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Supreme Court Says Sorry, But WalMart Is Too Big To Sue

enlarge The US Supreme Court released some decisions today about climate change and Wal-Mart. While the court ruled on whether certification was improper on the damages claim, there was still dissent among the justices as to whether the underlying issues were valid. WalMart Employees WalMart employees wanted the right to sue as a class for gender discrimination in the workplace. In a unanimous decision, the court ruled that the class, as currently defined, was too broad to proceed as a class action lawsuit. NPR reported back in March : Standing on the steps of the Supreme Court, Betty Dukes, the lead plaintiff, said Wal-Mart’s appeal is an attempt to “keep us out of court so the facts will not be presented to the public at large or before a sitting jury.” Those facts, say the plaintiffs, show that when the case was filed 10 years ago, women held two-thirds of the lowest-level hourly jobs and only one-third of the management jobs; and that women were paid on average $1.16 less per hour than men in the same jobs, despite having more seniority and higher performance ratings. Wal-Mart, however, hotly disputes those statistics, contending that there is no pay difference between men and women at 90 percent of its stores. And the company points to what it repeatedly calls its “strong policy” against discrimination. Jezebel : But Antonin Scalia’s majority opinion lost four justices — former civil rights attorney Ruth Bader Ginsburg, plus Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, and Stephen Breyer — when he argued that there could be no class that was discriminated against because there was no written policy covering them all: This is a novel trap: Because clearly individuals don’t discriminate against a class of people — say, women who they think are less likely to be competent or committed — and nothing is on the books, systemic discrimination must not exist. Case closed! Of course, Ginsburg and her Democratic-appointed colleagues saw it differently. In arguing that they would have sent the plaintiffs to a lower court and try the case under different rules, Ginsburg pointed out, ” Women fill 70 percent of the hourly jobs in the retailer’s stores but make up only 33 percent of management employees,” and that “the plaintiffs’ ‘largely uncontested descriptive statistics’ also show that women working in the company’s stores ‘are paid less than men in every region’ and ‘that the salary gap widens over time even for men and women hired into the same jobs at the same time.” Those are a lot of individual decisions that have nothing to do with each other. The Hill : Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, writing the court’s opinion, acknowledged that the case represented one of the “most expansive” class action suits in history. However, the suit was dismissed because the court said it failed to prove gender discrimination was a widespread common policy of Wal-Mart Those words “widespread common policy” are key. WalMart had a written policy assigning store managers with responsibility for deciding who should be put on a track to promotion within the company. As a result, the class, which included female employees of WalMart reaching back to 1968, was deemed to be too broad and overreaching when the decision rested with individual managers at individual stores. In other words, even if there was an overall culture of gender discrimination within the company, written policy assigning decisions on the store level protected the company from scrutiny. This decision doesn’t mean WalMart can’t be sued for gender discrimination. They can, but it would have to be undertaken on a store-by-store basis, rather than nationwide. That might prove to be cost-prohibitive for anyone wanting to undertake such an action, since litigating issues like this is costly with no guarantee there will be a beneficial outcome. The message to national corporate employers: Wherever possible, set policy on a local store/division level, do it in writing, and you’ll be protected from whatever culture of discrimination may exist within your ranks. There was dissent, however. Justice Ginsberg said the court properly ruled that the court should not allow the class under one part of the rule, but that the case should be remanded to the district court for consideration under another part. The five conservative justices disagreed with that. Whether the class the plaintiffs describe meets the specific requirements of Rule 23(b)(3) is not before the Court, and I would reserve that matter for consideration and decision on remand.1 The Court, however, disqualifies the class at the starting gate, holding that the plaintiffs cannot cross the “commonality” line set by Rule 23(a)(2). In so ruling, the Court imports into the Rule 23(a) determination concerns properly addressed in a Rule 23(b)(3) assessment. In English, what this means is that while there’s the possibility that the lawsuit could have gone forward as a class action under a different set of rules, the court struck down the entire class as one that doesn’t have enough common ties to bind it together, which undoes any standing under other rules. You can read the entire ruling here . Climate Change The Court also rejected a climate change lawsuit against power companies: But the Supreme Court, in an opinion delivered by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, rejected an appeals court decision that would have allowed federal judges to effectively put limits on greenhouse gas emissions. That responsibility, the Supreme Court said, should be left in the hands of the EPA. “The critical point is that Congress delegated to EPA the decision whether and how to regulate carbon-dioxide emissions from power plants; the delegation displaces federal common law,” the decision states. The ruling builds on a 2007 decision in Massachusetts v. EPA in which the Supreme Court said that greenhouse-gas emissions could be regulated under the Clean Air Act if EPA found they endanger public health and welfare. EPA later made such a finding and has begun phasing in a series of rules aimed at ratcheting down the emissions. Can you imagine how loaded the courts would be with paid-for judges if these cases were litigated in court? Of course, now it remains to be seen how the EPA will proceed with enforcement when Congress has defunded them, but still, it’s probably a better decision to leave it in their hands.

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Aeroplane crashed half a mile from the runway on flight between Moscow and northern city of Petrozavodsk At least forty-four people have been killed after a passenger jet crashed in north-west Russia, a government spokesman said. The plane, reportedly carrying 52 people, including nine crew, crashed half a mile from the runway outside the northern city of Petrozavodsk at about 11.40pm local time on Monday. News agencies reported that eight people who survived the crash were seriously injured and taken to hospital. There was no immediate explanation for the crash, but the Interfax news agency quoted the airport director Alexei Kuzmitsky as saying there were “unfavourable weather conditions”. Russian news agencies said the plane, a Russian-made Tu-134 jet, crashed on its final approach to the airport in Petrozavodsk, landing a few hundred yards short of the runway. Petrozavodsk is in the in the province of Karelia, 640km (400 miles) north-west of Moscow. The plane, , the Emergencies Ministry said, carrying 52 people, nine of whom were crew, the news agencies said. News agencies reported that Russian Premier League football referee Vladimir Pettaya was among the victims, as well as one Swedish national. Russia Europe Plane crashes Jo Adetunji guardian.co.uk

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Jim DeMint Repeats the ‘Half of Americans Pay No Federal Income Tax’ Big Lie About Taxes

Click here to view this media During Sean Hannity’s special last week, featuring Republican propagandist and professional turd-polisher Frank Luntz, South Carolina Sen. Jim DeMint joined the show and took questions from Luntz and audience members in one of his focus groups. During this segment DeMint repeated what has become one of the right’s big lies they like to tell on taxes, that half of Americans don’t pay any federal income tax, as though that’s the only tax anyone pays. This reminded me of an article I recently read at AlterNet where Joshua Holland did a nice job debunking that talking point last year. Fox and Drudge Sucker Tea Partiers with a Big Lie About Taxes : Here’s how Fox Nation and the Drudge Report were fanning the flames of their readers’ simmering tribalism last week, courtesy of Steve M. at No More Mister Nice Blog : Here are Drudge and Fox Nation right now: enlarge Credit: No More Mister Nice Blog Credit: No More Mister Nice Blog Those banner headlines led to an AP story that might make wingnut blood boil, but was in reality about a rather irrelevant bit of Tax Day trivia: Tax Day is a dreaded deadline for millions, but for nearly half of U.S. households it’s simply somebody else’s problem. About 47 percent will pay no federal income taxes at all for 2009. Either their incomes were too low, or they qualified for enough credits, deductions and exemptions to eliminate their liability…. Many people continue to labor under the false belief that the United States has a progressive tax system. Here’s the reality: after decades of assault on the taxes that fall disproportionately on the wealthy, we now have an effective flat tax. Poor people in this country pay around 40 percent of their incomes in taxes, give or take 5 percent. Rich people in this country also pay around 40 percent of their incomes in taxes, give or take 5 percent. And folks in between pay around 40 percent of their incomes in taxes, give or take 5 percent. The idea that most working people don’t pay taxes — an incredibly popular talking-point on the right — is the product of a rather easy-to-understand Big Lie. You simply pretend that the most progressive tax in the United States, the federal income tax, is the only tax that Americans pay. You move the goal-posts, beginning the discussion with a statement of fact — ‘many people pay no federal income taxes’ — and then shifting to an egregious falsehood: ‘many people pay no taxes .’ It’s a simple but incredibly effective lie of omission. Here are the facts (as I lay ‘em out in my upcoming book, The Fifteen Biggest Lies About the Economy (And Everything Else the Right Doesn’t Want You to Know about Taxes, Jobs, and Corporate America)). Read on…

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Comedy or Activism? Jon Stewart Spars With Fox News’ Chris Wallace

Jon Stewart faced off against Chris Wallace on Fox News Sunday yesterday, debating whether The Daily Show is a form of activism that is pushing a liberal agenda. It was a heated 25-minute interview, where at times Chris Wallace sounded like a shrink trying to figure out what makes Jon Stewart tick, while the Comedy

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The New York Times' Maureen Dowd's most recent anti-Catholic hit piece (Sun., 5/19/11) contains a number of falsehoods. However, her article's biggest eye-opener is her apparent claim that homosexuality is a direct cause of child sex abuse. Dowd's article lashes out against New York Archbishop Timothy Dolan's stance against the implementation of gay 'marriage' in New York. Dowd takes issue with a recently released report commissioned by the United States Catholic bishops that sought to examine the “causes and context” of the Catholic Church abuse scandals

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Donald Trump’s plan for £750m Scottish golf resort put on hold

US tycoon says golf course will open next year – but complex featuring luxury villas and five-star hotel postponed for now Donald Trump has been forced to postpone his plan to create the “world’s greatest” golf resort in Scotland, complete with five-star hotel and luxury villas, because of the global financial crisis. The billionaire property developer flew into Aberdeen on Monday on his latest luxury jet, a Boeing 757-200 fitted out with a master bedroom and five kitchens, to announce that his championship standard 18-hole golf course overlooking the North Sea would open for play in July next year. Before touring the first completed holes, Trump said he had spent £50m to £60m of his own money carving the “amazing” course from the vast dunes, and would start taking advance bookings in 10 days. He hoped that Sir Sean Connery, one of the earliest backers of the resort, would open it for him. “We have been inundated from New York and Scotland from people who want to come and play the course,” he said. “Thousands of people have been calling: ‘how can we play it?’” But the tycoon said that the full scheme, a £750m complex featuring a luxury hotel, Trump Boulevard, a golf academy, a second course and timeshare apartments, had been bunkered by the recession. Trump said “the world has crashed” since he first bought the Menie estate and dunes in 2005, provoking a long-running battle with local residents, councillors and environmental groups about his proposals, which has involved heavily altering the legally protected rare dunes. As Trump flew in, it emerged that a cinema in Aberdeen, the Belmont, had decided to give a new, highly-critical documentary investigating the tycoon’s conflicts with local residents, called You’ve Been Trumped, an extended run this weekend. This was due to “an amazing response” to a screening last Friday. Trump has denounced the film as “a fraud”. He also brushed aside continuing conflicts with his neighbours, particularly David and Moira Milne, owners of a former coastguard station overlooking the new course, and Michael Forbes, the salmon fisherman whose land Trump once described as “disgusting”. Milne has been sent warning letters from Trump’s lawyers threatening legal action in a dispute over boundary fences and demands to demolish a garage which Trump believes intrudes on his land. Trump’s local manager, Sarah Malone, claimed David Milne “has chosen to take an aggressive stance and if he moves his fence, there won’t be an issue. And if he doesn’t, we’re looking at all the options available to us”. Andy Wightman, a land rights expert who has investigated the conflict between the Milnes and Trump, said the Milnes had proper title to land complete with a Ordnance Survey map record, which was legally registered with the Keeper of the Registers of Scotland. “If Trump has a problem with boundaries, it should be taken up with the Keeper,” Wightman said. “It is totally out of order for them to issue threats of legal action to demolish other people’s property. I am dismayed that a Scottish law firm has been persuaded to follow through and issue such threats to people who simply wish to live in peace.” Scotland Donald Trump Global recession Golf Sean Connery Severin Carrell guardian.co.uk

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This is a great idea . It provides a legitimate basis for the feds to intervene in this madness that’s spreading through the country like wildfire: WASHINGTON — Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) announced the introduction of a bill that could make it considerably more difficult for cash-strapped states and cities to lease their transportation assets to private investors. The bill would require states and cities to repay any federal funds they used to build or maintain the assets, such as toll roads or airports, as a condition of leasing them , likely thwarting many deals before they happen. It would also call for more transparency in the negotiation of such deals. In recent years some local governments, such as the City of Chicago and the State of Indiana, have traded their right to collect money on toll roads to foreign investors in exchange for billion-dollar up-front payments. Critics say such deals are short-sighted budget gimmicks that could end up burdening generations down the road. Chicago’s Midway Airport, where he spoke today, was nearly leased for $2.5 billion two years ago, but the deal fell apart. “I’m really trying to stake some ground here on a principle and position that we ought to reflect on,” Durbin told HuffPost. “The federal government is in debt. We are borrowing money to sustain our operations, and we’re sending some of that money to states and localities for investment in infrastructure. We’re making quite a sacrifice. If a decision is made by a local unit of government to privatize that public infrastructure, federal taxpayers should have a seat at the table.” As states and cities across the country face grim budgets, more and more are looking to stem their shortfalls by leasing existing assets, such as roads, lotteries or government buildings. The City of Harrisburg, Pa., may soon lease its parking meters to a private investors, as Chicago has already done for a 75-year period starting in 2008. Durbin remarked that he’s already watched the cost of parking soar in Chicago since that city’s deal was inked.”It’s a caution to all of us,” Durbin said. “When we look at privatization, we have to look at the long-term.”

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Matthews Bashes Ratings of ABC’s ‘This Week’ Which Gets Three Times The Viewers He Does

There's been a lot of talk lately that MSNBC's Chris Matthews is beginning to lose it. As further evidence that the “Hardball” host seems a bit detached from reality, consider that on Monday's program, he referred to ABC's “This Week” as a show “not many people see…It doesn’t get many viewers” (video follows with transcript and commentary): CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Alright, let’s take a look. Here’s John McCain hitting Romney on Sunday. They're all hitting him from all sides. This is fair. This is personal. McCain doesn’t like Romney. Let's listen. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) SENATOR JOHN MCCAIN (R-ARIZONA): I wish that candidate Romney and all the others would sit down with General Patraeus and understand how this counterinsurgency is working and succeeding. For us to abandon Afghanistan to the tender mercies of the Taliban and radical Islamic extremists I think would be repeating the mistakes we made before. (END VIDEO CLIP) MATTHEWS: Well, not many people see that show on Sunday. Mark, it's called “This Week.” It doesn’t get many viewers, but… It doesn't get many viewers? The Sunday, June 12, installment of “This Week” got 2.197 total viewers and 738,000 in the all-important demographic aged 25 to 54. Compare that to “Hardball” which last Thursday got 626,000 total viewers at 7PM and only 174,000 in the demo. This means that “This Week” got over three times more total viewers and over four times more in the demo. Yet Matthews said, “Not many people see that show.” Makes you wonder how he feels about his own ratings – or do folks at MSNBC not tell him how far he's fallen since he hosted a program people were actually interested in watching way back in the '90s?

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Strangers No More celebrates Oscar win at Israel’s melting pot school

Academy award-winning documentary hands round its statuettes at Tel Aviv school, despite many pupils facing deportation There’s not much that is usual about the Bialik Rogozin School in Tel Aviv – so the pupils took it in their stride when the end of term was celebrated with two Oscar statuettes being handed around. This year’s Academy award for best documentary was won by Strangers No More, which tells the story of students from the school, 70% of whom are immigrants, many from the world’s most dangerous countries. On Monday, the film’s directors, Karen Goodman and Kirk Simon, brought their Oscars to share with the schoolchildren and to allow them to bask in a little reflected glory. With 832 pupils from 48 countries, including Muslims, Christians and Jews, the children might not share that much in common, but one thing was for sure – they all wanted to get their hands on the Oscar. “This is a tribute to the miracle that is Bialik Rogozin. The moment we came here, we found love and we are still in love with this school and everyone who has found a home here,” said Goodman as the school celebrated with readings and awards while some of the girls nervously carried out dance routines, interrupted by the occasional misstep and technical glitch. “If we received an Oscar, it’s because these kids opened their hearts to us. All we did was capture it,” said Goodman’s co-director Simon. Many of the students face deportation and the government is due to make its decision on their futures. “They might postpone it but it still leaves the kids living in fear,” said Simon. In recent years, Israel has received 35,000 asylum seekers and refugees from across Africa. It also has tens of thousands of foreign workers who have overstayed their visas, some of whom have children born in Israel. Non-Jewish migration has created confusion in Israel. The ministry of the interior, headed by a minister from the ultra-orthodox Shas party, is keen to cut the numbers but others are proud that Israel has become a refuge. The film documents a year in the life of the school, focusing on three students: Esther Aikpehae, who fled South Africa after her mother was murdered; Johannes Mulugeta from Eritrea, who had not previously attended school; and Mohammed Adam, who walked to Israel from Darfur in Sudan after seeing his grandmother and father murdered in front of him. All three have temporary residence permits. The school is due to receive Israel’s national education prize from the president, Shimon Peres, but headteacher Karen Tal pointed out it was not easy running a school where so many pupils were worried about their future. “We have a deal with the pupils: we keep the routine and aim for educational achievement which will give them confidence at a time when they have no roots. The other side is that we are very active in agitating on behalf of the students. I speak to prominent people all the time and we have set up an action committee and hosted guests from all over the world,” she said. Goodman believes the school is an example to others all over the world that struggle to provide good education in multicultural environments. “How can you take kids from 48 countries and and educate them? The answer is, give them the right opportunity and the right atmosphere and they will come together and learn. Here, being different is the norm,” she said. Tal’s vision for the school and the country is of a society based on shared responsibility. “In our vision, all students who come to Israel, whether they are Jewish, Muslim or Christian, have made a statement that they want to be part of that society and all that means. If that means military service or civil service, then that is part of our duty.” International education news Israel Middle East Oscars Oscars 2011 Religion Judaism Islam Christianity Children Conal Urquhart guardian.co.uk

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Jimmy Carter: Call Off the Global Drug War

Click here to view this media Lawrence O’Donnell read from some of former President Jimmy Carters’ latest op-ed at the New York Times, calling for an end to America’s “war on drugs.” Call Off the Global Drug War : The report describes the total failure of the present global antidrug effort, and in particular America’s “war on drugs,” which was declared 40 years ago today. It notes that the global consumption of opiates has increased 34.5 percent, cocaine 27 percent and cannabis 8.5 percent from 1998 to 2008. Its primary recommendations are to substitute treatment for imprisonment for people who use drugs but do no harm to others, and to concentrate more coordinated international effort on combating violent criminal organizations rather than nonviolent, low-level offenders. These recommendations are compatible with United States drug policy from three decades ago. In a message to Congress in 1977, I said the country should decriminalize the possession of less than an ounce of marijuana, with a full program of treatment for addicts. I also cautioned against filling our prisons with young people who were no threat to society, and summarized by saying: “Penalties against possession of a drug should not be more damaging to an individual than the use of the drug itself.” These ideas were widely accepted at the time. But in the 1980s President Ronald Reagan and Congress began to shift from balanced drug policies, including the treatment and rehabilitation of addicts, toward futile efforts to control drug imports from foreign countries. This approach entailed an enormous expenditure of resources and the dependence on police and military forces to reduce the foreign cultivation of marijuana, coca and opium poppy and the production of cocaine and heroin. One result has been a terrible escalation in drug-related violence, corruption and gross violations of human rights in a growing number of Latin American countries. More at the link above so go there to read the rest and good for President Carter for speaking out on this matter.

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