New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg is facing off with Yale University over efforts by the NYPD to monitor Muslim student groups. He says there is nothing wrong with officers keeping an eye on websites available to the general public. (Feb. 21)
Continue reading …Federal regulators approved new suppliers for two crucial cancer drugs. An oncologist at the NYU Cancer Institute says the move could ease shortages and fears that patients, particularly children with leukemia, would miss lifesaving treatments. (Feb. 21)
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 …[caption id="attachment_245789" align="alignright" width="314" caption="Image source: Sports Grid"] [/caption] ESPN has fired the employee responsible for using a racial slur in its headline about New York Knicks basketball sensation Jeremy Lin, the network said Sunday. The headline “Chink in the Armor” appeared briefly on ESPN’s mobile website after the Knicks lost to the New Orleans Hornets Friday… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Blaze Discovery Date : 16/02/2012 19:37 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …With the majority of smartphone devices, and many regular cellphones, turning toward flat touchscreen technology, you can imagine the challenge these devices could pose for those who are blind. But, several apps and technologies are emerging to make use of these devices easier on those who rely on braille to read or type. One such app, still in its prototype phase, was developed by researchers at Georgia… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Blaze Discovery Date : 15/02/2012 21:42 Number of articles : 6
Continue reading …Monday is election day in the Libyan city of Misrata. This is the city’s first vote since the fall of dictator Moammar Gadhafi. Misrata residents are electing a 28-member local council. (Feb 20)
Continue reading …A year after a deadly earthquake devastated Christchurch, the New Zealand city is slowly and steadily recovering and rebuilding. Many say the disaster has brought the community closer together. (Feb. 20)
Continue reading …There’s no shortcut: The only way police departments respond to the community is when the community rises up. Unfortunately, far too often, people think expressing your outrage online is equivalent to showing up at your town council meetings. It isn’t. Leaders will go as far as they think they can go without suffering public backlash: Relations between Oakland police and the city’s residents have never been good, which is one reason why the department issued body-mounted cameras to its officers last year. The goal was to increase accountability, which is important for a department that is facing a federal takeover this March. However, the above video, which shows several officers with their body-mounted cameras turned off – a departmental violation – is just the latest example of Oakland police officers not wanting any accountability.The video is also a clear demonstration of just how high tensions are between Oakland police and citizens. The video was produced by Jacob Crawford and journalist Ali Winston from footage obtained during the January 28th demonstration that included activists attempting to break into city hall. “When the cameras are turned on, you see a green light,” said Crawford, a longtime Cop Watch activist whom I wrote about in 2010 after he was assaulted for attempting to video record a cop.“When the cameras are turned off, they just look like a pager.”
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