Frankie Muniz & GF — Cozy Date After Gun Incident VIDEO. Hell No! Elycia Turnbow Claims Frankie Muniz Put Gun to His Head Frankie Muniz Threaten Suicide After Domestic Disturbance With Elycia Turnbow Frankie Muniz & GF — Cozy Date After Gun Incident | TMZ.com Less than 24 hours after Frankie Muniz allegedly pulled a gun out during a nuclear fight with his girlfriend … the couple went on a nice, normal date… Frankie Muniz put gun to his head during fight, girlfriend says Frankie Muniz put gun to his head during fight, girlfriend says, Phoenix officers were called to TV star Frankie Muniz’s house after an argument between Muniz and his girlfriend got out of hand. Elycia Turnbow Forgives Bad Boy Frankie Muniz ? | Famecrawler Most people think of Frankie Muniz as the lovable child star from Malcolm in the Middle, but considering the fact that he threatened his girlfriend, Elycia Turnbow and then held a gun to his own head, it seems as though Muniz definitely … Frankie Muniz Allegedly Punches Girlfriend, Holds Loaded Gun To … Another former child star is in trouble with the law – Frankie Muniz is named in a police report about a fiery domestic dispute, during which he reportedly held a loaded gun to his head. The form… Frankie Muniz Tried To Kill His Girlfriend Elycia Turnbow … Did Frankie Muniz put a loaded gun to his head and then beat up girlfriend Elycia Turnbow? Today a disturbing police reports was leaked stemming from a violent. TheBroads says: Frankie Muniz goes crazy – hear what the Broads have to say!
Continue reading …Activists are clear that for Egyptians to be truly free, Mubarak’s machinery of repression must be dismantled After an inspirational show of people power in Egypt, what next for this great country? And what kind of reforms are needed to satisfy the dreams and demands of its people? Amnesty’s partners in the Egyptian human rights community are clear. The machinery of repression underpinning Hosni Mubarak’s Egypt must be dismantled. This means, to start with, lifting the dead hand of the state of emergency and repealing article 179 of the (now suspended) constitution – which gives sweeping powers of arrest to the security forces, allowing Egypt’s leader to totally bypass ordinary civilian courts and instead send people suspected of terrorist offences to military and special courts. Similarly, emergency powers allowing administrative detention of government critics must be scrapped. Only shortly before Mubarak’s departure on Friday , the Egyptian army was promising to lift the state of emergency ” as soon as current circumstances end “, and now we need to see follow-through on that with a clear public timetable. Meanwhile, Egypt’s vast, unregulated prison system needs swift reform. Throughout the last fortnight we’ve heard reports of prisoners escaping from jails, and these must be investigated, with those who had been properly convicted returned to custody. At the same time, the authorities must urgently review the cases of thousands of prisoners held in “administrative” detention without charge or trial (one of Egypt’s most shameful practices), either charging them with a recognisable criminal offence or setting them free. Meanwhile, all prisoners of conscience must be released without delay. Free speech has burst its chains in Egypt, but for the last 30 years it has been virtually impossible for peaceful protesters to assemble on the streets of Cairo, Alexandria, Port Said, Suez or anywhere else without attracting the attention of truncheon-wielding police officers. Summary arrests would follow. The empowering effect of vast numbers of people steadfastly and publicly demanding change in Egypt has won the day. But freedom of speech and association must be now be protected and legally entrenched in Egypt. In dry practical terms , this means repressive laws – for example articles 80(d), 98bis(d), 98(f), 102, 102bis, 171, 178, 179, 181, 188, 201 and 308 of the penal code, and review law 84 (the law of associations) – must be either swept way or amended in line with international standards. Other major reforms must include guaranteeing the rights of women and girls, ending legal discrimination against all religious groups, including Coptic Christians and Baha’is, and putting a stop to the persecution of gay people (including the practice of charging gay men with the “habitual practice of debauchery”). The death penalty should be abolished. Meanwhile, we mustn’t forget the blood spilt and crimes committed during Egypt’s historic 18 days of protest. Reports indicate that at least 300 people were killed and many more injured, while an as yet unknown number were ” disappeared ” into detention and, in at least some cases, tortured. When, on February 3, two of Amnesty’s staff were detained by the military in Camp 75 in the Cairo suburb of Manshiyet el-Bakri, along with 33 other human rights defenders, they could clearly hear the screams of detainees being beaten . For too long torture has been a dark stain on Egypt. We need to see credible investigations of the part played by the police, the Mukhabarat (secret police) and the army. With bravery, dignity and fortitude, Egyptians have captured the world’s attention with their popular uprising against repression, poverty and corruption. Now, at a pivotal moment in world affairs, it’s vital that leaders around the world listen very carefully to their message: that there can be no reform without human rights reform. We are living through a moment of global significance. Many in Algeria, Yemen, Jordan, Bahrain and the wider region (and indeed right across the world) are demanding exactly what Tunisians and Egyptians have demanded. At a major rally in Trafalgar Square at the weekend, thousands stood in solidarity with the people of Egypt and the greater Middle East and north Africa. They expressed their solidarity with the call for a human rights revolution and defiance of those who would suppress the right to be free. One banner on Saturday caught my eye. It read: “Bye-bye state of secret police!” Hear hear to that. Egypt Protest Middle East Human rights Kate Allen guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …CBS News journalist Lara Logan remains in hospital after a brutal assault in Tahrir Square on the night Mubarak resigned CBS News journalist Lara Logan is recovering in hospital this week after being violently attacked and sexually assaulted by a mob in Egypt’s Tahrir Square on Friday, according to a statement by CBS. Amid the celebrations on the night of Hosni Mubarak’s resignation, Logan was reporting on the scenes in Tahrir Square for the news programme 60 Minutes when the South African-born journalist, her camera crew and security staff were overwhelmed by what the US television network described as “a dangerous element … a mob of more than 200 people whipped into frenzy”. “In the crush of the mob, she was separated from her crew. She was surrounded and suffered a brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating before being saved by a group of women and an estimated 20 Egyptian soldiers,” CBS said in its statement released on Tuesday evening. “She reconnected with the CBS team, returned to her hotel and returned to the United States on the first flight the next morning. She is currently in the hospital recovering.” Logan joined CBS in 2002, after a television news career that included a spell at GMTV covering the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, and is a veteran of reporting from warzones including Iraq and Kosovo. CBS’s chief foreign affairs correspondent, Logan had previously been detained by the Egyptian military for a day, as part of the Mubarak regime’s crackdown on foreign journalists. Logan serves on the board of the Committee to Protect Journalists, which documented 140 attacks on journalists in Egypt during the protests this month. “We have seen Lara’s compassion at work while helping journalists who have faced brutal aggression while doing their jobs. She is a brilliant, courageous and committed reporter. Our thoughts are with Lara as she recovers,” said Paul Steiger, chairman of the committee. CBS said it will make no further comment. “Logan and her family respectfully request privacy at this time,” the network said in its statement. Egypt CBS US television Women United States The news on TV TV news Richard Adams guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Lara Logan in Cairo, reporting for CBS News The details are slight, but it makes the story no less disturbing : “60 Minutes” correspondent Lara Logan suffered a “brutal and sustained” sexual assault at the hands of a large group of men while covering the Egyptian uprising, CBS News said. It happened during Friday’s jubilation in Cairo’s Tahrir Square after President Hosni Mubarak finally stepped down. “A dangerous element” in the crowd surrounded Logan and her crew, said CBS spokesman Kevin Tedesco. “It was a mob of more than 200 people whipped into a frenzy. In the crush of the mob, she was separated from her crew,” he said in a statement Tuesday. “She was surrounded and suffered a brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating before being saved by a group of women and an estimated 20 Egyptian soldiers.” Logan went home to the United States on the first flight Saturday and is recovering in a hospital, Tedesco said. [..] At least 140 reporters have been injured or killed covering Egypt since Jan. 30, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists. Logan’s personal life has been fodder for tabloids–and I’m not entirely sure some of it wasn’t furthered by DC types threatened by her no-nonsense reporting of the f ailures in Iraq and Afghanistan and her lack of fear of calling out pundits (aka Fox’s Bill O’Reilly and Laura Ingraham ) for their studio armchair war coverage heavy on spin and light on facts–but for the sake of her husband and child, I hope that the media respects her desire for privacy on this. It would be truly horrible to learn that she had been victimized quite so brutally again by pro-government forces because of her desire to report the truth on the ground.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media We’ve been remarking for awhile how strange it is that the case of Shawna Forde has received so little media attention, especially because of its naturally sensational elements and the fact that it has real political and social significance. Indeed, one of the most common reactions we’ve observed among readers to whom we’ve presented the case has been: “Why haven’t I heard about this?” Even with yesterday’s conviction on two counts of first-degree murder for the killings of 9-year-old Brisenia Flores and her father, it hasn’t gotten a great deal better: the story, for instance, ran as only a “brief” in the New York Times , and didn’t appear at all in the Washington Post, even though both had written briefly about it previously. Well, at least CNN — the only cable-TV network to have bothered to pick up the story previously — did a full-length segment on the story, which ran on Anderson Cooper’s show. It pretty well covered the bases, although it repeatedly emphasized that Forde had been “kicked out” of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps for being “emotionally unstable” and that she was supposedly not associated with any of them — even though in fact Forde maintained a close association with Minuteman Project cofounder Jim Gilchrist right up to the moment of her arrest, and was very much part of the larger Minutemen movement. Easily the best coverage of the case came from the local reporters at the Arizona Daily Star and from the Daily Beast’s Terri Greene Sterling, who yesterday pulled off a coup by getting Forde to talk to her for a post-conviction interview. As we observed yesterday, one of the more remarkable aspects of the announcement of the jury’s verdict was how utterly unfazed by it Forde seemed to be. Sterling zeroed in on this: Forde, dressed in a navy-and-cream blazer and navy pants, remained calm as she listened to the verdict, even though the murder charges could lead to a death sentence in a state that does not shy from executions. The 43-year-old former child burglar, mom, beautician, and self-professed Minuteman from Everett, Washington, kept her composure, because, she told The Daily Beast in an exclusive post-verdict jailhouse interview, “you can’t freak out with the whole world watching you.” Speaking by videophone in the Pima County Adult Detention Center, the woman prosecutors dubbed a braggart and a killer—who reportedly boasted she would “kick down doors and change America” with her border vigilante activities—maintained her innocence. Wearing glasses, no makeup, and black-and-white striped jailhouse pajamas, Forde told me she was “extremely saddened” by the verdict. The jury of 11 women and one man also found Forde guilty of attempted murder, two counts of assault, two counts of robbery and one count of burglary. The jury gave a clear victory to prosecutors, who accused Forde of cooking up a plan to steal drugs and money from Raul Flores by gaining entry to his Arivaca, Arizona, mobile home with accomplices on the pretense of being law-enforcement officers in search of fugitives. The verdict was “surreal” to Forde, but she said she took it like a “pro.” As the leader of Minutemen American Defense, or MAD, which she described as a large organization of patriots, she said she’d learned to “take things step by step, revamp, assess, and move forward.” Forde also claimed that she sympathized with Brisenia’s mother, Gina Gonzalez, who was shot in the home invasion but survived, and later identified Forde as the leader of the gang. But then, she had a very bizarre way of expressing it: “I know in her mind,” Forde said of Gonzalez, “I am guilty and she hates me. I know her tragedy is extremely sad.” But on the other hand, she said “people shouldn’t deal drugs if they have kids.” (No drugs were found in the trailer.) Forde told me she’d “lost a daughter” and she knows from experience Gonzalez will feel pain “the rest of her life” and her “tragedy is extremely sad.” “I wish I could say I was sorry it happened,” Forde said. “I am not sorry on my behalf because I didn’t do it.” Forde, of course, is a prodigious liar. Fortunately, the jury figured that out.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media We’ve witnessed some pretty insane things coming out of South Dakota for a long time now including the creepy Bill Napoli and his ‘ Virgin Rant” of 2006 on the only acceptable scenario to allow for an abortion: BILL NAPOLI: A real-life description to me would be a rape victim, brutally raped, savaged. The girl was a virgin. She was religious. She planned on saving her virginity until she was married. She was brutalized and raped, sodomized as bad as you can possibly make it, and is impregnated. I mean, that girl could be so messed up, physically and psychologically, that carrying that child could very well threaten her life. South Dakota is now taking it a step farther in their attempts to outlaw abortion. This one might top the list. A law under consideration in South Dakota would expand the definition of “justifiable homicide” to include killings that are intended to prevent harm to a fetus—a move that could make it legal to kill doctors who perform abortions. The Republican-backed legislation, House Bill 1171 , has passed out of committee on a nine-to-three party-line vote , and is expected to face a floor vote in the state’s GOP-dominated House of Representatives soon. The bill , sponsored by state Rep. Phil Jensen, a committed foe of abortion rights , alters the state’s legal definition of justifiable homicide by adding language stating that a homicide is permissible if committed by a person “while resisting an attempt to harm” that person’s unborn child or the unborn child of that person’s spouse, partner, parent, or child. If the bill passes, it could in theory allow a woman’s father, mother, son, daughter, or husband to kill anyone who tried to provide that woman an abortion—even if she wanted one. — UPDATE: Jensen spoke to Mother Jones on Tuesday morning, after this story was published. He says that he disagrees with this interpretation of the bill. “This simply is to bring consistency to South Dakota statute as it relates to justifiable homicide,” said Jensen in an interview, repeating an argument he made in the committee hearing on the bill last week. “If you look at the code, these codes are dealing with illegal acts. Now, abortion is a legal act. So this has got nothing to do with abortion.” Greg Sargent interviewed Jensen and he used an insane analogy to defend his bill: When I asked Jensen what the purpose of the law was, if its target isn’t abortion providers, he provided the following example: “Say an ex-boyfriend who happens to be father of a baby doesn’t want to pay child support for the next 18 years, and he beats on his ex-girfriend’s abdomen in trying to abort her baby. If she did kill him, it would be justified. She is resisting an effort to murder her unborn child.” I wonder how many of these cases have landed in SD’s court system? I’d like to call this the South Dakota-Scott Roeder bill since Roeder, who murdered Dr. Tiller in Kansas, used a very similar argument as his defense his horrific violent act. He had to kill so others could live. That’s the argument defense attorneys are set to make Dec. 22 for Scott Roeder, the anti-abortion activist accused of shooting abortion doctor George Tiller. This is an about face in strategy from their previous statement back in November when Roeder seemingly confessed to the Associated Press that he murdered the prominent and controversial abortion doctor “because of the necessity defense,” saying that he was defending “preborn children.” Can you image how many Randall Terry Lunatic Zombies would descend upon our nation if justifiable homicide became lawful in this way? PFAW is condemning this bill too.
Continue reading …The far-left's racially-tinged paranoia and hatred of black conservatives rears its ugly head from time to time, often without the notice let alone disapproval of the liberal mainstream media. Hermain Cain is just the latest target. The businessman, radio host , and potential 2012 presidential aspirant was the “minstrel show” entertainment of CPAC 2011, according to Alternet's Chauncey DeVega. [For full disclosure, Cain serves as the national chairman for the Business & Media Institute, a division of the Media Research Center, NewsBusters.org's parent company] DeVega opened his Feb. 12 blog post with a passing swipe at all black conservatives before focusing exclusively on Cain: As you know, I find black garbage pail kids black conservatives fascinating not because of what they believe, but rather because of how they entertain and perform for their White Conservative masters.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media John King brought in former Labor Secretary Robert Reich and the Peterson Group’s David Walker to discuss the president’s proposed cuts to the budget. Of course King couldn’t pass up the opportunity to allow Washington’s resident fear monger in chief on Social Security and Medicare to have some air time here. Robert Reich has an article at the HuffPo where he reiterated many of the same points he attempted to make here on the president’s budget proposal — The Obama Budget: And Why the Coming Debate Over Spending Cuts Has Nothing to Do With Reviving the Economy : President Obama has chosen to fight fire with gasoline. Republicans want America to believe the economy is still lousy because government is too big, and the way to revive the economy is to cut federal spending. Today (Sunday) Republican Speaker John Boehner even refused to rule out a government shut-down if Republicans don’t get the spending cuts they want. Today (Monday) Obama pours gas on the Republican flame by proposing a 2012 federal budget that cuts the federal deficit by $1.1 trillion over 10 years. About $400 billion of this will come from a five-year freeze on non-security discretionary spending — including all sorts of programs for poor and working-class Americans, such as heating assistance to low-income people and community-service block grants. Most of the rest from additional spending cuts, such as grants to states for water treatment plants and other environmental projects and higher interest charges on federal loans to graduate students. That means the Great Debate starting this week will be set by Republicans: Does Obama cut enough spending? How much more will he have cut in order to appease Republicans? If they don’t get the spending cuts they want, will Tea Party Republicans demand a shut-down? Framed this way, the debate invites deficit hawks on both sides of the aisle to criticize Democrats and Republicans alike for failing to take on Social Security and Medicare entitlements. Expect Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson, co-chairs of Obama’s deficit commission, to say the President needs to do more. Expect Alice Rivlin and Paul Ryan, respectively former Clinton hawk and current Republican budget hawk, to tout their plan for chopping Medicare. It’s the wrong debate about the wrong thing at the wrong time. Go read the rest and thank you Robert Reich. I’m sick and tired of seeing our government officials ask us to balance our budget off of the backs of the poor and the middle class instead of the rich being asked to pay more when they can more than afford it. Transcript via CNN below the fold. KING: Gentlemen, I want to try to do something very rare in television and get a yes or no answer to this will question first, then we’ll move on. Can we have a serious conversation about Washington’s spending problems without dealing with Medicare and Social Security? Mr. Secretary, to you first. ROBERT REICH, FMR. LABOR SECRETARY: No. Medicare especially, we have to deal with rising health care costs and that combined with the baby boomers is probably the most serious underlying issue in the budget over the long-term. KING: David Walker? DAVID WALKER, FMR. U.S. COMPTROLLER GENERAL, COME BACK AMERICA INITIATIVE: No. KING: OK, that was good, a one-word answer. That is very rare in television. I appreciate it. (LAUGHTER) And so, then why are we playing this silly game in Washington? And I’ll call it, who goes first. The president refuses, in his budget, to say let’s deal, here’s my proposal on Medicare and Social Security. Because he wants to see what the House Republicans do. The House Republicans, of course, are waiting and they say no, the president has to lead and go first. Why does Washington have to get lost every time in that same game? WALKER: John, the president is the chief executive officer of the United States government. He is also the political quarterback. He has a responsibility to lead, but unfortunately as it relates to our escalating deficits and debt, he punted. KING: Mr. Secretary, did the president punt? REICH: I wouldn’t go so far as to say he punted, John, but I think it is very difficult in this political climate for either the president or for the Republicans to take the lead on dealing with programs, Social Security and Medicare, that are so popular. They are the third rails of American politics, the president did deal with Medicare substantially in the health care bill, that became law, and he paid for it in terms of Republicans accusing him of cutting Medicare. KING: But he’s the president now, Mr. Secretary. I want to stay with you as the Democrat in the conversation. Should he have put forward something? Even if he took his own deficit and debt commission and put that plan forward, and said to the Congress, there are things in this I don’t like, but I’m going to start the conversation by introducing this plan before the United States Congress, so that I can at least force the conversation? REICH: Not on Social Security, but I think, on Medicare, particularly with regard to containing health care costs over the long term. The president could have gone further than he did under his health care law. And he could have continued that conversation, yes, indeed. KING: David Walker, how do you get the conversation out of this, literally, it’s a who goes first game? WALKER: Frankly, neither the president nor the leadership in Congress is dealing with 85 percent of the problem. Which are Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, interest on the debt, et cetera. What we need to do is have a civic education engagement program over the next couple of years to educate the American people on the facts and truth and tough choices. And we need to bring back tough statutory controls as part of the debt ceiling increase that will force these type of choices, starting in about 2013. Because right now there’s no consequence for doing nothing, and doing nothing is driving us over a cliff. KING: Let’s focus now on what is before us. The president budget, Mr. Secretary, puts forward what he calls a cut and invest plan. He says he’s making some tough choices, Republicans clearly, they argue he’s not making many tough choices any way, if any tough choices. But you’ve raised some concerns that you think the president’s proposal, because he has to find some cuts would hurt those who need it most. REICH: Indeed, if he’s just dealing with-as the president is, as are the Republicans-just the nondefense discretionary spending, which is a relatively small portion of the entire federal budget, then we are cutting into home heating oil. We’re cutting into community service block grants. We’re cutting into things that poor people, particularly the most vulnerable members of our society, now at a time in our economy when many of these people are more vulnerable than ever, are going to be hurt, and it’s just not necessary. You don’t want to hurt these people. We’re still coming out of the worst economy, the worst recession we have had since the Great Depression. And we shouldn’t even be putting these things on the table right now. KING: So, David Walker, how do you then, if you accept the Secretary’s argument, how do you cut spending and it has to be some spending in Washington you can cut, without hurting those who at this moment maybe do need that help? WALKER: They really need to focus on the disease, not the symptoms. The symptoms are short-term spending, we need to be able to deal with the deficits that are going to be here after economy recovers, after unemployment gets down. Bring back the tough budget controls, force decisions starting about 2013, that deal with the 85 percent plus of the budget that’s the real problem. KING: And Mr. Secretary, do you see anything on the horizon in terms of your outlook on the economy? A strong economic growth would make these conversations a lot easier to have if the government was taking it a lot more in revenue, number one, it would put the line down on the deficit a little bit. But it would make the other conversations easier. Is that going to happen over the next three or four years, or do they have to deal with this tough environment right now? REICH: My own concern, quite frankly, is that all of this focus on the budget deficit at a time when we are still deep in the throws in the gravitational pull of the great recession-is going to distract us from the job of getting jobs back, getting the economy rapidly growing. It’s not going to grow rapidly, jobs are not going to come back, if we simply cut public spending and also cut taxes. That’s not the way to get jobs back. KING: That a fair point, David? WALKER: Yes, I think we have to separate between the short-term challenge and the structural one. We can actually have more tolerance for deficits and debt in the short-term, if it’s combined with a means forward to deal with the 85 percent plus spending problem, and frankly, to reform our tax system in ways that will make it simpler, fairer, more equitable and generate more revenues. KING: David Walker, Bob Reich, appreciate your time today. WALKER: Good to be with you. Thank you, John.
Continue reading …Mimi Imfurst: The Hardest Working Bitch In Show Business (Mimi Imfurst EPK) New York Times get the FUCKING facts right. Don’t mess with Whoopi Goldberg The Oprah Winfrey Show – 02/11/2011 – Barbara Walters and The View Cast Part 1 Whoopi Goldberg Livid Over Inaccurate New York Times Oscars Article Uh-oh, Whoopi’s mad — and you know what that means: Run for your life! The View’s Whoopi Goldberg is angrier then a Justin Bieber fan at an. Whoopi Goldberg Goes Off On The New York Times On The View … Whoopi Goldberg got heated on The View today over a NY Times article about Black actors and movie awards. I don’t blame her. Apparently, the article. Oh No They Didn't! – Whoopi Goldberg Blasts New York Times for … When Whoopi Goldberg caught sight of an recent New York Times article discussing the lack of racial diversity among this year’s Academy Award nominees, she naturally expected to see her own name. But Goldberg, 55, who won an Oscar for … Whoopi Goldberg responds to 'NYT' rebuttal statement « New Media Blog USA Today, by Arlenne Thompson Posted By: Photoonist- Tue, 15 Feb 2011 05:14:48 GMT Just because the New York Times has clarified their position on a recent story about African’Americans and the Oscars, doesn’t mean that Whoopi Goldberg … Whoopi Goldberg Attacks the NY Times – What's hot right now The piece seemed to list all the black actors who won an Oscar and appeared to leave out Whoopi Goldberg who won for best supporting actress in 1990. Whoopi, having … read more. [Source] theblemish.com … dmanister says: Whoopi Goldberg criticizes ‘New York Times’ for not mentioning her Oscar; http://tinyurl.com/4j6r7m3
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