Best political party name this election season (from NY Governor Debate last night):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4o-TeMHys0
Can truth be any stranger? Ginny Thomas, wife of Supreme Court Justice "Silent" Clarence Thomas, calls and leaves a voice mail on the office phone of Anita Hill asking her to apologize for accusing "Silent" Clarence of sexual harassment during their employment together more than 20 years ago.What would possibly possess the wife of a sitting Justice to do such a thing? He's got the most secure job in the country but does she think his widdle pwide is huwt?
He should resign, effective immediately, IMO.:not:
From the I can't believe she is a serious candidate section...
....
On the issue of whether creationism should be taught in public schools, a highly skeptical O'Donnell questioned Coon's assertion that the First Amendment calls for the separation of church and state.
"The First Amendment does?" O'Donnell asked during the Tuesday morning debate. "Let me just clarify: You're telling me that the separation of church and state is found in the First Amendment?".......
From the I can't believe she is a serious candidate section...
Delaware's O'Donnell doesn't think separation of church and state is in the Consititution and has said so. Well after she was told there was, she still doesn't believe so.
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.co...gets-coons-for-constitutional-law-101/?hpt=C1
Christine O'Donnell received a lesson on the Constitution at Delaware's Widener Law School Tuesday, but unfortunately for the Republican Senate candidate it came during a debate with Democrat Chris Coons.
On the issue of whether creationism should be taught in public schools, a highly skeptical O'Donnell questioned Coon's assertion that the First Amendment calls for the separation of church and state.
"The First Amendment does?" O'Donnell asked during the Tuesday morning debate. "Let me just clarify: You're telling me that the separation of church and state is found in the First Amendment?"
Coons responded by quoting the relevant text: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion."
"That's in the First Amendment?" a still skeptical O'Donnell replied smiling, as laughter could be heard from the crowd.
These views are not abnormal. They are held by many leaders of the nutbag conservative religious right. The Texas Board of Education is attempting to teach just such viewpoints as O'Donnells as fact. More importantly, the Texas Board of Education knows they have power over textbooks due to economies of scale, and they have acted to use that power to revise the history of the founders.
Get used to it, we will be hearing a lot more of this drivel as fact in the future. Welcome to power by the hom skoold!
On the issue of whether creationism should be taught in public schools, a highly skeptical O'Donnell questioned Coon's assertion that the First Amendment calls for the separation of church and state.
"That's in the First Amendment?" a still skeptical O'Donnell replied smiling, as laughter could be heard from the crowd.
This is what scares me about the Tea Party. Stick to the economy. Please don't get involved in any other topics that you don't understand. :not:
The 10th Amendment is also directed at the enumerated powers of Congress in Article. I. Section. 8. and the prohibitions of powers to states in Section. 9. and Section. 10. (and anywhere else in the document). What is not covered in its text is thus, by default, a power of the states *OR* of the people (as individuals) themselves.The First Amendment originally prevented the Federal government from adopting or promoting a particular "official" religion, preventing people from worshiping any particular religion, or from not worshiping any religion at all. Some later discussion surrounded whether this also applied to individual states. But the prevention of the fedral level from promoting or preventing any particular religion was pretty clear and I think this is what most people think of when they say "separation of church and state."
My reading (and I am no constitutional scholar) is that the Tenth Amendment says that any power not given to the Federal government in the Bill of Rights rests with the States. But the First Amendment DOES outline the issue of religion and government, so it seems to me this should trump states rights in such a case. Since all public schools must comply with standards set by the federal Department of Education (est. 1867) the favoring of Creationism (which DOES promote one particular religion's view) seems to me to be in violation of the First Amendment and any claims to states rights is trumped under the Tenth. I think this is also why some have sought to cast these teachings as "Intelligent Design" - to sidestep the specific-religion view.
Would you also advocate putting the kibosh on tax financing/subsidizing of educations at private/religious colleges and universities (ie, Brigham Young, Notre Dame, Valparaiso, Marquette, University of Southern California, Texas Christian, etc)?Its also worth noting that Darwin's Origin of Species was published on 1859 and the DoE was created in 1867. The tension between what was being taught locally in the piecemeal education system that had evolved up to that time and the soon-to-emerge federal standards, which adopted evolution, has meant this controversy has been there since the beginning of standardized education in America.
I suppose there is an argument to be made that since public education is funded by a combination of state and federal monies, that the states should have some say. But if we are going down that road, why should a non-believer's tax dollars be used to teach religion-based education in a public school setting that takes place on government property? NOT teaching Creationism in the schools does not prevent anyone from going to church or Sunday school or any additional religious education people choose, But teaching it in the school FORCES those who do not share that belief to learn and accept these beliefs and that seems in direct conflict to the First Amendment.
I wonder what would happen if the USA went back to the monetary system called for in Article. I.,Section. 8. ("The Congress shall have Power...") Paragraph 5 ("...To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin...") and Article. I. Section. 10. paragraph 1 ("No State shall... ...coin Money, emit Bills of Credit, make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debt...") - essentially the gold standard?Personally, I can't believe that a whole generation of children in places like Texas and Kansas will potentially enter college being so out of step with their peers in other states.
Again, I am not constitutional scholar, but I have just been reading/studying about this stuff, so its pretty fresh on my mind. This is my lay attempt at playing Supreme Court Judge.
....
Personally, I can't believe that a whole generation of children in places like Texas and Kansas will potentially enter college being so out of step with their peers in other states.
.......
Hate to break it to you, but they don't understand the economy either.
Sad, but true.
They will grow up knowing that the Civil War had nothing to do with slavery in any way shape or form.
They will grow up knowing that the forefathers never intended an actual separation of church from the state.
That studying racial and other social groups separately “really takes away from the whole idea of the melting pot effect".
There is so much craziness coming out of texas it is not even funny. Be afraid, be very afraid.
To make you feel even better. The people who write the textbooks don't care. As long as they sell a few books, the quality of the education kids receive does not mean a thing. So they will facilitate what texas is doing.
At least what was happening in Kansas stayed in Kansas.
What is not covered in its text is thus, by default, a power of the states *OR* of the people (as individuals) themselves.
Would you also advocate putting the kibosh on tax financing/subsidizing of educations at private/religious colleges and universities (ie, Brigham Young, Notre Dame, Valparaiso, Marquette, University of Southern California, Texas Christian, etc)?
"He's an honest man whose freedom of speech is protected by Fox News on a daily basis," Ailes said.
Fox News... we love to hire people that are fired for good reasons! As if we didn't see this coming... at what point do we just put Fox News in the same place as The Onion?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_upsho...-news-offers-juan-williams-2-million-contract
My favorite line from Ailes...
![]()
![]()
but.....but.....but everyone else is part of the liberal/commie/socalist/nazi/california-northeast elitist/pagan/anti-American cabal. Who else is protecting us from that Kenyan anti-colonialist/socliast/communist/nazi who is bent on destroying this Country that so many died for. You know he is the anti-Christ who really isn't eligible to be president.:wall: Let me tell ya about the death panels and the concentration camps that FEMA is building for those who oppose the chosen one /savior who is destroying the free markets and making the government too big so that will take over our lives.
I don't believe it was right for NPR to fire Juan WiIliams based on what he said. This wasn't a bigoted remark- all he did was confess to a prejudice within a context (airplane encounter) that I'd bet 90% of Americans have as a result of the terror attacks of 9-11. What's wrong with admitting that? I'm disappointed that the speech police at NPR would hang him for this, and I wonder if they would've let him go if he didn't work at Fox and the comments weren't said on Bill O'Reilly's show.
I try not to get involved in these political threads but I will say two things. NPR let the late Daniel Schorr freely express his liberal views. After 10 years with NPR, Juan Williams should not have been fired by telephone regardless of the offense, real or imagined.
The central issue from NPR's perspective is that his role on Fox and the content of what he has said (and this was not the first incident in which he had been warned) was deemed to be in violation of NPR's ethics code, which requires contracted journalists to "avoid situations that might call its impartiality into question." Because they felt his opinions put NPR's impartiality into question.
NPR let the late Daniel Schorr freely express his liberal views. After 10 years with NPR, Juan Williams should not have been fired by telephone regardless of the offense, real or imagined.
Even Williams is saying that NPR had been warning him about appearing on fox news and saying wacky things that could make NPR look bad. Seems like he knew he shouldn't have been doing this and continued to break their rules/direction. Whether we agree with him or not, it seems he ignored his employers direction. That is usually grounds for dismissal.
Does anyone outside of a few elitist circles even listen to NPR anymore?
^o)
(how are their overall ratings compared with the ratings that FNC receives? :-c )
Mike
FYI, I've been a big fan, listener, and supporter of NPR for years. Don't even think about throwing me under the conservative vs. liberal bus on this one!
TexOk said:NPR's ethics code seems to be applied under the auspices that NPR's progressive liberal outlook is fact rather than a particular worldview.
Do you listen to NPR? I believe it is a misnomer that it is progressive and/or liberal. It is generally as unbiased as I believe a news outlet can be. The only reason it gets labeled like that IMO is that fox news type right wingers label everything that is factually based, as liberal.
Also, your last sentence tends to confirm my original hypothesis.
Name one news outlet that isn't obviously rightsided like Fox as a neutral news source?
I don't think there are any neutral news sources. The best we can hope for is balance, and even then you can't really get that from any individual news source. NPR is definitely more balanced than, say, Fox News or MSNBC. But that's not really saying much, is it?
Since Sept. 11, 2001, Congress and the Defense Department have added more than $2 trillion to the Pentagon budget. About half that increase covered the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; the rest covered the "base" (non-war) parts of the Defense Department. Against all logic, the extra money made our military forces mostly smaller and older.
Right now, the Pentagon does not know how it spends its money, as the Government Accountability Office has reported for decades. It is literally "unauditable."
Those making today's defense budget decisions are locked in a mindset where more empty spending is never enough. That, more than anything, needs to change.
So you agree that NPR is balanced? What more can you hope for?
No, I don't think NPR is balanced. I don't think any media outlet is balanced. I said NPR was more balanced than either Fox News and MSNBC, but that that kind of comparison doesn't really mean much (because Fox News and MSNBC are off-the-scale unbalanced). I'd put NPR about on a same plane as The New York Times as far as balanced coverage.
Which are the two most balanced news outlets available? I just want to understand what you consider to be balanced. And although you are much more reasonable than some on the conservative side, whenever I try to have an open dialog about the media with some, I get told that I am not conservative enough if I think that the media is unbiased a lot of the time. I believe that outside of obvious websites (Drudge, Huffington, etc.) and MSNBC or Fox, most others attempt to be balanced. I won't argue that many drift left, but in the end they are still pretty fair and accurate in accounts. They don't follow the loony left or right stories. Although lately they have all been failing on this front.
I'd put NPR about on a same plane as The New York Times as far as balanced coverage.
I don't think there are any neutral news sources. The best we can hope for is balance, and even then you can't really get that from any individual news source. NPR is definitely more balanced than, say, Fox News or MSNBC. But that's not really saying much, is it?
Which are the two most balanced news outlets available? I just want to understand what you consider to be balanced. And although you are much more reasonable than some on the conservative side, whenever I try to have an open dialog about the media with some, I get told that I am not conservative enough if I think that the media is unbiased a lot of the time. I believe that outside of obvious websites (Drudge, Huffington, etc.) and MSNBC or Fox, most others attempt to be balanced. I won't argue that many drift left, but in the end they are still pretty fair and accurate in accounts. They don't follow the loony left or right stories. Although lately they have all been failing on this front.
So then what would you considered balanced? Comparative to most news outlets, NPR presents both sides of the coin very well (almost as good as the newshour on PBS). Really can't get an unbiased other than say BBC America news. Papers editorialize because they need to sell a product. Same with Fox, MSNBC, and most news talk radio stations: they gotta sell them adds. Audience and ad revenue is key.
Yes, NPR has more "stories" that perk my interest as a left-center leaning person, but at the same time i think when you view NPR as a whole "Morning edition, Talk of the Nation, All things Considered and Marketplace" it is a pretty well rounded news source.
You are not going to get that from Glen Beck, Rush, KO, Meadow Hannerity and the other talking pundits out there.
Mike Pence is going to step down from the Republican leadership likely to set up a run at the presidency in 2012.
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1010/44201.html
Any Indiana people have experience with Pence? From my quick review (other than the stupid stuff he says on Hannity and at Tea Party rallies) is that he is a social uber-conservative, and follows the party line on everything else - tax cuts, immigration, cut federal government size, etc.
He seems like someone that has a very small, if not zero, percent chance of making it big. He is also a member of the house... which doesn't work well when trying to make the step to president. I don't understand who would give him the idea that he is a good candidate? Am I missing something that makes him unique?
Just a few more days until the Rally to Restore Sanity and the March to Keep Fear Alive. I will be there...![]()
Just a few more days until the Rally to Restore Sanity and the March to Keep Fear Alive. I will be there...![]()