Click here to view this media Liz Trotta apparently doesn’t have any remorse about her statements that John wrote about last week, where she said that women in the military should expect to be raped , and rather than apologize, she decided to double down and blame the liberals and feminists for her woes. Via Raw Story — In labored clarification, Fox contributor castigates military’s ‘fake heroism’ : Appearing on the Fox News show America’s News HQ , contributor Liz Trotta attempted to clarify remarks she made earlier this month that became fodder for The Daily Show , during which host Jon Stewart summarized that she did not want the military helping women who’ve been “raped too much. ” Unfortunately for the former Washington Times editor , what she actually said isn’t going to make the controversy go away — but then, that may have been the point. After suggesting that the issue of women in military roles has “never gotten a fair and open hearing,” Trotta went on to say: “The political correctness infecting the Pentagon has resulted in silly and dishonest fairy tales about female heroism,” she said. “Has anyone forgotten the Jessica Lynch story?” “There are countless other stories of fake heroism or exaggerated prowess in which women are the stars, many of them tailored for The New York Times and its agenda to promote militant feminism, no matter what the truth,” Trotta added. And here’s more via Mediaite — Fox’s Liz Trotta Clarifies Remarks About Women In The Military : Later in her appearance, Trotta noted that: The military is not a social services operation, or a testing ground for gender wars. It is a fighting machine. Women are not as strong as men. Their instincts and reactions in crises are markedly different. There’s a reality the left will not face: biology is not destiny. “I certainly did not say all military men are rapists,” she added. “I believe that the environment of combat, by definition, sets up the situation where basic instincts rule. Any scientist will tell you that testosterone rules.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media h/t Video Cafe for the video) Frank Bruni of the NY Times wrote a piece called ‘ Mitt’s Muffled Soul ,’ which discussed Romney’s campaign and the lengths he has gone to to avoid discussing his Mormon religion. When Romney first ran for president in 2008, there was so much discussion about the potential impact of his Mormonism, and his own concern about it was deep enough, that he delivered a set-piece speech designed to rebut any lingering impression of the religion as an exotic, even loopy sect. In that painstakingly calibrated address, he said the word Mormon all of once. Christ or Christianity came up repeatedly. Four years later, he still avoids the word, trumpeting his faithfulness without specifying the faith. What’s surprising is that no one around him — not reporters, not rivals — talks about it all that much, either. The Romney-Gingrich showdowns in South Carolina and Florida got plenty nasty: at one point the Gingrich camp, flashing back to Romney’s term as Massachusetts governor, falsely accused him of pretty much wresting kosher food from the mouths of Holocaust survivors. But neither Gingrich nor his allies played the Mormon card, even though nearly 20 percent of the Republicans and independents surveyed by Gallup last year said they wouldn’t support a Mormon presidential candidate. It’s a very neutral piece and asks some good questions. The GOP has put religion smack in the middle of their presidential primary as soon as it began and in recent weeks it has been ramped up. Reporters are obviously more afraid than usual of being labeled anti-religion since the new dog whistle coming out of the GOP camp is called “religious freedom” so I doubt they will go near this topic unless events really force them to. I was surprised to see this opening for CNN’s Reliable Sources. Check out Howard Kurtz’ first question to Bruni in the segment called Pressing Romney on Religion : KURTZ: “New York Times” columnist Frank Bruni says that’s precisely why the Mormon question is fair game. “There are valid reasons,” he writes, “for the rest of us to hone in on Romney’s religion, not in terms of its historical eccentricities but in terms of its cultural, psychological, and emotional imprint on him. His aloofness, guardedness, and sporadic defensiveness: are these entwined with the experience of belonging to a minority tribe that has often been maligned and has operated in secret?” But should the media be setting those boundaries? Joining us now in New York is Frank Bruni of “The Times”; and here in Washington, Jennifer Rubin, who writes “The Right Turn” blog for “The Washington Post”; and Scott Conroy, national political reporter for “Real Clear Politics” and CBS News. Frank Bruni, start with you. So why is Romney’s faith or why should it be any of the media’s business? Right from the start of the interview Howard attaches negative connotations to the idea that Americans would want to know anything about the Mormon faith and reporters have no business bringing it up. Bruni handles it quite deftly: FRANK BRUNI, NEW YORK TIMES: Well, I think when you’re running for president, the public, the media — we have a right to know as much as we can about you. I mean, we want to take your full measure as a human being. And if a big part of your biography, if a big part of who you are is your religious faith, then I think that needs to be discussed. I think it’s wise for the candidate himself to discuss it. And I think it’s entirely fair game for us to ask questions about it. We — you’re running for president of the United States, highest office there is. We need to know who you are, where you’re coming from, what animates you, what’s important to you . Exactly so why is Kurtz so bothered by his column? It’s the truth. Before I published my post on Romney’s great–grand father’s polygamist past and exodus to Mexico in the 1880′s on 01/04/12, the media refused to even gaze into Romney’s family history or religion this election cycle and he’s running for the highest office in our country. Now at least a few media outfits have started to tackle the topic. I find the story of Mormonism, which was founded in America, Joseph Smith and the Romney’s ties to it a fascinating story and my writing has been about that information on C&L Just recently a huge article hit the LA Times because the LDS Church apologized to the Jewish community for their continued practice of Baptisms of The Dead on Holocaust survivors after they had promised not to do that anymore. The Daily Beast has republished a Newsweek interview from 2007 where Mitt Romney says he used to be part of that practice, but doesn’t anymore. Romney’s biography is fully Mormon. When asked by NEWSWEEK if he has done baptisms for the dead—in which Mormons find the names of dead people of all faiths and baptize them, as an LDS spokesperson says, to “open the door” to the highest heaven—he looked slightly startled and answered, “I have in my life, but I haven’t recently.” The awareness of how odd this will sound to many Americans is what makes Romney hesitant to elaborate on the Mormon question. So why does the topic bother Howard so much in this online video ? It’s news plain and simple. The religious right in the GOP is going all in against Obama on contraception now even though the country solidly disagrees with that position and Santorum is attacking Obama’s religion head on with outlandish statements so why isn’t that offensive to the media?
Continue reading …Click here to view this media This is what happens when you spend too much time ‘paling around’ with Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum . Santorum Spokesperson Refers To Obama’s ‘Radical Islamic Policies’ : Rick Santorum spokesperson Alice Stewart slipped up on MSNBC Monday afternoon when talking about President Obama’s environmental policies. Instead, she called them Obama’s “radical Islamic policies.” Santorum communications director Hogan Gidley told TPM that Stewart “misspoke.”
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum on Sunday likened the upcoming U.S. election to World War II. While the candidate’s comments to a packed First Redeemer Church in Cumming, Georgia were somewhat vague, NBC news noted that he “seemed to compare President [Barack] Obama to [Adolf] Hitler.” The former Pennsylvania senator told his supporters that this election was like World War II, “where our closest ally, Britain, was being bombed and leveled.” “And America sat from 1940 when France fell to December of ’41 and did almost nothing,” he explained. “Why? Because we’re a hopeful people. We think, ‘You know it will get better. Yeah, I mean, he’s a nice guy. It won’t be near as bad as what we think. You know, this will be OK. You know, maybe he’s not the best guy.’ After a while, you found out some things about this guy over in Europe and maybe he’s not so good of a guy after all. But you know what? ‘Why do we need to be involved? We’ll just take care of our own problems, just get our families off to work and our kids off to school and we’ll be OK.’” The candidate added: “Sometimes, sometimes it’s not OK.” As BuzzFeed pointed out earlier this year, it’s not the first time Santorum has compared his opponents to Adolf Hitler. During a 2005 speech on the Senate floor, the then-senator blasted Senate Democrats for complaining that Republicans were trying to stop them from filibustering President George W. Bush’s judicial appointees. “It’s the equivalent of Adolf Hitler in 1942: ‘I’m in Paris. How dare you invade me? How dare you bomb my city? It’s mine,’” he said. Over the weekend, Santorum also said that Obama’s theology was not “based on the Bible.” He later clarified that he wasn’t questioning if the president was a Christian.
Continue reading …Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton (D) specifically called out the American Legislative Exchange Council in a recent speech, taking on one of the key operatives on the right wing in a way that few other Democrats have done in recent years, despite ALEC’s rising power in state legislatures across the country. ALEC has repeatedly attempted to push pro-corporate, anti-working family legislation in numerous states and has managed to largely fly under the radar in the media and with the public. The more high profile politicians like Dayton call them out, the more pressure the organization will face from working families and their allies. Minnesota’s Governor, Mark Dayton, is doing a really good job. As we have reported in the past months, he is trying to stimulate the state’s economy via expanded infrastructure and local hire and he has vowed to fight the newly radicalized Minnesota GOP by reaching across the aisle for bipartisan support. But what is going to really get progressive panties in a bunch is Dayton’s latest move: calling out the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) by name. Referring to four now-vetoed tort reform laws as “partisan political ploys,” Dayton told the press that, “The real impact would be to reduce the rights of law abiding citizens and businesses to seek justice from the wrongdoing of others.” At one point during his remarks (video below), he held up the ALEC manual that the tort reform laws came from: “So exactly who did the Republicans in the legislature listen to?” Dayton asked, as he held up a thick document. “Three of the four bills come right from this manual. Tort Reform Boot Camp, published by the American Legislative exchange council, or ALEC.” The organization often holds seminars for conservative state legislators across the nation, and provides model legislation that reflects a public policy agenda. “It is an extremely conservative group funded largely by large corporations, big business associations, insurance companies and very wealthy individuals,” Dayton remarked… “I’ve found that Minnesotans do not want their laws written by the lobbyists of big corporations.”
Continue reading …Chris Matthews appeared at Ford's Theater in Washington D.C., Monday, for a President's Day panel and sneered that Catholics are attracting bigots. While talking about Richard Nixon, the so-called Southern Strategy and racism, the Hardball host berated, “If you're really anti-gay, you become a Catholic now.” At a question and answer session after the event, I confronted him about the quote and asked him if he wished to “expand or apologize.”
Continue reading …The technology giant’s biannual transparency report reveals a 70% rise in takedown requests from US government or police Google faced down demands from a US law enforcement agency to take down YouTube videos allegedly showing police brutality earlier this year, figures released for the first time show. The technology giant’s biannual transparency report shows that Google refused the demands from the unnamed authority in the first half of this year. According to the report, Google separately declined orders by other police authorities to remove videos that allegedly defamed law enforcement officials. The demands formed part of a 70% rise in takedown requests from the US government or police, and were revealed as part of an effort to highlight online censorship around the world. Figures revealed for the first time show that the US demanded private information about more than 11,000 Google users between January and June this year, almost equal to the number of requests made by 25 other developed countries, including the UK and Russia. Governments around the world requested private data about 25,440 people in the first half of this year, with 11,057 of those people in the US. It is the first time Google has released details about how many of its users are targeted by authorities, as opposed to the number of requests made by countries. “For the first time, we’re not only disclosing the number of requests for user data, but we’re showing the number of users or accounts that are specified in those requests too,” said Dorothy Chou, a senior policy analyst at Google. “We believe that providing this level of detail highlights the need to modernize laws like the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, which regulates government access to user information and was written 25 years ago—long before the average person had ever heard of email.” Brazil made the most content removal requests in the first half of this year, according to the report, followed by Germany, the US and South Korea. Google United States Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher, the everyman of rightwing America, is turning his attention to saving Washington It’s a wonder what five minutes on camera can do for you. On 12 October 2008, Joe the Plumber was a lowly worker whom nobody had heard of. To be accurate, he wasn’t Joe the Plumber at all, he was Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher, and he wasn’t licensed to work as a plumber either, but let’s gloss over that. On that day, a would-be president by the name of Barack Obama swung by Wurzelbacher’s neighbourhood in Holland, Ohio, and for five minutes the two men bantered about how Obama’s tax plans would affect Wurzelbacher’s small
Continue reading …Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher, the everyman of rightwing America, is turning his attention to saving Washington It’s a wonder what five minutes on camera can do for you. On 12 October 2008, Joe the Plumber was a lowly worker whom nobody had heard of. To be accurate, he wasn’t Joe the Plumber at all, he was Samuel Joseph Wurzelbacher, and he wasn’t licensed to work as a plumber either, but let’s gloss over that. On that day, a would-be president by the name of Barack Obama swung by Wurzelbacher’s neighbourhood in Holland, Ohio, and for five minutes the two men bantered about how Obama’s tax plans would affect Wurzelbacher’s small
Continue reading …