ABIDJAN: About 14,000 refugees have fled Ivory Coast to seek refuge in eastern Liberia after post-election violence, the United Nations refugee agency said on Saturday. The standoff…
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Happy holidays everyone and here’s your weekly podcast from The Professional Left, our own Driftglass and Bluegal . You can listen to the archives at http://professionalleft.blogspot.com/ and make a donation there if you’d like to help keep these going and Bluegal also has a button available at her Cafe Press store which allows you to contribute to the podcast as well. Have a great weekend everybody and we look forward to hearing about your experiences with your wingnut relatives this holiday season as well.
Continue reading …A burqa-clad woman suicide bomber in Pakistan lobbed hand grenades, then detonated her explosive belt among a crowd at an aid centre Saturday, killing at least 45 people in the latest strike against the authorities’ control over the key tribal region bordering Afghanistan. Police…
Continue reading …Joy Behar, ever the comedienne, sent family and friends a Christmas card this year featuring a Photoshopped picture of her hugging Fox News's Bill O'Reilly. The Huffington Post appears to be the first to publish its contents which included tidings to “Muslims and Jews and Catholics and Atheists (not agnostics – too wishy washy) and Mama Grizzlies and Democrats and Republicans and Tea Partiers”: read more
Continue reading …It’s been awhile since we’ve heard any news from the Adamo camp, but for those looking to blow a bit of that Santa cash on something thin and light, the timing here couldn’t possibly be better. Nearly 1.5 years after the 13-inch ultraportable was let loose — for $1,999 and up , no less — a new low-cost configuration has emerged at Dell’s website. These days, $899 gets you a 0.65-inch thick machine, complete with a 13.4-inch WLED display (1366 x 768 resolution), 2.1GHz Core 2 Duo SL9600 processor, a 64-bit copy of Windows 7 Home Premium and 4GB of DDR3-800 memory. You’ll also get a 128GB SSD, 802.11n WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1+EDR and a 40 WHr Lithium Polymer battery, and if you’re down for spending a bit more, you can grab an internal mobile broadband module as well. Or, you know, you could wait and see what kind of treasures CES brings. Your call. Dell’s Adamo 13 ultraportable slips to $899, gets a spec bump originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 25 Dec 2010 18:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …The metaphor “The War on Christmas” can be mocked – as if Santa and his reindeer are dodging anti-aircraft fire. But many of our public schools have church-and-state sensitivity police with an alarming degree of Santaphobia. Anyone who's attended a school's “winter concert” in December with no traditional Christmas music – not even “Frosty the Snowman” – knows the drill. The vast Christian majority (that funds the public schools) is told that school is no place to celebrate one's religion, even in its most watered-down and secularized forms. There are real-life stories of Scrooge-like school administrators, like the one at the appropriately named Battlefield High School in Haymarket, Virginia. A group of ten boys calling themselves the Christmas Sweater Club were given detention and at least two hours of cleaning for tossing free two-inch candy canes at students as they entered before classes started. They were “creating a disturbance.” One of their mothers, Kathleen Flannery, told WUSA-TV that an administrator called her and explained “not everyone wants Christmas cheer. That suicide rates are up over Christmas, and that they should keep their cheer to themselves, perhaps.” Of course, that level of sensitivity is not applied when it comes to slamming Christianity during the Christmas season. On December 16, The Washington Post paid tribute to another suburban school in northern Virginia, McLean High School, for warming hearts during the season with “The Laramie Project.” This play is a political assault, using transcripts of real-life interviews by gay activists out to blame America's religious people for the beating death of homosexual college student Matthew Shepard in 1998. read more
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Digby has more on this exchange on CNN’s Parker Spitzer and Jeffrey Toobin tying himself in knots trying to defend Attorney General Eric Holder’s statement that the US government might use the Espionage Act to go after Julian Assange and WikiLeaks, so go read her whole post over at Hullabaloo. I just wanted to highlight something Naomi Wolf said during that discussion on how dangerous it is if the government does end up taking that route. SPITZER: And back to Woodward, where does Woodward fit in to this? SHIRKY: So I think that Woodward is not a criminal for publishing leaked documents but I also think that Assange is not a criminal for publishing leaked documents. However, I also, also think that if I’m wrong about that, that the way in which I would be wrong is going through the court system. Not through an extra legal running of WikiLeaks off the network. The damage to me — Jeffrey to your earlier point about the slippery slope, the non-slippery slope argument is the State Department has currently committed itself to making it very difficult for autocratic governments to force information off the Internet. And we’re suddenly providing not just a recipe but a rationale that’s making everyone from Lubchenko (ph) to Kim Jong-il laugh. TOOBIN: But see, you know, again, this is a slippery slope argument. SHIRKY: No. TOOBIN: It is, it is. Because the fact that someone takes United States government documents, secret, no foreign distribution, and says that shouldn’t be on the Internet. To say that North Korea shouldn’t have a free press, to say that Russia shouldn’t allow journalists to — I mean, I think it is easy to draw a distinction between the two. WOLF: Jeff, can I talk about the Espionage Act because that’s really what’s at stake now that they’ve invoked it. I predicted in my book “The End of America” that sooner or later, journalists would be targeted with the Espionage Act in an effort to close down free speech and free criticism of government. And we have a precedent for that. In 1917, the Espionage Act was invoked to go after people like us who are criticizing the first World War. Publishers, educators, editors. Wait, and people were put in prison. They were beaten. One guy got a 10-year sentence for reading the First Amendment. And that intimidation effectively closed down dissent for a decade in the United States of America. The Espionage Act has a very dark and dirty history. And when you start to use the Espionage Act, to criminalize what I’m sure you’ve handled classified documents in your time as a serious journalist, you know perfectly well that every serious journalist has seen or heard about classified information and repeated it. When you start to use the Espionage Act to say reporting is treachery, reporting is spying, it’s espionage, you criminalize journalism. And that’s the history that our country has shown. TOOBIN: I recognize there is that history. And I’m familiar with the red scare, too. America is different now. WOLF: Oh, it’s worse in some ways. TOOBIN: Well, I would disagree. SPITZER: I want to ask Jeff a question though, because I want to come back to this Woodward distinction. You would agree with Clay and Naomi, I think, that Julian Assange would be precisely Bob Woodward if he had been the recipient of these documents, is that correct? TOOBIN: I’d have to know a lot more. SPITZER: But it might be the case. TOOBIN: It well might be the case. SPITZER: OK. So you’re sort of clear articulation of the beginning that he clearly violated something maybe not so much. TOOBIN: I’m not sure. Certainly the attorney general of the United States seems to think criminal — criminal activity was involved here. But I think the wholesale taking of enormous quantities of classified information and putting it on the Internet, even if you don’t put all 250,000 documents on, I think that is a meaningful distinction from what Bob Woodward does. SPITZER: It seems to me that Bob Woodward arguably did something much more egregious. He took real-time decisions about why we were going to war in Afghanistan, the discussions are rationale, where we would go spoke to the most senior political and military officials in the nation and blasted that out in the book. A clear distinction. TOOBIN: Well, again, there is a distinction in part because the president of the United States and the vice president are allowed to declassify anything they want at any time for any reason. So if the president declassified — SPITZER: A lot of people who didn’t have that power were sourced in that book. Seemed to be speaking in clear violation. They, in fact, should be subject to criminal investigations. TOOBIN: I always wondered why — why Woodward gets away with it. It’s an interesting question. (CROSSTALK) PARKER: It’s a fascinating conversation. I have mostly listened as a non-lawyer to these arguments. And I never want to make a case against due process because that seems always the right thing to do. WOLF: Thank you. PARKER: And yet I also want to say the government should be able to shut down people who are giving away secrets that are going to cause people to lose their lives and put in, you know, and cause our own people abroad not to be able to do their work in safety. All right then. Naomi Wolf, Clay Shirky and Jeffrey Toobin, fabulous conversation. Thank you. SHIRKY: Thanks so much. PARKER: And you, too, Eliot Spitzer. We’ll be right back. It’s pretty pathetic that CNN’s supposed “legal analyist” apparently doesn’t have any grasp of history with his as Digby described it, authoritarian views he relayed here. I used to think that Toobin was a little more of a straight shooter than some of the other hacks over at CNN, but not any more after watching this interview.
Continue reading …Jerusalem mayor equates between Jewish home, old synagogue in which Arabs now live in Silwan
Continue reading …Yeahhhhhhhhh boyeeeeee, it’s CHRISTMAS , yo!!! You know what that means!!! ENGADGET PODCAST TIME — WITH PRESENTS!!!!! HIT IT!!! Hosts: Joshua Topolsky, Paul Miller, Nilay Patel Producer: Trent Wolbe Music: Last Christmas 00:03:35 – Verizon teases Android LTE hardware for January 6th at CES 00:03:50 – New HTC device starts leaking piecemeal — is it the Mecha / Incredible HD? 00:04:10 – Motorola has an LTE phone for Verizon in the works 00:04:25 – Motorola’s ‘Tablet Evolution’ video teases some Honeycomb at CES 00:35:50 – Palm’s tablet is codenamed ‘Topaz,’ keyboard accessory leaks out 00:36:20 – Three HP Slate-like webOS tablets coming at CES? We’re not so sure. 00:47:00 – Microsoft to demo new slate PCs, Windows 8 tablet functionality at CES? 00:49:05 – Microsoft to announce ARM-based Windows at CES? 00:58:11 – How to pronounce ASUS (video) 00:59:35 – FCC passes limited net neutrality rules, almost no one happy about them 01:00:30 – FCC releases full net neutrality rules 01:01:20 – Net neutrality: Verizon, AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile react 01:06:00 – FCC: We didn’t impose stricter net neutrality regulations on wireless because Android is open 01:13:27 – NYT: Next batch of Google TV devices delayed, pending software updates 01:13:35 – Sony says Google TV sales meeting expectations, TV division working more closely with Google than cellphone group 01:13:45 – Logitech said to be halting Revue production until Google TV software revamp 01:16:30 – New Apple TV, Roku media streamers race to break one million in sales 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) LISTEN (OGG) Contact the podcast 1-888-ENGADGET or podcast (at) engadget (dot) com. Twitter: @joshuatopolsky @futurepaul @reckless @engadget Filed under: Podcasts Engadget Podcast 222 – 12.25.2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 25 Dec 2010 17:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
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