Author: HL

  • Wealthy CEOs Conspire to Influence Elections for GOP

    Wealthy CEOs Conspire to Influence Elections for GOP
    Wall Street CEOs have formed a group to take advantage of new fundraising possibilities opened up by the Supreme Court decision to end the ban on corporate election spending.

    Wall Street CEOs have formed a group to take advantage of new fundraising possibilities opened up by the Supreme Court decision to end the ban on corporate election spending.

    Sarah Palin Aims to Bust Up the Republican Party — And the Tea Party Movement
    Palin’s speech was her boilerplate of non sequiturs and cognitive disconnections, but in the interview that followed, she revealed her hand in a game for the presidency.

    Palin's speech was her boilerplate of non sequiturs and cognitive disconnections, but in the interview that followed, she revealed her hand in a game for the presidency.

    Don’t Drink the Tea Party Kool-Aid
    Let’s hope the American people don’t buy the propaganda of anti-government groups calling for the overthrow of the very institutions that protect all of us from tyranny.

    Let's hope the American people don't buy the propaganda of anti-government groups calling for the overthrow of the very institutions that protect all of us from tyranny.

    Bad Policies Are Really What’s Driving California’s Huge Prison Costs
    By opting for a policy of sending low-level offenders to state prison, California is far out of step with other states – and out of time.

    By opting for a policy of sending low-level offenders to state prison, California is far out of step with other states – and out of time.

  • Jerusalem Post No Longer A Newspaper & Avatar Is Subversive!

    Jerusalem Post No Longer A Newspaper & Avatar Is Subversive!
    UPDATE: Two years ago, at a family event, an Israeli guest noticed Wolf Blitzer in attendance and said, “In Israel, we took CNN off the cable packages for being anti-Israel. Now we have FOX which is great.” My younger son,…


    United StatesNative Americans in the United StatesHolocaustEthnicityNative American

    Jerusalem the Golden
    The neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah in East Jerusalem has been in the news a lot lately–due to tensions between Jewish settlers and the Palestinians who live in houses that the settlers would like to inhabit. But, the neighborhood will also…


    Sheikh JarrahEast JerusalemIsraelJewPalestinian people

  • Palin says she?s fine with Limbaugh?s use of the ?r-word.?

    Palin says she?s fine with Limbaugh?s use of the ?r-word.?
    This morning on Fox News, host Chris Wallace asked Sarah Palin about her public call for White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel to resign after reports surfaced that he called a group of liberal activists “f—ing retarded.” Palin reiterated her call for Emanuel to “step down” and explained that while she’s not “politically correct” […]

    This morning on Fox News, host Chris Wallace asked Sarah Palin about her public call for White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel to resign after reports surfaced that he called a group of liberal activists “f—ing retarded.” Palin reiterated her call for Emanuel to “step down” and explained that while she’s not “politically correct” or “one to be a word police,” she was committed to “reaching out and to helping the special needs community.” But when Wallace asked Palin about Rush Limbaugh’s endorsement of the language, Palin said she was fine with Limbaugh’s satirical comments. “I didn’t hear Rush Limbaugh calling a group of people whom he did not agree with ‘f-ing retards,’” she said. “There is a big difference there”:

    PALIN: I agree with Rush Limbaugh. He was using satire to politically correct

    WALLACE: He used the “r” word.

    PALIN: He used satire. Name-calling by anyone, I teach this to my children and you teach it to your children and grandchildren, too. Name calling by anyone is just unnecessary. It just wastes time. Let’s speak to the issues and — […]

    PALIN: I didn’t hear Rush Limbaugh calling a group of people whom he did not agree with ‘f-ing retards’ and we did know that Rahm Emanuel has been reported, did say that. there is a big difference there. Again, name-calling, using language that is insensitive, by anyone, male, female, Republican, Democrat, is unnecessary. It’s inappropriate. Let’s all just grow up.

    Watch it:

    Emanuel, who has apologized for the remark to Special Olympics CEO Tim Shriver, now plans to host “a delegation of advocates, including two people with mental disabilities, at the White House” as part of his effort to make amends. Limbaugh, meanwhile, gleefully used a derivative of the word “retard” at least forty times, saying that “there’s going to be a retard summit at the White House. Much like the beer summit between Obama and Gates and that cop in Cambridge.”

    Podesta Calls On McConnell To Apologize For Denigrating FBI Interrogation Of Abdulmuttalab
    Last week, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) besmirched the reputation of FBI agents who interrogated terrorist Umar Farouq Abdulmutallab after he was arrested. “He was given a 50 minute interrogation, probably Larry King has interrogated people longer and better than that,” McConnell said on Fox News. This morning on ABC’s This Week, Center for American […]

    Last week, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) besmirched the reputation of FBI agents who interrogated terrorist Umar Farouq Abdulmutallab after he was arrested. “He was given a 50 minute interrogation, probably Larry King has interrogated people longer and better than that,” McConnell said on Fox News.

    This morning on ABC’s This Week, Center for American Progress Action Fund President and CEO John Podesta noted that intelligence agents have skillfully secured the cooperation of Abdulmuttalab’s family. Because his family was assured that Abdulmuttalab was not being tortured, they worked with the FBI to convince the terrorist to talk. Abdulmuttalab then provided intelligence, some of which was apparently used to capture terrorists in Malaysia.

    “I think you can huff and puff as former Governor Palin likes to do, but the proof’s in the pudding — he’s talking, they’ve gotten actionable intelligence, they’re acting on it,” Podesta said. When conservative pundit Peggy Noonan complained that the administration shouldn’t have told the public that Abdulmuttalab was cooperating, Podesta suggested disclosure may not have been necessary if political leaders like McConnell weren’t criticizing intelligence agents:

    PODESTA: Maybe if all those politicians stopped attacking the FBI – Mitch McConnell likened the FBI to a Larry King interview – maybe if they stopped with the politics –

    RUTH MARCUS: Now that’s cruel.

    PODESTA: Well, no, I think he owes the FBI an apology. But if they’d stop with the politics, maybe they wouldn’t have to respond.

    Watch it:

    Later, Podesta defended the FBI: “I tend to listen to the professionals, and other people tend to listen to Governor Palin.”

    He also referenced Sen. Richard Shelby’s (R-AL) “blanket hold” on Obama’s 70 executive nominees — two of whom include the head of the State Department intelligence official and the Homeland Security intelligence official. “What gives here?” Podesta asked. “Are these people serious or are they just playing politics?

  • U.S. sends a message by stepping up crackdown on foreign business bribes

    U.S. sends a message by stepping up crackdown on foreign business bribes
    Federal authorities want companies to know that the cost of paying bribes to win overseas contracts is growing steeper by the day.

    5 workers killed in explosion at Middleton, Conn., power plant
    CONNECTICUT An explosion that sounded like a sonic boom blew out the walls of an unfinished power plant in Connecticut and set off a fire during a test of natural gas lines Sunday, killing at least five workers, injuring a dozen or more, and leaving crews picking through debris for more possible…

    David Plouffe advising White House on 2010 midterm elections
    Ask David Plouffe how Democrats can recover from their electoral setbacks over the past few months and he has a simple answer: Republicans.

    Mass. wind farm that Obama administration might support meets strong resistance
    ABOARD THE IDA LEWIS — Interior Secretary Ken Salazar journeyed out into Nantucket Sound on a Coast Guard vessel last week to signal the Obama administration’s readiness to put some muscle behind wind energy. To do that, Salazar has to resolve a battle over building a wind farm on 25 square mile…

  • Spiro T. Obama

    Spiro T. Obama
    John Stossel, FOX News
    February 6, 2010 11:00 AM EST by John StosselThis week the President again showed how thin-skinned he is about criticism in the media. Maybe he's so sensitive to criticism because he's gotten so little of it.The president's advice came in answer to a question from Sen. Mike Bennet, D-CO, who is facing a difficult re-election fight back home and wanted to know what Democrats and Republicans can do “to fix this institution so that our democracy can actually withstand the test that we're facing right now.””You know what I think would actually make a…

    Obama’s ‘Post-Partisanship’ is Disingenuous

    Gov’t Intervention Will Leave Hangover
    Irwin Stelzer, Weekly Standard
    Last week, a little more than 24 hours after the FBI warned senators not to disclose the sensitive information that Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab was cooperating with the FBI, the White House shared the information with the news media.Attorney General Eric Holder has been the Obama administration's point man in revising the nation's approach to terrorism. Holder said last summer that it was his decision to reinvestigate CIA operatives who had employed enhanced interrogation techniques during the Bush administration, although these individuals had been cleared by the Justice…

  • ‘Left, Right & Center’: Global Markets Reeling; China Flexes Muscle; Apologies

    ‘Left, Right & Center’: Global Markets Reeling; China Flexes Muscle; Apologies
    With national and global finance still wobbling and the fundamentals of the economy still gone awry, the fellows on “Left, Right & Center” discuss economic policy, China and the politics of apology.

    Left, Right & Center

    With national and global finance still wobbling and the fundamentals of the economy still gone awry, the fellows on “Left, Right & Center” discuss economic policy, China and the politics of apology.

    Related Entries


    Missionary Release
    Robert Park, a 28-year-old Korean-American missionary and human rights activist, was arrested on Christmas Day after entering North Korea. Now the country’s state-controlled media is reporting that Park will be released. —JCL The Guardian: An American missionary arrested after entering North Korea is set to be released, according to the state-controlled media. Robert Park, 28, was arrested after entering the country on Christmas Day carrying a letter to its leader, Kim Jong-il. He is believed to have been attempting to draw attention to the tens of thousands of political prisoners said to be held in the communist state. KCNA reported this morning that an investigation into Park, a Korean-American human rights activist, had found he trespassed into North Korea “due to his wrong understanding of the DPRK [Democratic People’s Republic of Korea]”. “The relevant organ of the DPRK decided to leniently forgive and release him, taking his admission and sincere repentance of his wrongdoings into consideration,” KCNA said. Read more

    Robert Park, a 28-year-old Korean-American missionary and human rights activist, was arrested on Christmas Day after entering North Korea. Now the country’s state-controlled media is reporting that Park will be released. —JCL

    The Guardian:

    An American missionary arrested after entering North Korea is set to be released, according to the state-controlled media.

    Robert Park, 28, was arrested after entering the country on Christmas Day carrying a letter to its leader, Kim Jong-il. He is believed to have been attempting to draw attention to the tens of thousands of political prisoners said to be held in the communist state.

    KCNA reported this morning that an investigation into Park, a Korean-American human rights activist, had found he trespassed into North Korea “due to his wrong understanding of the DPRK [Democratic People’s Republic of Korea]”.

    “The relevant organ of the DPRK decided to leniently forgive and release him, taking his admission and sincere repentance of his wrongdoings into consideration,” KCNA said.

    Read more

    Related Entries


  • Stefan Sirucek: EXCLUSIVE (Update): Palin’s Tea Party Crib Notes

    Stefan Sirucek: EXCLUSIVE (Update): Palin’s Tea Party Crib Notes
    UPDATE: (Huffpost Exclusive) Closer inspection of a photo of Sarah Palin, during a speech in which she mocked President Obama for his use of a…

    Karen Dalton-Beninato: Landrieu Continues New Orleans Family’s Mayoral Dynasty
    Louisiana Lt. Gov. Mitch Landrieu made his first speech as Mayor Elect of the City of New Orleans with, “One team. One fight. One…

    Ellen Brown: AIG-Gate: The World’s Greatest Insurance Heist
    Unlike the perpetrators of the Watergate scandal, who wound up facing jail time, Timothy Geithner evidently has a golden parachute waiting at Goldman Sachs, not coincidentally the largest recipient of the AIG bailout.

    Sarah Palin Tea Party Speech WATCH LIVE VIDEO
    Scroll Down For Live Video Of The Speech NASHVILLE, Tenn. – These are Sarah Palin’s people. Just ask them. At the mere mention of her…

  • Defense Contractor Will Plead Guilty On False Statements Charge

    Defense Contractor Will Plead Guilty On False Statements Charge
    A politically connected British defense contractor has agreed to plead guilty to having misled the government about payments that may have been used to help win contracts Saudi Arabia, the Justice Department has announced.

    Frank Doubles Down: Fund Is ‘Congenital And Habitual Liar’
    Rep. Barney Frank is doubling down on his criticism of Wall Street Journal columnist John Fund, calling him a “congenital and habitual liar.”


  • “Rogue” Nations, American Leadership, and Multilateralism

    “Rogue” Nations, American Leadership, and Multilateralism
    In Newsweek recently, Nader Mousavizadeh offerred a trenchant critique of US efforts to corral wayward governments back into the law-abiding international fold. Part of Mousavizadeh’s argument rehearses some key lessons of past attempts to isolate so-called rogues — one lesson…


    Warfare and ConflictWeaponsNuclearProliferationUnited States

    Jerusalem Post No Longer A Newspaper & Avatar Is Subversive!
    UPDATE: Two years ago, at a family event, an Israeli guest noticed Wolf Blitzer in attendance and said, “In Israel, we took CNN off the cable packages for being anti-Israel. Now we have FOX which is great.” My younger son,…


    United StatesNative Americans in the United StatesHolocaustEthnicityNative American

    Out of Work and Pissed Off
    This chart shows that the number of working males has dropped back to 1996 levels when there were 30 million less citizens in the U.S. A lot of angry unemployed men in an interregnum is a recipe for social unrest…


    Presented By:

    Look at your bill and
    find out how much your
    business can save

    with Comcast Business Class.

    Internet, Phone & TV for $99.
    Learn More

     



    United StatesPoliticsSarah PalinRand PaulAlaska

  • Marco Rubio faces criticism over opposition to including immigrants in the Census.

    Marco Rubio faces criticism over opposition to including immigrants in the Census.
    This week, Republican Florida U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio accused his opponent, Gov. Charlie Crist, of trying to “dilute the voting power of every American citizen” through his support of including immigrants in this year’s Census count. However, the Sarasota Herald Tribune reports that Rubio took a much softer stance as little as […]

    Charlie Crist and Marco Rubio This week, Republican Florida U.S. Senate candidate Marco Rubio accused his opponent, Gov. Charlie Crist, of trying to “dilute the voting power of every American citizen” through his support of including immigrants in this year’s Census count. However, the Sarasota Herald Tribune reports that Rubio took a much softer stance as little as a week ago:

    When asked whether illegal immigrants should count on things like the number of seats that Florida should have in Congress, Rubio initially said last week that he was not sure and that he wanted to “research it more.”

    “I think there’s good arguments on both sides of it,” said Rubio, a former House speaker and Republican from Miami. Rubio, however, also said that the census should have an “accurate count” in order to know how “bad of an immigration problem we have.”

    Crist has remarked that Rubio’s “notion that you wouldn’t want to accept federal funding to make a political point is absurd.” Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-FL) stated, “It [not counting undocumented immigrants] would be pretty damaging to Florida. … Pretending they’re not there, not counting them, doesn’t make them go away.” State Rep. Dean Cannon commented that “it’s just important that the count be accurate regardless of their [immigrant] status.” Even Rubio supporter State Rep. Esteban Bovo (R) said, “So much funding is tied to the Census, and to be undercounted could have devastating effects down the line. … I really don’t want our community to get shortchanged.” Rubio later backtracked on his remarks to clarify that he was only referring to undocumented immigrants, not green card-holders like his Cuban immigrant parents once were.

    More at the Wonk Room.

  • Half of Obama’s Cabinet coming over for the Super Bowl

    Half of Obama’s Cabinet coming over for the Super Bowl
    Nine Cabinet secretaries and several lawmakers will join President and Mrs. Obama to watch Sunday’s Super Bowl, the White House said Friday.

    California’s outsize problems won’t be easy for Schwarzenegger to solve
    SACRAMENTO People in the nation’s largest state are in a sour mood. They are unhappy with the economy, unhappy with what has happened to their state, unhappy with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) and unhappy with the Democratic-controlled legislature.

    Internet gambling again in play
    Poker lobbyists are ramping up an aggressive push backed by millions of dollars to legalize Internet gambling in the United States this year, hoping to overcome passionate objections from social conservatives, sports leagues and other longtime opponents.

    Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner: Global bank reform still needed
    Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said Saturday that the recovery in the global economy has not caused major economies to ease up on their commitment to stiffen the rules for banks.

  • A Tea Party with Palin & My 7th Grade Girlfriend

    A Tea Party with Palin & My 7th Grade Girlfriend
    David Paul Kuhn, RCP
    I logged onto Facebook to read Sarah Palin's latest posts. Thursday morning she had 1,260,892 fans. Facebook randomly features six fans or friends on someone's page. One of the six fans featured that morning was, by chance, my 7th grade girlfriend.Palin has gotten some heat lately for headlining the National Tea Party Convention, underway today in Nashville. The convention costs $549 to attend or $349 for only the lobster-and-steak banquet, where Palin will give the keynote address. Some conservatives saw the costs, combined with Palin's $100,000 speaking fee, as unbefitting a…

    Toyota’s Blind Spot
    Matthew DeBord, New York Times
    Los AngelesWhat lessons should the carmaker have learned from recall fiascoes of decades past? TOYOTA is in serious trouble. The Japanese juggernaut should be celebrating its recent ascension to the top spot among global automakers. Instead, it is slogging though a multistage recall of millions of its most popular vehicles, a situation that wasn’t much improved by Friday’s awkward, contentious press conference with Akio Toyoda, the company’s president (and the founder’s grandson). Managing spin, as is becoming glaringly apparent, is not something that…

    Why Are Liberals So Condescending?
    Gerard Alexander, Washington Post
    Every political community includes some members who insist that their side has all the answers and that their adversaries are idiots. But American liberals, to a degree far surpassing conservatives, appear committed to the proposition that their views are correct, self-evident, and based on fact and reason, while conservative positions are not just wrong but illegitimate, ideological and unworthy of serious consideration. Indeed, all the appeals to bipartisanship notwithstanding, President Obama and other leading liberal voices have joined in a chorus of intellectual condescension.It's…

  • Archbishop Chides Blair on Iraq

    Archbishop Chides Blair on Iraq
    The archbishop of Canterbury has some choice words for Tony Blair. The public intellectual criticized Blair’s lack of empathy and his defensive posturing regarding recent inquiries into the Iraq war, declaring the former prime minister to be “one of the most un-Dostoevskian characters in Britain.” Ouch. Characters in Fyodor Dostoevsky’s novels are famous for their soul-searching and empathy, characteristics the archbishop feels Tony Blair lacks. —JCL The Guardian: The archbishop of Canterbury has renewed his criticism of Tony Blair by urging the former prime minister to recognise his “absurdity” in the wake of the Chilcot inquiry into the Iraq war — and suggesting he read more Dostoevsky. Repeating a previous quip that Blair is “very strong on God, very weak on irony”, Rowan Williams said the former prime minister had perhaps not done enough soul-searching. Speaking at a lecture on the Russian writer Fyodor Dostoevsky, Williams was asked by an audience member how he viewed Blair’s appearance at the hearing last week in the context of his studies of the Crime and Punishment author. Read more

    The archbishop of Canterbury has some choice words for Tony Blair. The public intellectual criticized Blair’s lack of empathy and his defensive posturing regarding recent inquiries into the Iraq war, declaring the former prime minister to be “one of the most un-Dostoevskian characters in Britain.” Ouch.

    Characters in Fyodor Dostoevsky’s novels are famous for their soul-searching and empathy, characteristics the archbishop feels Tony Blair lacks. —JCL

    The Guardian:

    The archbishop of Canterbury has renewed his criticism of Tony Blair by urging the former prime minister to recognise his “absurdity” in the wake of the Chilcot inquiry into the Iraq war — and suggesting he read more Dostoevsky.

    Repeating a previous quip that Blair is “very strong on God, very weak on irony”, Rowan Williams said the former prime minister had perhaps not done enough soul-searching.

    Speaking at a lecture on the Russian writer Fyodor Dostoevsky, Williams was asked by an audience member how he viewed Blair’s appearance at the hearing last week in the context of his studies of the Crime and Punishment author.

    Read more

    Related Entries


    Yuppie Obama Edition
    Blue whales are changing their tune, medieval trial-by-floating-or-drowning turns out to have been shockingly accurate, and President Obama may have trouble with working people because he’s so damned upwardly mobile—all this and more on today’s list. On a regular basis, Truthdig brings you the news items and odds and ends that found their way to Larry Gross, director of the USC Annenberg School for Communication. A specialist in media and culture, art and communication, visual communication and media portrayals of minorities, Gross helped found the field of gay and lesbian studies. The links below open in a new window and newer ones are on top. Amazon for Art Shoppers? If you need a Damien Hirst diamond-skull T-shirt or a Grayson Perry silk scarf that reads “unpopular culture,” you’re in luck. Blue Whales Are Singing in a Lower Key Blue whales have changed their songs. It’s the same old tune, but the pitch of the blues is mysteriously lower—especially off the coast of California where, local researchers say, the whales’ voices have dropped by more than half an octave since the 1960s. Medieval-Style ‘Trial by Ordeal’ Actually Worked? For the better part of a millennium, Europe’s legal systems decided difficult criminal cases in a most peculiar way. What Would Pat Robertson Say About This? There’s an interesting chart on the web that compares the religiosity of the various states—based on a Gallup poll—with other factors. Based on these stats it would seem that the five least religious states are six percent more intelligent than the five most religious states. The most religious states also have 70% more poverty, 133% more murders, 57% more thefts and 33% more divorces. Maine’s Missing Water The Stonington Water Co. has a mystery on its hands. Large amounts of water have been disappearing regularly from the system since October, and officials don’t know how or why. Why Do Late-Night Hosts Always Keep Their Desks on the Right? Conan O’Brien and Jay Leno, who have been at each other’s throats of late, had very different approaches to hosting the Tonight Show. But one thing remained the same: For the interview portion, both hosts sat at a desk on the right side of the television screen, with their guests on the left. Race to the Checkout Line: Grocers Association’s Best Bagger Championship What the National Grocers Association’s Best Bagger Championship says about work and competition. The ‘Long Tail’ Hits Manufacturing The door of a dry-cleaner-size storefront in an industrial park in Wareham, Massachusetts, an hour south of Boston, might not look like a portal to the future of American manufacturing, but it is. Why Obama Can’t Connect With the Working Class He’s a yuppie: He has trouble with working class voters because he appears to them as coming from a different world, a different realm of experience, a different class, if you like. And that’s because he does. Have Iran’s Opposition Leaders Really Sold Out? Is the Green Movement finished? That is what the Iranian government wants the world to believe. Crying Shame at UCLA: Fair Use, Videos and Higher Ed The University of California at Los Angeles has decided to forbid teachers from posting videos (or, apparently, pieces of them) to their electronic teaching platforms, after an educational media association complained about the practice. Top Doctorate Programs Shrinking Yale University has become the latest research institution to announce that it is shrinking graduate admissions. The Corporations Already Outspend the Parties For the first time in recent history, the lobbying, grassroots and advertising budget of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has surpassed the spending of BOTH the Republican National Committee and Democratic National Committee. The Creed of Objectivity Killed the News Don’t blame the Internet. The bloodless and soulless journalism of the traditional media left newspapers on the wrong side of the growing class divide and their readers. Amazonian People and ‘Avatar’ I’m very happy that “Avatar” has helped to bring to the mainstream some of the issues that indigenous people face—issues that all of us care about deeply. Also, I recently learned that the Fundación Pachamama in Quito, Ecuador, hosted some 90 indigenous people for a screening of the 3-D version of “Avatar.” From what I understand, the film re-affirmed the validity of what most people in the audience are doing to protect themselves and their forest. The Intellectual Property Wars from Gutenberg to Gates Academe today is the site of myriad conflicts over intellectual property, including those of patent ownership, piracy of university press publications, and Google Books, to name just a few. But, while the rise of the Internet has given it new dimensions, the concept of intellectual piracy has existed for centuries, and the disputes of previous eras have much in common with those of our own time. Volcker Rules Finally President Barack Obama has come to his senses on financial regulation. His endorsement of what he calls the “Volcker Rule” for once puts him squarely on the side of ordinary Americans as opposed to the banking bandits who have so thoroughly fleeced the public.

    Blue whales are changing their tune, medieval trial-by-floating-or-drowning turns out to have been shockingly accurate, and President Obama may have trouble with working people because he’s so damned upwardly mobile—all this and more on today’s list.

    On a regular basis, Truthdig brings you the news items and odds and ends that found their way to Larry Gross, director of the USC Annenberg School for Communication. A specialist in media and culture, art and communication, visual communication and media portrayals of minorities, Gross helped found the field of gay and lesbian studies.

    The links below open in a new window and newer ones are on top.


    Amazon for Art Shoppers?
    If you need a Damien Hirst diamond-skull T-shirt or a Grayson Perry silk scarf that reads “unpopular culture,” you’re in luck.

    Blue Whales Are Singing in a Lower Key
    Blue whales have changed their songs. It’s the same old tune, but the pitch of the blues is mysteriously lower—especially off the coast of California where, local researchers say, the whales’ voices have dropped by more than half an octave since the 1960s.

    Medieval-Style ‘Trial by Ordeal’ Actually Worked?
    For the better part of a millennium, Europe’s legal systems decided difficult criminal cases in a most peculiar way.

    What Would Pat Robertson Say About This?
    There’s an interesting chart on the web that compares the religiosity of the various states—based on a Gallup poll—with other factors. Based on these stats it would seem that the five least religious states are six percent more intelligent than the five most religious states. The most religious states also have 70% more poverty, 133% more murders, 57% more thefts and 33% more divorces.

    Maine’s Missing Water
    The Stonington Water Co. has a mystery on its hands. Large amounts of water have been disappearing regularly from the system since October, and officials don’t know how or why.

    Why Do Late-Night Hosts Always Keep Their Desks on the Right?
    Conan O’Brien and Jay Leno, who have been at each other’s throats of late, had very different approaches to hosting the Tonight Show. But one thing remained the same: For the interview portion, both hosts sat at a desk on the right side of the television screen, with their guests on the left.

    Race to the Checkout Line: Grocers Association’s Best Bagger Championship
    What the National Grocers Association’s Best Bagger Championship says about work and competition.

    The ‘Long Tail’ Hits Manufacturing
    The door of a dry-cleaner-size storefront in an industrial park in Wareham, Massachusetts, an hour south of Boston, might not look like a portal to the future of American manufacturing, but it is.

    Why Obama Can’t Connect With the Working Class
    He’s a yuppie: He has trouble with working class voters because he appears to them as coming from a different world, a different realm of experience, a different class, if you like. And that’s because he does.

    Have Iran’s Opposition Leaders Really Sold Out?
    Is the Green Movement finished? That is what the Iranian government wants the world to believe.

    Crying Shame at UCLA: Fair Use, Videos and Higher Ed
    The University of California at Los Angeles has decided to forbid teachers from posting videos (or, apparently, pieces of them) to their electronic teaching platforms, after an educational media association complained about the practice.

    Top Doctorate Programs Shrinking
    Yale University has become the latest research institution to announce that it is shrinking graduate admissions.

    The Corporations Already Outspend the Parties
    For the first time in recent history, the lobbying, grassroots and advertising budget of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has surpassed the spending of BOTH the Republican National Committee and Democratic National Committee.

    The Creed of Objectivity Killed the News
    Don’t blame the Internet. The bloodless and soulless journalism of the traditional media left newspapers on the wrong side of the growing class divide and their readers.

    Amazonian People and ‘Avatar’
    I’m very happy that “Avatar” has helped to bring to the mainstream some of the issues that indigenous people face—issues that all of us care about deeply. Also, I recently learned that the Fundación Pachamama in Quito, Ecuador, hosted some 90 indigenous people for a screening of the 3-D version of “Avatar.” From what I understand, the film re-affirmed the validity of what most people in the audience are doing to protect themselves and their forest.

    The Intellectual Property Wars from Gutenberg to Gates
    Academe today is the site of myriad conflicts over intellectual property, including those of patent ownership, piracy of university press publications, and Google Books, to name just a few. But, while the rise of the Internet has given it new dimensions, the concept of intellectual piracy has existed for centuries, and the disputes of previous eras have much in common with those of our own time.

    Volcker Rules
    Finally President Barack Obama has come to his senses on financial regulation. His endorsement of what he calls the “Volcker Rule” for once puts him squarely on the side of ordinary Americans as opposed to the banking bandits who have so thoroughly fleeced the public.

    Related Entries


  • Nikolas Kozloff: Banana Republic, U.S.A.? “Populism” Comes to America

    Nikolas Kozloff: Banana Republic, U.S.A.? “Populism” Comes to America
    Confronting economic malaise, the country seems to be heading back into one of its perennial populist cycles. As a result, “going populist is now smart politics and good policy.”

    Stu Kreisman: Congress Needs a Shot Clock
    There was a time in basketball when a lesser team could try to even the odds of winning by eating up the clock or stalling….

    Laura Flanders: The F Word: Another Super Bowl, Another Scandal
    It’s Super Bowl season, another year, another scandal. This year’s outburst over CBS’s $3 million Focus on the Family ad has revived the mythology around…

  • Quick Fact: Wash . Times , Fox News’ North advance claim that repealing DADT is a harmful “social experiment”

    Quick Fact: Wash . Times , Fox News’ North advance claim that repealing DADT is a harmful “social experiment”

    The Washington Times and Fox News host Oliver North advanced the baseless claim that repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell” amounts to a “social experiment” and “social engineering” that would be detrimental to the military and “military readiness.” In fact, those claims are heavily undermined by the fact that other countries allow gay men and lesbians to serve in the military, and many have said it has not created problems.

    Fox News’ North, Washington Times advance claim that repealing ban is a “social experiment” that affects “military readiness”

    North: Obama is treating military “like lab rats in a radical social experiment.” Oliver North, host of Fox News’ War Stories, said on the February 4 edition of Fox News’ Hannity that repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell” is a “stunning assault” on the military and that Obama “now intends to treat them like lab rats in a radical social experiment.” He also said, “[T]his isn’t about rights. This isn’t about fairness. It’s all about national security. And, apparently, Mr. Obama has forgotten it.” Later, North said of repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell”: “Now, here’s what’s next. NAMBLA members, same-sex marriages. Are chaplains in the U.S. military going to be required to perform those kinds of rituals? Do they get government housing?” North added that repealing DADT “affects readiness and recruiting and retention.”

    Washington Times quotes veterans groups saying Obama is using military as “social experiment” and “social engineering.” A February 5 Washington Times article uncritically quoted two veterans groups saying that repealing the ban would be a “social experiment” and “social engineering.” It quoted the American Legion as saying, “Now is not the time to engage in a social experiment that can disrupt and potentially have serious impact on the conduct of forces engaged in combat,” and Veterans of Foreign Wars as saying changing the law would amount to using the military as “a control group for social engineering.” The article also advanced false claims that allowing openly gay servicemen and women to serve would affect “military readiness,” reporting: “[S]pokesmen for the VFW and the Legion told The Washington Times on Wednesday their groups do not want to see military readiness disrupted while the armed forces are fighting two wars.”

    FACT: Other countries allow gay men and lesbians to serve openly without problems

    At least 25 nations — including many U.S. allies — allow military service by openly gay people. According to the Palm Center, as of June 2009, 25 nations allowed military service by openly gay people, including North America Treaty Organization member countries Belgium, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, France, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Slovenia, Spain, and the United Kingdom.

    GAO: Other countries say allowing gays to serve openly “has not created problems in the military.” In a June 1993 report to Congress, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) studied four countries that allow gay men and lesbians to serve in the military — Canada, Israel, Germany, and Sweden — and found that military officials said “the presence of homosexuals has not created problems in the military because homosexuality is not an issue in the military or in society at large.” It also found that “[m]ilitary officials from each country said that, on the basis of their experience, the inclusion of homosexuals in their militaries has not adversely affected unit readiness, effectiveness, cohesion, or morale.” GAO wrote that it chose those four countries to study because they “generally reflect Western cultural values yet still provide a range of ethnic diversity” and have similarly sized militaries.

    None of the 104 experts interviewed for studies believed decisions to lift gay bans in U.K., Canada, Israel, or Australia undermined military readiness, recruiting, or cohesion. In a 2003 article for Parameters, the U.S. Army War College Quarterly, Aaron Belkin, a University of California at Santa Barbara professor who specializes in sexuality and the military, wrote that the university’s Center for the Study of Sexual Minorities in the Military had conducted studies of the impact of the decisions to lift bans on gays and lesbians serving openly in the military in the United Kingdom, Israel, Canada, and Australia, and found: “Not a single one of the 104 experts interviewed believed that the Australian, Canadian, Israeli, or British decisions to lift their gay bans undermined military performance, readiness, or cohesion, led to increased difficulties in recruiting or retention, or increased the rate of HIV infection among the troops.” According to Belkin: “To prepare the case studies, every identifiable pro-gay and anti-gay expert on the policy change in each country was interviewed, including officers and enlisted personnel, ministry representatives, academics, veterans, politicians, and nongovernmental observers. During each interview, experts were asked to recommend additional contacts, all of whom were contacted.”

  • Frank Doubles Down: Fund Is ‘Congenital And Habitual Liar’

    Frank Doubles Down: Fund Is ‘Congenital And Habitual Liar’
    Rep. Barney Frank is doubling down on his criticism of Wall Street Journal columnist John Fund, calling him a “congenital and habitual liar.”


    McCain Again Cites Bogus Abdulmutallab ‘One-Way’ Ticket Meme (VIDEO)
    McCain, the third-ranking Republican on the Homeland Security Committee, again claimed that the “fact” that Umar Abdulmutallab was traveling on a one-way ticket should have been a red flag — even though he had been corrected on the same bogus point two weeks ago.

  • James O’Keefe, the Landrieu ‘Sting’ and the Truth About Conservative ‘Journalism’

    James O’Keefe, the Landrieu ‘Sting’ and the Truth About Conservative ‘Journalism’
    As the he antics of O’Keefe and company demonstrate, the right has failed to train many genuine journalists. So why do mainstream journalists swallow their line?

    As the he antics of O'Keefe and company demonstrate, the right has failed to train many genuine journalists. So why do mainstream journalists swallow their line?

    The Commercial Super Bowl: Voyeuristic Horndogs, Hot Babes, Flatulent Slackers, and God’s Quarterback Star in the Big Game
    Whatever happens, the Tim Tebow controversy has put the game’s spotlight back where it belongs — on the advertising.

    Whatever happens, the Tim Tebow controversy has put the game’s spotlight back where it belongs — on the advertising.

    How Corporations Are Secretly Moving Millions to Fund Political Ads
    Gaping legal holes allow corporations to spend enormous sums on politics without leaving a paper trail.

    Gaping legal holes allow corporations to spend enormous sums on politics without leaving a paper trail.

    Why We Can’t Afford to Let Obama Give Bush’s War Criminals a Free Pass
    Punishing the guilty for deeds they committed in the past is the only way to show the world that we are truly on a new path.

    Punishing the guilty for deeds they committed in the past is the only way to show the world that we are truly on a new path.

  • Scott Brown Claims That The Stimulus Has Not Created ?One New Job?

    Scott Brown Claims That The Stimulus Has Not Created ?One New Job?
    Newly sworn-in Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA) has parroted his party’s line on most issues since he began receiving national attention, even changing his opinion on the health care bill. Yesterday, at his first press conference as a U.S. senator, he took another chance to side with the most orthodox conservatives, falsely claiming that the Recovery […]

    Newly sworn-in Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA) has parroted his party’s line on most issues since he began receiving national attention, even changing his opinion on the health care bill. Yesterday, at his first press conference as a U.S. senator, he took another chance to side with the most orthodox conservatives, falsely claiming that the Recovery Act has not created “one new job“:

    Last stimulus bill didn’t create one new job. Some states the money that was released hasn’t even been used yet. We lost another 85,000 jobs again, give or take, last month. Massachusetts has not created one new job. Throughout the country as well. May have retained some but has not created any new jobs.

    After the conference, CNN’s David Gergen took issue with Brown’s claim, saying, “I think that there are an awful lot of people out there who would dispute the assertion.” Watch it:

    Gergen’s right. Among those people are the nearly 600,000 whose jobs were saved or created in the last quarter of 2009 alone. Economists have consistently praised the Recovery Act for rescuing the economy, projecting that without the “boldest countercyclical fiscal stimulus in American history,” unemployment would have hit 10.8 percent and there would have been another 1.2 million lost jobs. Today, unemployment stands a full percentage point lower at 9.7 percent.

    Brown understood this last week, when he asked Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick to increase “the pace of the state’s economic stimulus spending.” This came after reports that the stimulus had added last quarter more than 9,000 jobs to the 23,000 already created or saved in Massachusetts. Despite the evidence and the economists’ consensus, however, Brown has endorsed his fellow Republicans’ “clueless” denial of the stimulus’ effectiveness.

    DJ Carella