Title: Up Above The Rock Artist: Ray Bryant Philadelphia jazz pianist Ray Bryant died today. Bryant accompianied the likes of Miles Davis, Aretha, and Sonny Rollins, and was a respected composer in his own right. R.I.P.
Continue reading …Twice in the last two weeks has Time magazine devoted a page to Mark Halperin's oddsmaking on who will be the Republican nominee — the May 23 issue (page 35) and the June 6 issue (page 16). Twice, there's been no mention of Herman Cain. The GOP cast of contenders is lily-white. This seems odd, since Cain participated in the first presidential debate on May 5 to high praise and formally announced on May 21. Are Time and Halperin racists? They can't say they're unaware that Cain is running. They can't say that Cain is too much of a long shot. In the first set of odds, Halperin put Michele Bachmann at 1,000-to-1. (The best odds in order were to Romney, Huckabee, Daniels, Pawlenty, Huntsman, Gingrich, and Palin, second to last at 60 to 1.) In the second set, Huckabee and Daniels were removed from the list, and Santorum (at 500 to 1) and Ron Paul (at 2,000 to 1) were added. Bachmann was still at 1,000 to 1.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Media Matters detailed very well why this latest talking point by our mainstream media that Mitt Romney was somehow a “job creator” either as Governor of Massachusetts of as an investor is sheer nonsense, but that didn’t stop MSNBC’s Richard Lui from pushing that talking point regardless of both Maria Cardona and Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz laying out facts to the contrary. Of course contributor to Tucker Carlson’s rag, The Daily Caller Matt Lewis was happy to help do his part to deceive the audience at MSNBC as well. Here’s more from Media Matters Political Correction — Mitt Romney’s ‘Jobs Record’ Is A Sham : Mitt Romney is attempting to establish himself as the Republican presidential candidate with the most credibility on job creation, but the former Massachusetts governor may have trouble defending his record. During Romney’s tenure as governor, Massachusetts’ job growth was bested by every state in the nation except three, including Hurricane Katrina-devastated Louisiana. As CEO of Bain Capital, Romney profited as five of the companies under his firm’s direction went bankrupt, and thousands of workers lost their jobs. One particularly brutal round of firings came back to haunt Romney during his failed 1994 Senate campaign, when laid-off workers protested his candidacy. Lots more there so go read the rest and maybe someone could send this along to MSNBC’s Richard Lui as well before he comes back on the air and pretends like Romney cared about or knows anything about creating jobs in the United States. Anyone that tries to maintain that MSNBC is somehow a “liberal” network because of some of their prime time programing probably doesn’t watch much of their daytime lineup which features hackery like this on a regular basis. They’re not quite as bad as Fox, but that’s not saying much.
Continue reading …So what if the markets tank?
Continue reading …Allegations of rape against ex-IMF chief fuel debate on macho culture among male establishment figures in country Among a group of women shouting “We’re all chambermaids!”, one softly-spoken 43-year-old was glad to see feminists taking to Paris streets in the wake of the Dominique Strauss-Kahn affair. The well-dressed woman, who now counsels sexual violence victims, said she had been attacked by a French businessman with political connections but had never pressed charges. “I was raped by a powerful man. I went to the police, they said the pressure would fall on me and I risked being destroyed. I didn’t take it any further. Victims feel they have almost no voice in France. We hope that might change now.” France now talks about “before and after DSK”. Two weeks since the head of the International Monetary Fund and great Socialist hope for president was arrested and charged with attempting to rape a New York hotel maid, a sexual revolution is underway. Strauss-Kahn denies the charges against him, but whatever the outcome of his case, it has sparked an outpouring against French sexism and harassment disguised as “gallantry”, as well as a new openness about tackling rape. France always prided itself on a tradition of unbridled sexuality and a society based on seduction, where Jacques Chirac kissed female leaders’ hands and declared that Michèle Alliot-Marie, who served as justice, defence and foreign minister, had “the best legs” on the right. Many argued that the dreaded “American puritanism” – the US’s strict laws on workplace touching and harassment – would make France a dull place. But now the floodgates have opened on women denouncing French machismo. When Le Parisien reported this week that the sports minister, Chantal Jouanno, avoided wearing skirts in parliament for fear of salacious comments from male MPs, other political women confessed they did the same. It wasn’t the Strauss-Kahn charges themselves that caused the backlash. It was the perceived belittling of rape and sexism of leading French thinkers reacting to his case. Suddenly France, the land of feminist luminary Simone de Beauvoir, was being lampooned abroad as a macho backwater. Feminists held street protests and young male politicians rushed to sign a mayor’s anti-sexism petition distancing themselves from what the US media called the reign of the French “dirty old man”. Despite outrage, the Socialist Jack Lang has stuck by his comments that Strauss-Kahn should have been released on bail earlier, considering that “no one had died”. The journalist and philosopher Jean-Francois Kahn dismissed the case as a ” troussage de domestique “, a phrase suggestive of French aristocrats having non-consensual sex with servants. He later apologised and quit journalism. Women politicians are speaking out. One female Socialist MP wearing trousers and a summer top to a recent commission hearing was reportedly told by a rightwing MP: “Dressed like that, you shouldn’t be surprised at being raped.” The former environment minister Corinne Lepage told Libération she had seen a female MP raise the issue of a rape in parliament and a male MP shout: “With a face like that it’s hardly going to happen to you.” Women politicians complained of jokes, cat-calls, belittling and attempts to chat them up. Political journalists spoke of politicians who repeatedly texted them, locked them in cars or knocked on their hotel room doors during party conferences. Sexism in French politics had long been decried, notably in 2007 when Patrick Devedjian, a senior Sarkozy ally, was forced to apologise after calling a female politician a “salope” – bitch or slut. But since “l’affaire DSK” feminists hope there is no going back. The real impact is legal. Chantal Brunel, MP and head of France’s observatory on sexual equality, said: “I think the DSK affair will do more to further the cause of women in terms of violence, than any law. Because today laws already exist on violence, the problem is women speaking out.” Rape crisis telephone lines reported an increase in calls in recent days. Counsellors said the fact the whole country was talking about a sex assault alleged by a hotel worker against a powerful man had broken the “omertà” in France, where only one in 10 rapes are reported. The renowned feminist lawyer Gisele Halimi warned that if the DSK affair had happened in France, it would likely have been hushed up and never reached court. Nicolas Sarkozy, whose low poll ratings have climbed slightly in recent days, is sensitive to the national mood. He condemned sexist comments about the DSK case, saying: “Frankly some things we’ve heard we would have preferred not to.” Then this week, the civil service minister, Georges Tron, was forced to resign from government after two women, emboldened by the Strauss-Kahn case, filed complaints for harassment, including inappropriate foot massages and groping. The state prosecutor opened a preliminary inquiry for sexual assault. Tron denied the allegations and threatened to sue the women for libel. They told French radio they would not be scared off and would pursue the complaint. It is unusual for a Sarkozy minister to leave government so fast, particularly before charges are made, but the president couldn’t risk the effect public opinion. The former prime minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin said a “return to morals” would now be at the heart of next year’s presidential election campaign. For many, the French culture of sexual conquest is a hangover from the old, monarchic traditions of the Ancien Régime: powerful men seen as having a right to exact sexual favours from subordinates and political leaders held in esteem for their libido. The commentator Laurent Joffrin warned that France’s “archaic” notions and heavy-handed seduction were in fact “all about holding women in disdain”. The historian Dimitri Casali said that in France sex and power had always been linked – Napoleon had 60 mistresses, the Sun King Louis XIV had 300, but Louis XVI who had erection problems ended up guillotined in the French revolution, he explained in L’Express. But he said the “monarchic tradition” of prizing leaders with multiple sexual conquests “may now be living its final hours”. In numbers 18.5% of MPs in the French parliament are women, compared to 21% in the UK, 33% in Germany and 46% in Sweden. Less than a quarter of the French senate is female 19% The pay gap between men and women in the private and semi-private sector in France 15% of executives in large French companies are women. A new law sets a 40% quota by 2017 75,000 rapes each year in France, but only 10% of women go to the police. A woman dies every three days as a result of domesetic violence France Dominique Strauss-Kahn Women Gender Angelique Chrisafis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …If there’s one thing both parties seem to have in common, it’s that they can always come together to support another endless war . Their favorite motto? Si vis pacem, para bellum (If you want peace, prepare for war.) Bipartisanship! President Obama could get a second chance to sell Congress on the military operation in Libya, thanks to some last-minute help from an unlikely ally: House Speaker John A. Boehner. On Thursday, with some liberals and conservatives trying to get Congress to force a withdrawal from Libya, Boehner (R-Ohio) offered an alternative. He introduced a resolution that would give Obama 14 more days to make his case. Boehner’s resolution would vent congressional anger, stating that “the president has not sought, and Congress has not provided, authorization” for the operation. It also contains a threat that Congress might cut off funding if Obama defies Congress. But the resolution stops short of demanding that the operation stop and doesn’t declare that Congress officially disapproves of it. On Wednesday, Republican leaders had to abruptly shelve a proposal from one of Congress’s perennial outliers — Rep. Dennis J. Kucinich (D-Ohio) — that would have demanded Obama withdraw forces from the Libya campaign within 15 days. The bill turned out to have much broader support than expected. Boehner’s resolution was intended as a less-drastic way to express congressional unhappiness. In a meeting with fellow Republicans on Thursday afternoon, Boehner said of Kucinich’s bill that it would be wrong to abruptly pull out of a NATO-led operation .
Continue reading …According to the Donald, his “comfort” trumped all when he dug into his New York slice with a plastic fork. After facing a feeding frenzy of journalists, pundits and comedians critiquing his pizza-eating habits, Donald Trump is sounding off. In a rambling retort, Trump tried to explain how digging in with fork and knife helps
Continue reading …Controversial pathologist’s rise to fame in 1990s led to national debate in the US over assisted suicide Jack Kevorkian, the pathologist known as Dr Death who claimed to have helped 130 people commit suicide when terminally ill, died on Friday in Detroit. He was 83 and had been in hospital since last month with pneumonia. Kevorkian’s rise to fame, or infamy, in the 1990s led to a national debate in the United States on assisted suicide. He built a suicide machine, known as the Mercitron or Thanatron, which he operated out of a Volkswagen van to inject a lethal drug dose for people who sought his help in dying. After one of his injections was shown on national television, he served eight years in jail for murder, but lived to see his life made into an award-winning HBO movie last year, starring Al Pacino. Kervokian provocatively likened himself to Martin Luther King or Mahatma Gandhi, but the American Medical Association called him “a reckless instrument of death” who posed a great threat to the public. For nearly a decade, he evaded efforts to stop him. Four trials resulted in three acquittals and one mistrial. His home state of Michigan had no law against assisted suicide in the early 1990s, but later enacted one in response to Kevorkian’s activities. During his trials supporters filled courtrooms wearing “I Back Jack” badges. He called his prosecutors “Nazis”, and said that doctors who did not agree with him were “hypocritic oafs”. In 1996 he arrived in court wearing US colonial-era costume of white wig, breeches, gold brocade coat and tricorn hat, and waving a copy of a letter by Thomas Jefferson which he said defended suicide for the terminally ill. “My ultimate aim is to make euthanasia a positive experience,” he told the New York Times. “I’m trying to knock the medical profession into accepting its responsibilities, and those responsibilities include assisting their patients with death.” In March 1999 a Michigan jury found Kevorkian guilty of second-degree murder, after he videotaped himself administrating a lethal injection to Thomas Youk, a man with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The video was sent to the 60 Minutes TV news show, and caused a national outcry as well as serving as prime evidence for a first-degree murder charge. “You had the audacity to go on national television, show the world what you did and dare the legal system to stop you,” said judge Jessica Cooper. “Well, sir, consider yourself stopped.” Kervorkian was sentenced to 10 to 25 years in jail, and served eight years. Geoffrey Fieger, his lawyer and friend, said: “He was a physician who had an acute sense of compassion and a respect for the dignity of his patients.” Asked if Kevorkian would have chosen to end his life by suicide, given the opportunity, Fieger responded that he had neither the physical or mental strength to make that decision in his final days. “Jack Kevorkian didn’t have an obligation or a duty to society to end his life in the manner in which some of his patients did,” Fieger said. “Everyone chooses the very end for themselves.” Fieger said of Kevorkian: “It’s a rare human being who can single-handedly take on an entire society by the scruff of its neck and force it to focus on the suffering of other human beings. It’s a rare human being who has the courage of his convictions, and is strong enough to stand up against the never-ending threats and attacks of the most powerful figures of our society.” Kevorkian’s life story became the subject of the 2010 HBO movie, You Don’t Know Jack, which earned Al Pacino an Emmy and a Golden Globe award for his portrayal of Kevorkian. Pacino paid tribute during his Emmy acceptance speech, calling Kevorkian “brilliant, interesting and unique”. “You’re all right Jack,” Pacino said waving his award at the doctor, who sat smiling in the audience. Jack Kevorkian United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Controversial pathologist’s rise to fame in 1990s led to national debate in the US over assisted suicide Jack Kevorkian, the pathologist known as Dr Death who claimed to have helped 130 people commit suicide when terminally ill, died on Friday in Detroit. He was 83 and had been in hospital since last month with pneumonia. Kevorkian’s rise to fame, or infamy, in the 1990s led to a national debate in the United States on assisted suicide. He built a suicide machine, known as the Mercitron or Thanatron, which he operated out of a Volkswagen van to inject a lethal drug dose for people who sought his help in dying. After one of his injections was shown on national television, he served eight years in jail for murder, but lived to see his life made into an award-winning HBO movie last year, starring Al Pacino. Kervokian provocatively likened himself to Martin Luther King or Mahatma Gandhi, but the American Medical Association called him “a reckless instrument of death” who posed a great threat to the public. For nearly a decade, he evaded efforts to stop him. Four trials resulted in three acquittals and one mistrial. His home state of Michigan had no law against assisted suicide in the early 1990s, but later enacted one in response to Kevorkian’s activities. During his trials supporters filled courtrooms wearing “I Back Jack” badges. He called his prosecutors “Nazis”, and said that doctors who did not agree with him were “hypocritic oafs”. In 1996 he arrived in court wearing US colonial-era costume of white wig, breeches, gold brocade coat and tricorn hat, and waving a copy of a letter by Thomas Jefferson which he said defended suicide for the terminally ill. “My ultimate aim is to make euthanasia a positive experience,” he told the New York Times. “I’m trying to knock the medical profession into accepting its responsibilities, and those responsibilities include assisting their patients with death.” In March 1999 a Michigan jury found Kevorkian guilty of second-degree murder, after he videotaped himself administrating a lethal injection to Thomas Youk, a man with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The video was sent to the 60 Minutes TV news show, and caused a national outcry as well as serving as prime evidence for a first-degree murder charge. “You had the audacity to go on national television, show the world what you did and dare the legal system to stop you,” said judge Jessica Cooper. “Well, sir, consider yourself stopped.” Kervorkian was sentenced to 10 to 25 years in jail, and served eight years. Geoffrey Fieger, his lawyer and friend, said: “He was a physician who had an acute sense of compassion and a respect for the dignity of his patients.” Asked if Kevorkian would have chosen to end his life by suicide, given the opportunity, Fieger responded that he had neither the physical or mental strength to make that decision in his final days. “Jack Kevorkian didn’t have an obligation or a duty to society to end his life in the manner in which some of his patients did,” Fieger said. “Everyone chooses the very end for themselves.” Fieger said of Kevorkian: “It’s a rare human being who can single-handedly take on an entire society by the scruff of its neck and force it to focus on the suffering of other human beings. It’s a rare human being who has the courage of his convictions, and is strong enough to stand up against the never-ending threats and attacks of the most powerful figures of our society.” Kevorkian’s life story became the subject of the 2010 HBO movie, You Don’t Know Jack, which earned Al Pacino an Emmy and a Golden Globe award for his portrayal of Kevorkian. Pacino paid tribute during his Emmy acceptance speech, calling Kevorkian “brilliant, interesting and unique”. “You’re all right Jack,” Pacino said waving his award at the doctor, who sat smiling in the audience. Jack Kevorkian United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Controversial pathologist’s rise to fame in 1990s led to national debate in the US over assisted suicide Jack Kevorkian, the pathologist known as Dr Death who claimed to have helped 130 people commit suicide when terminally ill, died on Friday in Detroit. He was 83 and had been in hospital since last month with pneumonia. Kevorkian’s rise to fame, or infamy, in the 1990s led to a national debate in the United States on assisted suicide. He built a suicide machine, known as the Mercitron or Thanatron, which he operated out of a Volkswagen van to inject a lethal drug dose for people who sought his help in dying. After one of his injections was shown on national television, he served eight years in jail for murder, but lived to see his life made into an award-winning HBO movie last year, starring Al Pacino. Kervokian provocatively likened himself to Martin Luther King or Mahatma Gandhi, but the American Medical Association called him “a reckless instrument of death” who posed a great threat to the public. For nearly a decade, he evaded efforts to stop him. Four trials resulted in three acquittals and one mistrial. His home state of Michigan had no law against assisted suicide in the early 1990s, but later enacted one in response to Kevorkian’s activities. During his trials supporters filled courtrooms wearing “I Back Jack” badges. He called his prosecutors “Nazis”, and said that doctors who did not agree with him were “hypocritic oafs”. In 1996 he arrived in court wearing US colonial-era costume of white wig, breeches, gold brocade coat and tricorn hat, and waving a copy of a letter by Thomas Jefferson which he said defended suicide for the terminally ill. “My ultimate aim is to make euthanasia a positive experience,” he told the New York Times. “I’m trying to knock the medical profession into accepting its responsibilities, and those responsibilities include assisting their patients with death.” In March 1999 a Michigan jury found Kevorkian guilty of second-degree murder, after he videotaped himself administrating a lethal injection to Thomas Youk, a man with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The video was sent to the 60 Minutes TV news show, and caused a national outcry as well as serving as prime evidence for a first-degree murder charge. “You had the audacity to go on national television, show the world what you did and dare the legal system to stop you,” said judge Jessica Cooper. “Well, sir, consider yourself stopped.” Kervorkian was sentenced to 10 to 25 years in jail, and served eight years. Geoffrey Fieger, his lawyer and friend, said: “He was a physician who had an acute sense of compassion and a respect for the dignity of his patients.” Asked if Kevorkian would have chosen to end his life by suicide, given the opportunity, Fieger responded that he had neither the physical or mental strength to make that decision in his final days. “Jack Kevorkian didn’t have an obligation or a duty to society to end his life in the manner in which some of his patients did,” Fieger said. “Everyone chooses the very end for themselves.” Fieger said of Kevorkian: “It’s a rare human being who can single-handedly take on an entire society by the scruff of its neck and force it to focus on the suffering of other human beings. It’s a rare human being who has the courage of his convictions, and is strong enough to stand up against the never-ending threats and attacks of the most powerful figures of our society.” Kevorkian’s life story became the subject of the 2010 HBO movie, You Don’t Know Jack, which earned Al Pacino an Emmy and a Golden Globe award for his portrayal of Kevorkian. Pacino paid tribute during his Emmy acceptance speech, calling Kevorkian “brilliant, interesting and unique”. “You’re all right Jack,” Pacino said waving his award at the doctor, who sat smiling in the audience. Jack Kevorkian United States Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk
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