Author: HL

  • Robert Kuttner: A Wake Up Call

    Robert Kuttner: A Wake Up Call
    How could the health care issue have turned from a reform that was going to make Barack Obama ten feet tall into a poison pill for Democratic senators? Whether or not Martha Coakley squeaks through in Massachusetts on Tuesday, the health bill has already done incalculable political damage and will likely do more. Either way, the Massachusetts surprise should be a wake-up call of the most fundamental kind. Obama needs to stop playing inside games with bankers and insurance lobbyists, and start being a fighter for regular Americans.

    Lawrence O’Donnell: Will Scott Brown Ruin Republicans’ (Secret) Plan to Pass Obamacare?
    It is now a given that if he wins a Massachusetts Senate seat on Tuesday, Scott Brown will destroy the Democrats’ plan to pass health care reform. But he will also destroy the Republicans’ not-so-secret plan to pass health care reform.

    Death Penalty Opponents Wooing Conservatives
    LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Roy Brown seems like a rarity – a conservative who’s against the death penalty. But to Brown, a state senator and the…

    Al Sharpton: Pat Robertson’s Haiti Comments ‘Un-Christian’
    The Rev. Al Sharpton came to the Christ United Temple on Chicago’s South Side Sunday, asking churches to contribute to Haiti relief funds. Along the…

    John O’Kane: Who’s the Enemy?
    To convert a piece of wisdom from Martin Luther King, if we are to move toward the creation of a better democracy, and eventually produce the paths to reach the promised land, we need to face adversity.

  • Selective memory? Former Bush official Hughes ignored Reid’s ties to Al Qaeda

    Selective memory? Former Bush official Hughes ignored Reid’s ties to Al Qaeda

    On Meet the Press, public relations executive and former Bush administration official Karen Hughes argued that Northwest Airlines bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab should not be tried in a criminal court — as “shoe bomber” Richard Reid was — because the “circumstances weren’t similar. He [Reid] was not sent here by Al Qaeda to engage in an act of war against our country.” However, Reid’s indictment explicitly tied him to Al Qaeda training camps; the FBI reportedly believed “an al Qaeda bomb maker” made Reid’s bomb; and, during his sentencing, Reid professed “allegiance” to Osama bin Laden before saying he was “at war” with the United States.

    Hughes claims Abdulmutallab and Reid situations “weren’t similar” because Reid wasn’t “sent here by Al Qaeda”

    From the January 17 broadcast of NBC’s Meet the Press:

    HUGHES: I do think that President Obama has made some decisions that have been very ill-advised in the area of national security. For example, the decision to try the Christmas Day — the Al Qaeda operative who came here to engage in an act of war against our country on Christmas Day — in civilian courts is a mistake. He’s someone who was training in the training camps in Yemen. He might have knowledge of other pending attacks against our country. He should have been interrogated legally and designated as an enemy combatant and interrogated –

    DAVID GREGORY (host): He did provide a good deal of information just being interrogated by existing methods.

    HUGHES: Well, he could have, you say.

    GREGORY: No, he was. He provided a lot of information so far.

    HUGHES: I hope so. But again, I think it’s a mistake to take someone — we have to be very honest about what is at stake in this war against Al Qaeda.

    JOHN PODESTA (CEO, Center for American Progress): That’s exactly what the Bush administration did with Mr. Reeves [sic], the shoe bomber, who was — in very similar circumstances, was traveling to the United States.

    HUGHES: The circumstances weren’t similar. He was not sent here by Al Qaeda to engage in an act of war against our country. It was not a similar situation.

    Reid indictment tied him to Al Qaeda training camps

    Two of the counts against Reid said “[at] various times relevant to this count, Richard Colvin Reid received training from Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan.” On January 16, 2002, a grand jury indicted Reid on eight counts related to terrorism, including “attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction against a national of the United States,” and “attempted homicide of a national of the United States outside the United States.” For those two charges, the indictment states:

    1. At all times relevant to this count brought under Title 18, United States Code, Chapter 113B–Terrorism, Al-Qaeda was a designated foreign terrorist organization pursuant to 8 U.S.C. §1189.

    2. At various times relevant to this count, Richard Colvin Reid received training from Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan.

    FBI reportedly suspected Al Qaeda involvement in Reid’s attempted attack

    NY Times: “Prosecutors said they found evidence that” Reid “had help” with constructing his bomb. In a January 31, 2003, article on Reid’s sentencing, The New York Times reported: “Although Mr. Reid told investigators that he had constructed the bombs himself from materials he bought in Europe, prosecutors said they found evidence that he had help. Among the evidence was a human hair in the bomb and a palm print on the paper used to make the detonator.”

     Mueller reportedly said FBI believed “an al Qaeda bomb maker” made Reid’s bomb. In a May 2002 speech before the National Association of District Attorneys, FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III reportedly said that the FBI believed that ”an Al Qaeda bomb maker” made Reid’s shoe bomb.

    During sentencing, Reid pledged “allegiance” to bin Laden and said he was “at war” with the U.S.

    Reid: I “admit my allegiance to Osama bin Laden, to Islam, and to the religion of Allah.” According to CNN transcripts from Reid’s January 30, 2003, sentencing hearing, Reid said: “I further admit my allegiance to Osama bin Laden,” and “I am at war with your country.” He added:

    REID: With regards to what you said about killing innocent people, I will say one thing. Your government has killed 2 million children in Iraq. If you want to think about something, against 2 million, I don’t see no comparison.

    Your government has sponsored the rape and torture of Muslims in the prisons of Egypt and Turkey and Syria and Jordan with their money and with their weapons. I don’t know, see what I done as being equal to rape and to torture, or to the deaths of the two million children in Iraq.

     Reid: “I am at war with your country.” Reid further stated:

    REID: So, for this reason, I think I ought not apologize for my actions. I am at war with your country. I’m at war with them not for personal reasons but because they have murdered more than, so many children and they have oppressed my religion and they have oppressed people for no reason except that they say we believe in Allah.

  • The Rehabilitation Of Joseph McCarthy? Texas Textbooks Process Grinds On

    The Rehabilitation Of Joseph McCarthy? Texas Textbooks Process Grinds On
    In the home stretch of a process that will set Texas’ nationally influential history textbook standards, a liberal watchdog group is worried that the State Board of Education will try to push through changes to claim that communist-hunting Sen. Joseph McCarthy has been vindicated by history.

    U.S. Embassy Guards Now Being Recruited On Craigslist
    In what has got to be some kind of milestone in the privatization of government security functions, an Ohio firm has turned to online classifieds service Craigslist to recruit guards for the U.S. embassy in Brazil.

    Contractors’ Attorney: Blackwater Is Scapegoating My Clients In Kabul Murder Case
    A lawyer for the Blackwater contractors charged last week with killing two men in Kabul says his clients were thrown under the bus by a company desperate to preserve its standing with the Afghan government, after another shooting case in Iraq led to a crackdown on its operations in that country.


  • Avatar Half-Tells a Story We Would All Prefer to Forget

    Avatar Half-Tells a Story We Would All Prefer to Forget
    The real story of what happened to Native Americans is a story no one wants to hear, because of the challenge it presents to the way we choose to see ourselves.

    The real story of what happened to Native Americans is a story no one wants to hear, because of the challenge it presents to the way we choose to see ourselves.

    Martin Luther King’s Legacy and Israel’s Future
    King’s teachings can help us see Israel’s state violence in a new light that illuminates the deep, often unnoticed links between violence and irrational fear.

    King's teachings can help us see Israel's state violence in a new light that illuminates the deep, often unnoticed links between violence and irrational fear.

    Getting to the Bottom of Why "They" Want to Hurt Us
    Veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas broke through the terrorism boilerplate by asking "why."

    Veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas broke through the terrorism boilerplate by asking "why."

  • Weekly Roundup: What We Missed

    Weekly Roundup: What We Missed
    The week began with a ‘game-changer,’ so to speak, and a PR disaster for the Senate Majority Leader. This story, thankfully, fizzled out, but for the worst possible reason. The unspeakable tragedy in Haiti has, understandably, been the primary focus…


    Majority leaderUnited States SenateSenateUnited StatesHaiti

    A Sobering Picture
    [See a high-resolution version of the map here.] Yesterday, at my request, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a report that provides a thorough understanding of the state of the housing market at the end of June 2009. A…


    Government Accountability OfficeGovernmentViolence and AbuseElderFinance

    The Last Big Question: Will Health Care Reform Be Paid For By The Rich or the Middle Class?
    There’s only one big remaining issue on health care reform: how to pay for it. The House wants a 5.4 percent surtax on couples earning at least $1 million in annual income. The Senate wants a 40 percent excise tax…


    Health careSenateExciseUnited States SenateHealth

  • Red Cross financial aid Scott Brown voted to kill now assisting Massachusetts relief efforts in Haiti.

    Red Cross financial aid Scott Brown voted to kill now assisting Massachusetts relief efforts in Haiti.
    State Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA), the Republican candidate for the special U.S. Senate election Tuesday, voted against a bill to provide financial assistance to 9/11 rescue workers who had volunteered to rush to the site of the twin towers after the terrorist attack in 2001. The measure, which was opposed by only two other […]

    haitianimmigrants State Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA), the Republican candidate for the special U.S. Senate election Tuesday, voted against a bill to provide financial assistance to 9/11 rescue workers who had volunteered to rush to the site of the twin towers after the terrorist attack in 2001. The measure, which was opposed by only two other legislators in addition to Brown, provided paid “leaves of absence for certain Red Cross employees participating in Red Cross emergencies.” Despite Brown’s efforts to kill the legislation, it passed along overwhelmingly bipartisan lines and is now helping to compensate Massachusetts Red Cross employees currently deploying to Haiti to provide emergency assistance after the devastating earthquake. Asked yesterday by ThinkProgress why he opposed the 2001 measure for rescue workers, Brown stated that he had his “own priorities first” at the time. As ThinkProgress reported, during the same period that Brown opposed the financial aid to 9/11 rescue workers, he sponsored a bill to provide a tax-subsidized bond to build a golf course in his district, and voted for across the board corporate tax subsidies.

    Bush repudiates criticisms that Obama is ?politicizing? Haiti: ?I don?t know what they?re talking about.?
    Last week following the devastating earthquake that hit Haiti, hate radio host Rush Limbaugh controversially said that President Obama was politicizing the disaster by trying to boost his credibility with the “light-skinned and dark-skinned black community in this country.” Fox News host Glenn Beck also said that Obama was “dividing the nation” by reacting “so […]

    Last week following the devastating earthquake that hit Haiti, hate radio host Rush Limbaugh controversially said that President Obama was politicizing the disaster by trying to boost his credibility with the “light-skinned and dark-skinned black community in this country.” Fox News host Glenn Beck also said that Obama was “dividing the nation” by reacting “so rapidly to Haiti.” Today on NBC’s Meet the Press, host David Gregory asked President Bush about these criticisms (without specifically mentioning either Limbaugh or Beck). Bush rejected their characterizations:

    GREGORY: In some circles, the President’s been criticized for politicizing this disaster. Do you think that’s fair?

    BUSH: I don’t know what they’re talking about. I’ve been briefed by the President about the response. And as I said in my opening comment, I appreciate the President’s quick response to this disaster.

    Watch it:

    Televangelist Pat Robertson has also been receiving a significant negative backlash to his remarks that Haiti’s earthquake was a result of the country’s “pact to the devil” many years ago. As the earthquake has brought out the “fundamental goodness” in many Haitians who are helping to rebuild their country, many religious leaders are incensed by Robertson’s remarks. “I get mad when I hear that Haiti is somehow being punished,” said Arsene Jasmin, head of Haitian outreach for the Catholic Archdiocese of Washington. “It’s unacceptable and wrong.”

  • Obama’s first year: ‘High hopes and deferred dreams’ for black Americans

    Obama’s first year: ‘High hopes and deferred dreams’ for black Americans
    Adapted from A Day Late and A Dollar Short: High Hopes and Deferred Dreams in Obama’s ‘Post-racial’ America, published this month by John Wiley and Sons.


    Obama invokes health-care ‘progress’ in speech honoring MLK
    President Obama called on the memory of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. on Sunday in making what could be seen as a veiled plea for pragmatism on his health-care overhaul, saying that the civil rights leader never chose to forsake progress for a theoretical ideal that was out of reach at the time.

    Fewer Americans think Obama has advanced race relations, poll shows
    Soaring expectations about the effect of the first black president on U.S. race relations have collided with a more mundane reality, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll.

  • Off-The-Cliff, But Catching On

    Off-The-Cliff, But Catching On
    George Will, Houston Chronicle

    Assessing Obama, One Year Later
    Dan Balz, Washington Post
    A month before he was inaugurated, Barack Obama pinpointed one of the biggest challenges he would face as president. Could he restore confidence in government, even as he was proposing the biggest federal intervention in the domestic economy in a generation?At the time, Obama said he did not think his victory marked an abrupt end to the skepticism ushered in by President Ronald Reagan toward top-down government and social engineering by Washington.”What we don't know yet is whether my administration and this next generation of leadership is going to be able to hew to a new, more…

    Mr. Schwarzenegger Goes to Washington

    Independents Key in Massachusetts Election
    Brian Mooney, Boston Globe
    Independent voters in Massachusetts are an unpredictable breed and downright ornery when times are bad. On Tuesday, they will determine who will be the state’s next US senator in a race too close to call, capturing the nation’s attention because the fate of a national health care overhaul hangs in the balance.Termed unenrolled voters because they are not affiliated with a party, independents constitute a majority of the registered voters in the state. Republicans, outnumbered by Democrats by more than 3 to 1, need to capture a huge majority of independents and a slice of…

  • ‘Left, Right & Center’: Tragedy in Haiti; the Evils of Wall Street

    ‘Left, Right & Center’: Tragedy in Haiti; the Evils of Wall Street
    Is the tragic story of the Haiti earthquake as much about poverty and failed governance as it is about a natural disaster? Is the Banking Commission a kangaroo court? And what does the Massachusetts special election have to do with the future of the health care plan in Congress? All this and more on this week’s episode of “Left, Right & Center.”

    Left, Right & Center

    Is the tragic story of the Haiti earthquake as much about poverty and failed governance as it is about a natural disaster? Is the Banking Commission a kangaroo court? And what does the Massachusetts special election have to do with the future of the health care plan in Congress? All this and more on this week’s episode of “Left, Right & Center.”

    Related Entries


  • Ed Schultz On MA Election: ‘I’d Cheat To Keep These Bastards Out’ (AUDIO)

    Ed Schultz On MA Election: ‘I’d Cheat To Keep These Bastards Out’ (AUDIO)
    On Friday, MSNBC host Ed Schultz proposed a radical path to a Democratic win in the unexpectedly close Massachusetts Senate race for the late Ted…

    John Eskow: $100 Million US Aid to Haiti: $3.3 Billion Quarterly Profit for JP Morgan
    It was extremely strange to hear President Obama specify $100 million as America’s pledge to the suffering people of Haiti. My first thought was: $100 million is roughly one-quarter of the budget for Avatar.

    Paul Loeb: Call for Coakley: How three votes can tip an election
    On election day 2004, I was canvassing in my home state of Washington, alternating between knocking on doors for gubernatorial candidate Christine Gregoire and breaking…

  • Fox News’ Bulls & Bears makes dubious claim that plan to tax banks will cause ATM fees to rise

    Fox News’ Bulls & Bears makes dubious claim that plan to tax banks will cause ATM fees to rise

    On Fox News’ Bull & Bears, while discussing President Obama’s plan to tax the nation’s largest banks, host Brenda Buttner claimed that it’s “going to be the consumers who get hit, ultimately”; Fox Business Network host Eric Bolling agreed, responding that the tax would be passed “right down to the depositors, through ATM fees, through check fees, through lower rates.”  However, according to economist Dean Baker, since the tax “only applies to the largest banks, it would not be possible for the banks to pass it along to consumers, since they would lose market share to smaller banks who don’t pay the tax.”

    Fox News’ Bolling and Buttner:  “Consumers” will get hit by Obama’s bank tax 

    From the January 16 edition of Fox News’ Bull & Bears

    BUTTNER:  It’s going to be the consumers who get hit, ultimately, isn’t it?

    BOLLING:  Unfortunately, that’s what’s going to end up happening.  The fifty banks or so that are going to get slapped with this tax, they’re going to get fees, and they’re going to drop it right down to the depositors, through ATM fees, through check fees, through lower rates, the bottom line is –

    TOBIN B. SMITH (Fox Business Network contributor):  Less lending –

    BOLLING:  Less lending. 

    Baker: Not possible for banks to pass tax along to consumers

    Baker: “it would not be possible for the banks to pass [tax] along to consumers.” In a January 15 post on his American Prospect blog Beat the Press, Baker noted that since the tax applies only to the largest banks, if they passed along fees to consumers, they “would lose market share to smaller banks who don’t pay the tax. (If they could charge their customers more, why aren’t they doing it already?)” From Baker’s post:

    It would also be helpful if reporters tried to evaluate the assertion of the industry lobbyists that this (or other) taxes will simply be passed on to customers. Reporters should have the time and ability to do make such an evaluation, rather than just pass along a he said/she said to readers, almost none of whom will have the time or expertise to make this assessment.

    In the case of this tax, since it only applies to the largest banks, it would not be possible for the banks to pass it along to consumers, since they would lose market share to smaller banks who don’t pay the tax. (If they could charge their customers more, why aren’t they doing it already?) The alternative scenario, in which the large banks are able to pass on the tax, would suggest a degree of concentration in the industry which should require anti-trust action.

    Bulls & Bears claim echoed Limbaugh’s dubious assertion

    Limbaugh: “your ATM fee’s gonna go up” because of bank tax.  On the January 14 edition of his radio program, Rush Limbaugh told listeners that their lives “might get worse because your ATM fee’s gonna go up. As these banks are taxed, they’re gonna pass as much of it along to you and all of us as possible. That’s just how it works, which Obama also knows.”

  • Star Witness In Alaska Corruption Cases Begins Prison Term

    Star Witness In Alaska Corruption Cases Begins Prison Term
    Bill Allen, the Alaska businessman whose secretly taped declaration, “Ted, I love you,” was played during the Ted Stevens corruption trial, reported to prison in California yesterday, the Anchorage Daily News reports.


    Ex-Gitmo Detainee Who Joined Al Qaeda Accuses U.S. Of Torture At Bagram
    In a new interview with the BBC, a former Gitmo detainee and former member of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula accused the United States of torturing him while at Bagram prison in Afghanistan.

  • A Sobering Picture

    A Sobering Picture
    [See a high-resolution version of the map here.] Yesterday, at my request, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a report that provides a thorough understanding of the state of the housing market at the end of June 2009. A…


    Government Accountability OfficeGovernmentViolence and AbuseElderFinance

    Presented By:

    Phony Banking Commission
    The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission began its show trial this morning. As I suspected it will be a two day elaborate pantomime in which the nations top bankers are allowed to profer a feigned apology, Congress will be allowed to…


    Financial Crisis Inquiry CommissionUnited States CongressGoldman SachsBusinessLloyd Blankfein

  • Obama administration grants undocumented Haitians Temporary Protected Status.

    Obama administration grants undocumented Haitians Temporary Protected Status.
    After activists and over 80 lawmakers, including at least eight Republicans, called on the Obama administration to grant undocumented Haitian immigrants already in the U.S. Temporary Protected Status (TPS), Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano announced yesterday afternoon that Haitian nationals who were in the U.S. at the time of the earthquake in […]

    3412938456_1556bcba2dAfter activists and over 80 lawmakers, including at least eight Republicans, called on the Obama administration to grant undocumented Haitian immigrants already in the U.S. Temporary Protected Status (TPS), Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano announced yesterday afternoon that Haitian nationals who were in the U.S. at the time of the earthquake in Haiti will be permitted to over-stay their visa for the next 18 months. A statement released by DHS on behalf of Napolitano reads:

    As part of the Department’s ongoing efforts to assist Haiti following Tuesday’s devastating earthquake, I am announcing the designation of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian nationals who were in the United States as of January 12, 2010.

    This is a disaster of historic proportions and this designation will allow eligible Haitian nationals in the United States to continue living and working in our country for the next 18 months. Providing a temporary refuge for Haitian nationals who are currently in the United States and whose personal safety would be endangered by returning to Haiti is part of this Administration’s continuing efforts to support Haiti’s recovery.

    Napolitano is careful to note that TPS will not be granted to those who attempt to travel to the United States after January 12, 2010 and that Haitians who try to enter the U.S. without documentation from there on out will be repatriated.

  • Medicaid provision for Nebraska raises ire

    Medicaid provision for Nebraska raises ire
    It was a single paragraph, added at the last minute on Page 2,129 of the Senate’s mammoth health-care bill: a promise that the federal government would pay forever for extra poor people to join Medicaid in Nebraska. And it triggered a swift, partisan backlash.


    For now, a show of unity on helping Haiti, but politics could intrude later
    President Obama hosted former presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton in the Oval Office on Saturday to discuss Haiti relief efforts, a show of political solidarity that has become an expected ritual in the days after a massive natural disaster.

    Featured Advertiser

    Poll shows growing disappointment, polarization over Obama’s performance
    A year into his presidency, President Obama faces a polarized nation and souring public assessments of his efforts to change Washington, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll.

  • Why Intelligence Keeps Failing

    Why Intelligence Keeps Failing
    Herbert Meyer, American Thinker
    In the wake of our country's latest intelligence failure — allowing a Nigerian terrorist to board Northwest Airlines Flight 253 from Amsterdam to Detroit when his own father had alerted us to the dangers posed by his son — President Obama demands to know why our intelligence service failed to “connect the dots.”So he's ordered investigations led by the very same officials who presided over our country's intelligence failures. That would be John Brennan, the president's counter-terrorism adviser whose job it was to keep Umar Abdulmutallab from boarding that…

    A Republican? In Massachusetts?
    Mark Steyn, Orange County Register

    Rewarding Losers, Punishishing Winners
    Larry Kudlow, RealClearMarkets
    President Obama's misbegotten bank tax is precisely the wrong policy at precisely the wrong time. It will wind up backfiring across the board. Why? Because bank consumers and borrowers are the ones who will wind up paying this tax, creating an obstacle to economic recovery. Obama is actually rewarding losers and punishing winners — exactly the reverse of free-market capitalism.Who's being rewarded? Obama's bank-tax penalty is being used to finance the failed government takeovers of GM, GMAC, and Fannie and Freddie. And let's not forget the $75 billion failure of the…

    Dispatch Health Care Reform Bill

    Why Haiti Matters
    President Barack Obama, Newsweek

  • Immigration Debate Finds Center In Phoenix

    Immigration Debate Finds Center In Phoenix
    A huge rally will converge in Phoenix on Saturday with activists calling for federal action to address Arizona’s immigration problems. At the center of it all is Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, a man accused of racial profiling in his notorious crusade against undocumented immigrants. Many see Arizona as ground zero in the ongoing national debate over illegal immigration and immigrants’ rights. —JCL USA Today: When activists from around the country rally for immigrants’ rights Saturday, it’s no coincidence that they’ll converge here. Arizona is the flash point of the immigration debate, a place where high levels of illegal immigration have led to state and local restrictions, most recently a law that requires government workers to report illegal immigrants seeking public benefits. Perhaps the most visible figure in Arizona’s immigration politics is Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio. He has won praise and condemnation for having deputies swarm neighborhoods, stopping people in search of criminals and illegal immigrants. His department is under investigation by the Justice Department for allegations of racial profiling and discrimination based on national origin. Read more

    A huge rally will converge in Phoenix on Saturday with activists calling for federal action to address Arizona’s immigration problems. At the center of it all is Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio, a man accused of racial profiling in his notorious crusade against undocumented immigrants.

    Many see Arizona as ground zero in the ongoing national debate over illegal immigration and immigrants’ rights. —JCL

    USA Today:

    When activists from around the country rally for immigrants’ rights Saturday, it’s no coincidence that they’ll converge here.

    Arizona is the flash point of the immigration debate, a place where high levels of illegal immigration have led to state and local restrictions, most recently a law that requires government workers to report illegal immigrants seeking public benefits.

    Perhaps the most visible figure in Arizona’s immigration politics is Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio. He has won praise and condemnation for having deputies swarm neighborhoods, stopping people in search of criminals and illegal immigrants.

    His department is under investigation by the Justice Department for allegations of racial profiling and discrimination based on national origin.

    Read more

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    News Minute: Haiti, Health Care, Arenas’ Plea
    In this brief news update, The Associated Press reports about the status of relief efforts in Haiti and the latest in the ongoing saga of health care reform in Washington. In other news from our nation’s capital, Washington Wizards guard Gilbert Arenas pleads guilty to a felony gun charge.

    Haiti report

    In this brief news update, The Associated Press reports about the status of relief efforts in Haiti and the latest in the ongoing saga of health care reform in Washington. In other news from our nation’s capital, Washington Wizards guard Gilbert Arenas pleads guilty to a felony gun charge.

    Related Entries


  • Bil Browning: Indiana State Senate to take action on marriage amendment

    Bil Browning: Indiana State Senate to take action on marriage amendment
    A constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage in Indiana has been re-introduced in the state senate and will be heard in committee next week. Similar…

    John Odum: A Response to my Senator, Bernie Sanders, on Where We Go From Here
    My Senator Bernie Sanders, whom I greatly admire (and even briefly worked for as an organizer during the 1996 campaign), has asked Huffington Post readers…

    Civilian Casualties Soar; Key Afghan Metric Headed In Wrong Direction
    Civilian deaths in Afghanistan climbed in 2009 to their highest number since the fall of the Taliban, the United Nations says in a recent report….

    Scott Brown Engaged In Culture Wars As Mass Pol
    Years before he became a state senator — and many years before he became a fast-rising Republican candidate for United States Senate — Scott Brown…

    Billy Hallowell: Hollywood’s Oxymoronic Definition of ‘Liberal Tolerance’
    Why can’t people like Perez Hilton, Cher, and Madonna simply be good liberals and accept — as their self-professed doctrine would ask them to — that Americans have unique perspectives and life experiences?

  • Fox Nation, Hoft falsely claim Coakley said “Catholics” shouldn’t work “in emergency rooms”

    Fox Nation, Hoft falsely claim Coakley said “Catholics” shouldn’t work “in emergency rooms”

    Fox Nation and Gateway Pundit blogger Jim Hoft have seized on comments made by Democratic Massachusetts Senate candidate Martha Coakley during a January 14 radio interview to falsely claim that Coakley said “devout Catholics” should not “work in emergency rooms.” In fact, as the context of Coakley’s remarks makes clear, she was discussing individuals who would refuse to provide certain emergency medical procedures and treatments — including emergency contraception — to patients on the grounds of their religious beliefs, not all “devout Catholics.”

    Fox Nation, Hoft falsely declared Coakley said Catholics “shouldn’t work in the emergency room”

    Gateway Pundit, Big Government posts: “Martha Coakley: Devout Catholics ‘Probably Shouldn’t Work in the Emergency Room.’ ” In a January 14 Gateway Pundit blog post, Hoft reported that “Democrat Martha Coakley was on with Ken Pittman from WBSM in Massachusetts today. Martha told Ken that if you object to abortion and are a devout Catholic then…You probably shouldn’t work in the emergency room.” Hoft declared these remarks to be a “game-changer” in the Massachusetts Senate race. Hoft reposted this blog post on BigGovernment.com.

    Fox Nation: “Coakley: Catholics Shouldn’t Work in the ER.” On January 15, Fox Nation linked to Hoft’s Gateway Pundit post. From Fox Nation:

    fn_coakley

    In fact, Coakley discussed those who would refuse to provide medical treatment – including emergency contraception — on religious grounds

    Coakley referred to those who would “deny emergency contraception to a woman who came in who had been raped.” In the interview, WBSM’s Ken Pittman asked Coakley, who reportedly is Catholic, if she would “pass a health care bill that had conscientious objecter toward certain procedures, including abortion.” Coakley stated that she didn’t “believe that would be included in the health care bill,” and that she would oppose legislation that “say[s] that if people believed that they don’t want to provide services that are required under the law and under Roe vs. Wade that they can individually decide to not follow the law.” Referencing her Republican opponent, Coakley added: “And let’s be clear, because Scott Brown filed an amendment to a bill in Massachusetts that would say that hospital and emergency room personnel could deny emergency contraception to a woman who came in who had been raped.” Coakley’s statement prompted the following exchange with Pittman:

    PITTMAN: Right, if you are a Catholic, and you believe what the Pope teaches, you know, that any form of birth control is a sin. And you don’t want to do that, that –

    COAKLEY: No, but we have a seperation of church and state here, Ken, let’s be clear.

    PITTMAN: Yeah, but in the emergency room you still have your religious freedom.

    COAKLEY: The law says that people are allowed to have that. And so, then, if you — you can have religious freedom, you probably shouldn’t work in the emergency room.

    PITTMAN: Wow. OK, so if you have religious conviction, stay out of the emergency room.

    COAKLEY: Well, no, I’m not — look, you’re — you’re the one who brought the question up. I don’t believe that the law allows for that, and I know that we accommodate all kinds of differences all the time. I think Roe vs. Wade has made it clear that women have a right to choose, and in Massachusetts, particularly if someone has been the victim of a rape, an assault, and she goes to an emergency room to get contraception, someone else should say, “Oh, no, I don’t believe in this, so I’m going to affect your constitutional rights?”

    PITTMAN: I agree that you’ve gotta have some balance there.

    Hoft did not include transcript for the portions of the exchange in which Coakley made clear she was discussing those who would deny certain treatments — including emergency contraception — to patients because of their religious beliefs.