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Proposed U.S. Passport Questionnaire Asks About Baptism, Circumsision

The State Department has proposed a new questionnaire form for U.S. Citizens who cannot supply a valid birth certificate. Any citizen who had a  “non-institutionalized birth or delayed birth filing” must provide specific details to questions that ask them the location of their mother’s residence one year before their birth, the day of their birth

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I want you to hear Baratunde Thurston’s heartfelt message to Donald Trump and the media who enabled him. Be forewarned, it’s NSFW in places. While it will likely have no effect on those who most need to hear the message, it had a profound impact on me, and I think it will have one on you, too. In his intro he writes this: I then thought of this fetid, smug, hate-filled, wealthy white man taking credit for the release and yet still not being satisfied. It does not matter how long we’ve been in these United States. We will never be American. I was especially moved by his direct message to Donald Trump, a man who “was given everything” and lives the life he does with the freedom to do what he did because he was given everything. I don’t want to hear about The Apprentice . I don’t want to hear about your new cologne. I don’t want to hear about the new tower you’re building in whatever f–king town. That cologne smells of racism. That tower is built on the blood of disrespected slaves and freedom fighters. And that show is merely a showcase for the dishonor you have brought on anyone who would call themselves an American. Adam Serwer writes : Aside from being one of the most idiotic moments in American political history, this marks a level of personal humiliation no previous president has ever been asked to endure. Other presidents have been the target of crazy conspiracy theories, sure, but few have been as self-evidently absurd as birtherism. None has been so clearly rooted in anxieties about the president’s racial identity, because no previous American president has been black. B-Serious : He has been called everything but a child of God and, in two short years, has been portrayed as anything but what he truly is . . . A man, worthy of the respect and dignity of his own words and reputation. Instead, people have sought to attack the very foundation of his existence . . . his birth. And the sad part in all of this? It’s become par for the course. Not because President Obama has never answered his critics. Not because the President has never released information. Not because the President has allowed others to shape the debate. It’s because there never should have been a “debate” in the first place. It was never a real story to begin with. Oliver Willis : This is hilariously sad. It’s dumb that Obama had to go to extraordinary lengths to release his long-form birth certificate, but hilarious because it now shows that the leading presidential candidate of the Republican party has gotten to his position on what is an even now more thoroughly debunked conspiracy theory. David Remnick (The New Yorker) : Let’s be even plainer: to do what Trump has done (and he is only the latest and loudest and most spectacularly hirsute) is a conscious form of race-baiting, of fear-mongering. And if that makes Donald Trump proud, then what does that say for him? Perhaps now he will go away, satisfied that this passage has sufficiently restored his fame quotient and television ratings. The shame is that there are still many more around who, in the name of truth-telling, are prepared to pump the atmosphere full of poison. After watching Baratunde’s video and reading some of these comments, do you think these people really give a damn about Jake Tapper’s self-aggrandizing equivocation or Orly Taitz’ coked-up Soviet-style BS or Eric Cantor’s Orwellian flip-flop ? I’m sure the president understood that it wouldn’t satisfy the True Believers. But he smelled a swiftboating and decided to deal with it head-on. Corporate media have been put on notice now. They can make these wingnuts irrelevant or continue to flog the narrative. I suggest we begin to hold them accountable for flogging the narrative in a way that will cost them. Viewers, readers, advertisers, whatever it takes.

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My best shot: Philippe Vermès

‘This poster was the one everyone wanted in May 1968. It’s saying: “We, the workers, are the power now.”‘ This shot was taken at the Atelier Populaire – the popular workshop – which occupied the Ecole des

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My best shot: Philippe Vermès

‘This poster was the one everyone wanted in May 1968. It’s saying: “We, the workers, are the power now.”‘ This shot was taken at the Atelier Populaire – the popular workshop – which occupied the Ecole des

Continue reading …
My best shot: Philippe Vermès

‘This poster was the one everyone wanted in May 1968. It’s saying: “We, the workers, are the power now.”‘ This shot was taken at the Atelier Populaire – the popular workshop – which occupied the Ecole des

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The Most Ridiculous Disses to Obama’s Birth Certificate Release

Obama can’t catch a break.

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Giffords’s awesome recovery

When US congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords was shot in the head in January, few thought she would survive. But her slow improvement is gripping the nation When astronaut Mark Kelly blasts off at Cape Canaveral tomorrow afternoon, commanding a flight of the space shuttle Endeavour , millions of people will watch him and his crew soar into orbit. They will gaze at the fiery launch on televisions around the world, from beaches along the Florida coast and from special viewing platforms at the space centre. Among them, carefully hidden from public view, will be one very special pair of eyes: those of Kelly’s wife, Gabrielle Giffords , whose presence at the launch is nothing short of a modern medical marvel. For Giffords should be dead. The previously little-known Democratic congresswoman for Arizona rose to fame in January when a lone gunman, Jared Loughner, attacked a meet-and-greet session in Tucson, killing six people and putting a bullet through Giffords’s brain . The tragedy sparked intense national mourning in the US and a fierce debate over violent imagery used in political discussion. President Barack Obama travelled to Tucson to lead a nationally televised memorial ceremony. Central to the moment was Giffords’s astonishing struggle to survive her horrific wound. Loughner’s shot went in through her forehead and out the back of her head. At first falsely reported dead, it quickly became clear that Giffords, 41, was clinging desperately to life. Slowly, shocked Americans began to track her progress, not daring to hope for the best until, bit by bit, good news trickled out. President Obama himself began the process, announcing during his memorial speech the first signs of progress with the words: “Gabby opened her eyes for the first time.” Giffords’s presence at her husband’s shuttle launch will mark the latest triumphal milestone on her road to recovery at Houston’s TIRR Memorial Hermann hospital. It has overshadowed the shuttle’s science mission and even Obama’s expected presence at the launch. But it has been a difficult path for Giffords to get to Florida: her Texas physicians only gave the trip the go-ahead last week . “She is medically able and well enough to travel,” said Dong Kim, director of the Mischer Neuroscience Institute at her hospital. When told the news, according to Kelly, Giffords reacted with a fist-pump and a single word: “Awesome.” That attitude sums up much of the positive news that has leaked out about Giffords’s progress and the happy spin put on it by an American media eager to wrest something good from an unbearably bleak event. But, by many measures, Giffords’s progress has indeed been remarkable. From the bloodied figure rushed to hospital who had part of her skull removed to relieve brain pressure, she has taken firm steps towards not just survival but recovery. Though the bullet ripped through the left side of her brain, which controls language, she has started to speak some simple words and phrases. She even played Scrabble recently (and won) by pairing up with her husband against other players. She has a newspaper read to her and fiddles around with an iPad. She asks for her favourite foods. She goes through a daily routine of rehabilitation that involves a couple of hours of speech therapy, followed by occupational therapy and then physical therapy. The speaking part of her day often involves singing or music therapy, as a damaged brain often retains that ability better than pure speech. In fact, the trip to Florida is a big part of her rehab: first, as a much-needed break and second, as the achievement of a “goal” that is crucial to keeping patients working hard. Her progress, which some reports have said is in the top 5% of people with her kind of injury, has impressed neuroscientists around the country. “I think it is fantastic, especially as she has endured such a radical procedure as a craniectomy (partial-skull removal),” says Ricky Madhok, a neurosurgeon at Cushing Neuroscience Institutes in Long Island, New York. But there is still much to do. Giffords can get around with help but cannot walk unaided. She can write a little but has to use her left hand, not her usual right one, because movement on the right side of her body is seriously impaired. She takes time to articulate and form thoughts. “The initial reports were perhaps a little too optimistic,” says Kritis Dasgupta, a brain surgeon at the National Rehabilitation Hospital in Washington. For a long time, her family and friends kept the truth of what happened in Tucson from her and she evidently believed she had suffered a car accident. Now, as she gets better, she has been told about the shooting but reportedly many details – including the deaths of friends and staff – have been kept hidden. Though Kelly told CBS News’s Katie Couric last week that Giffords’s personality was “100% there”, it is clear she still bears a grave injury. “You really have to be patient and this experience has taught me a lot of patience,” Kelly said. “So, just giving her time to compose her thoughts and put the words and sentences together is, you know, at this phase in her recovery, really what she needs.” But there is daily improvement, albeit slow. The remarkable thing about the brain – especially in someone relatively young – is that healthy parts can learn to take over the functions of damaged areas. That is a process that can go on for years, ensuring gradual improvements may continue for a long time to come. One man who knows about this intimately is Ezriel Kornel , a neurosurgeon who helped treat Jim Brady, Ronald Reagan’s press secretary, who was shot in the head during the failed 1981 assassination attempt on the president. Like Giffords, Brady was first reported wrongly to be dead. But, though he still has slurred speech and limited motor control, he has returned to active public life, spearheading a gun-control campaign. Kornel says there is no reason to think Giffords might recover any less than Brady. “The brain in someone relatively young has the ability to relearn,” he says. “She was also not in a coma for very long and that indicates there is probably a lot of healthy brain there.” Other factors have played a role in Giffords’s survival and progress. She was taken to hospital speedily, ensuring the maximum survival of brain tissue. “It is a simple equation: time is brain,” says Madhok. Then there was the skill of the team of surgeons in Arizona. Finally, there was the sheer fortune of the bullet’s path through her head: it went straight through, ensuring much of its kinetic energy was expended outside her skull. It also limited its path to one side, neither crossing hemispheres nor penetrating the brain stem, both of which would have seen even more catastrophic injuries. “If the trajectory of the bullet had been a couple of degrees off, then it could have been a completely different situation,” says Dasgupta. Although Giffords was already a public figure, she has actually become more of one now that she has been shut away in hospital. Ever since Obama made his dramatic announcement that she had opened her eyes, the US has grasped over-eagerly at any sign of progress. From when she spoke her first word by asking for “toast” to the news that she had touched her husband’s face, the public has urged Giffords down a road many perhaps feel will lead back to her previous life. She has been put on a global pedestal. She even made it on to Time’s 100 Most Influential list. In recent weeks, almost $500,000 in donations has poured into her virtually nonexistent re-election campaign. Giffords is now a household name, even though she lives in a hospital. Indeed, it is telling that, despite the vast interest in her recovery and her trip to Florida, not a single photograph of Giffords has been released since the shooting. The only glimpse of her in recovery has been a shot of her hand, firmly grasped in her husband’s as he sat by her bedside. That will not change in Florida. For the brutal truth is that Giffords is unlikely ever to be entirely back to “normal” again. But, because of the high emotion of her shooting, Americans are investing in a perfect happy ending, with Giffords returning to Congress and getting back to work. Many medical observers think that will be unlikely. Yet the key thing is to see what “recovery” really means and who should be making that judgment. It is not the media – eager to tell a happy story – who should define Giffords’s recovery. Nor is it the watching American public. It should not be measured by whether she can walk, talk or eventually appear as if she was never injured. Looking at where Giffords was on the day of the shooting, she has, in many ways, already recovered more than enough to make anything else a pure bonus. “She was shot at point-blank range in the head and she survived,” says Kornel. “She will most likely be able to be a human being who appreciates her life and her loved ones. To me, that’s already a real miracle.” When Kelly blasts off into space under Giffords’s gaze tomorrow, many Americans will still be longing for a happy ending for the couple. But perhaps they should recognise it has already happened. Gabrielle Giffords United States Nasa The space shuttle Space Paul Harris guardian.co.uk

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[ Kyle de Beausset ( @kyledeb ) is a pro-migrant blogger at Citizen Orange . ] If Obama wants any chance of a pro-migrant voter advantage going into 2012 , he better start taking lessons from folks like Mass. State Rep. Michael Moran (D-Brighton) . As if to illustrate just how sickening nativists can be Moran was flooded with hate mail after he was rear ended by 27-year-old unauthorized migrant Isaias Naranjo. The responsibility for the focusing this hate on Moran lies primarily with the nativist denizens of the Boston Herald opinion page, like Michael Graham and Joe Battenfeld , who singled Moran out for his courageous pro-migrant stances. Car crashes, huzzah! I’m almost reluctant write about this and throw more gasoline on the nativists’ fire because they will inevitably blow the actions of unauthorized migrants like Naranjo out of proportion.

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CBS: Ryan Budget Opponents ‘Poignant’; Touted ‘Nasty’ Tea Parties in 2009

CBS's Early Show on Wednesday played up how opponents of Rep. Paul Ryan's budget plan shouted down GOP representatives at recent town hall meetings, but downplayed them as ” less than friendly ,” and marveled at their apparently ” poignant ” questions. The network also omitted how liberal groups targeted these meetings, and trumpeted the ” nasty national shouting match ” at health care town hall meetings in 2009. News anchor Jeff Glor noted how “House Republicans are back home for the first time since passing an aggressive deficit cutting plan , including the architect of that plan, Congressman Paul Ryan.” Glor used the “less than friendly” label immediately before playing a clip of an unidentified protester shouting, ” Ryan, stop lying! ” outside a town hall meeting held by the Republican in Wisconsin, and another of a woman who directly accused him of ” screwing our generation and the next generation .” The CBS anchor then introduced correspondent Nancy Cordes by asking her, “The exchange we just saw: typical of what you saw yesterday?” Cordes enthusiastically replied, ” Oh, yes, absolutely, Jeff ,” and continued that ” Congressman Ryan heard some poignant questions from constituents about his deficit reduction plan.” The correspondent didn't give an example of such a question during her report, but instead, played a clip from a video posted by Think Progress , the blog of the liberal group Center for American Progress, from a town hall meeting hosted by Florida Republican Dan Webster, where protesters screamed “liar” at the congressman (Think Progress's identifying graphic is clearly visible during the clip; see graphic at right). By contrast, on the August 12, 2009 edition of Early Show, then-host Russ Mitchell highlighted how ” Democratic lawmakers pushing reform are being jeered at testy town hall meetings ” and that the anti-Obamacare protests were proof that the debate over the health care issue was ” turning into a nasty national shouting match .” Politico's Marin Cogan reported on Monday that “liberal groups are amping up their efforts against House Republicans this week, targeting lawmakers in their districts in an effort to make GOP support of Paul Ryan’s budget blueprint a political liability ahead of the 2012 election….This week’s efforts continue a campaign by Democratic groups last week to shift the narrative on the Ryan budget in their favor. Last week, MoveOn encouraged its members to attend town halls and grill lawmakers on Medicare and Medicaid.” Neither Glor nor Cordes mentioned these detail during the report. The full transcript of the report, which began 8 minutes into the 7 am Eastern hour of Wednesday's Early Show: JEFF GLOR: House Republicans are back home for the first time since passing an aggressive deficit cutting plan, including the architect of that plan, Congressman Paul Ryan. In some places, the reception that Ryan got was less than friendly. UNIDENTIFIED PROTESTERS (chanting, from demonstration in Kenosha, Wisconsin): Ryan, stop lying! GLOR: Representative Ryan attended four town hall meetings in Wisconsin yesterday, where he heard from voters about his budget plan, which includes major changes to Medicare. UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE 1 (from town hall meeting): You're screwing our generation and the next generation. REPRESENTATIVE PAUL RYAN: So the alternative is this, is a debt crisis? Is that your point? I mean, I can't- are you saying cut spending faster and deeper? UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE 1: I'm saying your plan screws the next two generations. GLOR: CBS News congressional correspondent Nancy Cordes joins us from Kenosha, Wisconsin this morning. Nancy, good morning to you. The exchange we just saw: typical of what you saw yesterday? NANCY CORDES: Oh, yes, absolutely, Jeff- good morning. We went to all of those town hall meetings. They were packed to the gills, every one of them, and at each one, Congressman Ryan heard some poignant questions from constituents about his deficit reduction plan, and specifically, that part about Medicare, about overhauling Medicare, turning it essentially into a voucher system for future generations, where the government would give them a subsidy, to then go ahead and buy private insurance. And this is something we're hearing about not just in Wisconsin, but at Republican town halls across the country. In fact, take a look at one exchange in Orlando, Florida between a constituent and Congressman Dan Webster, who is a Florida Republican. REPRESENTATIVE DAN WEBSTER (from town hall meeting): Not one senior citizen is harmed by this budget. UNIDENTIFIED MALE 1 (interrupting and shouting): What? You're a liar. UNIDENTIFIED MALE 2: You're a damned liar! GLOR: That was Nancy Cordes in Kenosha, Wisconsin, this morning.

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Chaskielberg wins L’Iris D’Or award

Argentinian wins for portfolio of images taken when living with islanders living in the Paraná river delta over two years An Argentinian photographer who began his career on local papers last night picked up one of his art form’s leading awards for a portfolio of pictures he took while living with islanders in the Paraná river delta, Argentina. Alejandro Chaskielberg’s dramatically luminous images of a community going about their daily lives won him photographer of the year – known as L’Iris D’Or – at the Sony World Photography Awards, presented last night at a gala ceremony at the Odeon Leicester Square in London. Chaskielberg, 34, spent two years with the islanders, immersing himself in their daily lives and taking photographs of precisely staged scenes at night. The chairman of this year’s judges, critic Francis Hodgson, said of Chaskielberg’s High Tide series: “These carefully directed pictures tell solid truths – about toil and community and marginal survival – in a splendidly allusive way.” Buenos Aires-born Chaskielberg, who took his first job on a local newspaper aged 18, said of the project: “Using photography, I have been able to present another version of the Paraná river delta and its community that has been photographically ignored throughout the years.” The photographer wins $25,000, new camera equipment, and of course considerable acclaim, joining previous Iris d’Or winners David Zimmerman, Vanessa Winship and Tommaso Ausili as a member of the World Photography Academy. He beat considerable competition, with 105,000 images entered from 162 countries. Other winners at the ceremony, which was held in London for the first time – it has previously been held in Cannes – included a Hong Kong jewellery manufacturer who taught himself basic photography skills using books and the internet. Chan Kwok Hung was named overall winner in the amateur categories, picking up $5,000 as Open Photographer of the year for his dramatic picture Buffalo Race, which he took in Indonesia. There were 13 more winners named in various professional categories covering everything from sport to travel to conceptual. Briton Adam Hinton won the campaign section of the commercial awards for his photographs for Saatchi & Saatchi and Spaniard Javier Arcenillas, shortlisted in four categories, won in two – current affairs and contemporary issues. The truly big name at last night’s awards was American photographer Bruce Davidson, 77, who received the outstanding contribution to photography award. He arrived ahead of two shows of his work in London – a selling exhibition at Chris Beetles gallery opening next week and a retrospective being shown as part of the World Photography Festival at Somerset House. Photography book awards were also given out as part of the proceedings with the best photography book going to a special volume of David Goldblatt’s TJ – images of Johannesburg shot over 40 years – which had married with Ivan Vladislavic’s novel Double Negative. Matthew Solomon’s book Disappearing Tricks, on early theatrical magic and silent film, won the best moving image book award and German publisher Gerhard Steidl was given an outstanding contribution award. Photography Awards and prizes Mark Brown guardian.co.uk

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