Openly gay MSNBC anchor Thomas Roberts is aggressively using his daily soapbox for gay activism. On Friday morning, Roberts was outraged with the rest of the left that the Republican candidates did not denounce the boos after openly gay soldier Thomas Hill asked on video if the Republicans would “circumvent the progress that has been made” for gays if elected. No one seems to question why Fox News and Megyn Kelly would pluck this question out of thousands of submissions and throw it directly at Rick Santorum. It seems like they were wearing a bracelet asking “What Would CNN Do?” Roberts, speaking very calmly, said something very wild. These Republican candidates would like to build a time machine and go back to when women couldn't vote and slavery was cool: THOMAS ROBERTS: And the [Santorum] phrase of “social experimentation.” I get out of all of these things that many of these candidates would rather take legislation to build a time machine and go back in time to where, uh, we had, you know, no women voting, slavery was cool. I mean, it's just kind of ridiculous. CHRIS HAYES: Well — I also thought was interesting about the response, he seemed to imply there is no sex in the armed forces. Basically saying, this is — everybody should be — ROBERTS: Nothing happens on shore leave. HAYES: Nothing happens in the armed forces. And it was like, really? Have you talked to to any members who served? ROBERTS: Been to Fleet Week in New York? Notice how Hayes tried not to agree with the crazy talk and changed the subject. Roberts began the segment by disdaining the trend of “strange crowd reactions and candidate responses” in GOP debates: ROBERTS: So, boos from the crowd, the debate crowd last night after hearing from a service member protecting our nation, followed by that response. Well, everybody really failing to thank him for serving our country. It’s just the latest in the series of strange crowd reactions and candidate responses in these Republican debates. Let's bring in Chris Hayes….What is your reaction? The audience response, especially last night. We’re on the heels of the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell. Bravely, courageously, this person fighting in Iraq submits that question, publicly asks it of the panelists, you know, the GOP hopefuls, and Santorum — that’s his response. Hayes agreed, and then expressed admiration for how the soldier was “jacked.” Roberts returned to his point: ROBERTS: But It was a missed opportunity for a lot of people to stand up because they love to stand and wave their military support all the time and funding for our military. This was a missed opportunity. Hayes agreed, and said the Republican base is still “very hung up on cultural issues.” As if MSNBC and Thomas Roberts are not.
Continue reading …Openly gay MSNBC anchor Thomas Roberts is aggressively using his daily soapbox for gay activism. On Friday morning, Roberts was outraged with the rest of the left that the Republican candidates did not denounce the boos after openly gay soldier Thomas Hill asked on video if the Republicans would “circumvent the progress that has been made” for gays if elected. No one seems to question why Fox News and Megyn Kelly would pluck this question out of thousands of submissions and throw it directly at Rick Santorum. It seems like they were wearing a bracelet asking “What Would CNN Do?” Roberts, speaking very calmly, said something very wild. These Republican candidates would like to build a time machine and go back to when women couldn't vote and slavery was cool: THOMAS ROBERTS: And the [Santorum] phrase of “social experimentation.” I get out of all of these things that many of these candidates would rather take legislation to build a time machine and go back in time to where, uh, we had, you know, no women voting, slavery was cool. I mean, it's just kind of ridiculous. CHRIS HAYES: Well — I also thought was interesting about the response, he seemed to imply there is no sex in the armed forces. Basically saying, this is — everybody should be — ROBERTS: Nothing happens on shore leave. HAYES: Nothing happens in the armed forces. And it was like, really? Have you talked to to any members who served? ROBERTS: Been to Fleet Week in New York? Notice how Hayes tried not to agree with the crazy talk and changed the subject. Roberts began the segment by disdaining the trend of “strange crowd reactions and candidate responses” in GOP debates: ROBERTS: So, boos from the crowd, the debate crowd last night after hearing from a service member protecting our nation, followed by that response. Well, everybody really failing to thank him for serving our country. It’s just the latest in the series of strange crowd reactions and candidate responses in these Republican debates. Let's bring in Chris Hayes….What is your reaction? The audience response, especially last night. We’re on the heels of the repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell. Bravely, courageously, this person fighting in Iraq submits that question, publicly asks it of the panelists, you know, the GOP hopefuls, and Santorum — that’s his response. Hayes agreed, and then expressed admiration for how the soldier was “jacked.” Roberts returned to his point: ROBERTS: But It was a missed opportunity for a lot of people to stand up because they love to stand and wave their military support all the time and funding for our military. This was a missed opportunity. Hayes agreed, and said the Republican base is still “very hung up on cultural issues.” As if MSNBC and Thomas Roberts are not.
Continue reading …We kind of don’t even know where to start these days! We’ve all heard about how technology expands exponentially, and this week feels like we are really getting cubed…or something. From the meta to the macro to the micro it was a silly-crazy week, and as hard as it was we did end up starting the podcast and tried to round it all up for you as best we could. It’s the Engadget Podcast, the only way we can do it. Host: Tim Stevens, Brian Heater Guest: Dana Wollman Producer: Trent Wolbe Music: Funky Town 01:20 – Introducing Engadget Distro! 03:50 – Review score review 06:44 – The Engadget Show is live, here at 6:00PM ET! (update: we’re done!) 09:15 – HP names Meg Whitman new President and CEO, gives Leo Apotheker the boot 17:42 – Facebook partners up to bring music, news and videos to your profile through Open Graph (video) 18:40 – Facebook outs Timeline, gives your profile page a new outfit (video) 25:15 – Color abandons app independence for Facebook, hopes you’ll pay someone a ‘visit’ 29:48 – HTC Rhyme official: 3G, 3.7-inch display, single-core CPU, headed to Verizon for $199 on contract 38:48 – HTC Sensation XE with Beats Audio, we go ears-on (video) 40:10 – HP’s unreleased white TouchPad and Pre 3 for AT&T (hands-on video) 42:37 – A week with Google Wallet (video) 45:00 – Amazon lets you check out Kindle books from library websites, asks you to shush yourself at home 50:43 – Report: Apple to hold media event on October 4th, Tim Cook to unveil iPhone 5 53:47 – Listener questions Hear the podcast Subscribe to the podcast [ iTunes ] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in iTunes (enhanced AAC). [ RSS MP3 ] Add the Engadget Podcast feed (in MP3) to your RSS aggregator and have the show delivered automatically. [ RSS AAC ] Add the Engadget Podcast feed (in enhanced AAC) to your RSS aggregator. [ Zune ] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in the Zune Marketplace Download the podcast LISTEN (MP3) LISTEN (AAC) Contact the podcast Send your questions to @tim_stevens . Leave us a voicemail: (423) 438-3005 (GADGET-3005) E-mail us: podcast at engadget dot com Twitter: @bheater , @timstevens , @danawollman Filed under: Podcasts Engadget Podcast 257 – 09.23.2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 23 Sep 2011 13:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …A spending showdown in Congress is prompting a partisan rift so raw that an effort to help disaster victims has become mired in disputes over jobs, the national debt and the other contentious issues. (Sept. 23)
Continue reading …A baby leopard cub was presented to the public for the first time on Thursday at Rome’s Bioparco zoo. A dark, shaky video showed the first shots of the Iranian leopard cub, born on September 1 at the zoo. (Sept. 23)
Continue reading …In a Thursday morning post setting the table for last night’s Republican presidential debate in Orlando, New York Times chief “Caucus” blog reporter Michael Shear became the latest Timesman to falsely finger the Tea Party audience at a CNN debate last week as cheering on the prospect of letting a hypothetical man die for lack of health insurance. Shear listed six things to watch for in Orlando last night. The last item: Give me liberty or… This debate will feature two fierce libertarians — Gary Johnson and Ron Paul — which should make for some interesting moments. Mr. Johnson has been excluded from most of the recent debates because of his low standing in the polls, but Fox News organizers said he managed to exceed 1 percent in five recent polls, the minimum standard they set for participation. Mr. Johnson, a former New Mexico governor, is probably best known for his support of the legalization of marijuana and other drugs — something Mr. Paul has also supported — so that issue is likely to re-emerge in this debate. And following the last debate, when Mr. Paul was asked whether a young man without health insurance should be left to go without treatment — which was greeted with some chants of “let him die” from the crowd — expect more questions along these lines. Has anyone at the Times actually watched the debate clip? It was debate moderator Wolf Blitzer who actually used the words “let him die,” when asking candidate Ron Paul a loaded question about letting a hypothetical man die for lack of health insurance. There is no auditory evidence anyone at all in the crowd shouted such a thing, much less enough people to form a constant “chant.” Columnist Paul Krugman on September 16 also falsely claimed “the crowd erupted with cheers and shouts of ‘Yeah!’” after Blitzer pressed Paul on the case of the hypothetical young man without health insurance, asking whether “society should just let him die.” Washington Post blogger Erik Wemple fact-checked the horrified liberal response of commentators like Krugman. This is how Wemple described what happened after debate host Wolf Blitzer raised his inflammatory question ( you can watch the clip at the Post ). A few jeers? Yes. Heckles? No question. “Audience” cheers? No way. The voices that can be heard in the video — perhaps two or three of them — don’t constitute an “audience” reaction. There were 1,100 people in the crowd. The episode is the clumsy work of a few loons or meatheads in the audience.
Continue reading …In Case You Missed It of the Day: It seems every GOP debate is determined to have that one moment sheer callousness that makes you fret for humanity’s future — and last night’s FOX News/Google debate did not disappoint. Moderator Megyn Kelly introduced a YouTube question about “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” from a now-openly-gay soldier serving his country in Iraq, after which several audience members could… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 23/09/2011 06:38 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …In Case You Missed It of the Day: It seems every GOP debate is determined to have that one moment sheer callousness that makes you fret for humanity’s future — and last night’s FOX News/Google debate did not disappoint. Moderator Megyn Kelly introduced a YouTube question about “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” from a now-openly-gay soldier serving his country in Iraq, after which several audience members could… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 23/09/2011 06:38 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas formally submits an application for statehood to UN chief Ban Ki-moon. (Sept. 23)
Continue reading …Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas formally submits an application for statehood to UN chief Ban Ki-moon. (Sept. 23)
Continue reading …