicate publicly that it has been withdrawn so that law enforcement do not rely upon it and attempt to enforce it, thereby creating unnecessary liability exposure to them and the state,” Kevin Potter, an assistant attorney general, said in a March 4 email. Fitzgerald refused to back down. It was only when the Senate stripped out certain provisions of the bill allowing the Republicans to pass it with or without Democratic participation that the Majority Leader’s office stopped trying to pressure state law enforcement to compel the Democrats back to Madison.
Continue reading …In the weekly GOP radio and Internet address, House Speaker John Boehner says necessary steps to encourage hiring include spending cuts, blocking tax increases, reducing the bureaucracy and eliminating regulations. (April 2)
Continue reading …Fifteen-year-old with rare condition makes legal history in bid to force Derbyshire primary care trust to pay for his medicine A 15-year-old boy who suffers from a rare medical condition that means he cannot eat protein is to make legal history by becoming the first child to sue his local health authority under the Human Rights Act. The boy’s lawyers claim that he will suffer both physical and mental retardation at a critical time in his adolescent development unless Derbyshire primary care trust agrees to fund a drug that helps him consume a normal diet. The boy, who is referred to as NL, is said by his solicitor to be half the weight of normal children because of his condition, phenylketonuria, or PKU. The rare condition affects one in 15,000 people, making it difficult for them to produce an enzyme that breaks down the protein found in meat, chicken, fish, eggs, nuts and cheese. It is sometimes fatal. Derbyshire PCT has refused to pay for the boy to receive Kuvan, a drug that can alleviate the condition and costs £30,000 a year, on the grounds that he is not an exceptional case and there are alternatives available such as a synthetic food diet. The case, one of the first to invoke the Human Rights Act against a PCT, is highly unusual because the claim against the PCT is being made under article six, the right to a fair trial, and article eight, respect for family life. The boy’s lawyers claim article six is relevant because of the way in which the PCT reached a decision not to fund the drug. They also say the boy’s mother has had to give up her job because of the stress on the family, while his two younger brothers have suffered because his poor diet has left him often short-tempered, indicating that a claim under article eight is also valid. His family has raised sufficient funds to pay for a one-year course of Kuvan, but they say their resources have now run out. The boy’s father, Max, said his son may soon have to return to a synthetic diet that he has refused to eat in the past, leaving him prone to malnutrition. Since the boy started taking the drug, which is widely available in other EU countries, he has made a dramatic improvement, according to his family and experts at Birmingham children’s hospital who have observed him. The boy has been able to eat small amounts of protein – about a third of a normal child’s intake, which is equivalent to a bowl of cereal a day without milk. He has gained weight as a result. His father said the family was not asking the PCT to supply the drug indefinitely, but for the next three years, during which time the increased protein intake could help NL with his adolescent growth spurt. “We have pretty much spent our life savings,” Max said. “We are down to selling our house to continue. If not, I’ve got to put my son through more pain by taking him off the drug.” He said that since NL had been on the drug it was “like having a different son. His whole character has changed. He’s less angry, easier to deal with, far more tolerant, more relaxed, more humorous, his confidence has improved and he’s more able to concentrate.” Oliver Wright, of MPH solicitors who are acting on behalf of NL, said: “The PCT said we couldn’t prove that it works and that it only works for one in four people with the condition. Well, my client has paid for it for a year and shown it works. He’s put on weight, he’s grown, he’s happier.” The PCT, which declined to comment, was preparing to fight the case in court after proceedings were issued against it in February. However, after a series of legal wrangles, it has now referred a decision to its specialist individual funding request panel. If the panel declines to approve funding, the boy’s lawyers will seek a judicial review into how the PCT reached its original decision. The case is being studied closely by medical lawyers. Experts predict an increasing number of patients will use the Human Rights Act to demand access to expensive drugs and surgery. This week the High Court is expected to deliver its verdict in the case of Tom Condliff, a diabetic who says he will die within a year if Staffordshire primary care trust refuses to pay £5,500 for him to have a gastric bypass. His legal team has argued that without the operation there is a significant chance he will lose some of his limbs, making the cost of caring for him far outweigh that of the operation. But lawyers for Staffordshire PCT have said that National Institute of Clinical Excellence (Nice) guidelines make it clear that he does not qualify for surgery in his current condition. The case is the first to have been brought under the Human Rights Act against a PCT, with Condliff’s legal team arguing that, under article two, the Staffordshire trust must respect their client’s right to life. If it is successful, similar applications are expected to be made at many of the UK’s 159 PCTs. Human Rights Act Health NHS Jamie Doward guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …In her April 1 Washington Post story, staffer Krissah Thompson explored how the “mission” and “challenges” of the Congressional Black Caucus have “evolved” from its initial aim “to eradicate racism.” Yet nowhere in Thompson's 23-paragraph article is any mention of how the CBC has denied entry to prospective members on the basis of skin color, such as liberal Democrats Steve Cohen (Tenn.) and Pete Stark (Calif.). Here's how Politico's Josephine Hearn reported on the controversy surrounding the former in January 2007: As a white liberal running in a majority African American district, Tennessee Democrat Stephen I. Cohen made a novel pledge on the campaign trail last year: If elected, he would seek to become the first white member of the Congressional Black Caucus.
Continue reading …Rep. Eric Cantor finally said what was really on his mind to a Conservative Think Tank (Hoover Institute) about Social Security and America. Campaign For America’s Future: Last week, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said out loud what he really thinks: He believes Social Security “cannot exist.” At all. For anyone . This week NPR played Cantor’s remarks to the conservative Hoover Institution: He declared: “So we’ve got to protect today’s seniors. But for the rest of us? For – you know, listen. We’re going to have to come to grips with the fact that these programs cannot exist if we want America to be what we want America to be.” These guys say things like this at right-wing think tanks, expecting that the folks back home won’t hear them. We want to make sure every person in Rep. Cantor’s congressional district hears those words straight from his mouth. The Campaign for America’s Future isn’t letting Rep. Cantor get away with it. We have a TV ad that will let his constituents know about his extreme opposition to Social Security. But we need your help to get it on the air. The more you can donate, the more we can get his constituents to see the ad and the more we can spread the truth, and put him on the hot seat. Click here to help us keep this ad on the air What does Cantor mean when he says, ” if we want America to be what we want America to be.” Why does Eric Cantor and Conservatives in think tank’s like the Hoover hate working class Americans and seniors so much so that they would destroy Social Security? They are smart enough to know that cutting it now would destroy their election chances in 2012, so they make these sweeping unfactual statements about the future of Social Security. Here’s the link to the NPR news report. Rep. CANTOR: I mean, just from the very notion that it said that 50 percent of beneficiaries under the Social Security program use those moneys as their sole source of income. So we’ve got to protect today’s seniors. But for the rest of us? For – you know, listen. We’re going to have to come to grips with the fact that these programs cannot exist if we want America to be what we want America to be. CORNISH: Cantor says Republicans will unveil their plans for the 2012 budget soon, which will include entitlement program reforms. They’re keeping the details quiet for now. But it’s clear the GOP will have to make the first move, since the president didn’t include changes to entitlements in his budget proposals, and Democrats are on the defense. That’s no easy task, considering the unveiling will likely collide with the ongoing debates over the debt ceiling, the current budget, and the threat of a government shutdown . Please pass this Eric Cantor video around.
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