Archive for October 30th, 2010

Oct
30

John Kerry Paul Simon Bette Midler at the other sanity rally NYRPs Hulaween

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John Kerry Paul Simon Bette Midler at the other sanity rally  NYRPs Hulaween

John Kerry took the stage last night at the New York Restoration Project’s annual Hulaween Ball at the Waldorf Astoria dressed in a gray suit and tie. Addressing the at-capacity charity gala, a literally sparkling crowd decadent with intense costumes–from a fleet of giant flag waving Chilean miners to a Prescilla Queen of the Desert troupe–Kerry coolly explained his “costume”: “I came as Don Draper in fifteen years.”
Bette Midler, diva extraordinaire and the founder of NYRP, an organization at the forefront of greening New York City through various community driven intitiatives including planting one million trees in the next decade (it’s ahead of schedule with more than 315,000 trees planted in two years), introduced Kerry on stage as “a senator who does not give up.”
Midler presented Kerry with The Wind Beneath My Wings Award for his longtime role in helping raise awareness of and solutions to global warming. She also praised Kerry’s 2007 book, This Moment on Earth: Today’s New Environmentalists and Their Vision for the Future. Kerry accepted the award by saying, “I want you to know that ‘Wind Beneath My Wings’ is my favorite song. It had to replace ‘Hail to the Chief.’”
“It’s our own rally to restore sanity,” Kerry said of the evening that raised around $2.4 million to plant trees, create green jobs, and build and maintain community gardens throughout the five burroughs. Having just arrived from Delaware where he spent the day campaigning for Chris Coons, Kerry made the crack that he saw many versions of Coons’ opponent, Christine O’Donnell, in attendance, giving a nod to the witches in the house.
His speech turned serious as Kerry impassionately spoke on the great need for the U.S. to join the world in aggressively reducing global warming. “The world is waiting for us,” he said, pointing out that a lack of serious progress is the result of a “national shouting match instead of real dialogue,” in reference to Fox News and other bombastic cable news programs that fuel misinformation, which brought tens of thousands of people to the National Mall today to protest in the Rally to Restore Sanity.
Kerry’s speech called for the passage of cap-and-trade legislation, job-creating clean technology innovation here at home to compete with China and India’s nascent but reactive green industry, and to establish energy independence.
He warned that “big, big coal and oil” have spent $500 million to stop clean energy legislation. “Please, tomorrow, wake up and think about it.”
The audience included designer Michael Kors, Citi C.E.O. Vikram Pandit, Tommy Mottola and his wife Thalia, John McEnroe, actor Gilles Marini, musician Patty Smyth, and NYRP’s new executive director Amy Frietag who oversaw the building of The High Line as a deputy of the Parks Department.
Costume winners, judged by Kors, included a pantless Brett Favre and a hot blond/receiver of infamous text messages in third place, a radiant butterfly and butterfly catcher in second place, and in first place, a family of enormous costumes symbolizing the chorus to A Sound of Music’s “Do-Re-Mi.” Wearing a suit of green and his neck draped in vines, Kors announced, “Green is the new black.” For more photos from the evening check Broadwayworld.com.
With his acoustic guitar, Paul Simon took the stage next; he dedicated “Loves Me Like a Rock” to Kerry, saying, “What a better world it would have been if the [2004 election] results had been different.” Simon changed the famous line “If I was the President” to “If I was the Senator of Massachusetts.”
After a set of transportive Simon and Garfunkle hits, Midler joined Simon on stage to sing “The Boxer,” closing out the evening, which raised a record $400,000 in a live auction and $2 million more from the ticket sales. A Charity Buzz auction is continuing with prizes that range from meeting Lady Gaga backstage at one of her concerts to getting a personal voicemail recording by the actress Julianne Moore.
More pictures from the evening will be posted here soon.

Follow Andrea Chalupa on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/AndreaChalupa

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
30

The Knight News Challenge Jon Stewart and the countrys immune system

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The Knight News Challenge Jon Stewart and the countrys immune system

Okay, the deal is that trustworthy media really is the immune system of our country, as Jon Stewart just reminded us:
If we amplify everything we hear nothing.
The press is our immune system. If we overreact to everything we actually get sicker and perhaps eczema.
or alternatively, trustworthy media should be “the immune system of democracy” as someone else blurted out.
The Knight Foundation has been working on this for years, getting very serious about four categories for the Knight News Challenge ’11: Mobile, Authenticity, Sustainability and Community
Mobile. The mobile phone, with 5 billion units in use, has become an important tool for news. Knight Foundation is interested in projects that use mobile devices to produce, deliver, consume share and otherwise engage with news.
Authenticity: We went back and forth on how to describe this: trust, reputation, integrity and credibility were other terms we considered. We’re hoping to identify promising ideas for helping citizens negotiate our oft-chaotic media world. How can we help news users to better evaluate the validity and trustworthiness of news and information? How can we better filter and assess the credibility of what we read and watch? We were motivated to choose the topic by a sense that there’s a lot of energy around the topic– Craig Newmark, for one, has been thinking out loud on these issues.
Sustainability. New ways of conducting and consuming journalism may require new ways of paying for it. We’re open to ideas for generating revenue as well as ways to reduce costs. A lot of people have been thinking of this for a while now, including some prior News Challenge winners– we’re hoping to contribute more to new efforts to address this problem.
Community: This is designed to jump-start work on technologies and approaches that haven’t arrived yet. Unlike the first three categories, submissions in Community must have a focus in a geographic place.
Trust is the new black.

Follow Craig Newmark on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/craignewmark

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
30

Fox News Estimates Jon Stewarts Crowd at Seven People

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Fox News Estimates Jon Stewarts Crowd at Seven People

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report) — The Fox News Channel reported today that the turnout for Jon Stewart’s “Rally to Restore Sanity” was underwhelming at best, with Fox sources estimating the total turnout at seven people.
“Our total count includes Stewart, [Stephen] Colbert, and what appear to be a few of their friends and relatives,” said Fox anchor Shepard Smith. “This has to be a smaller crowd than they were expecting.”
But immediately after Fox broadcast what it described as “live coverage” of the rally showing a nearly-deserted National Mall, viewers began to point out irregularities in the images being shown.
First of all, one viewer noticed that the live coverage of the rally was actually being broadcast a full twelve hours before the rally began. Continue reading here.
The Los Angeles Times says Andy Borowitz has “one of the funniest Twitter feeds around.” Follow Andy on Twitter here.

This Blogger’s Books from
The Borowitz Report: The Big Book of Shockers
by Andy Borowitz
The Republican Playbook
by Andy Borowitz

Follow Andy Borowitz on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/BorowitzReport

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
30

NFL Week 8 Tweet Dreams Trick or Tweet

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NFL Week 8  Tweet Dreams Trick or Tweet

Hypothetical tweets from real NFL figures!
@TonyGonzalez88 Roddy White is like Ozzy Osbourne – it’s impossible to cover him. #atleastroddyscoherent
@ChrisJohnson28 We have a quarterback controversy – both @VinceYoung10 and Kerry Collins want to be on the bench. #forgetthetitans
@DEZ_88 (Dez Bryant) Roy Williams says Jon Kitna is just as good as Tony Romo – he must have his shoulder pads on a little too tight. #nowthetruthcomesout
@Dhall23 (DeAngelo Hall) I’ll have to send @JayCutler6 a postcard from Hawaii in February – he single-handedly put me in this year’s Pro Bowl! #favoritetarget #interception
@kbull53 (Keith Bulluck) Since this is our bye week Coach Coughlin’s going trick-or-treating as Rex Ryan. #supersizeme
@jmac_18 (Jeremy Maclin) Since this is our bye week Coach Reid’s going trick-or-treating as Rex Ryan #loseweightfirst
@Percy_Harvin Brett, I know your ankle’s a mess, but would you please stop sending those lewd pictures to my phone?!? #thatswhatjennsaid
@AaronRodgers12 The only thing we have in common with the Jets is that Brett Favre used to play for them too. #enoughalready
@JayCutler6 Aside from the different-colored uniform @Dhall23 (DeAngelo Hall) looks a lot like our receivers. #noexcuse #pickedoffagain
@Kevinsmith34 The good news is we have Matt Stafford back this week. The bad news is we still don’t have a defense. #youarentkidding
@reggie_bush Does anyone have @dmcallister’s (Deuce McAllister’s) number? #noitsgoingtoberetired
@GK_McCoy (Gerald McCoy) Win on Sunday and we’re tied for first! #JohnMcKaywouldbeproud
@Jonathanstewar1 As long as our defense holds the other team under ten points, we have a great chance to win. #notaskingformuch
@LarryFitzgerald Why couldn’t we have sent a plane for @kurt13warner? #lacksBrettsego
@VernonDavis85 Since we’re playing in England, do we have to run all our plays on the left side of the field? #righton
@PeteCarroll Has our money-back guarantee on Marshawn Lynch expired yet? #hopeyoukeptthereceipt
@sj39 (Steven Jackson) Coach Spagnuolo told me I need to amputate my finger if that’s what it takes for me to play this weekend. #dontcountonit
@Mark_Sanchez Coach Ryan is out trick-or-treating as The Situation. #flabdomen
@CJSPILLER If Ryan Fitzpatrick’s so smart, why can’t we win a game? #hedoesntplaydefense
@VontaeDavis21 It’s always good to see Dan Carpenter nail a game-winning field goal. #hecelebratesbygettinghammered
@LeighBodden From now on BenJarvus Green-Ellis will take legal action against anyone who refers to him as the “law firm”. #ironic
@terrellowens Weren’t we supposed to be a Super Bowl contender? #defensedidntgetthememo
@JoshCribbs16 Colt McCoy wants Jake Delhomme and Seneca Wallace to carry his pads after practice. #reversedez
@tpolamalu Can we please get the same officiating crew we had for last week’s game? #afterfurtherreview
@RayRice27 @raylewis52com – don’t you think you’re getting carried away with this Old Spice thing? #eatyourheartout
@PierreGarcon85 See that guy in the third row? Think he could play wide receiver for us? #walkingwounded
@johnson80 (Andre Johnson) When Coach Kubiak said we need to keep our defense off the field, all our offensive players volunteered to play both ways. #notwhathehadinmind
@kirkmorrison55 We’re going to play all 11 guys on the line of scrimmage and dare Matt Cassel to beat us with the pass. #notagoodidea
@dmcfadden20 Al Davis has done an outstanding job this season. #maybehesnotcrazyafterall
@jcharles25 We’re treating this game with Jacksonville like a preseason game. #fanswontbehappy
@TimTebow The only player on our team Queen Elizabeth wanted to meet was Eddie Royal. #namegame
@rmatthews24 Weren’t we supposed to be a Super Bowl contender? #Norvyourefired

Follow Scott Swanay on Twitter:
www.twitter.com/fantasy_sherpa

Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
30

Must Be Jelly Yeaworths The Blob

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Must Be Jelly Yeaworths The Blob

As a woefully unproductive waste of soft tissue, I spend a great deal of my time–most of it, really–eating unhealthy foods and watching appalling movies on Instant View. Last October, in hopes of fostering the illusion of productivity while leaving my habits unchanged, I wrote up a series of dinner-and-a-horror-movie pairings for my culinary blog, The Poor Mouth. My selections included The Silence of the Lambs (1991) and tacos lengua; The Exorcist (1973) and split pea soup; Let the Right One In (2008) and Swedish meatballs; The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) and Texas Red; Pumpkinhead (1988) and pumpkin seed mole; Dagon (2001) and stuffed squid; and The Hills Have Eyes (1977) and chicken fried steak.
I owe this idea to my shoddy memory: I’d conflated TNT’s Joe Bob Briggs-hosted MonsterVision (1993-2000, R.I.P.) with TBS’s Dinner and a Movie, which first aired in 1995 and is not, alas, horror-centric. As a tribute to ol’ Joe Bob, whose western shirts and bolo ties loomed so large in my adolescent consciousness, I’ll reprise the feature this year for a larger audience than my Facebook friends, all of whom, to judge by their status updates, are preoccupied with child-wrangling and “wishing this cold would go away.” Here are my ill-advised date-night suggestions on HuffPost Food.* * *
It’s no secret that many Hollywood stars got started in the horror business. Jamie Lee Curtis debuted in John Carpenter’s Halloween (1978), and followed that up with appearances in The Fog, Prom Night, and Terror Train, all in the space of 1980. You can see Kevin Bacon in Friday the 13th (1980). Jason Alexander went to camp with the Cropsy Maniac in 1981′s The Burning. Johnny Depp debuted in A Nightmare on Elm Street in 1984. One year before Jennifer Connelly starred in Labyrinth, she played a psychic child in Phenomena (1985). Jennifer Aniston went toe to toe with the Leprechaun in 1993.
For my favorite example, though, we must go back two decades earlier than Halloween. In 1958, the eventual star of The Magnificent Seven (1960), The Great Escape (1963), and The Getaway (1972) made his leading-role debut–in Irvin Yeaworth’s The Blob. He was credited as Steven McQueen; at nearly thirty, he played one of the oldest teenagers I’ve seen outside of 90210. McQueen didn’t think much of the movie, opting for $3000 cash “rather than . . . profit participation,” according to this Criterion essay. But it’s McQueen’s performance that lends urgency and credibility–seriously!–to an otherwise unapologetically half-baked concept.
You know the score. It came from outer space!–”it” being, in this case, a meteorite containing a substance like Gushers fruit snack with an appetite of its own. It’s discovered in the forest by Old Man Plot Device (Olin Howland), who accidentally gets it stuck to his hand. Steve Andrews (McQueen) and his petting-averse date Jane (Aneta Corsaut), who have seen the thing crash to earth and want to investigate (note: never, ever investigate), nearly run down the shrieking Old Timer, then take him to Dr. Hallen (Alden Chase).
Steve is sent on an errand by the Doc, and returns just in time to watch him get eaten. From there the Blob just gets bigger and bigger, while Steve tries frantically to make the police and townsfolk believe him. (Telling wild lies to the police seems to have been fairly unremarkable behavior in the golden age of juvenile delinquency.) At last the Blob, now the size of a freight car, attacks the Colonial Theater during a midnight Lugosi flick. The sight of the Blob oozing through the projection booth window is memorable not only because it’s cool, which it is, but also for the heartbreaking crappiness of the miniature. They don’t make pictures like this anymore, and it’s a shame.
Cheesiness is more or less why I’ve picked this movie for Halloween weekend. Gore is good, but Halloween is about nostalgia and atmospherics. I understand that I can’t feel genuine nostalgia for a time that preceded my birth by a quarter-century. But no matter your age, watching The Blob, with its humble effects, its comic-book colors, and its dangerously infectious Bacharach & David theme song, will make you wish you were snug in a ’58 Caddy, preferably with a non-petting-averse date, at a moonlit drive-in theater in Spook City, U.S.A.
What’s for dinner? I’m not a big fan of the grad-school approach to horror movies, in which Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) is about commies, Dawn of the Dead (1978) is about mindless consumerism, and the recent spate of torture-porn garbage is “about” renditions and waterboarding. Sure, fine, but when the subtext is written in red neon, it’s kind of beside the point. Do I need to tell you that The Blob played on people’s Atomic Age anxieties? (That reminds me: Don’t miss the film’s final line, which opens it up to a very modern climate change interpretation.)
Nevertheless, I can’t resist pairing The Blob with that forgotten hero of Fifties and Sixties cuisine, the quivering, hideous blob called an aspic. Unless it’s made a cameo on Mad Men–I don’t recall one–most people my age have never been face to face with this creature. I borrowed a couple molds from a friend and opened my copy of The Joy of Cooking to p. 174: tomato aspic. What followed was an unqualified disaster. I’m not even going to tell you how to make it, because it’s clear that I have no idea. What I was supposed to end up with is a delicate red mound of tomato gelatin filled with crab, jalapeo, yellow bell pepper, and avocado.
What went wrong? For one thing, the aspic was far less eager to leave its mold than the Blob was to leave its meteorite shell, and it mostly disintegrated in the process. For another, the mold was too small and the pieces of crab and vegetables far too large. It’s obvious why this dish is rarely attempted nowadays: I understand exactly what it feels like to be a diet-pill-addled housewife who spends twelve hours on a dish, only to have it fall apart five minutes before the dinner party starts. Approach this monster with extreme caution, or get a TV dinner instead.
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Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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Oct
30

Miniature livers grown in lab

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Miniature livers grown in lab

Scientists have managed to produce a small-scale version of a human liver in the laboratory using stem cells.
The success increases hope that new transplant livers could be manufactured, although experts say that this is still many years away.
The team from Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center presented its findings at at conference in Boston.
UK experts said it was an “exciting development” but it is not yet certain a fully-functioning liver is possible.

  • The demand for transplant livers far exceeds the number of available organs, and in recent years, research has focused on ways to use cell technology to support failing organs in the body, or even one day replace them.
    Their building block is the stem cell, a “master cell” which can, in certain conditions, can divide to produce different types of body tissue.
    However, constructing a three-dimensional organ from stem cells is a difficult task.
    The method used by the Wake Forest researchers, and other teams around the world, is to form new liver tissue on a scaffold made from from the structure of an existing liver.
    In this case, a detergent was used to strip away the cells from the liver, leaving only the collagen framework which supported them, and a network of tiny blood vessels.
    The new stem cells – in this case immature liver cells – and endothelial cells, to produce a new lining for the blood vessels, were gradually introduced.
    After a week in a “bioreactor”, which nurtured the cells with a mixture of nutrients and oxygen, the scientists saw widespread cell growth within the structure, and even signs of some normal functions in the tiny organ.
    Professor Shay Soker, who led the research, said: “We are excited about the possibilities this research represents, but must stress that we're at an early stage, and many technical hurdles must be overcome before it could benefit patients.
    “Not only must we learn how to grow billions of liver cells at one time in order to engineer livers large enough for patients, we must determine whether these organs are safe to use.”
    UK researchers welcomed the findings, which are being presented to the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. Professor Mark Thursz, from Imperial College London, said the results were “encouraging”.
    “The report suggests that the authors have overcome one of the major hurdles in creating an artificial liver – to generate functioning human liver cells in a 'natural' liver structure.
    “It is clear that the cells are growing well, but the next step is to show that they are functioning like normal human liver tissue.”
    Dr Mark Wright, from Southampton University added: “In an era of increasing liver disease and death with a chronic shortage of liver transplants this represents an exciting development in an important field of work.
    “The researchers appear to have made the step of combining stem cell technology with bioengineering as a first step to producing artificial livers.
    “Whilst 'off the shelf' new livers are clearly still a long way off, this work gives a glimmer of hope that this is no longer just the stuff of science fiction.”

    Source:BBC

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    Oct
    30

    Three Purple Heart Recipient Jim Bryan Expects Victory As Florida Write In Candidate

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    Three Purple  Heart Recipient Jim Bryan Expects Victory As Florida Write  In Candidate

    Jim Bryan is the write-in candidate for the US Congress in Florida’s 1st District. This large district is the panhandle of Florida and covers six counties, and contains the largest concentration of military in the United States. He is running as the only Democrat in that district.
    Bryan is the holder of two world records for parachuting, records which still hold today, and also is an expert with nuclear weapons. He has received over 30 combat decorations, including 3 purple hearts and saved over 200 lives.
    Jim was a weapons test manager for a major weapons program for the Department of Defense and the United States Army Tactical Nuclear Weapons Program. He is a master parachutist, master gunner and heavy weapons expert. He helped train then 2nd Lieutenant David Patraeus, from 1975 through 1977 and later built a trucking business in Arizona.
    Jim also happens to come from a family of bootleggers and moonshiners and is a self described real- life Forrest Gump.
    Read how Jim was wounded 6 times (3 times in one night) in his book Walking With Heroes.
    Kathleen Wells: Jim, you are running as a write-in candidate for the US Congress for the 1st district in Florida and as a Democrat. Why as a write-in candidate and why as a Democrat?
    Jim Bryan: Well, I’ve always been a Democrat but the main thing is: as I went across this district, people are so upset about looking for leadership and trying to figure out who to vote for or what to vote for. And I said, “Well, this time, I’m going to give them something and someone to vote for.”
    This district is a red district and it’s torn between watching Fox News every day and a whole bunch of idiots out there that are spreading a lot of falsehoods. You know, 10 lies will spread around the world faster than the truth will go an inch. So I said, well, let me give the voters someone to vote for and so I decided to go as a write-in this time. I took no party money from anyone. I just took donations from everyday people that help me with my gas. I said, okay, let’s see if the American people will put their vote where their mouth is instead of pushing, especially here, the party line, and let’s see if we can get some commonality.
    Kathleen Wells: Why should Florida residents write you in, write your name in?
    Jim Bryan: Well, here, you’ve got to look at this district. This district is 74 percent military-affiliated dependents, retirees, and several bases. It’s actually the largest concentration of military in the entire United States, in this district of six counties.
    Me being a veteran, I said, well, who would be better to represent this district than a combat-wounded veteran, that’s retired military? I said, okay, I’ll run. I’ll run as Jim Bryan, a veteran. And keep in mind, this district has not had a veteran as a congressman and this area was built by a Democrat named Bob Sikes who actually built all these bases.
    He pushed to get Eglin expanded into the test program, and the naval base in Pensacola, and he funded all these military installations the whole time he was in Congress. In fact, my grandmother introduced me to him as Uncle Bob – Uncle Bob Sikes. And shoot, I didn’t realize the guy wasn’t my uncle until I was 25 years old. That’s the type of congressman he was. He was everybody’s uncle and if you had a problem you went to your uncle and he would help. And that was my first taste of politics and, hey, that’s what a congressman’s supposed to do. He’s supposed to be someone that everyone can go to with whatever problem they have and at least be able to address that problem and if possible get the help of the Congress.
    Kathleen Wells: Now when did the district turn to voting Republican?
    Jim Bryan: Well, when I was a kid, my grandmother… (You don’t mind if I use some of these examples but these are part of my life.) I was in a pea patch, pulling peas with my grandmother, and a guy came by campaigning and he was passing out quarts of moonshine to my uncle who was disabled. He was sitting under a shade tree and he gave him a quart of moonshine. And I said, “Granny, what’s that fellow doing?” And she says, “Well, he’s a politicking.” I said, “Well, Granny what’s that?” And I think I was something like eight or nine years old and she says, “Well, Son, all you need to know is Roosevelt helped this family and we’re Democrats. Democrats are for the poor; Republicans are for the rich.”
    Now, that was over 50 years ago when she said that. And I said, “Well, I’m a Democrat.” So when I became of voting age, I went ahead and registered as a Democrat and the rest is history.
    Kathleen Wells: But when… How long has the district been…
    Jim Bryan: Oh, the district. I’m sorry. Well, this district turned probably around ’74. Bob Sikes got out of Congress in 1974, I believe. He had served 34 years representing this district. And that’s all everybody knew, and this whole area was Democrat. So the only Republican that would come through here would be somebody selling shoes, or a traveling salesman.
    And then, Colonel Bud Day came into the area in ’74 and he started pushing for a Republican party, and it caught on and it turned Republican from ’74 on.
    Kathleen Wells: Reveal something to me about the whole process — the process of running a campaign.
    Jim Bryan: Well, I ran last election, and with me it’s a little different because I’m running to serve my country. I’m not running for any other reason and I decided when I came home and saw the lack of jobs, how poor the district was in a lot of the parts of the six counties, and the only thing we had was, of course, the tourist industry on the coast. We had the military, but we lost all of our manufacturing.
    And so I decided then to go ahead and run when I came back here because I had worked in manufacturing out West and I was pretty successful in bringing manufacturing in out there.
    So I said when I retired and came back home, and I saw what we had, it was a lot of the same problems we had when I was growing up. And I said, well, we’ve got to have manufacturing come back. We’ve lost a lot of textile. We’ve lost a lot of plants and companies. We can’t just depend on tourists because look what happened with the oil spill. We can’t just depend on the military because what happens if bases move and close down?
    So I said I need to get in and do what I did in Arizona, when I lived out there and helped develop and push the manufacturing, so I decided to run.
    Nobody knew me, even though I was from here. I got local party support, but no national support, no Florida state party support. I ran my last election on two credit cards and donations of gas from individuals. I was running against a congressman named Jeff Miller, a friend of [Congressman] Joe Wilson, and also best friends with Karl Rove. That’s who Mr. Jeff Miller is. So I said, wow, I’m up against pretty tough odds, but I’m going to run.
    So I ran last time and I think I raised a little over $10,000 – and, that’s paying for my qualifying fee. So I only had a few thousand to run on. But on that few thousand dollars, I had 100,000 votes, 30 percent against Mr. Miller who’s a millionaire who received the rest – 70 percent and with $300,000 to go against me. I said, wow, okay, people are paying attention.
    So it here comes for the second time. Well, you know I sat with the chair of the Democratic party, Howard Dean. It was at Harbor Docks Restaurant, the last election. I said, “Mr. Dean,” of course everybody was mad the way Florida was going with the elections process and nobody was sitting with Mr. Dean, so I went over and sat with him. And I said, “Mr. Dean, if I make it through the primary, is the Democratic Party going to help me?” He said “Well, sure, if you make it through the primary.”
    So I made it through the primary, but the Democratic Party has written this area off since 1974, pretty much and they don’t fund any candidates up in this area. And, of course, I made it through the primary, no help, and I went ahead and ran my race and, of course, I did get 30 percent — 100,000 votes.
    Well this time, everybody kept saying, “Hey, we’re looking for somebody to vote for.” I said, “Okay, let me see what’s going to happen. I’m going to run as a write-in.” So I decided to run as a write-in.
    So I went as a write-in and actually I’m picking up momentum. I’ve raised a little over $4,000 and it’s kept me in the race. It’s kept gas in the tank, it’s kept my little cards out and Mr. Miller still has about $300,000. In fact, I think he gave $270,000 back or to the Republican Party because he felt he didn’t need it here to run against me, so he went ahead and gave it back to the GOP.
    That’s where we stand. Last night [October 21], I was in an event with Alex Sink who is running for governor here. I support Alex Sink and a lot of people came up to me and said, “Hey, Jim, I’ve already wrote you in. I’ve done my early voting and I’ve already put you in.” And there were probably 300 people at that meeting. Several people came up and said, “Jim, we’ve already written you in.” So, believe it or not, early voting is going on, and I’m actually getting some action. Murkowski in Alaska is a write-in and she’s tied neck-and-neck right now with her opponent. So this could be the year.
    U.S. Senator Bill Nelson, left and Jim Bryan, right
    Kathleen Wells: And you mentioned that this is the second time that you’re running. I know the first time you received the endorsement of General Wesley Clark. You don’t have his endorsement this time. Tell me why.
    Jim Bryan: Last election, I had a little help from the unions, because I was a registered Democrat on the ballot. Well, I’m still a registered Democrat it’s just that I’m a write-in candidate.
    I went before the union board, and they wouldn’t even discuss me because I’m a write-in. I haven’t been able to get any endorsements from anywhere because I’m a write-in, plus it’s been awfully hard to get through to General Clark. If I had his attention, he’d give me an endorsement this election. He did the last election. I know General Clark. I also know General David Petraeus. Of course, he’s active duty. He’s not going to do that. But hey, I’m plugging away.
    Kathleen Wells: And what makes you different from any other politician?
    Jim Bryan: Well, I’m just me. I’ve served my country before and now I’m stepping up to serve my country again. It has nothing to do with politics with me. It has to do with what’s right, what’s right for this country, how I can serve with my education. I do have a good education. I do have a good background, and I feel I can add to this area, especially in manufacturing as well as the issues in Congress that we’re facing.
    Kathleen Wells: As a Vietnam veteran, and as someone who has made a career out of serving in the Army with three tours and just shy of 20 years, give me your thoughts about the 60 Minutes piece which ran last week about homeless veterans?
    Jim Bryan: Well, here we have a stand-down. In fact, it’s going on today [October 22] as we speak. Once a year, we have a stand-down in the church in Fort Walton Beach. It’s put on by Judge Maney.
    Judge Maney is an Afghanistan veteran who was wounded with an IED when his vehicle was blown up. He spent something like six months in Walter Reed before he could get back, and he’s now back on the bench. And Judge Maney holds these stand-downs once a year. He actually holds court. He has a dentist that comes in, a doctor with nurses come in and do blood pressure checks and screen for any problem. We feed everybody a very good meal. We give clothes where they need clothes and any assistance that a veteran may need. And a VA representative is there as well to do any VA paperwork that may help that veteran. And a legal group of lawyers is also at the stand-down. So I’m very proud of our community by putting in the stand-down once a year.
    I’m with the local chapter of the Purple Heart and we support that as well each year and we try to identify homeless veterans.
    Kathleen Wells: But what does it say about our country that we have so many individuals, men and women, that have served in wars, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and they are homeless? What does that say to you?
    Jim Bryan: What it says is there’s a very big need and you also have to look at the high rate of suicide that’s predominant right now in the military. It’s a lot higher than it has ever been. Multiple tours in Afghanistan and Iraq for these young men and women and when they come home, what they are faced with is a community that has left them. They have left that community, their friends, the people they… Kids they went to school with, they went on to other careers.
    And I had the same problem when I came back from Vietnam. A lot of the guys that stayed out of the Vietnam conflict, in fact, back then they would join the Guard to get out of Vietnam. These people were deputy sheriffs, they were working for the county and the state and then I come in and I’m an outsider.
    And that’s what happens with a lot of our veterans. We come back from these conflicts, and these conflicts change your whole mental makeup. You view things a lot different than the average person does that has kept their butt at home and not been involved with what you’ve just were involved with. And then you have dumb butts like Geraldo Rivera making the comment he made, like “Oh, veterans should just get over it.”
    Well, these veterans — these things stick with them for the rest of their lives. The things that they’ve seen, are so great and traumatic events in their lives that they view them just as if it’d happened yesterday even though 30 or more years may have passed. And this is something that the average public just doesn’t have a clue about.
    Kathleen Wells: In Vietnam, you won three Purple Hearts. Speak to the significance, what that means to you — winning those Purple Hearts.
    Jim Bryan: Well, with my first Purple Heart as an American Indian, I came back from Vietnam and the Indian nations gave me the responsibility and the honor of becoming a warrior. And with that, a warrior has a very grave responsibility and that’s: protect the old, protect the young, protect the village. And of course, my grandmother told me, “Your village is the United States of America.” So that’s a big responsibility in the Indian culture but a lot of people don’t quite have that to fall back on when they come back.
    When I came back the first time, I had close to 30 decorations; I had no idea what they were. I didn’t know. I was a young kid that was sent to Germany and I had three rows of ribbons and the Colonel had one row of ribbons. And I didn’t understand what they were. Somebody put my ribbons together for me. I didn’t understand until years later the significance of those Purple Hearts — what they meant and what they meant in my military career. And that happens with a lot of people coming back. They don’t think about medals. Medals were something that may come later, you don’t know.
    In fact, my second Purple Heart was awarded in 2002 when General Petraeus was a two-star general at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. So that was one that came later. But you know, when you’re in, you don’t think about those things until the company commander or the battle commander or your commander says, “Okay, top, you better start wearing your stuff.” And they would have to tell me to wear my decorations because I didn’t do it throughout my career but my record did follow me.
    Kathleen Wells: Speak to me or give us your thoughts on the significance and relevance of the media and money. Those two elements — media and money – and, how they play in the success or failure of a candidate running for office.
    Jim Bryan: Well, here’s something that happened last election in this district. Mr. Miller, in the month of July during the election cycle, was in the paper 26 times of out 30 days. “Congressman Miller saves neighbor’s cat from tree.” I mean anything to get his face in the press. These newspapers here were bought up years ago, the beginning of Bush administration, by Gannett News. Some 12 newspapers are owned by Freedom Press and Freedom Press leans to one side.
    So when somebody like myself comes in, they don’t write anything. They won’t put anything in the paper unless I buy space. And it gives a lopsided view of who’s running for what, especially if you’re a Democrat. The other thing, the money, my goodness, Mr. Miller has received all kinds of corporate money at 10,000 a pop when I’m out receiving a five buck donation from a lady on Social Security that says, “Go get ‘em, Jim!” There’s no competition. There’s no way we can compete with the massive amounts of money that are corporate from insurance company, from the drug industry and especially with this new Supreme Court ruling that says corporations can be treated as individuals.
    In fact, in this cycle what’s going in these races where people have no idea where the money is coming from but all of a sudden it pops up a hundred, 200 thousand dollars at pop to push against some candidate that’s been raising 5, 10, 20 dollars from individuals?
    Kathleen Wells: Now, in your particular race, how many candidates are running?
    Jim Bryan: There are four in the race: Mr. Miller, the incumbent; Mr. Krauss a Republican, no party affiliate running; Mr. Cantrell, a Republican, no party affiliate, running; and myself, a write-in Democrat.
    Kathleen Wells: And what do you think your chances are?
    Jim Bryan: Well, I actually think I have a pretty good chance here. But, you know, yesterday [October 21] I met with a group of the tea Party in Pensacola and they had banners up saying, “Oh, we want to do this and do that. And, what about the Indians? You know, how did the government treat the Indians?” And I went up to a guy with a banner and I say, “Hey, I’m an Indian”. And I say, “I’m running for congress here”. And he says, “Well, were only going to vote Republican”. I say, “Hold it, I thought you guys were tea party”. He says, “Yeah, we’re tea party, but we support Congressman Miller”.
    And I say now, I’m looking at 30 people out here with signs and I went up and asked each one of them. Every single one was a Republican that was supporting Congressman Miller. And I said, “I thought you guys were tea party”. He says, “Yeah, we’re independent, but we only vote Republican”.
    Kathleen Wells: So what does that mean? What does that say to you?
    Jim Bryan: Well, what it means is: the tea party originally was funded and is funded by the Koch brothers as well as others. Dick Army and Freedom Works have promoted the tea party and they’re just another branch of the Republican Party. I’ve been to four of their meetings and they’ll be 3 or 400 people at the meeting and I’m the only Democrat in the entire auditorium. I go around and ask questions, I say, “Oh, what are you guys doing?” “Oh, we’re independent, we’re independent. Down with Obama”. I say, “Oh, okay”. They say, “Up with Rubio”. I say, “I thought you didn’t endorse any candidate.” They say, “Well, we’re just supporting Rubio”. I say, “I thought you guys were independent”. They’re not independent they are strictly another brand of the Republican Party.
    I’ve been to four or five of their meetings and that’s all I see every time I go. A few people there will say, “Jim, I support you”, but it’s a very few and it’s usually military retirees.
    Kathleen Wells: Well, Mr. Bryan I wish you all the best. I hope you have a successful campaign. Is there anything else you’d like to address?
    Jim Bryan: Well, more people like us need to stand up, but how can we stand up, when we don’t have the money? Is this supposed to be a rich man’s game? Is it supposed to be a lawyer’s game? Mr. Smith went to Washington, what happened to that? Let’s let Mr. Bryan go to Washington. Let’s let other people go to Washington that want to step up and serve our nation and not serve a party.
    And I see a lot of people serving parties, but I see few people serving America — what our country is founded upon. My goodness, we do have to have a change in this country. But the change is: congress has to work together to move us forward and there’s no way we can sustain the congress we have today. One group, hell bent on saying, “No”, no matter what. And then, of course, another group trying to accomplish some things. We have to be accomplishing things together as a united… In the old days, you did have some consensus where they crossed party lines for the benefit of the nation. And that is what the voters are upset about. They’re upset at both parties because we can’t move this country forward with a broken congress.
    Kathleen Wells: I want to thank you for taking the time to speak with me and I wish you all the best of luck and success in your campaign.
    Jim Bryan: I wish you all the best as well, and if anybody is interested in my book, let them read it. Pass it on. You’re free to do anything you want with it.
    Kathleen Wells: Sounds good to me. Okay, thank you very much, Mr. Bryan. Good luck, okay?
    Jim Bryan: Okay, Kathleen, and best of luck to you.
    Kathleen is on Facebook

    Follow Kathleen Wells, J.D. on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/WellsKathleen

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    Has Al Jazeera Lost Its Magic Touch

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    Has Al Jazeera Lost Its Magic Touch

    Why are so many people mad at Al Jazeera www.aljazeera.net and is it still a leading Arab satellite channel?
    Why have so many anchors and correspondents quit the Qatar-based TV station?
    Al Jazeera logo (Abu-Fadil)
    “Morocco suspends Al Jazeera’s license due to ‘escalation and deliberate insults’,” read a front page headline in Saturday’s pan-Arab daily Al Hayat www.daralhayat.com.
    The report said Morocco’s Information Ministry had suspended the channel’s operations, halted its correspondents’ accreditation, and charged it with deviating from accepted professional and ethical standards.
    It added that the ministry had fully assessed Al Jazeera’s coverage of Moroccan news and found it undermined the country’s image and interests despite repeated warnings to mend its ways.
    But the channel’s Rabat bureau chief denied the charges, adding that the issue wasn’t only being handled by the information ministry, but by other parties that he didn’t name.
    Run-ins with Arab governments have been a trademark of the channel, whose motto “the opinion, and opposite opinion,” has often landed it in hot water in a region where personality cults and state-run media are standard fare.
    Critics have long complained that Al Jazeera is very good at criticizing others but never turns the cameras inwards at Qatar where it wouldn’t dare bite the hand that feeds it.
    Al Jazeera newsroom (Abu-Fadil)
    Earlier this month Jordan threatened to take Al Jazeera to court if it continued what Amman said were anti-Jordanian campaigns and claims Jordanian authorities had ordered the jamming of World Cup broadcasts carried by its sports channel.
    Repeating such claims “mars Jordan’s image, which we won’t tolerate, and if Al Jazeera persists, we reserve the right to sue it according to international laws and conventions,” a Jordanian official told Asharq Al-Awsat www.asharqalawsat.com newspaper.
    These flaps have been compounded by internal problems like the conspicuous resignations of anchors and correspondents in recent months amid complaints of on-the-job harassment by higher-ups.
    Just this week news made the rounds that Beirut correspondent Abbas Nasser was at loggerheads with his bureau chief and planning to quit while other reports said Al Jazeera’s administration in Doha would transfer him to another post.
    Abbas Nasser (Abu-Fadil)
    Nasser and various media said the reporter had been offered a job with the BBC’s Arabic service in 2007 when his differences with bureau chief Ghassan Ben Geddo first surfaced, but that the former turned down the British contract when Qatar’s emir begged him to stay on.
    Not so, countered sources familiar with the issue who declined to be identified.
    They said Nasser wouldn’t have been hired by the BBC because of what they described as his biases and having worked for Hezbollah’s Al Manar TV http://www.almanar.com.lb/newssite/news.aspx?language=en channel prior to Al Jazeera.
    Both Nasser and Ben Geddo have declined to comment on the issue but the sources said the situation at the Beirut bureau had become untenable.
    Cairo bureau chief Hussein Abdel Ghani is another casualty of internal turmoil.
    Hussein Abdel Ghani (Abu-Fadil)
    He quit when his bosses accused him of constantly fighting with his colleagues. But those who know him say he was made the fall guy in a long running dispute between Egyptian and Qatari authorities.
    Cairo has often criticized Al Jazeera’s editorial policies and slammed it for its anti-Egyptian reports.
    Another bureau chief left on account of the channel’s policies and what he saw as veering towards Islamization.
    Hafez Al Mirazi (Abu-Fadil)
    Hafez Al Mirazi, a veteran of the BBC, had headed Al Jazeera’s Washington office and hosted a successful talk show from the U.S. capital. He now hosts a talk show from Cairo on Saudi-owned satellite rival Al Arabiya http://www.alarabiya.net/default.html.
    Bureau chiefs and correspondents from Dubai, Paris, Ankara, Yemen and New York have also tossed in the towel.
    But what really created a stir was when five female anchors quit at once in May after what they said was abusive talk and harassment from then deputy news editor in chief Ayman Jaballah.
    Lebanon’s daily Assafir www.assafir.com reported at the time that Jaballah, who is Egyptian, was close to the banned Moslem Brotherhood organization and that he’d been reassigned.
    He had apparently complained about the women for not dressing modestly (read veiled). http://www.huffingtonpost.com/magda-abufadil/critics-skewer-arab-regim_b_610367.html
    Complaints notwithstanding, Al Jazeera is back on top thanks to a series of firsts, according to Lebanese daily Al Akhbar www.al-akhbar.com.
    “Wikileaks returns Al Jazeera to its golden age,” the paper said, attributing the success to its broadcasts of the controversial Iraq war diaries http://warlogs.wikileaks.org.
    It said Al Jazeera and a few newspapers had scooped other media with their coverage of the leaked documents that uncovered war crimes and incidents of torture by U.S. and coalition forces in Iraq.
    Al Akhbar also said Al Jazeera planned a to expand its investigative journalism unit, to open new bureaus worldwide, to launch new channels, to delve into new media, and to upgrade its training center for journalists.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    Mostly NFL Thoughts and Observations from a Fantasy Sports Worker Week 8

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    Mostly NFL Thoughts and Observations from a Fantasy Sports Worker  Week 8

    I bet Ryan Succop had to take a lot of crap for his name when he was a kid. Now he’s the starting kicker on my fantasy team.
    If Brett Favre were to miss Sunday’s game against the Pats, Peyton Manning would have the longest games-played streak in the NFL. And Eli Manning would be second. Like Bernie Goetz, they only look soft.
    For you stat-heads out there who realize the importance of yards per passing attempt (YPA) on offense, YPA allowed on defense, and net YPA (Offensive YPA minus Defensive YPA) as a reliable measure of team strength, note the following:
    Team A has a net YPA of -0.6, while Team B has a net YPA of 2.8 so far this year. For fun, Team C had a net YPA of 2.5 over a full 16-game season a few years ago.
    Team A is the New York Jets, and Team B is the San Diego Chargers who lead the NFL in total offense, total defense, per-play offense and per-play defense this year, but sit at 2-5 despite having Oakland, Arizona, St. Louis, Seattle and Jacksonville on the schedule for five of their first seven games.
    Team C incidentally is the 16-0 2007 New England Patriots. Put differently, Wade Phillips can only dream of underachieving on Norv Turner’s scale. Essentially a net YPA over 2.0 is Super Bowl caliber (Hat tip: Mike Salfino).
    Blake Griffin is going to be an absolute monster if he can stay healthy. He’s got Amar’e Stoudemire quickness and Carlos Boozer strength. He’s Chris Webber with more polish, and he can jump out of the gym.
    LeBron should have gone to the Clips because he’d be able to play in the second biggest market alongside a rising star, get all the credit and take it to Kobe in his own building. Actually, LeBron should have done whatever he wanted – he was a free agent, and his new commercial defending himself is beyond stupid.
    Wes Welker is droppable in non-PPR leagues. Sure, everyone loves the “little [white] engine that could,” but let’s be honest – at least half of that was due to Randy Moss keeping the safeties deep, and Welker’s not even 100 percent healthy after his knee surgery.
    The last episode of Dexter was a good illustration of why our constitution has due process protections. Granted Dexter’s “code” is a bit different from the due process afforded by law, but it’s a good deal more rigorous than what some openly advocate.
    Terrell Owens was voted the league’s most overrated player by his peers according to an SI poll. It’s therefore impossible that he’s actually overrated since everyone seems to agree that he’s not really that good.
    In seven seasons under Tom Coughlin, the Giants have been 5-2 after seven games six times. The one time they weren’t was 2008, when they were 6-1. (Hat tip: Mike Garafolo – Newark Star-Ledger). Incidentally, I have them at 16:1 to win the Super Bowl (bought in July) and 25:1 to win it (bought in September).
    If the Panthers had stuck with Matt Moore (who threw for 308 yards Sunday on 7.5 yards per attempt), they might well be 3-3 instead of 1-5, and very much in the thick of things in the NFC. That they did not pains me greatly considering I have them at 12:1 (and another ticket at 8:1) to win the NFC South and 175:1 to win the Super Bowl.
    I’m not a big fan of Halloween for people over 12. I have no desire to dress up as someone else, so I just feel like an idiot when I’m the only one not wearing a costume.
    If you’re into fantasy hoops, check out Andre’ Snellings’ Hoops Lab. He predicted Rajon Rondo would lead the NBA in assists – and after Rondo’s 24-assist game Friday night, it’s looking pretty good.
    For a free 10-day trial to RotoWIre.com, go to RotoWire.com/trial.

    Follow Christopher Liss on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/Chris_Liss

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    The Language of Cinema

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    The Language of Cinema

    As a low-budget movie-maker with one micro-budget feature under my belt, I’m certainly looking to keep improving. I often feel like a rookie surrounded by vets with sweet jump shots and low-post moves, and I can’t help but think “Damn, that’s what my game needs!” How can I write stronger characters and improve my storytelling? How can I keep my audience even more engaged? How can my production aesthetics get better? This kind of stuff keeps me up at night, and I’m confident I’m not the only one.
    I’ve read so many books on screenwriting and directing. On my shelf now I see Dara Marks’ Inside Story (a personal favorite), selections from Robert McKee and Syd Field, titles like My First Movie, First Time Director, David Mamet’s On Directing, Mike Figgis’ Digital Filmmaking (another great one), and more. Thing is, movie-making is a collaborative process, and it’s great to collaborate with others even when learning about the subject. Nothing beats live instruction, open dialogue, and encouraging words from others who’ve been deep in the trenches in person.
    If you’re in Los Angeles on November 6th and 7th and you’re into improving your craft as a movie-maker, I highly recommend attending CINEMA LANGUAGE. I’ll be there. For me, this type of instruction is like working with Reggie Miller on my jump-shot. (The code “HUFF” will get you a discount on the class.)
    If you can’t make CINEMA LANGUAGE in person, be sure to check out the Facebook page. It’s really good stuff, and there will be postings re: future events.
    Are there any forms of movie-making instruction that you couldn’t get by without? Whether it’s a book, class, or conference, please share in the comments section below!

    Follow Abe Schwartz on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/AbeSchwartz

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    Re politicians follow the money send a postcard

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    Re politicians follow the money send a postcard

    Way too much money is flowing into the midterm elections, so it’s a big deal who’s backing the candidates on the ballot.
    The Sunlight Foundation (disclaimer: I’m on their Board) created a postcard generator that lets you send postcards citing the facts – and the dollar figures – to people who need to hear that.
    You can select any single candidate for Congress or compare two in a race, and display the industries and organizations that contribute the most to them. Enter an address and personalize the card by writing a note about why you want your friend or family member to see who’s funding whom – and who the winner will be listening to after Election Day. You don’t even need a stamp – simply choose your candidates and click send directly from the website.
    It’s a great way to show non-tech friends and family what’s happening in the elections–and what can be done with open data. The cards cost $2 to cover Sunlight’s costs, and I know they’d be grateful for an additional $1 (or more) donation.
    Send a postcard now at http://influenceexplorer.com/postcard

    Follow Craig Newmark on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/craignewmark

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    30

    Benjamin Franklin and a Modern American Portrait Tax Cuts Poverty and Moving In

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    Benjamin Franklin and a Modern American Portrait  Tax Cuts Poverty and Moving In

    Benjamin Franklin saw America as a democratic society: middle class, largely urban, technologically sophisticated, family centered, joyful, and upwardly mobile. The America we try to present to the world was largely Franklin’s vision. But recently we have been oriented more towards Ayn Rand than Benjamin Franklin. And we have been that way long enough that on the basis of data and not ideology we can evaluate how these anti-Franklinian policies have performed. What has been their success at nuturing and perpetuating the vital democratic middle class that has been America’s greatest strength — as important as its military prowess? There are many factors one might use to make this evaluation. Here are seven chosen across a broad spectrum of American society:
    Tax Cuts:
    Just as they did in 2000, the Republicans are running on an economic platform centered on tax cuts, and proposing that the Bush cuts be made permanent for the richest Americans. The 2008 income tax data are now in, so we can assess what their economic theory is worth, and how it fulfilled its promise that tax cuts would produce widespread prosperity by looking at all the years of the George W. Bush presidency. This is the analysis David Cay Johnston on the faculty of Syracuse University College of Law and Whitman School of Management, and Pulitzer Prize winning tax analyst has done for us, based on the IRS data:
    If you are a middle class American, you are voting against your own self-interest, and the health and security of your family, if your choice is a politician rattling on about the Bush Tax cuts.
    Poverty Rate:
    That same US Census data also described what has happened to the nation’s standard of living, comparing just the latest time period — 2008 data with that of 2009. Here are some of the highlights:
    Moving in:
    From the 50s until about five years ago, one of the strongest American familial trends was for children to grow up and move away. It was a central part of the nuclear family ethos. That is now reversing thanks to the grinding down of the middle class through unemployment, job loss, and reduction in income even when a person is employed.
    From 2005 to 2009, family households added about 3.8 million extended family members, from adult siblings and in-laws to cousins and nephews. Extended family members now make up 8.2% of family households, up from 6.9% in 2005, according to Census data released in September 2010.
    “Clearly, a big part of that is the economic recession and housing costs,” says Stephanie Coontz, co-chair of the Council on Contemporary Families, a non-profit research association. ‘We’re seeing a shift away from the 1950s and 1960s mentality against extended families,’ when ‘modern’ women did not take in aging parents for fear of hurting their marriage.”
    And this shift involves far more than blood relations. “For the first time in more than a century, more than half of people aged 25 to 34 have never been married. The number of people in non-family households — those whose members are not related — grew 4.4% from 2005 to 2009, faster than the 3.4% growth for family households.”
    Prison Population:
    According to the Pew Research Center’s Economic Mobility Project, the US prison population has more than quadrupled since 1980, from 500,000 to 2.3 million.
    The American Gulag is now larger than the 35 largest European countries combined. The incarceration rate in the US — 753 inmates per 100,000 — is five times that of the UK — itself an anomaly at 151 prisoners per 100,000. France, which is next, stands at 96, with Germany at 88. This means more than one in 100 Americans is in prison, and one in every 28 children in the US has a parent behind bars — up from one in 125 just 25 years ago.
    It probably won’t surprise you to learn that a family with a parent in prison on average earns 22 percent less the year after the incarceration than it did the year before. After all, who wants to hire an ex-con in a tight labor market? And children with parents in prison are significantly likelier to be expelled from school than others; 23 percent of students with jailed parents are expelled, compared to 4 percent for the general population.
    “Both education and parental income are strong indicators of children’s future economic mobility,” the survey notes. “With millions of prison and jail inmates a year returning to their communities, it is important to identify policies that address the impact of incarceration on the economic mobility of former inmates and their children.”
    In all, 2.7 million US children have parents behind bars, and “two-thirds of these children’s parents were incarcerated for non-violent offenses,” the study notes.
    And when you break the statistics down by race it just gets nastier. There are large disparities. Among black children, fully one in nine, or 11.4 percent, have a parent in jail. For Hispanics, the number is one in 28, and for white children it’s one in 57.
    I hope Marijuana law reform passes in California, because this alone could help reverse these trends, simply by reducing the 858,000 arrests in the United States in 2010 for marijuana. That’s marginally down from the 2007 peak of 872,000. It is notable that more than 50 per cent of these arrests are nonviolent violations involving marijuana.
    The cost to states of this human warehousing now exceeds $50 billion per year, or one in every 15 state dollars expended. What is worse, a growing number of small towns and cities now look to the Gulag for their economic well-being. Like something from an Orwell novel, it is a complete cycle: One group of Americans lives on the incarceration of another group of Americans. And although it would appear illogical, it goes on even though it is well-known that the children of incarcerated parents face a much harder struggle in life. The Gulag which incarcerates their parents, in the process, often condemns the next generation also to a life in jail. It is almost as if we set up a situation which grooms children, particularly children of color, to become spigots through whose incarceration public money can be siphoned off. Maintaining the Gulag requires a form of Willful Ignorance on the part of politicians and citizens alike.
    If this was the whole story — Tax Cuts, Poverty, Moving In, or the American Gulag — I think it would be enough to conclude that Franklin’s vision and the American middle class were not served by these policies. Sadly though, this is just the beginning.

    Follow Stephan A. Schwartz on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/saschwartz905

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    Signs of a Nice Jobs Surprise

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    Signs of a Nice Jobs Surprise

    Hey, good news. Just maybe we’re seeing some light at the end of the jobs tunnel.
    Come Friday, we’ll get the October employment numbers which numerous economists predict will show a paltry gain of between 25,000 and 75,000 new private sector jobs.
    Too low, says economist Madeline Schnapp, a consistent and accurate bear on employment trends over the past year. Now, though, she has suddenly shifted gears over the near term, citing such job-hiring stimulants as a lot of home refinancing, brisk hi-tech infrastructure spending, an upswing in health care hiring and a jump in commodity prices.
    To Schnapp, director of economics at West Coast liquidity tracker Trimtabs Research, which is partially owned by Goldman Sachs, it means an employment surprise — the creation of about 100,000 new private sector jobs in October.
    That would follow some recent good news on the employment front — namely a fall in the latest weekless jobless claims to 434,000, the lowest level since July.
    A one time seismologist who used to predict earthquakes, Schnapp now predicts a mini-market explosion in reaction to her higher than expected jobs numbers, something on the order, she figures, of a Dow rise on Friday of between 150 and 180 points.
    While pointing to signs of a pickup in employment, Schnapp is quick to stress that “we’re still not over the hump since we need to create 150,000 to 200,000 a jobs a month just to keep up with population growth.” She also sees the market vulnerable to another economic shock, such as further rise in oil to say $100 to $120 a barrel, which would send the currently rising gas price to $4-$4.25 a gallon. It’s now above $3 a gallon in a number of areas of the country.
    Getting back to the stock market, a lot of leery stock market players are suddenly hot to trot again, obviously seduced by the recent rise in equity prices, namely a surge in the Dow of more than 1,000 points or about 11% since Sept. 1.
    “You can easily sense greed and risk are back in fashion,” says Los Angeles money manager Arnold Silver of A. Silver Associates, who notes that he’s getting increasing calls from clients about speculative stocks that he says no one in the world should ever think twice about. “People seem to have lost sight of the huge market decline in recent years and all the lost wealth,” he says. “I think it’s dumb to do that this soon, considering all the unknowns.”
    Like most people, Silver, who views the market as overbought and vulnerable at current levels,
    looks for the G.O.P. to rack up solid election-day gains. But he thinks it would be a mistake for investors to over-react to a GOP victory because he doesn’t see any immediate benefits, notably cutbacks in government spending, reduction in entitlements, the avoidance of higher taxes or substantive new steps to pep up a slightly improving economy.
    “We’re looking at a lame duck President and political gridlock, which means little, if anything, will get done in Washington,” says Silver. “Why would anybody think that’s good for stock prices?”
    One of Wall Street’s premier technicians, Oppenheimer & Co.’s Carter Worth, is also hoisting warning flags. If indeed he’s on the money, it’s worth giving some thought to an old saying, When everything is coming your way (as is the case now with many stocks), you’re in the wrong lane.
    His latest readings suggest Wall Street’s bulls would be wise to take a breather before they’re the ones who get gored. The danger, as Worth sees it, is that the early birds have caught the worms, that the good news that has compelled stock prices higher is already being discounted in the marketplace. Here, he’s referring to pretty decent third-quarter earnings, the second round of quantitative easing (QE2) from the Federal Reserve and Republican gains in the mid-term elections.
    As such, he’s telling clients that the market, as measured by the S&P 500, should wind up the year at pretty much where it started (at about 1115). Since the index is currently around 1180, Worth essentially is warning that equity prices are headed lower.
    The most dangerous market sectors, as Worth sees them, are the financial and consumer discretionary areas. In the latter area, he views Chipotle Mexican Grill and Fossill as especially vulnerable since, he says, they’re both overextended and priced to perfection. His most appealing sectors: energy, industrials and utilities. He’s also enthusiastic about gold. whose uptrend, he notes, remains intact. His favorite gold stocks are Barrick Gold and Newmont Mining.
    What about Apple, the apple of many an investor’s eye? It, too, is viewed as extended, but Worth says its uptrend remains intact, allowing the stock free to work its way higher. As for Google, another market favorite, he says it has been repriced higher to a difficult level and is likely to back and fill for many weeks
    How does the market usually perform during mid-term elections? Sam Stovall, Standard & Poor’s chief investment strategist, offers some perspective. During the 20 mid-term elections since 1930, the S&P 500 rose an average 2.2% in November and posted increases 65% of the time.
    What do you think? E-mail me at Dandordan@aol.com.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    California Story Brown and Boxer Kick for the Finish Line

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    California Story Brown and Boxer Kick for the Finish Line

    Is it really almost over? California Republicans’ Golden Parachute Twins, billionaire Meg Whitman and ex-Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, are bringing distinctly odd notes to their closing efforts to catch Jerry Brown and Barbara Boxer in the races for governor and U.S. senator.
    The last Field Poll of the election season places Brown in the lead over Whitman, 49% to 39%, in the race to succeed Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Boxer ahead of Fiorina, 49% to 41%. I have tracking poll numbers from three very reliable pollsters who have Brown’s lead in that vicinity and Boxer’s a bit lower.
    The California Democratic Party launched this ad for Jerry Brown. “The Most Interesting Man in California” is based on the award-winning Dos Equis ads.
    Fiorina spent the Tuesday and Wednesday of her final campaign week in the hospital from complications with her breast cancer reconstructive surgery. National Republican groups, believing the race was closing rapidly last week, and not knowing of her health issue, poured millions into the state to help Fiorina, but the last Field Poll shows Boxer eights points ahead. They may wish they’d spent that money elsewhere come Tuesday night.
    Whitman, who must be wondering how she’s fallen behind the ever controversial Brown despite overwhelming all her opponents’ spending combined with her record-shattering campaign spending, is bopping around the state visiting diners to humanize her image after getting booed at Maria Shriver’s annual Women’s Conference for churlishly refusing to pull her negative ads. Naturally, her advertising continues to be highly negative.
    But the Whitman humanization drive hit ran into the ditch on Wednesday when the billionaire, smile frozen in place, told Fox News that “it breaks my heart” but her longtime illegal immigrant housekeeper Nicky Diaz — “who was just like a member of the family” — really must be deported. (Funny how that didn’t occur to her years ago when she learned that Diaz’s Social Security number was bogus.) She flip-flopped on this the next day, naturally, pulling back and calling immigration a “federal issue,” thus once again demonstrating her deep contradictions on the issue.
    But that’s hardly the oddest of notes the former McCain/Palin national co-chair struck this week. Before getting to those, let’s look at what the Field Poll and others have found regarding the two races.
    Essentially, Boxer’s lead is less than that of Jerry Brown in his race to return to the governorship against Whitman, but they are doing roughly the same with voter groups, though Brown has taken a very slight lead among white voters while Boxer trails slightly among white voters.
    Turning billionaire Meg Whitman’s refusal to pull her attack ads into a rather clever attack ad, Brown called for a “Positive Finish” in this closing ad.
    Like Brown, Boxer has big leads over Fiorina among women, Latinos, and independents. They have huge margins in the San Francisco Bay Area and in Los Angeles County. President Barack Obama’s huge rally with Brown and Boxer at USC, drawing nearly 40,000 people, helped solidify the Democratic advantage in the vast LA media market.
    But Boxer’s not taking anything for granted. She’s campaigning with fellow Senator Dianne Feinstein, who forcefully refutes Fiorina’s rather fanciful notion that she’s more like Feinstein than Boxer is.
    But frankly, nothing that Fiorina can say can be more, er, questionable than Whitman’s distinctly odd musings and moves.
    Proclaiming “Polls, schmolls” as she angrily dismisses all the credible public polls showing Brown with a significant lead, Whitman cites her own internal polls, which variously purport to show her dead even, or even slightly ahead. Of course, these are being spun out by the same folks — such as chief strategist Mike Murphy and spinner Rob Stutzman — who did the very same thing in 2005 when they presided over Schwarzenegger’s special election initiatives debacle that nearly sunk his governorship.
    Camp Whitman claims Brown is so worried over this purported dramatic development that he’s canceled his schedule since the two of them appeared on Tuesday with Schwarzenegger at First Lady Maria Shriver’s annual Women’s Conference in Long Beach. And some reporters have bit on the notion.
    I’m not aware that Brown has canceled anything. He did some TV interviews and had a speech in Orange County Friday night, at which he addresses the annual Golden Badge Awards ceremony for statewide law enforcement in his capacity as California’s attorney general. Early Saturday morning, he embarked on a three-day whirlwind tour of the state, closing with a Monday evening rally in Oakland’s Jack London Square near the converted warehouse he bought in the 1990s following his last presidential campaign.
    This is one of Whitman’s many non-positive finish ads. Whitman has run more negative advertising than any non-presidential candidate in American history.
    What’s he mostly been doing since Tuesday? Well, I told you that he is in charge of his own campaign for governor, didn’t I?
    After blowing it in spectacular fashion on Tuesday at Shriver’s annual Women’s Conference, Whitman went all-in on claiming victimization as her rationale for refusing to pull her negative advertising against Brown even if everyone else involved in the California governor’s race pulls theirs.
    The flailing Republican went on Fox News to claim that she’s been called “a liar, a whore, and a Nazi,” which she repeated in subsequent appearances.
    Actually, she’s only been called a liar. And with good reason, as she has amply demonstrated that she is a liar. No major candidate has ever had her or his advertising so excoriated and thoroughly debunked by fact-checking organizations. I’ve devoted thousands of words myself to her many dishonest statements and ads.
    No one called her a whore, either.
    Someone, in what is almost certainly an illegally recorded private conversation, suggested typing her as a political whore for reneging on her supposed commitment to public pensions reform. Whitman’s campaign had a bogus transcript of the conversation produced and disseminated and falsely claimed that Brown himself had uttered the word, which is a commonplace in describing sell-out political behavior. No one has suggested that Whitman made her fortune providing sexual services.
    I then revealed that not only was it not Brown himself who said it, it was not a man, either. Whitman knows very well that it was a woman, yet had her campaign lie in order to cast herself as a victim and distract from her illegal immigration scandal.
    Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger railed against the oil companies behind Proposition 23, the trailing initiative to do away with California’s landmark climate change/renewable energy program. Brown is also campaigning against the initiative.
    She wasn’t called a Nazi, either. Brown, in conversation while taking a jogging break a few weeks before the June primary, got into a conversation with someone he didn’t know who turned out to be a local radio reporter. This person, who appears on the air on a daily basis, sat on whatever it was that was said, then posted an account on his little-known blog right after the primary as Brown was spinning up campaign activity against the newly nominated Whitman.
    No one noticed but the Whitman campaign, which immediately got the report featured on the Drudge Report. Not that there’s anything the least suspicious about the sequence of events.
    Even the local radio reporter doesn’t claim that Brown called Whitman a Nazi. In his very detailed rendition of Brown’s comments, which he neither recorded nor took note of, Brown said that the Whitman campaign is following the propaganda techniques of Joseph Goebbels. Brown was then reading a book about the father of “Big Lie” propaganda campaigns. Which was not noted in the blog report.
    But all that is water under the bridge.
    For his part, Brown kept calling for days on all participants in the governor’s race to cease all negative advertising. Not that he actually expected the trailing Whitman to agree. In fact, in a neat irony, he has a closing ad attacking Whitman for not pulling her attack ads.
    While there are other serious contenders for Whitman’s oddest note of the week, I’d say it is her World Series bet with the governor of Texas. The National League champion San Francisco Giants are taking on the American League champion Texas Rangers in the World Series, and have taken the lead.
    It’s customary for governors whose state teams are in the top championship events to bet on the outcome, as Schwarzenegger has done the last two seasons on the NBA Champion Los Angeles Lakers.
    But there’s no bet on the World Series between Schwarzenegger and Texas Governor Rick Perry. Is that because there’s no love lost between them?
    I’m only speculating, of course, but I recall in fall 2007 when Schwarzenegger delivered what he viewed as one of his key speeches, to the California Republican Party convention outside Palm Springs. I went over the speech beforehand and wrote a column previewing the speech, in which the landslide re-election winner of the November past called on his rightward-leaning party to head more towards the center.
    Jerry Brown embarked on a three-day statewide tour, Saturday through Monday. I think of it as the “No Bull / No Bulworth Tour.” To strategically adjust what a certain former governor and presidential contender said about vagueness: A little candor goes a long way in this business. Incidentally, did you ever notice that Warren Beatty gave Jay Bulworth the same initials as Jerry Brown?
    The speech fell largely flat.
    Schwarzenegger was then followed by, yes, Texas Governor Rick Perry. Who served up a heaping dish of far right red meat which the California convention delegates lapped up with glee.
    Driving away from the convention the next day, I called Jerry Brown and told him it occurred to me that California Republicans were heading hard right, and that anyone who emerged from a competitive Republican primary could be beaten for the governorship.
    Even someone who has broken all spending records for a non-presidential campaign in American history.
    Speaking of which, Whitman showed just how pretentious she is by taking it upon herself to represent California in a bet with Texas on the World Series outcome.
    Whitman bet Perry, whose Texas administration she repeatedly praises as a model venture, a California surfboard against a pair of Texas cowboy boots.
    How nice.
    Whitman does deserve a souvenir from this monstrously expensive experience, so my recommendation is that she get Perry to give her a pair of Lucchese boots. They’re what I’ve worn since the early ’90s. (Schwarzenegger gave Russian President Dmitry Medvedev a pair of Luccheses.) Once they’re broken in, they feel great, and with proper care and refurbishing, they last and last. So they can remind her forever of when she pretended to be governor.
    You can check things during the day on my site, New West Notes … www.newwestnotes.com.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    Ring in the Holidays with Style

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    Ring in the Holidays with Style

    A gift should reflect the relationship you have with the recipient. Giving a truly great present speaks volumes, but how can you be sure to find the one that will perfectly suit the person you’re shopping for? The following tips are a guide to savvy gift-buying.
    DO . . .
    Strategize. When selecting gifts for a friend or business associate, consider a twist on the golden rule. Don’t look for the gift that you would like to receive, but the gift that you think or know the individual recipient would like to receive. This means knowing something about the recipient, and the kinds of things he or she likes. Long before the holiday season, ask yourself where that person works and plays. Does he or she garden, play golf, go hiking? What is that person’s taste (conservative? flamboyant? What are some of his or her favorite things?
    Choose the Unexpected. A sure-fire way to give a gift with impact is to choose something different and unusual. This season, try “function with flair,” from the kitchen to the home office: purely functional items that can also be works of art. For example, beautiful linen napkins that can be used as place mats, or office supplies or kitchenware with designer flair.
    Let the Gift Speak for Itself. Image is important, from what you choose to how you present it. Quality wrapping indicates that thought and care went into your present, and will leave a lasting impression. Instead of using last year’s reindeer paper, try an art supply store for unusual paper sheets, or wrap a gift in brown parchment paper tied with a red bow.
    DON’T . . .
    Become a Clich. Fight the urge to give a gift card or gift basket. While they are both easy and safe, they will be forgotten in a few weeks. Instead, take the extra time this year to search for gifts in new places, such as on vacation. If you keep your holiday list in mind throughout the year, you can purchase presents whenever you see the perfect item. But you don’t really even need to go out of the house–catalog and online shopping are convenient and open 24/7.
    Dismiss Your Intuition. Someone once told me that great gift giving is 70 percent inspiration and 30 percent fieldwork. If possible, get out of your regular routine to inspire some great gift ideas for 2010. Try a new street or area in your city. You’ll be surprised at what you find. Museum book and gift stores have some wonderful items sure to please, too. Let your intuition guide you to the best finds!
    Be a Slave to Labels. Why pay more for designer names, especially in this economy? If your dream gift has a designer logo, terrific, but most people appreciate gifts that are reflections of their taste–from style to function to color–with or without a famous label.
    Unique Gift Ideas
    1.Make a donation to a charity in the name of the recipient, but do your homework first to find out which causes he or she supports.
    2.Purchase an American flag from your local congressman or woman. They are under $20 and come with a certificate stating that it has been flown over the nation’s capitol.
    3.Offer to take a friend’s small children for an afternoon or a sleepover. The gift of time is priceless!
    4.Decorate a holiday wreath and deliver it in early December so your giftee can enjoy it all month long.
    5.Homemade gifts such as preserves and pickles are always welcome, and the giftee can share them with family and office mates.
    Lisa Mirza Grotts is a recognized etiquette expert and the author of A Traveler’s Passport to Etiquette. She is a former director of protocol for the city and county of San Francisco and the founder of The AML Group (www.AMLGroup.com), certified etiquette and protocol consultants. Her clients range from Stanford Hospital and Microsoft to Nordstrom and KPMG. She has been quoted by Cond Nast Traveler, InStyle Magazine, The Sunday Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Los Angeles Times, and USA Today. She has appeared on various radio and television stations, such as ABC, CBS, and Fox News. To learn more about Lisa, follow her on www.Twitter.com/LisaGrotts and www.Facebook.com/LisaGrotts.

    This Blogger’s Books from
    A Traveler’s Passport to Etiquette
    by Lisa Mirza Grotts

    Follow Lisa Mirza Grotts on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/LisaGrotts

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    Could BillsChiefs Be The Game

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    Could BillsChiefs Be The Game

    I’m a big believer in signs (and the like), thanks to my older cousin’s quarter-life crisis back when I was 12. Thus, I’ve convinced myself that the Bills always play better when my preview posts are short and sweet. So in the interest of doing anything possible to up our chances of finally getting our first win, that’s exactly what I’m going to do.
    Heading to Kansas City to face the 4-2 Chiefs tomorrow, this is what we should see from the Bills:
    -Fitz needs to come out strong and fearless. I’m thinking of sending him a CD with a few Taylor Swift, Hannah Montana and Rick Ross songs that encourage that very sentiment for him to listen to before gametime. With last week’s performance of 382 yards passing, 20 yards rushing and four touchdown passes, Fitz should be out to once again impress the pundits and fans who doubted his ability to turn this offense around.
    -Now that the offense is figuring out how to score both touchdowns and field goals, I expect Stevie Johnson and my Lee Evans to see the ball headed their way a lot. Hopefully KC hasn’t figured out a way to stick themselves to both #13 and #83…I mean, that’s a big job to keep up with two receivers who have proven they can make those catches when it matters.
    -I’d like to think Freddy J would be a useful engine, but tomorrow, I’m not so sure. The Chiefs have moved to 6th in the league in run defense. No matter how adaptive and fierce Freddy is, without an O-line that can develop those blocks for him, it could be a struggle. All the more reason for our pass game to step up big.
    -Matt Cassel hasn’t been great in the air, until recently. Then again, our pass rush hasn’t been great…at all. The Bills are going to be hungry for one of those spectacular takeaways they were known for last season. With Byrd and McGhee questionable, it’ll be up to Donte Whitner to get the job done.
    -With the switch back to a 4-3 formation, maybe the D will have gotten its mojo back.
    -It’s set to be the “battle of the rookies” on punt returns. C.J. Spiller has clearly emerged effective on returns, and KC’s Dexter McCluster and Javier Arenass are ranked near the top of the league in this category. Spiller seems eager to ignite some stronger sparks and excitement than we saw the last couple games, so perhaps the honor of being considered rookie of the game will be enough to light him up.
    -If we need him to, Lindell should have us covered on long field goals. I honestly have no idea what the weather in Kansas City is like, but I’m guessing it’s got to be more ideal for the longshots than in Buffalo.
    -Bottom line: put up some points, hang on to the ball, and improve improve improve.
    GO BILLS!!!

    Follow Alyssa Jung on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/Lysssie

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    Planting the Seeds

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    Planting the Seeds

    Nur Agha Akbari and his family live in Kabul, on an unpaved, pitted street lined by mud brick homes. When we visited him this week, his oldest son, age 13, led us to a sitting room inside their rented two-story apartment, furnished with simple mats and pillows. The youngster smiled shyly as he served us tea. Then his father entered the room.
    Mr. Akbari is a robust, energetic, well educated man from a respected, academic Afghan family. In the late 1970s, Nur had gone to study agriculture in the UK and remained there, becoming an organic farmer. His four brothers had instead remained in Afghanistan, or else returned there after studies abroad. His two eldest brothers had trained in the Soviet Union — one as an engineer, one as a nuclear scientist — and had received early warning of the likelihood of what came to be the 1979 Soviet invasion. They spoke out publicly about their fears as the invasion grew more and more imminent.
    On December 27 of that year, Soviet troops occupied major government, media and military buildings in Kabul, initiating a nine-year war between a nationalist/fundamentalist resistance (the “Mujahideen”) and the Soviet occupiers. Soviet officials fired Nur’s oldest brother from his cancer research work at Kabul University and blacklisted him. He found himself unable to work, and soon joined the resistance. Nur doesn’t know much about what happened to him then, but he was among thousands of people bulldozed into mass graves after capture and execution by the Soviets. All told Nur knows very little about the fates of his three older brothers, all killed in the war. But their tragedy would largely shape his life.
    Nur had arranged for his surviving, younger, brother to join him in the UK. But Nur would lie awake at night, thinking about the children and the wives of his slain brothers. Concerned that his nephews and nieces were now fending for themselves in Afghanistan’s war zones, fatherless and penniless, he resolved to return home.
    When he learned of a job with an Austrian relief agency which would have him living in Pakistan but taking three trips per year into Afghanistan, he immediately applied. A representative of the “Austrian Relief Group” recognized Nur’s family name and told him it would be exceedingly dangerous for him to enter Afghanistan, but Nur persisted, realizing this was perhaps his only chance to rescue his widowed and orphaned family there. He got the job and swiftly set up residence in the Pakistani city of Peshawar where, eventually, he managed to gather all of his brothers’ children and wives in a large house he had rented. At last he could be sure that they had health care, adequate food, and access to education. He worked tirelessly to make this possible.
    Now, at family reunions, they remember those hard times. The youngsters who were saved by their young uncle are themselves parents now, and the family history includes great gratitude for the sacrifices Nur made, as a young man, to provide for and encourage his large extended family.
    His is among thousands of stories of hardship and tragedy, many worse than his own, as he made sure repeatedly to remind us several times in the course of relating it. Stories of death and dislocation from the superpower invasion of 1979, and now from the American occupation, entering its tenth year.
    Now Nur works as an engineer for the Afghan government’s Department of Agriculture, with many more people to try to help rescue. He talked to us about the problems besetting Afghanistan as it attempts to rebuild from an ongoing war.
    Nur is a visionary. He imagines communities learning to provide for themselves and solving problems using local decision-making and initiative at a grass roots level. He is passionately committed to a model of community development which he had begun to implement in the Panjshir Province. “We need to sow seeds,” he says. “Germination takes time. It’s not like building a wall which you can just slap up.” But he has hit impasse after impasse in his efforts to foster grassroots community development, with many different forms of corruption everywhere springing up to commandeer the funds the occupation has made available for development work.
    Our delegation has heard a lot about rising and pervasive corruption over the past two weeks traveling in Afghanistan. Following the election of Mr. Karzai, people we’ve spoken with were stung by the congratulatory calls from heads of state around the world, including that of President Obama. Already outraged over what they (and international observers) consider an extremely fraudulent election, they feel bewildered by other world governments’ legitimization of corruption in their capital. By supporting the current government, the U.S. exacerbates the life-choking corruption here. Afghan Member of Parliament, Ramazan Bashar Dost, urged us to ask the U.S. government to realize this, and desist. A young woman running her own company in Kandahar province spoke to us with contempt about corrupt officials. And others — an Afghan human rights lawyer, the co-founder of a large media company, three fellows working for a smaller news agency, along with almost every Bamiyan villager we met during a week there — all spoke of how the corruption had negatively, in cases disastrously, impacted their efforts to make a living and contribute toward their country’s resurrection from its current, dreadful state.
    One of the most egregious examples has been set by the United States. According to a McClatchy report released on October 27, 2010, the U.S. government knows it has awarded nearly $18 billion in contracts for rebuilding Afghanistan over the past three years, but it can’t account for any of the billions spent before 2007. What’s more, a crucial agency of government investigators and auditors — those responsible for the SIGAR, the “Special Inspector General in Afghanistan Report,” on waste, fraud, and abuse of American taxpayer dollars — has now received a failing grade in a new government investigation of corruption in their own activities.
    Nur wonders where all the money has gone. “If we spent one quarter of one quarter of one quarter of the billions that they’ve spent, we could fund this process of community development,” he assures us. “Billions have been spent and we have nothing for it. If we had followed a process marked by transparency, fairness and involvement of local communities, we could have turned this country around in five years.”
    Beyond lamenting lost opportunities and lost lives in the dangerously impoverished Afghan economy, he mainly fears that ordinary Afghans will increasingly adjust to a welfare culture which relies on handouts rather than hard work to achieve progress.
    As we spoke with Nur, his son returned to the room with a rich, creamy soup prepared by his mother and then left and returned again with platters, one per guest, each heaped with walnuts, glazed dried apricots and luscious pomegranate seeds. When we praised the quality of this truly delicious fare, Nur (with a wry smile) replied,
    Nevertheless, Nur continues working toward a better future for Afghanistan. He holds on to a deep faith in the ability of the simplest people to generate solutions to their problems if they are liberated from the oppressive effects of war and corruption. This is no time for a loss of nerve. Nur Agha Akbari, a survivor and a creative thinker, may not reap the harvest in his lifetime, but he won’t stop planting the seeds.
    Kathy Kelly (kathy@vcnv.org) has been traveling in Afghanistan with two other co-coordinators of Voices for Creative Nonviolence, David Smith-Ferri and Jerica Arents.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    Zombie Venn Diagrams

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    Zombie Venn Diagrams

    From Twilight to World War Z to the X-Files to AMC’s new show, The Walking Dead, today’s pop culture is teeming with the undead. For those needing a little clarification on what’s up with the zombie thing these days, here are a few grisly venn diagrams to clear things up:
    See last year’s Vampire Venn Diagrams here. Happy Halloween everyone!
    Shane Snow is a New York-based designer and writer, founder of Printing Choice and Creative Director for the financial services network CreditLoan.com.

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    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    30

    Bills Woes Go Beyond the Field With New Rules on Tailgating

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    Bills Woes Go Beyond the Field With New Rules on Tailgating

    It seems the Buffalo Bills (well, their fans, at least) just can’t seem to win–or catch a break.
    It’s not bad enough we’re shouldered with the exhausting task of rooting for a team that’s embedded in our hearts and souls, yet can’t seem to figure out how not to break those hearts; of defending a team year after year after year, who to most everyone except Bills fans, doesn’t seem deserving of such loyalty; of spending countless hours and dollars watching games at the Ralph or the bar, only to walk away from another losing season. Have we not suffered enough?!
    And now, one of the only things that has distinguished the Buffalo Bills from other NFL teams (since in recent years, we can’t rely on stats to boast about) and given fans and non-fans something positive to talk about, is set to be ripped away from us.
    Tailgating.
    Almost everyone who knows anything about football, has heard about the epic event that is Buffalo Bills tailgating. Whether at an established party like The Coffin Corner (marathon-parties that draw former Bills and their families) or Pinto Ron (cooks on his car), or groups of friends tailgating out the trunk of their car, pre-game festivities in Buffalo is something of a legend. It was even featured as the first-ever episode on Food Network’s “Tailgate Warriors” hosted by Guy Fieri.
    Yet, the NFL has announced plans to eliminate those tailgating parties, without technically banning them.
    See this post on BuffaloStuff.net, written by my friend Don Tober, a key player in The Coffin Corner phenom. He explains, better than I can, exactly why the NFL’s proposed regulations are “so dumb, rea-l-ly dumb, forreal.”
    I guarantee, if you take away something that is almost an institution in this city of grieving and hopeful fans, they will just find another place and another way to continue doing what they’ve been doing for more than 20 years.

    Follow Alyssa Jung on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/Lysssie

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    The Objective UN Human Rights Council

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    The Objective UN Human Rights Council

    Late last month, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights released its report on the May 2010 Gaza Freedom Flotilla incident, concluding that the Israeli commandos involved engaged in “extra-legal, arbitrary and summary executions” of peace activists bringing supplies and humanitarian aid to the besieged territory. Gareth Porter, writing on this site shortly after the report was released, said that it “will certainly be the most objective, thorough and in-depth inquiry into the events on board the Mavi Marmara.” Of course it will, Mr. Porter, because it was issued by that impeccable, crown jewel of objectivity, the UN Human Rights Council (HRC).
    For those not in the know, the HRC was created in May 2006 to replace its predecessor, the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, which had been repeatedly criticized for allowing member states with dreadful human rights records (note: current members include China, Saudi Arabia, and Kyrgyzstan). At its first meeting in June 2006, the HRC voted to make a review of Israel’s human rights abuses a permanent feature of each council session, the only country in the world to enjoy that distinct honor. To date, it has passed 61 resolutions, 30 of which have been directed at Israel. For comparison, Sudan, where nearly half a million people have been killed and 2.5 million displaced due to the genocide in Darfur, has been the target of 7 resolutions, or about one quarter of Israel’s total. China, where political dissent is silenced through torture and pregnant mothers are forced to submit to mandatory abortions and sterilizations, has been the target of exactly zero. Saudi Arabia, where women are not allowed to receive an education or drive on the roads and limbs (including heads) are removed for the crime of homosexuality: zero. In fact, the HRC’s almost fanatical obsession with Israel has led UN Secretaries General Kofi Annan and Ban Ki-moon to denounce its “disproportionate focus” on the country “given the range and scope of allegations of human rights violations throughout the world.”
    As for the flotilla report, it was based on interviews with 112 eyewitnesses who mostly sympathized with the alleged victims and were therefore predisposed to place the blame on Israel. The Israeli government declined to cooperate with the investigation (understandable considering that it had to know it would never get a fair shake), meaning that the information it garnered was necessarily one-sided. The final product is about as objective as the council’s 2006 report on the Lebanon conflict and its 2009 report on the Gaza War (the Goldstone report), both of which shockingly concluded that Israel, and Israel alone, was to blame.
    I want to be clear: I’m not arguing that Israel has an unblemished human rights record, nor that its abuses should be swept under the rug or ignored because of its strategic alliance with the United States or any other reason. Every nation should be condemned and accordingly punished for the abuse of human rights. But that’s not how the HRC sees it. According to the HRC, Israel has committed 50% of resolution-worthy human rights violations worldwide, while China and Saudi Arabia have committed none. That’s patently absurd, and that’s why until the HRC stops turning a blind eye to the myriad abuses occurring elsewhere, focusing nearly all of its time and resources on attacking one nation again and again, it will continue to be impossible to take seriously.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    ICON OF STYLE Edith Head The Most Famous Costume Designer of All Time PHOTOS POLL

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    ICON OF STYLE Edith Head The Most Famous Costume Designer of All Time PHOTOS POLL

    *Scroll down for the complete slideshow from LIFE.com*
    In 2007, we launched on this site a column called Lets’ Bring Back — which has, over the past three years, celebrated hundreds of forgotten-yet-delightful fashions, pastimes, objects, and personalities.
    On November 1, 2010, Let’s Bring Back will make its debut as a book — and in honor of its release, the Huffington Post’s Style section will spotlight ten historical style icons featured in the book’s pages.
    Many of these tastemakers, designers, and muses are now unjustly fading from public memory. Once you’ve spent some time with them, you’ll agree that each of these women deserves to remain in the limelight.
    After all, fashion is fleeting, but true style glimmers forever.
    Our first ICON OF STYLE profile on performer Josephine Baker created quite a splash, and then many of you “met” brilliant hat designer Lilly Dach, our second ICON OF STYLE subject. Our third subject, Surrealist designer Elsa Schiaparelli, was once as dominant in the fashion industry as her then-rival Coco Chanel. This past weekend, we celebrated screen siren and war heroine Marlene Dietrich. And earlier this week, the world’s first supermodel, Suzy Parker, activist heiress Nancy Cunard, and the Marchesa Casati, artists’ muse and high priestess of eccentricity, resurfaced to dazzle the masses.
    Since this is Halloween weekend, we thought this would be the perfect time to showcase a costume designer. However, Edith Head is no run-of-the-mill Hollywood costumer: many argue that she is the most important and famous costume designer of all time. Responsible for some of the most memorable film wardrobes in history (her credits included Vertigo, Sabrina, and Sunset Boulevard, to name but a few), Head was nominated for dozens of Oscars throughout her career.
    For millions of American women, Edith Head became the authority on what was chic, what was of the moment, and how to wear it: she was every bit as influential as her fashion editor counterparts in New York City.
    She also dispensed her advice to women across the country through newspaper and magazine articles, radio and television shows, and two bestselling books. Read her savvy, still-relevant bon mot-like tips below.
    The following excerpt is from Let’s Bring Back (Chronicle Books, November 1):
    EDITH HEAD (1897-1981)
    Legendary costume designer, Ms. Head–aka the “Dress Doctor”–was as glamorous as the stars she dressed, and she dressed countless major Old Hollywood stars in some of their most memorable roles. If you loved Grace Kelly’s iconic look in Rear Window or Audrey Hepburn’s lavish wardrobe in Funny Face, one of Hollywood’s ultimate fashion movies, take your hat off to Edith.
    The winner of eight Oscars (she was nominated for an astonishing thirty-four), Ms. Head also had a heavy appetite for glamour and absolutely heaped it on the stars of Notorious, All About Eve, and over four hundred other films. (“I’ve designed films I’ve never seen,” she once admitted.)
    On the flamboyance of the times, Ms. Head once described Old Hollywood as a “Barnum & Bailey World,” filled with gold bathtubs, ermine bathrobes, and film actresses draped in satins and minks. “I caught the flavor and the fever,” she recalled.
    Ms. Head’s snippets of advice and witticisms were as closely heeded as those attributed to Coco Chanel, and they remain relevant today:
    “You can have anything you want in life if you dress for it.”
    “Life is competition; clothes gird us for the competition.”
    “The cardinal sin is not being badly dressed, but wearing the right thing in the wrong place.”
    “Your dresses should be tight enough to show you’re a woman and loose enough to prove you’re a lady.”
    “Clothes not only can make the woman; they can make her several different women.”
    “I say sacrifice style any day for becomingness.”
    Photos courtesy of LIFE.com.
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    circa 1955: Portrait of Hollywood fashion designer Edith Head (1897 – 1981) posing with six of her Oscars for Costume Design. Head was Fashion Chief at Paramount Pictures. She wears her trademark dark, round-rimmed sunglasses.
    circa 1955: Portrait of Hollywood fashion designer Edith Head (1897 – 1981) posing with six of her Oscars for Costume Design. Head was Fashion Chief at Paramount Pictures. She wears her trademark dark, round-rimmed sunglasses.
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    BUY THE BOOK: Click here to purchase Let’s Bring Back.
    Follow Let’s Bring Back on Twitter: @LetsBringBack
    For publicity inquiries, please contact April Whitney at Chronicle Books: April_Whitney@chroniclebooks.com

    This Blogger’s Books from
    Let’s Bring Back: An Encyclopedia of Forgotten-Yet-Delightful, Chic, Useful, Curious, and Otherwise Commendable Things from Times Gone By
    by Lesley M.M. Blume
    Let’s Bring Back: An Encyclopedia of Forgotten-Yet-Delightful, Chic, Useful, Curious, and Otherwise Commendable Things from Times Gone By
    by Lesley M.M. Blume

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    www.twitter.com/lesleymmblume

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    Oct
    30

    GOP and the Deepening Divide

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    GOP and the Deepening Divide

    The partisan divide on issues related to Arabs and Muslims has become disturbingly wide. For example, when, in a recent poll, we asked American voters whether they had favorable or unfavorable attitudes toward Arabs and Muslims, the results were shocking.
    Attitudes towards Arabs: Democrats – 57% favorable, 30% unfavorable; Republicans – 28% favorable, 66% unfavorable.
    Attitudes towards Muslims: Democrats – 54% favorable, 34% unfavorable; Republicans – 12% favorable, 85% unfavorable.
    These were but part of a broader survey of American attitudes conducted by Zogby international, and released by the Arab American Institute. The poll’s other findings were equally troubling, with the answers to question after question yielding the same patterned response. For example, “Is Islam a religion of peace?” – 62% of Democrats say that it is, while 79% of Republicans say it is not.
    What has happened to the “Grand Old Party” of George H.W. Bush and James Baker?
    For one, the GOP has become captive of several groups that now dominate the party’s base and have transformed its thinking. The “religious right” and its “end of days” preachers like Pat Robertson, William Hagee and Gary Bauer, presently constitute almost 40% of Republican voters. This group’s emphasis on the divinely ordained battle between the forces of “good” (i.e. the Christian West and Israel) and the forces of “evil” (Islam and the Arabs) has logically given rise to anti-Muslim prejudice.
    Then there are the Christian right’s ideological cousins, the neo-conservatives, who share an identical Manichaean and apocalyptic world view, though with a secular twist. And into the mix must be thrown Islamophobic right-wing radio and TV commentators like O’Reilly, Beck, Limbaugh, Savage and company, who daily spew their poison across the airwaves.
    The combination produces a lethal brew that is dangerous not only for the intolerance it has created, but the sense of certitude and self-righteousness it projects. This too comes through in our polling. When we ask Americans, in separate questions, whether they “know enough about Islam and Muslims (or Arab countries and people) or need to know more”, among Democrats, 68% say they would “like to know more” about Islam, with 80% wanting “to know more” about the Arab World. In answer to the same questions, 71% and 58% of Republicans say they “know enough” and “don’t want to learn more”.
    There have been policy implications to this intolerance. In the days following President Obama’s historic speech in Cairo that was designed to rebuild tattered ties with the Arab and Muslim Worlds, I appeared on a number of television programs debating Republican operatives like Liz Cheney and former Senator George Allen. Speaking from the same talking points they criticized the President, accusing him of demonstrating weakness and selling America short in order to curry favor with Muslims.
    Such stridency has only served to deepen the partisan divide. When asked whether they approve or disapprove of the White House’s outreach efforts to Arabs and Muslims, 82% of Democrats approve while 73% of Republicans disapprove.
    This split is manifested in other behaviors. Especially relevant here are the conclusions of two additional studies released this month by the AAI. The first of these is a Congressional Scorecard for 2009-2010 which evaluates the voting records of all 435 Members of Congress on 20 different pieces of legislation or Congressional actions on a range of foreign or domestic policy concerns important to Arab and Muslim Americans. The study finds over 60 Members – all Democrats and not a single Republican – with excellent records on these issues.
    The second of these AAI studies recorded and rated the comments made by all elected officials and candidates for federal or state-wide posts regarding the Park 51 controversy. With a few exceptions, Democrats were largely supportive of not only the project but, more broadly, of the rights of Muslims. The GOP side was the reverse. Only New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg (an independent), Governors Crist (Florida) and Christie (New Jersey), and Congressman Ron Paul were supportive, with most others in the Republican Party not only opposing the Islamic center but indulging in shameful anti-Muslim rhetoric – often echoing right-wing bloggers and radio personalities. More disturbing were reports that some GOP congressional candidates who had initially made more supportive statements were forced by party leaders to retract them and fall in line with their strategy of making the “Ground Zero mosque” a wedge issue to use against Democrats in the fall elections.
    Whether simply exploiting insecurity and fear of Arabs and Muslims in a crude effort to win votes – tactics that worked so well for Republicans in the post-9/11 environment, or mixing these national security concerns with good old fashioned xenophobia, with a touch of Islamophobia, to infuse their supporters with intensity – it’s a dangerous game with worrisome consequences. And with the GOP poised to wield even greater influence after this election, I believe that those who place value in the need to promote greater understanding have every reason to be concerned.
    Dr. James J. Zogby is the author of Arab Voices: What They Are Saying to Us, and Why it Matters (Palgrave Macmillan, October 2010) and the founder and president of the Arab American Institute (AAI), a Washington, D.C.-based organization which serves as the political and policy research arm of the Arab American community.

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    Weekly Reader PeekabooTranny the liberal agenda coming to Jesus

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    Weekly Reader PeekabooTranny the liberal agenda  coming to Jesus

    I’m really proud that we helped force Apple to remove the transphobic app “PeekabooTranny” this week in conjunction with GLAAD, but what else could you have missed this week? We had some major traffic to these posts this week:
    Sunday
    My religion is better for gays than yours Filed by: Alex Blaze
    Terry Branstad Tells Kids Their Family Does Not Matter Filed by: Joe Mirabella
    Monday
    A Come to Jesus Moment Filed by: Phil Reese
    Could Gays Cost Democrats the Election? Filed by: Joe Mirabella
    Tuesday
    Allen West on Gays in Military Barracks “tumultuous things happen” Filed by: Michael Emanuel Rajner
    When the liberal agenda isn’t so liberal Filed by: Bil Browning
    Wednesday
    Ever Wonder Why There’s No AIDS Vaccine Yet? Filed by: Patricia Nell Warren
    GetEqual wins big in Indianapolis Filed by: Bil Browning
    Thursday
    Why people think “misogynist/racist/etc.” are just meaningless insults Filed by: Alex Blaze
    Lt. Dan Choi & I: Together at last on Democracy Now Filed by: Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore
    Friday
    4 days and counting Filed by: Michael Crawford
    Time Magazine, 1979: Gay history memorabilia Filed by: Gloria Brame Ph.D.
    Don’t forget:
    Subscribe to the Bilerico Project Report to get all of the previous day’s posts sent to you every night at midnight Eastern time.
    Follow Bilerico Project on Twitter for links to new posts, breaking news and contest opportunities.
    Subscribe to the Bilerico Project RSS feed to read posts via a feedreader like Google Reader or Bloglines, or include the feed in a customized homepage like My Yahoo! or iGoogle.
    Want to read a faster version of TBP on your phone? We have a mobile version!

    Follow Bil Browning on Twitter:
    www.twitter.com/bilerico

    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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    Oct
    30

    Halloween Books 6 Flashlight Worthy Mysteries Set On Halloween Night PHOTOS

    by , under NEWS
    Halloween Books 6 Flashlight Worthy Mysteries Set On Halloween Night PHOTOS

    Hopefully you’ll spend Sunday night out with your wee ghosts and goblins… or at your front door handing out treats. But if you’re in the mood to turn out the lights and hide from the trick-or-treaters, then I recommend breaking out a flashlight and reading one of these 6 Halloween-themed mystery novels.
    And while they’re not as explicitly Halloween-themed as the books below, any of the hundreds of other titles in our collection of mystery books would make excellent reading on All Hallows Eve. Mysteries not your thing? There are over 400 other lists of recommended books at Flashlight Worthy.
    “A Catered Halloween: A Mystery with Recipes” by Isis Crawford
    1 of 7
    Mark Seliger, Famed ‘Rolling Stone’ Photographer: New Book Showcases Intimate Images (PHOTOS)
    Novels In Three Lines: They’re Pessimistic And French (PHOTOS)
    7 Ways The Mafia Made The U.S. A Better Place: ‘Renegade History’ (PHOTOS)
    Halloween Books: 9 Comics Congress Banned In The ’50s (PHOTOS)
    Steven Johnson’s ‘Where Good Ideas Come From’: 6 Brilliant, World-Changing Mistakes (PHOTOS)
    Bad Boss: 14 Horror Stories About The World’s Worst Bosses From The Author Of ‘Good Boss, Bad Boss’ (PHOTOS)
    Libby and Bernie Simmons are two sisters who own A Little Taste of Heaven, a catering company. They are thrilled when they are hired to cater the Halloween festivities at the rumored to be haunted Peabody School. A local businessman is going all out in decorating for the party, even constructing a haunted house with special high tech effects. Everything seems perfect until the head and torso of Amethyst Applegate ends up on the caterers’ table. Amethyst was universally loathed so the sisters with the help of their father have their work cut out in trying to find out who murdered Amethyst.
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    Follow Peter Steinberg on Twitter:
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    Source:www.huffingtonpost.com

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