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Sounds familiarSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 7, 2007 - 2:08pm.
on Justice | Race and Identity Knowing no more than is reported here, it's almost like the L.A.P.D. wants to end the Black-Latino beef by providing a common enemy. Witnesses dispute police version of man's death Three significantly different accounts of how a 31-year-old man came to die in police custody emerged Tuesday, one from the Los Angeles Police Department, the others from three people who said they saw officers beating the handcuffed man. The death of Mauricio Cornejo, 31, has sparked tensions at the Ramona Gardens housing project, where dozens of police in riot gear converged on a crowd Tuesday evening at a makeshift carwash intended to raise funds for his funeral. True to their word...
That's right...but we will order one to close a case and fire him for disobeying orders Obviously I don't believe the Justice Department official. Justice Department official denies firings were political WASHINGTON -- A top Justice Department official acknowledged yesterday that more than a half-dozen US attorneys were fired in the last year, in some cases without cause, but denied allegations by Democrats that they had been dismissed for political reasons. This one is all on White CultureSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 7, 2007 - 7:04am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora | Race and Identity Reason for edit. All the rest is true.
A documentary on the decline of White CultureSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 7, 2007 - 6:43am.
on Media | Race and Identity Rather than embed it as usual, I want you to watch the (R-rated) trailer on YouTube so you can check the comments. That's part of the documentary effect too. Rush is just mad at Black Culture because it made him a junkieSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 7, 2007 - 6:34am.
on Race and Identity At Media Matters for America, if you want to actually hear this dick.
The very definition of having too damn much moneySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 7, 2007 - 6:24am.
Snakes used in massage treatment in Israel Spa owner Ada Barak gives a snake massage treatment, where she lets loose the reptiles on the body of customer Liz Cohen, at her spa in the northern communal village of Talmey El'Azar Feb. 1, 2007. Barak uses California and Florida King snakes, corn snakes and milk snakes in her treatments, which she said were inspired by her belief that once people get over any initial misgivings, they find physical contact with the creatures to be soothing. Picture taken Feb. 1, 2007. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Here come the racists in earnestSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 6, 2007 - 8:02pm.
on People of the Word | Race and Identity Well, here it is.
Nigga, please...the old racist right hasn't been surplantedSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 6, 2007 - 2:55pm.
on Race and Identity
So "the left" is a race? "The right" is a race? God, he's useless for real discussion. Except as an example. maybe. As a noise-maker for the OLD racist right, he's a wunderkind. Again, warrior lessonsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 6, 2007 - 1:37pm.
on People of the Word Ampersand did a link dump. How to win arguments and influence debate is excellent.
Rightfully listed as the first rule. In fact, I will say that in the wild-west open discussion forums of the internets the goal is not to convince your opponent but is to shut him up. That was amusingSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 6, 2007 - 12:13pm.
on Cartoons | Seen online The horses having long left the barn...Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 6, 2007 - 11:25am.
on Justice A.B.A. Panel Would Weaken Code Governing Judges’ Conduct A commission of the American Bar Association has recommended that the group weaken its code of judicial conduct by changing, from a mandatory rule to nonbinding advice, an instruction to judges to “avoid impropriety and the appearance of impropriety.” Supporters of the change say disciplining judges for violating a concept as vague as “the appearance of impropriety” is unfair. Opponents denounce any retreat from the longstanding and widely embraced standard, and one critic — Robert H. Tembeckjian, the administrator of the New York State Commission on Judicial Conduct — has resigned in protest as an adviser to the A.B.A. commission. This post is NOT about the linked articleSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 6, 2007 - 10:30am.
on Race and Identity A side-effect of the recent release of Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid is I get to see a n interesting conversation among Jewish folk. It got me thinking this morning about why they can have public discussions like this one, when Black folks having an equivalent one would make the entire nation got batshit crazy. Part of it comes down to the Jewish discussion being seen as discussing what kind of white person to be. I'm having trouble framing how the equivalent Black discussion would be seen. I don't have to link the crazy diaper-wearing astronaut love kidnapping story, do I?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 6, 2007 - 9:49am.
on News Can we just assume Black culture drove the woman insane? Dionne's first question says it allSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 6, 2007 - 9:41am.
on For the Democrats | Politics | War In The War To Save The Surge, E. J. Dionne Jr. asks a question with a really obvious answer.
I have another, I think related, question. The Republican Senators just rejected the known will of the people for the purely political purpose of supporting an unpopular President's failed policies. So when will it be obvious Republicans have as little interest in what the nation's citizenry thinks as in working bipartisanly? And do you think they'll stop with the immigrants?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 6, 2007 - 8:54am.
on Culture wars | Politics | Race and Identity via OW Report: Supremacist activity flourishes NEW YORK - Huge street protests made millions of immigrants more visible and powerful last year, but they also seem to have revived a hateful counter force: white supremacists. Groups linked to the Ku Klux Klan, skinheads and neo-Nazis grew significantly more active, holding more rallies, distributing leaflets and increasing their presence on the Internet — much of it focused on stirring anti-immigrant sentiment, a new report released by the Anti-Defamation League says. An example of how changing the ground one operates on can override personal initiativeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 6, 2007 - 8:35am.
on Katrina aftermath This is beyond incompetence. It smacks of intent.
A 'Road Home' to Lunacy NEW ORLEANS -- It's beyond frustrating to hear well-meaning bureaucrats cite all the reasons that so little has been done to rebuild this ruined city and the rest of the Gulf Coast -- why, for example, out of more than 100,000 Louisiana households that have applied to the state government for their share of $7 billion in federal reconstruction funds, fewer than 400 have received their money. It's not an essay...Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 5, 2007 - 7:01pm.
on About me, not you | Race and Identity ...but The Angry Black Woman's idea is interesting, so
Each of these pictures is over 100 years old. C-ya...wouldn't wanna B...wait...Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 5, 2007 - 2:57pm.
on Culture wars | Economics | Race and Identity
Indian immigrants enticed to go home MUMBAI -- Lured by the booming Indian economy and fed up with living as outsiders in a foreign society, many Indian and other South Asian immigrants in the United States are returning to their homeland -- and bringing with them cutting-edge American skills. You've got to see first prizeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 5, 2007 - 2:43pm.
on Seen online No. 1 Plumbing and Drain-Cleaning Service Provider Creates Ultimate Toilet, Complete with flat-screen TV, DVD Player, Laptop, Refrigerator, Xbox™ 360, iPod™ (Cincinnati, Ohio — January 27, Thomas Crapper Day, 2007) — The average person spends 11,862 hours in the bathroom — which equals one year, four months and five days — in a lifetime. It's amazing the crapper, or as some say, "the toilet," has evolved so little since the Romans invented the latrine in 2500 B.C., with the most significant advance happening when Albert Giblin, an employee of Thomas Crapper, perfected an effective flush toilet in 1898. The days of emperors and queens have ended, but that doesn't mean you don't deserve your very own bathroom throne. A comment on commentsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 5, 2007 - 12:56pm.
on Culture wars | On bullshit | Seen online I notice some folks are having comment issues. I'd like to share a couple of resources that didn't actually help my views but encapsulate major sections of it. First, from News You Can Bruise for 2001 October 28
A bit overstated. Still... Next is the concise Greater Internet Fuckwad Theory. I have gotten great utility from this principle, both rhetorically and philosophically. No snarky headline is sufficientSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 5, 2007 - 11:01am.
on Justice | Race and Identity
[TS]Gary Tyler’s Lost Decades There is no longer any doubt that the case against the teenager, Gary Tyler, was a travesty. A federal appeals court ruled unequivocally that he did not receive a fair trial. The Louisiana Board of Pardons issued rulings on three occasions that would have allowed Mr. Tyler to be freed. But this is the South and Mr. Tyler was a black person convicted of killing a white. It didn’t matter that the case was built on bogus evidence and coerced witnesses, or that the trial was, in the words of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, “fundamentally unfair.” Mr. Tyler was never given a new trial and the pardon board recommendations were rejected by two governors.... It's well past time she was judged accuratelyLest ye forget
With Rumsfeld Gone, Critics of War Look to Rice WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 — For six years, first as national security adviser and then as secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice worked under the cover of a very effective shield: Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, who was the administration’s lightning rod for criticism over its handling of Iraq. But in recent weeks, with Mr. Rumsfeld gone, Ms. Rice has faced increased, and somewhat unfamiliar, criticism. At a Senate hearing on Jan. 11, she confronted a wall of opposition from Republicans as well as Democrats. During hearings this week on Iraq, several of her predecessors were pointed in their disapproval of her job performance. The failure to make that discernment is the heart of the NYPD's failureSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 5, 2007 - 9:53am.
on Race and Identity
As Officers Stop and Frisk, Residents Raise Their Guard At 14, Rocky Harris knows the routine: You raise your hands high, you keep your mouth shut and you don’t dare move a muscle. Then the police officer’s gloved hands go up and down each leg, around your waist, across your chest and back, then down your shoulders to your wrists. When they don’t find guns or drugs, Rocky said, they let you go. He said that he had been searched, fruitlessly, at least three times since last summer, and that he had friends who had been searched repeatedly. “They tell you that you’re selling drugs. But I don’t do nothing wrong. I just play ball,” he said, walking through the Red Hook East housing development in Brooklyn yesterday morning, headed to a community center for a game of basketball. That moaning you hear is Ward Connerly's first orgasm since NovemberSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 5, 2007 - 9:44am.
on Race and Identity
Not quite. It's an in-group, not an attitude. On Race and the Census: Struggling With Categories That No Longer Apply I think Congress has about two weeks to make such a statementSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 5, 2007 - 9:33am.
on For the Democrats Have you noticed that Bush ordered his 'plan' to begin before presenting it to us all? Have you noticed the fact that the plan is already underway is used to challenge those who challenge the 'plan'? Do you remember the troop build-up for the Iraq invasion...do you remember how the pundits figured out we'd "have to" attack by a certain date because we had all those assets on the ground and you can't just put all that stuff in the area and not use it?
We are fast approaching the point where Bush or Cheney or whoever is in charge can just give an order and a second invasion can be started by issuing an order. And then comes the recycling of the rhetoric about funding soldiers in combat. Congress must stop an attack on Iran DESPITE ANGUISH and anger over the Bush administration's decision to escalate its failing war in Iraq, Congress is unlikely to cut off funding. Even most opponents of the war fear that they could be blamed for not supporting the troops in the field and for a possible descent into even greater catastrophe in the face of a precipitous U.S. withdrawal from Iraq. But nothing prevents Congress from using its power of the purse to prevent an American attack on Iran. President Bush's neoconservative advisors and pundit supporters have been beating the drums of war with Iran since 2003, when the president declared Iran to be part of an "axis of evil." Recall that a senior administration official told The Times that Iran should "take a number" in the wake of the invasion of Iraq. In his recent address to the nation on the troop surge in Iraq, Bush issued more threats to Iran. Now the president has named a Navy admiral to head the U.S. Central Command and dispatched a second aircraft carrier and minesweepers to the Persian Gulf, presumably to prevent Iran from closing the Strait of Hormuz in the event of conflict. These developments and other administration moves could presage an air attack on Iran's nuclear facilities. SuckersSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 5, 2007 - 9:07am.
on Economics High Prices Help Sell All-in-One Products Should you get the whitening toothpaste, the anticavity toothpaste or the one that does both? The detergent that removes stains, the one that makes colors brighter or the all-in-one? Those decisions are the subject of studies described in a forthcoming paper in The Journal of Consumer Research, titled “Jack-of-All-Trades or Master of One?” The studies show that, when consumers consider all-in-one products side by side with specialized ones, the specialized products seem better at their particular functions than they did when considered alone. The all-in-ones, on the other hand, seem worse at each job. The privatized government In Washington, Contractors Play Biggest Role Ever WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 — In June, short of people to process cases of incompetence and fraud by federal contractors, officials at the General Services Administration responded with what has become the government’s reflexive answer to almost every problem. They hired another contractor. It did not matter that the company they chose, CACI International, had itself recently avoided a suspension from federal contracting; or that the work, delving into investigative files on other contractors, appeared to pose a conflict of interest; or that each person supplied by the company would cost taxpayers $104 an hour. Six CACI workers soon joined hundreds of other private-sector workers at the G.S.A., the government’s management agency. Black culture! Black culture, I say!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 4, 2007 - 6:10pm.
on Culture wars
Girls Gone Wild: What Are Celebs Teaching Kids? Feb. 12, 2007 issue - My 6-year-old daughter loves Lindsay Lohan. Loves, loves, loves her. She loves Lindsay's hair; she loves Lindsay's freckles. She's seen "The Parent Trap" at least 10 times. I sometimes catch her humming the movie's theme song, Nat King Cole's "Love." She likes "Herbie Fully Loaded" and now we're cycling through "Freaky Friday." So when my daughter spotted a photo of Lindsay in the New York Post at the breakfast table not long ago, she was psyched. "That's Lindsay Lohan," she said proudly. "What's she doing?" I couldn't tell her, of course. I didn't want to explain that Lindsay, who, like Paris Hilton and Britney Spears, sometimes parties pantyless, was taking pole-dancing lessons to prepare for a movie role. Or that her two hours of research left her bruised "everywhere." Then again, Lindsay's professional trials are easy to explain compared with Nicole Richie's recent decision to stop her car in the car-pool lane of an L.A. freeway. Or Britney Spears's "collapse" during a New Year's Eve party in Las Vegas. Or the more recent report that Lindsay had checked into rehab after passing out in a hotel hallway, an item that ran on the Post's Page Six opposite a photo of Kate Moss falling down a stairway while dressed in little more than a fur jacket and a pack of cigarettes. Four hours of Ossie DavisSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 4, 2007 - 3:33pm.
on Race and Identity | Seen online You can't embed this stuff, and if you hit the first link you'll likely get a play list with the other four in nice sequential order. But I don't want you to miss any of it, so here's all five links. Archive of American Television Interview with Ossie Davis Part 1 of 5 |
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