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Week of February 05, 2006 to February 11, 2006Road rage!Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 11, 2006 - 11:29am.
on Random rant
Philly Bus Driver Tosses Woman Off Bus
Thursday, February 9, 2006
(02-09) 17:10 PST PHILADELPHIA, (AP) -- A transit bus driver grabbed a woman by the hair, knocked her head into a pole, opened the door and tossed her into traffic after she yelled at him for missing her stop, police said. The 52-year-old woman, who was not identified, suffered a broken shoulder. Bus driver Mario Edney, 53, was arraigned Thursday on aggravated assault and other charges, said Officer Jillian Russell, a police spokeswoman. He was being held on $2,000 bail. Edney said he had to skip the woman's stop Wednesday morning because of a detour, police said. There's a level on which I feel I'd prefer knowingSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 11, 2006 - 10:55am.
on Race and Identity A federal lawsuit accuses the online site Craigslist of violating fair housing laws by publishing discriminatory classified ads, reviving the question of what legal boundaries, if any, should exist for postings on the Internet. But legal experts say the lawsuit against Craigslist, a fast-growing online network of classified ads and forums, faces an uphill battle because of laws in place to protect online service providers. Abramoff's favorite charities
Quote of note:
They included: Abramoff's Charity Began at Home Hopefully, teachers will have the courage to fail their asses for disrupting the class...aggressivelySubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 11, 2006 - 10:24am.
on Education | Onward the Theocracy!
Quote of note:
A former high-school biology teacher, Ham travels the nation training children as young as 5 to challenge science orthodoxy. He doesn't engage in the political and legal fights that have erupted over the teaching of evolution. His strategy is more subtle: He aims to give people who trust the biblical account of creation the confidence to defend their views — aggressively. Those who believe in creationism -- children and adults -- are being taught to challenge evolution's tenets in an in-your-face way.
By Stephanie SimonTimes Staff Writer February 11, 2006 News that's thousands of years oldSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 11, 2006 - 10:13am.
on Africa and the African Diaspora
Hole in a Wall Reveals Egyptian Relics
From a king's adjoining tomb, archeologists spy a chamber housing five mummies who, if not royal, were in a pharaoh's good books.
By Tanalee SmithAssociated Press February 11, 2006 LUXOR, Egypt — The painted 3,000-year-old face of a woman — her eyes lined in black kohl — stared from a funerary mask Friday as authorities revealed to the world the first tomb discovered in eight decades in the Valley of the Kings. The five mummies inside were found by a team of American archeologists working on the neighboring tomb of Amenmeses, a late 19th Dynasty pharaoh. The things they tell you about are bad enoughSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 11, 2006 - 6:09am.
So the Senate and House of Representatives have come to terms on a bill to extend the "controversial" provisions of the P.A.T.R.I.O.T. Act. The New York Times says Congress caved.
I told Howard Dean and now I'm telling Michael SteeleSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 10, 2006 - 4:16pm.
...who should know better than to jack around with people's symbols.
That's the problem with being a Black Republican...you have to deny so much you lose track of lessons legitimately learned. Steele Apologizes for Holocaust Remarks Compared Stem Cell Research to Nazi Medical Experiments By Matthew Mosk, John Wagner and Ann E. Marimow
Washington Post Staff Writers Friday, February 10, 2006; 11:30 AM Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael S. Steele apologized this morning for telling a Baltimore Jewish group yesterday that he believes stem cell research could be comparable to Nazi medical testing on Jews during World War II. "I'm just sorry for having said it, for it having come out the way it did," Steele (R) said on WBAL radio. "I made an inappropriate inference, and I apologize for that." Let me tell you what troubles me about thisSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 10, 2006 - 3:59pm.
on Africa and the African Diaspora Aristede won a Democratic election and was chased out of office by thugs using weapons that cost more than your average Haitian's annual salary. Candidate of Haiti's Poor Leads in Early Tally With 61% of Vote PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, Feb. 9 — Unofficial electoral results that had been carried in by mules, trucks and helicopters from polling centers across the country appeared Thursday to give an early lead to René Préval, a former president considered a champion of the poor masses and a thorn in the side of the elite. You think they can sort out the spam?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 10, 2006 - 1:10pm.
on War Police blotter: Patriot Act e-mail spying approved What: The Justice Department asks a judge to approve Patriot Act e-mail monitoring without any evidence of criminal behavior. What happened: As part of a grand jury investigation that's still secret, the Justice Department asked a federal magistrate judge to approve monitoring of an unnamed person's e-mail correspondents. Manufactured doubt aside...Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 10, 2006 - 9:41am.
on Culture wars
Quote of note:
Official Resigns Public TV Post WASHINGTON, Feb. 9 — The top television executive at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting announced on Thursday that he would be stepping down. This is the latest in a string of departures of officials and consultants who played central roles in an effort by conservatives to bring what they viewed as more balance to public television and radio. That's an interesting admissionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 10, 2006 - 8:35am.
on Impeachable offenses | Politics Quote of note:
Libby Testified He Was Told To Leak Data About Iraq Vice President Cheney's former chief of staff testified that his bosses instructed him to leak information to reporters from a high-level intelligence report that suggested Iraq was trying to obtain weapons of mass destruction, according to court records in the CIA leak case. When you put it that way I don't think there's an optionSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 10, 2006 - 8:18am.
on Politics Cheney Says NSA Spying Should Be an Election Issue Vice President Cheney suggested last night that the debate over spying on overseas communications to or from terrorism suspects should be a political issue in this year's congressional elections. Speaking to Republicans gathered for the annual CPAC convention, Cheney said the debate over the National Security Agency surveillance program "has clarified where all stand" on an issue that has drawn criticism from congressional Democrats and some Republicans. "And with an important election coming up, people need to know just how we view the most critical questions of national security, and how we propose to defend the nation that all of us, Republicans and Democrats, love and are privileged to serve," Cheney said. This is something I need to checkSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 10, 2006 - 7:44am.
on Impeachable offenses
I need to see what is in the P.A.T.R.I.O.T. Act extension the Senate is about to vote on. The one that didn't quite make it in had this gem:
Which video clip format works best for you?Quicktime 16% (3 votes) Windows Media Format 32% (6 votes) Either 42% (8 votes) I don't watch those things 11% (2 votes) Total votes: 19 No thank youSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 9, 2006 - 10:24am.
on Tech From the Los Angeles Times Google Inc. is offering a new tool that will automatically transfer information from one personal computer to another, but anyone wanting that convenience must authorize the Internet search leader to store the material for up to 30 days. We're not gonna discipline them anyway, so why make them go through all that stress?Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 9, 2006 - 9:57am.
on Justice WHAT CHANGED? That's the key question for members of the Los Angeles Police Commission, who secretly reversed a 25-year-old policy of publicly disclosing the names of police officers involved in shootings. Though the commission finally discussed the issue at a public meeting Tuesday, two months after making the decision behind closed doors, commissioners didn't adequately explain why a policy that has worked just fine for a quarter of a century is no longer viable. They need to. That said, it's going to be hard to come up with a justification. When police officers are involved in a shooting, their identities matter — because without them, it's impossible to know whether specific officers pose a problem. Using the names in police reports, The Times was able to determine in 2004 that a small group of officers was involved in a disproportionate number of shootings. Yes, police officers have a right to privacy, but details of shooting incidents should be a matter of public record. Since it works so well in elementary school...Submitted by Prometheus 6 on February 9, 2006 - 9:41am.
on Education Oh, come on.
You know the very act of slotting them into a scoring grid requires a single set of tests or the comparison is meaningless. Panel Explores Standard Tests for Colleges A higher education commission named by the Bush administration is examining whether standardized testing should be expanded into universities and colleges to prove that students are learning and to allow easier comparisons on quality. Corruption creeps slowly through the systemSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 9, 2006 - 8:56am.
on Impeachable offenses Secret Court's Judges Were Warned About NSA Spy Data Twice in the past four years, a top Justice Department lawyer warned the presiding judge of a secret surveillance court that information overheard in President Bush's eavesdropping program may have been improperly used to obtain wiretap warrants in the court, according to two sources with knowledge of those events. The revelations infuriated U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly -- who, like her predecessor, Royce C. Lamberth, had expressed serious doubts about whether the warrantless monitoring of phone calls and e-mails ordered by Bush was legal. Both judges had insisted that no information obtained this way be used to gain warrants from their court, according to government sources, and both had been assured by administration officials it would never happen. David Broder has no good news for the Bush regimeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 9, 2006 - 7:57am.
on For the Democrats | Impeachable offenses
He tries to be "even handed"
Gonzales, in his testimony, made an effective rhetorical point by citing examples going back to Washington, Lincoln, Wilson and Franklin D. Roosevelt of presidents ordering interception of wartime communications -- on their own authority....and he actually succeeds Rev. Joseph Lowery does not apologize for clear, intentional statementsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 8, 2006 - 2:00pm.
As well he should not. Think Progress won't mind my stealing their bandwidth. Rev. Joseph Lowery appeared on Tucker Carlson’s show last night to respond to right-wing criticisms that his remarks inappropriately politicized Coretta Scott King’s funeral. Carlson told Lowery his remarks “seemed like bad manners” and were “very uncomfortable.” Lowery stood his ground. Watch it:
Do We Have To Go Through This Crap AgainSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 8, 2006 - 1:32pm.
on Economics | For the Democrats | Politics Sleight of Hand Feb. 8, 2006 - If you read enough numbers, you never know what you'll find. Take President Bush and private Social Security accounts. Last year, even though Bush talked endlessly about the supposed joys of private accounts, he never proposed a specific plan to Congress and never put privatization costs in the budget. But this year, with no fanfare whatsoever, Bush stuck a big Social Security privatization plan in the federal budget proposal, which he sent to Congress on Monday. The N.R.A. has lost its mindSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 8, 2006 - 10:58am.
on News Corporate America is not going to leave itself open to a lawsuit (failure to protect the car that was broken into by the criminal that shot the place up). Under the bill, if business owners ban guns in cars on workplace parking lots, they could get sued and charged with a third-degree felony, punishable by a maximum five-year prison sentence and a $5,000 fine. The bill has an exception for places like schools, where guns are banned by law. NRA bill would OK guns in cars at work TALLAHASSEE - The National Rifle Association is pushing a bill that would penalize Florida employers with prison time and lawsuits if they prohibit people from keeping guns in their cars at workplace parking lots. If it were college instead of prison, they'd be having bake sales instead of fightsSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 8, 2006 - 9:58am.
on Justice | Race and Identity Quote of note:
Justice: Battling the Aryan Brothers
Prosecutors bid to break up a vicious prison gang. By Sarah Childress
Newsweek
Feb. 13, 2006 issue - Barry Byron Mills is a bank robber who will spend the rest of his life in prison. An alleged leader of the notorious Aryan Brotherhood prison gang, Mills stabbed a fellow inmate to death with a handmade knife 27 years ago, adding two life sentences to his time. Now 57, he likes to project a softer side. He spends his spare time crocheting, and writes love letters to lonely women on the outside who have a weak spot for prison toughs. Congressional election season may be challenging for RepublicansSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 8, 2006 - 9:45am.
on Politics Quote of note:
Reagan Navy Secretary Will Run for U.S. Senate RICHMOND, Feb. 7 -- James Webb, who served as President Ronald Reagan's Navy secretary, said Tuesday that he will seek the Democratic nomination to run against U.S. Sen. George Allen (R-Va.) this year, hoping to challenge the one-term incumbent on foreign policy and the conduct of the war in Iraq. A Senatorial De Lay in fundraisingSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 8, 2006 - 9:40am.
on Politics
Pony up, GOP sens. told
By Alexander Bolton Senate Republican leaders yesterday urged GOP senators to meet ambitious individual fundraising goals to help close the fundraising disparity with their Democratic counterparts. Several lawmakers said the individual fundraising goals are significantly higher than they’ve been asked to meet in past election cycles. The request also underscores how nervous Republicans are less than nine months before the midterm elections. Participants at yesterday’s meeting at the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) said that rank-and-file senators had been asked to raise about $100,000 for the NRSC and that chairmen had been asked to raise about $150,000. Hoping against hopeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 8, 2006 - 9:26am.
on Health
Has BYU prof found AIDS cure?
Compound could be long-sought breakthrough By Bob Mims The Salt Lake Tribune Researchers, including a BYU scientist, believe they have found a new compound that could finally kill the HIV/AIDS virus, not just slow it down as current treatments do. And, unlike the expensive, drug cocktails 25 years of research have produced for those with the deadly virus, the compound invented by Paul D. Savage of Brigham Young University appears to hunt down and kill HIV. Although so far limited to early test tube studies, CSA-54, one of a family of compounds called Ceragenins (or CSAs), mimics the disease-fighting characteristics of anti-microbial and anti-viral agents produced naturally by a healthy human immune system. There must have been hella more than five picturesSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 7, 2006 - 5:49pm.
on Politics
CORRUPTION -- DID THE WHITE HOUSE INSTRUCT PRIVATE PHOTOGRAPHER TO SCRUB BUSH-ABRAMOFF PICTURES? Two weeks ago, The Hill columnist and blogger Josh Marshall reported that Reflections Photography, a large studio frequently hired to photograph conservative political events, had removed from its database all photos showing President Bush with disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff. Marshall had unsuccessfully attempted to purchase such a photo from Reflections, and called the studio's president Joanne Amos to ask why the pictures were no longer available. She "very straightforwardly told me that the photographs had been removed and that they had been removed because they showed Abramoff and the president in the same picture.
GoodbyeSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 7, 2006 - 1:34pm.
on News | Race and Identity A final farewell to Coretta Scott King Even if I wanted to see them, the people pushing for broad publication would be enough to change my mindSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 7, 2006 - 1:25pm.
Hate behind right-wing blogburst
No need to publish offensive cartoons Feb. 7, 2006. 01:00 AM ANTONIA ZERBISIAS Well that didn't take long. While Muslim religious extremists are rioting in the streets of Beirut, Gaza City and Kabul, Scandinavian embassies are being torched and Jordanians are deprived of their Danish feta over cartoons that were never actually published in any legitimate newspaper, the right-wing blogosphere has been staging its own "blogburst": the act of reproducing the offending depictions of the Prophet Muhammad. It's a "simultaneous, co-ordinated posting by a large group of webmasters and bloggers on a given topic," says Israpundit who, along with Michelle Malkin, who is like Ann Coulter but not as funny and not so skinny, are leading the cartoon crusade. It's not just death that initiates the processSubmitted by Prometheus 6 on February 7, 2006 - 8:55am.
on People of the Word Quote of note: and When Death Is on the Docket, the Moral Compass Wavers Burl Cain is a religious man who believes it is only for God to say when a person's number is up. But in his job as warden and chief executioner at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, Mr. Cain is the one who gives the order to start a lethal injection, and he has held condemned inmates' hands as they died. He does it, he said in an interview, because capital punishment "is the law of the land." "It's something we do whether we're for it or against it, and we try to make the process as humane as possible," he said, referring to himself and others on the execution team. But he concedes, "The issue is coping, how we cope with it." |
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