Category: News

  • Against the grain

    I’ve just discovered the powerful story of the German psychiatrist Alice Ricciardi-von Platen. She refused to take part in the growing eugenics movement in the 1930s Germany that targeted people with mental illness for sterilisation and euthanasia, resisted the Nazi party and wrote a book documenting Nazi medical abuses of psychiatric patients after being asked to observe the Doctors Trial at Nuremberg.

    As a result, she was ostracised from the German medical community and her book was repressed. It wasn’t rediscovered by German historians until thirty years after it was published in 1948.

    Afterwards she became highly respected for her work developing group therapy and worked in Britain and Italy right into her late nineties.

    There is surprisingly little about her online or in the academic literature although she received two glowing obituaries in the British press when she died in 2008.

    We like to think that each of us would stand up to human rights abuses even if everyone else around us was involved but we know from countless social psychology experiments that it is an incredibly difficult thing to do. Consequently, I always have immense admiration for people like Ricciardi-von Platen who did so in the most difficult of circumstances.

    We also like to think that the Nuremberg trials put an end to the political abuse of psychiatry but a recent article in Schizophrenia Bulletin tracked the history of these abusive practices noting that they have been regularly used throughout the 20th century and into the 21st.

    From the Soviet use of sluggishly progressing schizophrenia to silence dissidents, to the Nazi’s incorporation of psychiatry into eugenics, to psychiatrists’ collaboration with torture during dictatorial regimes in Latin America, to China’s use of psychiatric hospitals to persecute Falun Gong members and to the collaboration with ‘war on terror’ torture in the US (albeit in the light of outright condemnation from the American Psychiatric Association).

    Sadly, psychiatry has been co-opted many times over as a tool of oppression. Complacency is the enabler of these abuses and people like Alice Ricciardi-von Platen are a reminder that even the most powerful forces can be resisted.

    Link to obituary from The Times.
    Link to obituary from The Guardian.

  • Obama Urges Bipartisan Effort on Soaring Deficits

    Obama Urges Bipartisan Effort on Soaring Deficits
    President Barack Obama said Tuesday Washington must urgently confront unpleasant truths about deficits. “There are few issues on which there is more vigorous bipartisan agreement than fiscal responsibility,” he said, flanked by Erskine Bowles and former Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., the two men he asked to lead efforts to reach a consensus plan for the deficit. “But in practice, this responsibility for the future is often overwhelmed by the politics of the moment.”

  • Late Late Night FDL: Vietnamistan

    Late Late Night FDL: Vietnamistan
    Featuring new videos by Alabama 3 and Populous.

    Featuring new videos by Alabama 3 and Populous.

    What’s on your mind tonight?

    You want to see a demonstration? They’ll show you a demonstration
    Thanks to Arizona, there may be some real protests this weekend, not the tightly-shot over inflated tea party variety.

    Over the last year or so we’ve been treated/subjected to Tea Party rally coverage. Those ‘tight-camera shots’ have allowed their organizers to claim hundreds of thousands were in attendance, nay MILLIONS! when reality showed a few thousand.

    But that doesn’t stop the media from treating them like a huge social movement.

    Coverage bias was most pronounced during the Health Care Reform votes when several hundred teabaggers on the Capitol grounds got a great deal of coverage, while a pro-immigration reform march at the same time drew a much bigger crowd, well into the tens of thousands, received virtually none.

    So let the teabags steep in their inflated numbers, thanks to Arizona, on very short notice, now you’ll see what a real political protest looks like.

    Protest organizers said on Wednesday outrage over the Arizona law — which seeks to drive illegal immigrants out of the state bordering Mexico — has galvanized Latinos and would translate into a higher turnout for May Day rallies in more than 70 U.S. cities.

    Some of these rallies, like Los Angeles alone in 2006 may (just may, remember short notice) draw half-a-million. Suck.on.that. Arizona.

    Not that you’ll see much coverage. After all, some mid-50ish white woman from Knoxville is screaming and carrying a sign telling the federal government to stay out of her “soshal securitee” and demanding those socialists let her drink liquor when she’s carrying her handgun. And that’s damn-fine television.


  • Four Surefire Strategies for Getting Seriously Silly

    S I L L Y !!

    Now there's a FUN word!  Say it a couple of times.  See!!  Can you even say that word AND be grumpy at the same time?  I don't think so!

    To add to the silliness around here, today I have a special guest who will share four strategies she uses to bring out the silly!  Please welcome Joy Tanksley, from Being Joy.  I've only recently gotten to know Joy…and that name, Joy, is so fitting for her!!  Just look below at that FUN picture…now doesn't that have JOY (and SILLY) written all over it!! 

    Really, check out her site – it is chock-full of pure fun (like her dancing!!!). 

    Today, Joy is not only wearing her bra in a different spot…she is also giving us all some great ways to get our own SILLY on!

    Four Surefire Strategies for Getting Seriously Silly

     

    Draw a crazy picture,
    Write a nutty poem,
    Sing a mumble-gumble song,
    Whistle through your comb.
    Do a loony-goony dance
    'Cross the kitchen floor,
    Put something silly in the world
    That ain't been there before.
     ~ Shel Silverstein

    Silliness is a virtue that is often overlooked and highly underrated. But I had the good fortune of learning its value from my incredibly silly mother. It would totally embarrass her if I told you that she would often perform the “gas ballet”, doing grande plies and dramatic leaps while making the unmistakable sounds of flatulence with her mouth. So I won’t tell you she did that. Suffice it say that silly is part of my pedigree, and, in my expert opinion, we could all benefit from being a little more absurd, foolish, and ridiculous on a regular basis.

    Here are four of my personal favorite ways to get seriously silly:

    1. The Jelly Butt Game

    This must be done in a public place and with a person who is easily embarrassed. Without any warning, begin gently swaying back and forth and bending your knees. Exclaim, “Uh oh! Oh no! It happened! I have Jelly Butt!” At this point, move your body as if your rear end has turned into complete jelly. It’s best if you fall into your companion for support. But watch out! Jelly Butt is contagious. Your friend might someday return the favor by having a surprise attack of Jelly Butt at your expense.

    2. Bark Like a Dog
    If you haven’t tried this, it’s a must. I can’t tell you how good this feels. Let go of all inhibitions. Get LOUD. Try different types of barks – from yippy to bellowing. Throw your head back and bark your head off! This one is delicious when done alone but is also great with a group.

    3. Foot as Telephone
    The next time someone’s foot is within reach, make a ringing noise like a telephone. Then answer their foot. They will be totally caught off guard, and will likely begin laughing hysterically. Try to keep a straight face and carry on a one-sided conversation, such as, “Hello? Yes, this is she. No, I am not interested in taking a survey, thank you very much. Well, there’s no need to get snippy!”

    4. Wear Underclothes on your Head

    This is a classic for a reason. It’s pricelessly funny, and especially so when combined with a goofy dance. I’m a big fan of bras worn on the head, with the strap going down around the chin. Underwear works, too. And it doesn’t have to be yours.

    I challenge you to try at least one of these techniques and see how it makes you feel. As the famous philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein said, “If people did not sometimes do silly things, nothing intelligent would ever get done.”


    Joy brings the silly, and all sorts of other great stuff at her insightful and fun blog, Being Joy.  Check it out today!

    Silly Alert!  This weekend I'll be in New York City, with The Levity Project, celebrating World Laughter Day!  And it's not too late to join in.  The more the merrier (and sillier!)!!  To register for this free event, click HERE, or visit the link in the sidebar. 
     

  • Dolphins GM Apologizes for Prostitute Question

    Dolphins GM Apologizes for Prostitute Question
    Miami Dolphins General Manager Jeff Ireland has apologized to NFL draftee Dez Bryant for asking the footballer if his mother was a prostitute. Bryant said he was “really mad,” but didn’t say anything at the time to his perspective employer. Bryant was taken 24th overall by the Dallas Cowboys. Ireland asked him the question several weeks ago in a pre-draft interview. Bryant’s mother, Angela, is gay and her personal life has already generated more attention than is warranted for merely being the mother of someone who’s looking for a job. AP via Google: “My mom is not a prostitute,” Bryant told Yahoo! Sports. As for his reaction to Ireland’s question: “I got mad — really mad — but I didn’t show it.” NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith said Ireland’s question raised worrisome issues. “We need to make sure the men of this league are treated as businessmen,” Smith said in a statement. “During interviews, our players and prospective players should never be subjected to discrimination or degradation stemming from the biases or misconceptions held by team personnel.” Read more

    Miami Dolphins General Manager Jeff Ireland has apologized to NFL draftee Dez Bryant for asking the footballer if his mother was a prostitute. Bryant said he was “really mad,” but didn’t say anything at the time to his perspective employer.

    Bryant was taken 24th overall by the Dallas Cowboys. Ireland asked him the question several weeks ago in a pre-draft interview.

    Bryant’s mother, Angela, is gay and her personal life has already generated more attention than is warranted for merely being the mother of someone who’s looking for a job.

    AP via Google:

    “My mom is not a prostitute,” Bryant told Yahoo! Sports. As for his reaction to Ireland’s question: “I got mad — really mad — but I didn’t show it.”

    NFL Players Association executive director DeMaurice Smith said Ireland’s question raised worrisome issues.

    “We need to make sure the men of this league are treated as businessmen,” Smith said in a statement. “During interviews, our players and prospective players should never be subjected to discrimination or degradation stemming from the biases or misconceptions held by team personnel.”

    Read more

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  • Ford Fiesta S1600

    Ford acaba de presentar una nueva edición elimitada de su Fiesta. Esta versión especial ha sido denominada como Ford Fiesta S1600. Esta edición ha sido enfocada al público más joven y ya esta a la venta en el Reino Unido.

    Exteriormente, el S1600 cuenta con un aspecto deportivo gracias a sus llantas de 18 pulgadas y la suspensión deportivo. Sólo se pondrán a la venta 650 unidades a un precio apróximado de 19,000€ cada una.

    En lo que respecta a la motorización, hará uso de un motor 1.6i 16v de 120 CV aunque de forma opcional podemos pedir la instalación de un kit de potenciación para aumentar dicha potencia hasta los 150 CV.

    Related posts:

    1. El nuevo Ford Fiesta es todo un éxito en Estado Unidos
    2. Ford Fiesta Sedán, fotos espía
    3. Ford Fiesta elegido coche del año en Castilla La Mancha
  • Mary Kay Henry ‘Almost Certain’ To Be Next SEIU President

    Mary Kay Henry ‘Almost Certain’ To Be Next SEIU President
    WASHINGTON — The race to become the next president of the nation’s fastest growing labor union became clearer on Wednesday after one of the candidates…

    Emma Ruby-Sachs: Gay Rights v. Free Speech, the Round Up
    The Supreme Court heard oral arguments yesterday on the validity of the Washington state law requiring the release of names on petitions submitted in support…

    Pavel Somov, Ph.D.: Gravity & Levity of Uncertainty
    As of this writing moment, the Earth’s human population is estimated to be 6,841,451,100. All of these 6.8 billion people are in the same exact…

    Quincy Tea Party Protest Draws Police In Riot Gear During Obama Speech (VIDEO)
    Tea Party protesters in Quincy, Illinois who did not follow a Secret Service agent’s orders were met with 15 police officers dressed in riot gear…

    Rep. Luis Gutierrez: Why the Rush on the Puerto Rico Statehood Bill?
    H.R. 2499, the Puerto Rico statehood bill was brought to the House this week after a surprise announcement last Thursday. Debate on this bill has…

  • Conservatives’ bogus attacks on Obama’s appeal to minorities: “Race card,” “Southern Strategy,” “racist”

    Conservatives’ bogus attacks on Obama’s appeal to minorities: “Race card,” “Southern Strategy,” “racist”

    After President Obama released a video message highlighting 2010 efforts to turn out the vote among minorities, right-wing media responded with inflammatory rhetoric, including claims that Obama is playing the “race card.” Those media figures have ignored that Republicans have issued similar appeals to minority voters.

    Obama’s 2010 election strategy includes getting young people, women, minorities out to vote

    Obama: “[M]ake sure that the young people, African-Americans, Latinos, and women” vote. From President Obama’s April 23 videotaped appeal to his supporters outlining Democratic Party strategy for the 2010 elections:

    In 2010, it will be up to each of you to ask folks like Claudia to stay involved, and to explain why this year the stakes are higher than ever. It will be up to each of you to make sure that the young people, African-Americans, Latinos, and women who powered our victory in 2008 stand together once again.

    Conservative media’s inflamed reaction: Strategy “disses white guys,” shows Obama “regime at its racist best”

    Drudge: “Obama plays race card.” The Drudge Report linked to an article about the video with the headline, “Obama plays race card: Rallies blacks, Latinos for ‘10 upset.” Drudge’s headline was echoed by conservative blogs such as Gateway Pundit and The Daily Caller.

    Ingraham: Obama “goes to the race card.” On the April 26 edition of Fox News’ The O’Reilly Factor, guest host Laura Ingraham asked of the video, “What’s with the racially charged rallying cry?” adding that it shows Obama “doesn’t have any other cards to throw down so he goes to the race card.” Guest Mary Katharine Ham similarly claimed that Obama is making a “race-based pitch to his voters.”

    Limbaugh: “The regime at its racist best.” Rush Limbaugh said of the video on his April 26 radio show: “This is the regime at its racist best. What’s the regime doing? Asking blacks and Latinos to join him in a fight. What is a campaign if not a fight? He’s asking young people, African-Americans, Latinos, and women to reconnect. To fight who? Who’s this fight against? … We’ve never had a president like this, who has purposely come to divide people. But he has, and he is. With that video, seeking to reconnect young people, African-Americans, Latinos, and other women for 2010. Against who?”

    FoxNews.com: Obama “left white, middle-age male voters in his rear-view mirror.” In an April 26 article, FoxNews.com stated that “President Obama left white, middle-age male voters in his rear-view mirror Monday in launching his first midterm election pitch, calling on “young people, African Americans, Latinos and women” to deliver for Democrats in November.”

    Wash. Times‘ Pruden: “Obama wants to join the sordid ranks of the race hustlers.” Washington Times editor emeritus Wesley Pruden wrote in his April 27 column that “Race-baiting never goes out of style,” adding: “Barack Obama wants to join the sordid ranks of the race hustlers, like the Revs. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, if not necessarily the race baiters. Maybe there’s only a small distinction between hustling and baiting, but once the toxic stuff is let loose, it doesn’t matter what you call it.”

    Wash. Examiner: “Obama disses white guys.” The front page of the April 27 edition of the Washington Examiner carried the headline “Obama disses white guys: Rallies blacks, Latinos, women.”

    Fox’s Gutfield: “Not since third grade basketball have I ever felt so left out.” Fox News host Greg Gutfield wrote in an April 27 Big Hollywood post:

    He knows he has the black vote, for political and sentimental reasons. Young people are green enough dismiss the debate between big and small government, so Obama can get ‘em too. Women – primarily those shielded from conservativism through an intense combo of psychotherapy, grad school deployment, self help books and dating wusses -could end up in O’s pocket too.

    That leaves Latinos — who the President believes he’ll win, once he drops the “A” bomb. I.e. Amnesty.

    And who’s left? White dopes like me.

    See, in the post-racial world, it’s Obama who sees race. He looks at me, and sees someone he can’t win over.

    […]

    But still, I feel Obama looks at me, and just sees an AWG, or “angry white guy.” Which is why I’m not on his list.

    Not since third grade basketball have I ever felt so left out.

    Actually, this is worse. Back then, I was picked last. Now I’m not even on the team.

    Carlson compares video to “Nixon’s Southern Strategy.” On the April 27 edition of Fox News’ Special Report, contributor Tucker Carlson said: “So how is this different substantially from Nixon’s Southern Strategy? What he’s doing is, saying, ‘You have reason to fear on racial grounds, therefore vote for me.’ I think he is using racial anxiety for political gain.”

    Contrary to conservative media outrage, Republicans have also appealed to minorities

    Steele, Gingrich have called for GOP outreach to minority voters. As Media Matters for America has detailed, Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele told The Washington Times in February 2009 that he planned to specifically target Hispanic and black voters as part of a new “urban-suburban hip hop” outreach program, saying, “We need messengers to really capture that region – young, Hispanic, black, a cross section … We want to convey that the modern-day GOP looks like the conservative party that stands on principles. But we want to apply them to urban-surburban hip-hop settings.” Similarly, at the June 2009 Senate House GOP Fundraising Dinner, Gingrich urged Republicans to “reach out to African Americans, to Koreans, to Vietnamese, to Chinese, to Indians, to Latinos.”

    Sargent: RNC adopts “Rush Limbaugh/Matt Drudge line” over Steele’s minority outreach. In an April 28 blog post, The Plum Line’s Greg Sargent noted that the Republican Party’s description of Obama’s remark as “an appeal based on class warfare and race” comes in the wake of Steele’s April 19 statement that Republicans “haven’t done a very good job” of giving African-Americans a reason to vote for them and “have lost sight of the historic, integral link between the party and African-Americans.” Sargent added: “Now the RNC is attacking Obama for minority outreach. In so doing, the RNC is essentially adopting the Rush Limbaugh/Matt Drudge line over Steele’s previous call for more racial sensitivity.”

    Republican strategist, Fox host also counter line of attack

    Republican Blakeman: Obama “not being divisive at all.” On the April 26 edition of Fox News’ America Live, former Bush administration official Brad Blakeman responded to host Megyn Kelly’s asking if Obama was “playing the race card” by saying, “I say Republicans should do exactly the same thing. The president was not being divisive at all; he was stating the obvious. … So I don’t think the president was being racist at all.”

    Fox’s Smith: Conservatives “getting all weird” about Obama “appealing to his base.” On the April 27 edition of Fox News’ Studio B, host Shepard Smith pointed out that Obama is “appealing to his base, like politicians always do,” adding, “It’s hilarious to me that people are all kind of weirded out by the fact that a politician is appealing to his base in an election. I mean, what’s wrong with them?” Smith also said, “The right’s getting all weird about this, though, isn’t it?”

  • Scott Rothstein’s COO Charged In Connection With Ponzi Scheme

    Scott Rothstein’s COO Charged In Connection With Ponzi Scheme
    The chief operating officer of Scott Rothstein’s former law firm has been charged with consipring to launder money from with his $1.2 billion Ponzi scheme, according to the a report in The Miami Herald.

    Civilian Pleads Guilty For Lying To FBI About Post-Katrina Shootings
    A man who was on the scene of the deadly police shootings of unarmed civilians on Danziger Bridge in the days after Hurricane Katrina pleaded guilty today to lying to an FBI agent about what happened that day, and for illegally possessing a firearm.

  • Strickland Leads Kasich in Ohio

    Strickland Leads Kasich in Ohio
    A new Quinnipiac poll in Ohio finds Gov. Ted Strickland (D) leads challenger John Kasich (R) in the race for governor, 44% to 38%.

    Said pollster Peter Brown: “Although Gov. Ted Strickland remains ahead, there are a couple of numbers that might be of some concern to his re-election committee. Only 37% of voters say he has kept his campaign promises and the race remains close even though 62% of voters don’t know enough about Kasich to have an opinion of him.”

    Democrats Hold Small Leads in Ohio Senate Race
    A new Quinnipiac poll in Ohio finds Lee Fisher (D) leading Rob Portman (R) in the U.S. Senate race to replace retiring Sen. George Voinovich (R-OH), 40% to 37%.

    Jennifer Brunner (D) also edges Portman, 40% to 36%.

    Fisher and Brunner face off in a primary next week for the Democratic nomination. A poll yesterday had Fisher pulling away in the race.

  • Europe Is Finished Unless It Changes The Rules Fast

    The current Greek crisis has shown all too starkly the limits of the euro zone’s sanction and support mechanisms. If the monetary union is to have a future, it needs new rules to keep members in line and bail them out if necessary.

    Europe is in the worst crisis of the postwar era. For months, the governments of the European Union member states have proven to be incapable of developing a convincing solution for the serious debt problems of individual countries, as well as for the reduction of imbalances within the monetary union. Uncertainty among investors has grown in recent weeks, which is primarily attributable to the helplessness of political leaders, and only secondarily to the influence of speculators.

    The banking crisis of the fall of 2008 teaches us that case-by-case bailout packages approved in response to market pressures fail to have the desired effect in the event of a massive crisis of confidence. At the time, it took the comprehensive approach of the Financial Market Stabilization Act to finally bring about stabilization in Germany. Today, the euro zone needs a common strategy that successfully combines sound public finances with solidarity between member states.

    Continue reading at Der Spiegel >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Rail proposal in Mass. could be nation’s first high-speed project, LaHood says

    ClimateWire: A planned high-speed commuter rail service connecting New Haven and Hartford, Conn., and Springfield, Mass., could become one of the nation’s first completed rail projects, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said Monday as he encouraged officials in Connecticut and Massachusetts to work together and with the federal government to move the project along.

    “All of us have the same goal, the same desire, and that is to have high-speed, real high-speed rail service in the corridor, in the heart of New England,” said Connecticut Gov. M. Jodi Rell (R). “If we can meet a timetable and be aggressive as we have planned, then I think we will be the first in the nation to accomplish that.”

    Connecticut, which is submitting studies to federal officials for funding, anticipates that the train will be operating by 2014 or 2016. The federal government has already given $40 million to the state, which is being used to build a second set of tracks in certain areas. Connecticut transportation commissioner Joseph Marie said the state will apply for a second, more substantial round of funding. The state must also match 20 percent of the federal funding.

    There once was Amtrak service that covered the New Haven-Hartford-Springfield network, but it ended 40 years ago. Efforts to revive the rail line have been hindered because of stretches with just a single track. The next step to the project, according to planners, would be linking western Massachusetts to Boston with its own high-speed rail. The Connecticut project could also be extended past Springfield.

    The service would help the thousands of commuters between Massachusetts and Connecticut or those who drive to New Haven to catch trains to New York or Washington (Susan Haigh, AP/Boston Globe, April 27). – JP

  • Stop Trying to Kill Social Security

    Stop Trying to Kill Social Security
    Worried about the deficit? Wall Street is the problem, not Social Security.

    Worried about the deficit? Wall Street is the problem, not Social Security.

    15 Ways I Oppress Rich, White Conservatives Like Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh
    The election of Obama has been difficult for rich, white conservatives. It’s time for me, as a black man, to make amends.

    The election of Obama has been difficult for rich, white conservatives. It's time for me, as a black man, to make amends.

    Can You Stomach Gluten? How Giving Up Grain May Better Your Health
    An increasing amount of stores, companies and personal care products are catering to people with gluten intolerance.

    An increasing amount of stores, companies and personal care products are catering to people with gluten intolerance.

    Can Switching to Hybrid Cars and Organics Really Save the World, or Is It Just Lazy Environmentalism?
    Heather Rogers’ new book, ‘Green Gone Wrong,’ explores whether we can save the world simply by swapping our polluting products for greener ones.

    Heather Rogers' new book, 'Green Gone Wrong,' explores whether we can save the world simply by swapping our polluting products for greener ones.

    Why an 81-Year-Old Widow from Iowa is Marching to Bring the Banks Under Heel
    Ferol Wegner wasn’t the type of person who would normally protest against the banking industry. But that was before she lost 30 percent of her pension in the economic downturn.

    Ferol Wegner wasn’t the type of person who would normally protest against the banking industry. But that was before she lost 30 percent of her pension in the economic downturn.

  • Being Rude to the Deficit Hawks

    Being Rude to the Deficit Hawks
    I worked at the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) for 6 ½ years. During this time, the credibility of my work and that of my colleagues was often impugned by describing EPI as “labor backed.” This was partially true, we got…


    Economic Policy InstituteRobert RubinUnited StatesCitigroupPeter Peterson

    VIDEO Jerusalem: A Great Model For Arizona
    I don’t know what we would do without Al Jazeera. Like the Israeli media, it goes where the American media fears to tred. Check this out. The occupied areas of Israel (including Arab East Jerusalem) have a segregated road system….



    IsraelEast JerusalemUnited StatesMiddle EastWarfare and Conflict

    Do Critics Have a Better Idea for Iran Policy?
    Here is the lede of Kori Schake’s slam against current US efforts to keep Iran from getting the bomb: The Obama administration is talking tough on Iran. Despite allowing the Iranian government to escape sanction for a year of not…


    IranKori SchakeMiddle EastPresidency of Barack ObamaGovernment

  • Despite Once Being Fierce Gun Control Advocate, McCain Introduces Bill To Force D.C. To Weaken Its Laws

    Despite Once Being Fierce Gun Control Advocate, McCain Introduces Bill To Force D.C. To Weaken Its Laws
    Facing a primary from ultra-conservative former congressman J.D. Hayworth, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) has been veering far to the right. He went as far as to claim that he never called himself a “maverick.” McCain has reversed his positions on a host of issues, from climate change to immigration, in an attempt to appease […]

    McCain2 Facing a primary from ultra-conservative former congressman J.D. Hayworth, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) has been veering far to the right. He went as far as to claim that he never called himself a “maverick.” McCain has reversed his positions on a host of issues, from climate change to immigration, in an attempt to appease right-wing voters; he is now doing the same on gun control.

    Yesterday, McCain and Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT) introduced legislation that would force the District of Columbia to weaken its gun laws:

    The Second Amendment Enforcement Act aims to change the District’s gun laws by repealing the city’s registration rules, amending federal law to allow D.C. residents to buy guns in Maryland and Virginia, while also allowing law-abiding Washingtonians to transport firearms in the District. The legislation would also alter city laws that recommend guns be kept unloaded and either unassembled or locked in homes.

    Some may ask why a Senator from Arizona and a Senator from Montana would introduce legislation that impacts the District of Columbia,” McCain said in a statement. “It’s simple — we believe that residents across this country should be able to exercise their constitutional right to have access [to] firearms to protect themselves.”

    News of bill “was met with outrage from city officials,” especially considering D.C. recently gave up a chance at receiving voting rights in the House of Representatives for the first time in history after gun-rights advocates tacked on an amendment similar to McCain and Tester’s.

    As Jonathan Cowan, president of the center-left think tank Third Way, noted, McCain’s sponsorship of the bill will “go down as the most spectacular and blatant reversal in Senator McCain’s political career.” In the early 2000s, McCain was a spokesperson for Americans for Gun Safety, a campaign headed by Cowan that encouraged states to enact stricter regulations. McCain cut ads on the group’s behalf, urging states with pending legislation to close the so-called gun show loophole, which allows people to purchase guns without a background check.

    In 2001, McCain “rattled the gun-rights lobby” when he sponsored national legislation to eliminate the loophole. In a speech on the Senate floor at the time, McCain blasted states that hadn’t cracked down on illegal guns, saying, “We all know…[this] very dangerous loophole” needs to be closed:

    We need this amendment because criminals and terrorists have exploited and are exploiting this very obvious loophole in our gun safety laws. We need this amendment because our second amendment rights do not extend to criminals who violate our laws and terrorists who hate this country. … We need this because every one of the 15 leading gun trafficking States in America has not taken action to close the gun show loophole.

    Hats off to John McCain,” famed White House reporter Helen Thomas wrote in a 2001 column, noting, “Gun-control advocates have a powerful new voice in the Senate.” The National Rifle Association was “bristling” over the gun show campaign, and “accused McCain of trying ‘to bootstrap on the Sept. 11 tragedy.’”

    McCain reiterated his support for closing the loophole as recently as May 2008, when he told an NRA meeting, “I believe an accurate, fair and instant background check at guns shows is a reasonable requirement.” His moderate stance on gun control earned him scorn from gun-rights advocates during the 2008 campaign, with Gun Owners of America accusing McCain of “working with the enemy.” The group also gave McCain an ‘F’ for 2004 and 2006.

    McCain’s pandering to the far right doesn’t seem to be helping him much, and his campaign opponent keeps calling out his flip-flops. So, McCain may end up losing the election along with his integrity.

  • Republicans hope to win three symbolic Senate seats

    Republicans hope to win three symbolic Senate seats
    Every now and then, there comes a congressional race so fraught with history and symbolism that it becomes as much about sending a message as winning a seat.

    McConnell doesn’t fear voter backlash for GOP blockade on regulation talks
    Will voters punish Republicans this fall for constantly slowing down the work of Congress?

    To woo voters, Democrats plan to cast selves as party of results
    Democrats plan to run in the November midterm elections as the party of “results” after passing a health-care overhaul and will cast Republicans as political obstructionists, Democratic National Committee Chairman Tim Kaine said Wednesday.

    Oil spill burned in Gulf of Mexico, in hope of saving coast
    The Coast Guard and BP set fire to a portion of the crude oil floating in the Gulf of Mexico on Wednesday in a bid to limit the impact of a widening slick, which federal officials said could touch shore in parts of the Louisiana delta as early as Friday evening.

  • Protected Belize reef provides model for conservation

    ClimateWire: A ban on fishing in the marine reserve at Glover’s Reef in Belize has made it a prime spot for wildlife to flourish and for researchers to see the natural workings of the reef ecosystem. But even more, it offers a test case for the prospects of similar “no take” reserves around the world.

    The 17,500-acre area with no fishing is just 20 percent of the 87,000-acre marine protected area in Glover’s Reef, an atoll about 28 miles off the Belize coast. In the rest of the region, some restricted fishing is allowed. Partly because of that, scientists say Glover’s Reef is one of the healthiest of its kind, with plentiful fish populations.

    For example, shark populations remained steady at the reef while they dropped around the rest of the world, according to an annual shark study in the Caribbean. A study of live coral published in February’s Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that marine protected areas help coral populations, although it can take decades for the results to be known. The no-take approach builds up fish stocks, which then repopulate nearby fisheries, and helps revive the entire region.

    Still, officials say it can be difficult to enforce the fishing restrictions. And the region has been heavily polluted and cover coral is low. A recent analysis found that 63 percent of Belize’s reefs are threatened by human activity (Erik Olsen, New York Times, April 26). – JP

  • EV mass market: Brussels Outlines Plans for Electric Cars TNR.v, CZX.v, RM.v, LMR.v, WLC.v, LI.v, CLQ.v, SQM, FMC, ROC ORE.ax, ABN.v, HAO.v, HEV, AONE

    There are Electric Cars, safe technology for reliable batteries and Lithium availible for them: there is no execuse not to start Electric Mobility revolution today.
    EV mass market will be started with standardization for safety and recharging infrastructure for Electric Cars. Hydrogen is lighting years away from mass adoption on cost and needed infrastructure crucial points. All the talk about dirty EVs is the old song from the Oil lobby guys. Electric Car is the only viable alternative to Oil driven CE, which is available today. By the way, every Hydrogen car needs a battery as well. Lithium supply for the batteries is not a question of existence or dependence on anybody’s political will, it is available in safe locations and there is no excuse not to advance Electric Cars now. Last events in Europe reminded about the feeling to be Grounded – with ash this time, how the world is going to live with Oil above 150 USD/barrel?

    Bloombeg Businessweek:

    Brussels Outlines Plans for Electric Cars
    Saying that cross-border standards for safety and rechargers will be critical to the success of electric vehicles, the European Commission has laid out a timetable
    By Leigh Phillips
    The European Commission on Wednesday (28 April) outlined a plan to get electric cars off the drawing board and onto the streets of Europe.
    Central to the EU’s plan for shifting away from the internal combustion engine is developing a series of European standards that everyone will adhere to.
    “Without strong standardisation work, I think it will be difficult to develop a market for electric cars,” said industry commissioner Antonio Tajani.
    “These aren’t just curiosities in motor shows any more. They are being keenly awaited by European citizens. It’s important for citizens to be able to cross borders and still charge their cars.”
    Ensuring that there is a standardised charger is core to the strategy. Brussels does not want citizens to be as frustrated with their green vehicle as they are with a hair dryer in a foreign hotel when they’ve forgotten to buy an adapter.
    The commission hopes to have electrical safety standards outlined by the end of 2010.
    Then, next year, standards for the recharging of cars will be developed, and the following year, 2012, the commission wants to analyse the risks involved when such cars are involved in collisions.
    The commission believes that hydrogen fuel-cell cars are one of “most promising options.”
    Responding to the plan announced today, Ian Williamson, the vice-chair of the UK Hydrogen Association said he was pleased with the strategy: “Hydrogen battery hybrid vehicles will be key to creating a low carbon transport infrastructure throughout Europe because, unlike pure electric vehicles, they offer consumers the same range, speed and fuelling times of conventional vehicles.”
    Green groups cautiously welcomed the news while underscoring that electric cars are only truly green if the electricity used comes from genuinely renewable sources. If the electricity is coming from coal-fired power plants, for example, this is just pushing the carbon emissions away from the vehicle but not tackling the root of the problem, they say.
    “The Commission hasn’t addressed two of the most critical issues, namely ensuring that the extra electricity needed will boost renewable sources and the need for smart meters in every vehicle to keep track of consumption and the carbon intensity of electricity,” said Jos Dings, director of Transport & Environment, a green transit NGO.
    “These two issues will be critical to ensuring that electric cars actually reduce emissions.”
    Provided by EUobserver—For the latest EU related news”