Click here to view this media In all the discussion of the horrific and tragic shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in Arizona today, let’s not forget the other victims, particularly Federal Judge John Roll , who, as Dave Weigel notes was also the victim of numerous death threats for his role in a ruling involving ranchers and immigrants: Hundreds of threats cascaded into the chambers of John M. Roll, the chief U.S. district judge in Arizona, in February after he allowed a lawsuit filed by illegal immigrants against a rancher to go forward. “They cursed him out, threatened to kill his family, said they’d come and take care of him. They really wanted him dead,” said a law enforcement official who heard the calls — which came from as far as Richmond and Baltimore — but spoke on condition of anonymity because no one has been charged. David Gonzales, the U.S. marshal in Arizona, said deputies went online and found Roll’s home address posted on a Web site containing threatening comments. They put the judge under 24-hour protection for about a month, guarding his home in a secluded area just outside Tucson, screening his mail and escorting him to court, to the gym and to Mass. “Some deputies went to church more in a week than they had in their lives,” Gonzales said. It certainly raises the possibility that Roll was also a secondary target of the shooter (witnesses say he clearly targeted Giffords). More on Roll here . We’re still trying to obtain a full list of the names of the victims of today’s tragedy. Here’s what we have so far, via the the HuffPo : Giffords spokesman C.J. Karamargin said three Giffords staffers were shot in the attack. One died, and the other two are expected to survive. Gabe Zimmerman, a former social worker who served as Giffords’ director of community outreach, died. According to CNN, one of the victims pronounced dead at the hospital was a 9-year-old girl: In all, six people died and 12 were wounded in the shooting, including U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Arizona, according to Rick Kastigar, bureau chief for the Pima County Sheriff’s Department. President Barack Obama later said Chief Judge John Roll of the U.S. District Court for Arizona was among the dead. A 9-year-old girl also died in the attack, according to authorities. The child, whose identity had not been released, was pronounced dead at a hospital. We’ll update as the names become available.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The Tucson Police Department have identified Jared Lee Loughner as the shooter in custody in today’s shooting of Rep. Giffords and Federal Judge Roll. I’ve posted a video above posted to YouTube last month by user ” Classitup10 “, who identifies himself as Jared Lee Loughner, resident of Tucson, Arizona. Here’s a screen shot of his YouTube profile: enlarge Loughner spends a lot of words in his video talking about mind control and currency, which carries echoes of Glenn Beck’s rhetoric , particularly with regard to currency and revolution. The cable news stations, including MSNBC, are already trying to spin him as a “loner” who was surely not influenced by anything or anyone other than his own thought life. Yeah, right. Meanwhile, ten victims are in the hospital, five in critical condition (including Rep. Giffords). There are six fatalities, including a nine-year old child and a Federal judge. If any “adult conversations” are to be had, I’d say they should center around the impact of a constant drumbeat of violent rhetoric on the airwaves, the halls of government, and the Internet. I’ll update this with more information as I find it. Update #1: Here’s a link to a backgrounder on Loughner. The more info that emerges, the more I’m convinced the real crime here is ignoring cries for help from people who do not appear to be living in reality. It certainly looks as though he was retreating into a world where most of us do not live.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media This is video of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords on MSNBC on March 25, 2010, after her offices were vandalized, talking about the need for civility in our democratic discourse. There will be a lot of hand-wringing in the coming days over the shooting of Rep. Giffords this morning at a constituent event — some of it, almost certainly, from the folks at Fox, who will wonder aloud how this kind of thing could happen. It can happen, in fact, because conservatives so thoughtlessly and readily use violent eliminationist rhetoric when talking about “liberals” (to wit: anyone who is not a conservative). They will adamantly deny it, of course, but the cold reality is that this kind of talk creates permission for angry and violent people to act it out. Example A: This summer, Pima County Republicans held a “target shoot” event in support of her teabagging opponent, as David Safier at Blogs for Arizona noted at the time: enlarge There’s nothing wrong with having a gun-themed event, if that’s what you want to do. Count me out, but if you want to meet at a shooting range instead of a bowling alley or a baseball stadium, that’s your right and your privilege. There’s also nothing wrong with having a “Help remove Gabrielle Giffords” event. That’s what the R candidates in CD-8 are trying to do. But to put it all together, starting with “Get on Target,” moving to “remove Gabrielle Giffords,” then finishing with “Shoot a fully automatic M16″ . . . That goes way beyond cute and clever and moves into a frightening linkage between shooting guns and removing Giffords. Giffords, as she explained in the video above, And Logan warned that it was just a matter of time before we saw this kind of violence last spring, when a gun was found after a Gifford event. We don’t yet know why the shooter — identified as a 22-year-old man named Jared Laughner — shot Giffords and a number of other people; we’ll learn more as the day progresses. But it’s impossible to survey the events so far and not come to the preliminary conclusion that this was yet another awful act inspired by right-wing hate rhetoric. I warned against precisely this kind of outcome in my book, The Eliminationists: How Hate Talk Radicalized the American Right . Events like this one, explained then, reflect a particular trend that has manifested itself with increasing intensity in the past decade: the positing of elimination as the solution to political disagreement. Rather than engaging in a dialogue over political and cultural issues, one side simply dehumanizes its opponents and suggests, and at times demands, their excision. This tendency is almost singularly peculiar to the American Right and manifests itself in many venues: on radio talk shows and in political speeches, in bestselling books and babbling blogs. Most of all, we can feel it on the ground: in our everyday lives, in our encounters, big and small, with each other. When the conservative movement’s True Believers are fed a steady diet of extraordinary warnings intended to induce a paranoiac, panicked fear — They’re Destroying America! They Want to End Your Liberty! Health Care Reform is the End of America! — and simultaneously fed a diet of suggestions that the solution is simply to do away with them (see Sean Hannity’s recent bit of eliminationist “humor” ), then what other outcome should you expect? People are acting out in an eliminationist manner because they have been inundated with, and have naturally internalized, a broad range of eliminationist ideas and talking points. Such speech is being bandied about in every cultural bandwidth—from talk radio, to the local press and in letters to the editor, to blogs and national mainstream media. I’ve also explained the dynamic at work here : The critical components that distinguish irresponsible free speech from responsible are interworking pieces: whether it is intended to harm by scapegoating or demonizing, and whether or not it is provably false. In the Goldmark case, the things the Duck Club told Rice not only demonized the Goldmarks, but they were also things that were simply not true — though the tellers wished ardently that they were, they were purely concoctions of their fevered imaginations. This is true of so much far-right wingnuttery — the “Birther” conspiracy theories, the FEMA-camp claims, the “constitutionalist” theories about taxation and the Federal Reserve, to list just a few examples — and yet people believe them anyway. This rhetoric also acts as a kind of wedge between the people who absorb it and the real world. There is always a kind of cognitive dissonance that arises from believing things that are provably untrue, and people who begin to fanatically cling to beliefs that do not comport with reality find themselves increasingly willing to buy into other similarly unhinged beliefs. For those who are already unhinged, the effects are particularly toxic. All of these theories, you’ll observe, serve the explicit purpose of supporting a scapegoating narrative. And a number of them have been featured in some shape, form, or fashion, in the mainstream public discourse because they have been presented seriously for discussion by various right-wing talking heads, most notably Glenn Beck and Lou Dobbs. But pointing out their ethical and moral culpability inevitably means that they immediately blame it on the “crazy” people, and who can take responsibility for “crazy” people? Back when Sarah Palin was targeting Democrats by urging her followers to “lock and load” and placing targets on a map for specific Democrats — one of them being Giffords — she denied that there was anything wrong with that. Today, that graphic (which Danny Schecter has preserved) has been taken down. A little for that, dontcha think?
Continue reading …enlarge For two years conservatives indulged themselves in unheard-of dogwhistle campaigns against this young African-American President while enlightened liberals pointed it out in a mild, somewhat derisive fashion but with little outrage. Now, in the aftermath of the midterm ‘shellacking’, a New Confederacy is rising with the assistance of the tea party and John Birchers, and it’s getting enough traction in Congress to do real damage.The scary part? It’s working. Fact: We are NOT living in a post-racial society. Not on the liberal side, and not on the conservative side. As nice as it is to think that we’ve transcended race now that we have a smart, well-educated mixed-race President, we haven’t at all. Racial divides are bigger and nastier than ever. The right exploits them; the left tries to ignore them. But they exist. Dave and John wrote about this in their book “Over the Cliff: How Obama’s Election Drove the American Right Insane” . The chapter on Mad Hatters and March Hares describes the series of dog whistles that birthed today’s Tea party. It’s not news to anyone paying attention, but it carries a subliminal and destructive message to those who are not. Will Bunch hit on the same themes in his latest book, “The Backlash” , too. When I asked him directly about race as a motivating factor, he answered with this: Race is a huge motivator. There’s been a lot of talk in the early reviews about ways in which “The Backlash” is perhaps understanding of the right-wing rank and file, but I want to be clear — racism of various stripes is a huge motivator, which I find disturbing and not excusable. A big driver of the movement is cultural factors — people are worried about a future in which America is a “non-white majority” nation, and media and pols are exploiting that fear . Barack Obama was the exclamation mark — that change was here in 2008 and not in 2050 when whites are predicted to be a minority. Race issues are doing great harm to Democrats and the progressive movement So far I’ve addressed the right wing racists. But let’s look at what race is doing on the left. The Atlantic reports a disturbing trend: From every angle, the exit-poll results reveal a new color line: a consistent chasm between the attitudes of whites and minorities. The gap begins with preferences in the election. After two years of a punishing recession, minority support for House Democrats sagged in this election to the lowest level recorded by exit polls in the past two decades, according to calculations that Alan Abramowitz, a political scientist at Emory University, provided to National Journal. Despite a drop in minority voters’ support for Democrats, it still averaged 73% across the board. However, white voters fled the Democratic party in droves. Meanwhile, Republicans, with their 60 percent showing, notched the party’s best congressional result among white voters in the history of modern polling. Media exit polls conducted by Edison Research and its predecessors have been tracking congressional elections for about three decades. In no previous exit poll had Republicans reached 60 percent of the white vote in House races. There were specific reasons for the exodus, too. First among those was Obama’s performance. Exactly 75 percent of minority voters said they approved; only 22 percent said they disapproved. Among white voters, just 35 percent approved of the president’s performance, while 65 percent disapproved; a head-turning 49 percent of whites said they strongly disapproved. (Those whites voted Republican last fall by a ratio of 18-to-1.) So white voters cut and ran for the Republican party not because Obama wasn’t liberal enough, but because he was perceived as too liberal for so-called liberal white voters. Why is that? Here are some answers, and they all draw upon racial divides and fears. The racial gulf was similar when voters were asked whether they believed that Obama’s policies would help the nation in the long run. By 70 percent to 22 percent, minorities said yes; by 61 percent to 34 percent, whites said no. On election night, much attention focused on the exit-poll result that showed voters divided almost exactly in half on whether Congress should repeal the comprehensive health care reform legislation that Obama signed last year or should preserve or even expand it. But that convergence obscured a profound racial contrast. The vast majority of minority voters said they wanted lawmakers to expand the health care law (54 percent) or maintain it in its current form (16 percent), while only 24 percent said they wanted Congress to repeal it. Among white voters, the sentiments were almost inverted: 56 percent said that lawmakers should repeal the law, while much smaller groups wanted them to expand it (23 percent) or leave it alone (just 16 percent). When you hear Republicans going on about how voters litigated health care reform repeal in November, they’re really saying white voters litigated health care reform repeal. And white voters are the only ones who count in their eyes. But wait, there’s more: Minorities were almost exactly twice as likely as whites to say that life would be better for the next generation than for their own; whites were considerably more likely to say that it would be more difficult. And on a question measuring bedrock beliefs about the role of government, the two racial groups again registered almost mirror-image preferences. Sixty percent of minorities said that government should be doing more to solve problems; 63 percent of whites said that government is doing too many things that would be better left to businesses and individuals. And which white voters are they losing? Blue collar workers, in droves. Democrats have been losing support among blue-collar white voters since the 1960s, but in this election, they hit one of their lowest points ever. In House campaigns, the exit poll found, noncollege whites preferred Republicans by nearly 2-to-1 with virtually no gender gap : White working-class women–the so-called waitress moms–gave Republicans almost exactly as many of their votes as blue-collar men did. These blue-collar whites expressed profound resistance to Obama and his agenda. Just 30 percent of them said they approved of the president’s job performance (compared with 69 percent who disapproved). Two-thirds of them said that government is doing too many things. An approximately equal number said that Obama’s agenda will hurt the country over the long term. Only about one-fifth of these voters said that the stimulus had helped the economy, and 57 percent wanted to repeal the health care law–even though they are uninsured at much higher rates than whites with more advanced education. While I’m certain that the crummy economy and Fox News had something to do with this, there is an inescapable race theme running through these numbers that cannot and should not be ignored. The Constitution and the New Confederacy The US Constitution will continue to be what conservatives use as their bedrock for every bad thing they do to this country. However, even for conservatives, it’s an imperfect document. Conservatives want desperately to defeat the equal protection clause, the general welfare clause, and anything that promotes equality between people of color and the white (whether blue-collar or white-collar) aristocracy. The Conservative US Constitution looks remarkably like the Confederate States Constitution drawn up in 1861. The Confederate States’ Constitution is quite similar to the US Constitution, except that it contains no reference to the “general welfare” of citizens, includes a reference to the “almighty God”, has some slight differences with regard to impeachment, term limits and carries a far deeper emphasis on states’ rights. Some interesting language additions: Amended Article 1 Sec. 1 Clause 1 to prohibit persons “of foreign birth” who were “not a citizen of the Confederate States” from voting “for any officer, civil or political, State or Federal .”[1] And, of course, the explicit allowance for slave ownership: No bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law denying or impairing the right of property in negro slaves shall be passed [by Congress] There are other provisions relating to slave ownership and limiting the importation of slaves to those slaves already in the Confederate states. A side-by-side comparison of the two documents reads a lot like today’s Tea Party manifestos. If today’s conservatives had an opportunity to rewrite the US Constitution in their own ideal, it would look much like the constitution drafted by Southern slave states in 1861 when they seceded. Race issues aren’t going away. Will progressives address them in time? Our big-tent Progressive/Liberal/Democratic Party movement has always been a coalition of competing interests, but race should be one we can deal with and coalesce around. I can’t imagine us being less passionate about equal rights based on race than we are passionate about gay or women’s rights. So why are we losing the message here? In then-candidate Obama’s March, 2008 race speech , he said this: Of course, the answer to the slavery question was already embedded within our Constitution – a Constitution that had at is very core the ideal of equal citizenship under the law; a Constitution that promised its people liberty, and justice, and a union that could be and should be perfected over time . And yet words on a parchment would not be enough to deliver slaves from bondage, or provide men and women of every color and creed their full rights and obligations as citizens of the United States. What would be needed were Americans in successive generations who were willing to do their part – through protests and struggle, on the streets and in the courts, through a civil war and civil disobedience and always at great risk – to narrow that gap between the promise of our ideals and the reality of their time. This was one of the tasks we set forth at the beginning of this campaign – to continue the long march of those who came before us, a march for a more just, more equal, more free, more caring and more prosperous America . I chose to run for the presidency at this moment in history because I believe deeply that we cannot solve the challenges of our time unless we solve them together – unless we perfect our union by understanding that we may have different stories, but we hold common hopes; that we may not look the same and we may not have come from the same place, but we all want to move in the same direction – towards a better future for our children and our grandchildren. How will we struggle against the rise of the New Confederacy? We’re seeing it in action every day on the floor of the House. The Senate is yet to come. I see this time as pivotal not only politically, but historically. We either fight for equality for all while rejecting and identifying racism in our media, politics and lives, or else we’re surrendering control to the power brokers who not only wish to separate us into haves and have-nots, but also by color and ethnicity until we’re so fractured we’re rendered ineffective.
Continue reading …On the morning before NPR announced its internal review of its leftist purge of Juan Williams for appearing on The O'Reilly Factor, media reporter David Folkenflik was “reporting” that the problem with the American news media is its painful lack of bias. Come again? “Mainstream news reporters don't tell you what they think enough of the time.” That came from the star of the Folkenflik story, journalism professor Jay Rosen, a favorite of Bill Moyers . On the website, the story was headlined: “American Media's True Ideology? Avoiding One.” Anchor Steve Inskeep began: Yesterday on this program, we heard a story from London about the boisterous world of British newspapers and how they, unlike their American counterparts, openly embrace a point of view. Today, NPR media correspondent David Folkenflik brings us an influential media critic who argues that mainstream American journalists do cling to their own ideology. It's not exactly on the right, not exactly on the left. He calls it the voice from nowhere.” It's not hard to imagine that Jay Rosen is “influential” in liberal media circles when he tells them they're not being liberal enough for him. Folkenflik set up his theory and his hopes and dreams for more bias: read more
Continue reading …Things may have been looking bleak for Microsoft’s upcoming version of Windows Home Server , dubbed ” Vail ,” when HP announced that it was dropping the OS in favor of WebOS last month, but Microsoft has now given it a boost of confidence that should put any rumors of its death to rest. The company is showing off an add-in for Vail that will let you manage alerts on your Windows Phone 7 phone, access media stored on your home server, and in turn send pictures stored on your phone to your server (but not other media, apparently). Still no firm word on a release, but Microsoft says it will available “soon.” Hit up the source link below for Microsoft’s complete walkthrough of the app. Microsoft shows off Home Server ‘Vail’ app for Windows Phone 7 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 22:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Where do you think Judy Miller thought she might be working in 2011 back in 2002, when she won her Pulitzer Prize while working for the New York Times? Maybe she figured she’d still be at the Times while releasing a new book? How about a show on CNN? She could have moved over to a magazine like Time , the New Yorker or the Washington Post . If times got tough she might have ended up at the Weekly Standard or, in today’s world, something like The Daily Beast . Well, if that’s what she figured, she’d be oh so wrong. Can you imagine how much I laughed my ass off when I learned that she took a job with Newsmax? Judith Miller, the former New York Times reporter, current Fox News contributor and featured player in the Valerie Plame scandal, is back in print journalism. Miller has been hired by NewsMax , the conservative news magazine, as a contributing writer. NewsMax, which loves their Birthers, also posts articles that hope for the U.S. military to overthrow President Obama. Really, they’re another version of WorldNutDaily. The only difference is that, as they did with the military-coup piece , NewsMax often later takes down its wingnuttery and scrubs the pieces from their site, as if to cover the trail. But we have them still in our personal archives. Here are some headlines from NewsMaxes past, only some of which still exist in the NewsMax archives: Turning the Y2K Glitch Into Global Prosperity” (Oct. 28, 1998). Excerpt: “How can any sheriff’s department serve and protect the citizenry if hordes of thirsty and hungry people are in near panic while waiting for the return of electricity to the power grid? No sheriff’s department can keep law and order under these conditions.” “Analysis: Internet Buzzes with Theories Surrounding Y2K Problem” (Christopher Ruddy, June 15, 1998). Excerpt: “[Gary] North’s appearance led me to his home page, and from there to other Y2K sites. What I found was scary.” “Waco Linked To Foster’s Death: Widow,” August 30, 1999. {Version available here .] When Militias Are Outlawed, Only Outlaws Will Have Militias (November 10, 1999) Congressman Fears Police State, Says Waco Expert May Have Been Murdered (Tuesday, May 30, 2000) “The Mexican Invasion”, by Wilson C. Lucom (Monday, July 11, 2005). Excerpt: “The United States is being invaded by Mexico, and President Bush is allowing it to happen. Mexico will one day take over the United States, through voting, if nothing is done to stop the invasion by Mexican illegals.” [Version can be found here (nativist site).] It’s your classic conspiracy-theory tabloid, only on the Internet. And they’ve made a ton of dough off selling this garbage to right-wing suckers. I gather NewsMax is probably paying Judy Miller well, but I doubt she thought she’d be catering to the John Birch Society crowd in her heyday. (Maybe we’ll see one of those NewsMax polls with Judy as the subject.) Fox News gave her a gig for being a good soldier for the conservative cause and George Bush, so that wasn’t shocking, but let’s face it. She does belong with Dick Morris. The above video was posted on C&L 02/10/2005. Judy was on Larry King Thursday night, and gave a virtuoso performance in denial. With a sophomoric grin and a delusional account of what happened to her at the NY Times, Judy was a talking point of the battered soul. The victim in all of this. She was stunned and saddened over her perceived attacks by Maureen Dowd in a column called Woman of Mass Destruction against her great character. After all, it was only a few stories that were slightly off in her mind after twenty-eight years of reporting. The WMD reports were a mere blip on the screen based on slightly faulty intelligence. It could happen to anyone right-Judy? Miller was particularly annoyed at that pesky word “‘entanglement,” that Bill Keller used. Let’s clear that up, after all what’s more important- a war that you helped promote, helping your pal Scooter Libby who’s involved in outing a CIA agent or a single expression? She refused to answer any questions about Scooter’s upcoming case even though she is legally allowed to. So how are the Aspens this time of year? Oh, and she had a very proper relation with Scooter Libby.
Continue reading …Verizon is sharing its grand vision of the future of TV at CES this year which not only includes FiOS TV programming on its set-tops and iPads, but also via Blu-ray players, game consoles, and even directly on the TV without any tethered box at all. And unlike other providers , Verizon isn’t taking the media server approach because it doesn’t scale. The demo at the at CES’s bloggers lounge included all four screens with a Samsung Blu-ray player’s app delivering both traditional live TV, DVR’d content and video-on-demand — in this case the DVR content was being streamed from a FiOS DVR, but the device could have internal storage. Because this content is to be delivered via IP instead of QAM , there’s the chance that this programming could be delivered everywhere and to any screen (rights issues aside of course). That’s the good news, the (potentially) bad news is that all this great content will only be delivered via Verizon’s software, so if you’re a TiVo or Media Center guy, no programming for you. We still stick by the idea that true inovation will only come when cable customers can chose both their hardware and their software , but we you can bet we’ll bite our tongue and enjoy some HD when we are not standing on our soap box. Gallery: Verizon FiOS TV on a Blu-ray player Verizon intends to take its FiOS TV to every box, maybe even everywhere originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 14:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Bill O’Reilly’s show is becoming a real snoozefest these days, which may be why I glazed over his discussion of religion with David Silverman of American Atheists earlier this week, which mostly entailed O’Reilly accusing atheists of “insulting” believers by running ads calling religion a “scam.” Fortunately, Nicholas Graham at the HuffPo has more patience than I and happened to notice this little exchange: O’REILLY: I’ll tell you why [religion's] not a scam, in my opinion: tide goes in, tide goes out. Never a miscommunication. You can’t explain that. SILVERMAN: Tide goes in, tide goes out? O’REILLY: See, the water, the tide comes in and it goes out, Mr. Silverman. It always comes in, and always goes out. You can’t explain that. Seriously? I mean, we knew that Bill O’Reilly was fond of pushing around his right-wing prejudices as conventional wisdom, and he’s displayed ignorant buffoonery on many an occasion. But this is epic ignorance, the kind you really don’t expect from a major TV news anchor. Hell, I bet even Glenn Beck knows that the tides are created by lunar cycles. So, yes, Bill, we can explain that. Quite scientifically and quite precisely, in fact. From Wikipedia : Tides are the rise and fall of sea levels caused by the combined effects of the gravitational forces exerted by the Moon and the Sun and the rotation of the Earth. Most places in the ocean usually experience two high tides and two low tides each day (semidiurnal tide), but some locations experience only one high and one low tide each day (diurnal tide). The times and amplitude of the tides at the coast are influenced by the alignment of the Sun and Moon, by the pattern of tides in the deep ocean (see figure 4) and by the shape of the coastline and near-shore bathymetry. Most coastal areas experience two high and two low tides per day. The gravitational effect of the Moon on the surface of the Earth is the same when it is directly overhead as when it is directly underfoot. The Moon orbits the Earth in the same direction the Earth rotates on its axis, so it takes slightly more than a day—about 24 hours and 50 minutes—for the Moon to return to the same location in the sky. During this time, it has passed overhead once and underfoot once, so in many places the period of strongest tidal forcing is 12 hours and 25 minutes. The high tides do not necessarily occur when the Moon is overhead or underfoot, but the period of the forcing still determines the time between high tides. The Sun also exerts on the Earth a gravitational attraction which results in a (less powerful) secondary tidal effect. When the Earth, Moon and Sun are approximately aligned, these two tidal effects reinforce one another, resulting in higher highs and lower lows. This alignment occurs approximately twice a month (at the full moon and new moon). These recurring extreme tides are termed spring tides. Tides with the smallest range are termed neap tides (occurring around the first and last quarter moons). We’ve known about this for some time, Bill. In fact, Isaac Newton famously first accurately described and predicted tides by lunar cycles in the Principia, published in 1687. Next from O’Reilly: The calendar is proof that God exists and religion is not a scam. You can’t explain why we have 365 days every year, can you?
Continue reading …Appearing on FNC's Fox & Friends on Friday, NewsBusters publisher and Media Research Center president Brent Bozell reacted to the resignation of National Public Radio executive Ellen Weiss and credited the incoming Republican Congress: “NPR is hearing footsteps, their hearing the footsteps of Republicans, who are saying…what in the world are we doing spending hundreds of millions of dollars a year on this network that is completely unnecessary.” As NewsBusters' Tim Graham earlier reported , an internal review of NPR's firing of news analyst and Fox News contributor Juan Williams led to Weiss being forced out.
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