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"Nobody will win the Republican nomination. The Republican candidate will be the one who doesn't lose it."
Trump 23% Carson 23% Fiorina 10% Parent
Intriguing. "Blacker than Obama" [raised in Detroit not Hawaii and mother isn't "white"], has done fetal tissue research, against abortion and same sex marriage. And the GOP can counter the accusation the party is racist. Parent
After the sordid jump of Kent Sorenson, chair of Michele Bachmans Iowa campaign, to Ron Paul's bid in 2011, giving rise to Sorenson's pleading guilty in federal court for taking $70,000, and the charging of three former Paul aides for violating federal laws, including Jessie Benton, a Paul relative by marriage, a new head-spinning mount/dismount has gained headlines.
Rick Perry's Iowa campaign manager, Sam Clovis, quit the Perry campaign (which was broke) and quickly went to work for Trump as national campaign chair. Clovis needed a job which is understandable, but this is the same Sam Clovis who just recently said Trump " had no moral center," Clovis had much to say about Trump--none flattering.
Trump's discounting of McCain because he was captured, was greeted by Clovis saying he was offended by a man who sought and gained four deferments to avoid the draft and has never served this nation a day.." And, since Trump has not asked for God's forgiveness, Clovis said he has "no foundation in Christ."
Gee, it is so confusing, last week, it was Perry, now Trump. And, Perry said Trump was a "cancer" What is a poor Republican in Iowa to do? Well, my advice for voters everywhere, outside of Iowa, would be to ignore Iowa. Or, at least, put it into perspective. Parent
As America's bridges, roads, and other infrastructure dangerously deteriorate from decades of neglect, there is a mounting sense of urgency that it is time to build a giant wall. Across the U.S., whose rail system is a rickety antique plagued by deadly accidents, Americans are increasingly recognizing that building a wall with Mexico, and possibly another one with Canada, should be the country's top priority. Harland Dorrinson, the executive director of a Washington-based think tank called the Center for Responsible Immigration, believes that most Americans favor the building of border walls over extravagant pet projects like structurally sound freeway overpasses. "The estimated cost of a border wall with Mexico is five billion dollars," he said. "We could easily blow the same amount of money on infrastructure repairs and have nothing to show for it but functioning highways." [...] While some think that America's declining infrastructure is a national-security threat, Dorrinson strongly disagrees. "If immigrants somehow get over the wall, the condition of our bridges and roads will keep them from getting very far," he said.
Across the U.S., whose rail system is a rickety antique plagued by deadly accidents, Americans are increasingly recognizing that building a wall with Mexico, and possibly another one with Canada, should be the country's top priority.
Harland Dorrinson, the executive director of a Washington-based think tank called the Center for Responsible Immigration, believes that most Americans favor the building of border walls over extravagant pet projects like structurally sound freeway overpasses.
"The estimated cost of a border wall with Mexico is five billion dollars," he said. "We could easily blow the same amount of money on infrastructure repairs and have nothing to show for it but functioning highways."
[...]
While some think that America's declining infrastructure is a national-security threat, Dorrinson strongly disagrees. "If immigrants somehow get over the wall, the condition of our bridges and roads will keep them from getting very far," he said.
Hard to believe it's satire, isn't it? Parent
Thanks Obama;) Parent
Leave aside the basic impracticality of the entire idea - What the hell are you going to do about that part of the border that runs through Lake Superior? Submarine nets? Sonar? Volunteer muskie fishermen with AK's in their boats? Yikes. Forget I said that last part. - and concentrate solely on the fact that, what Walker believes makes this a "legitimate issue for us to look at" is the fact that "some people" at a town hall meeting in New Hampshire brought it up to him. I will pay anyone a shiny buffalo nickel if they will show up at a future town hall meeting in New Hampshire and ask Scott Walker if we should fire sharks with frickin' laser beams on their heads into synchronous low earth orbit to prevent undocumented immigrants from Zontar from entering the country. It probably would be declared a "legitimate issue for us to look at." (And this is not even to mention the fact that, apparently, Walker is opposed to people crossing our Canadian border but has no problem at all with the world's dirtiest fossil fuel being pumped across that same border and through the richest farmland in the United States. Tar sands don't kill people. People kill people.)
(And this is not even to mention the fact that, apparently, Walker is opposed to people crossing our Canadian border but has no problem at all with the world's dirtiest fossil fuel being pumped across that same border and through the richest farmland in the United States. Tar sands don't kill people. People kill people.)
I hope Walker doesn't read Charlie's column - it might give him some ideas... Parent
Give me land, lots of land, under starry skies above...Don't fence me in.
Besides, the Great Wall of Fear is old hat, Chris Christie wants to track visitors to our country like UPS Packages.
"Thank you for calling ICE. What would you like to do today? To track a human being, press 1. Ok, track a human being. Please enter or say your tracking number after the tone. I'm sorry, I didn't catch that. Please enter or say your tracking number after the tone. Thank you. Your target was last scanned at the 7-11 buying milk and bread at 123 Main St. at 1:53 E.S.T. on August 30 2015. What would you like to do now? To dispatch a surveillance drone to the last tracked location, press 1. To speak to a Storm Trooper, press 2."
Ok, track a human being. Please enter or say your tracking number after the tone.
I'm sorry, I didn't catch that. Please enter or say your tracking number after the tone.
Thank you. Your target was last scanned at the 7-11 buying milk and bread at 123 Main St. at 1:53 E.S.T. on August 30 2015.
What would you like to do now? To dispatch a surveillance drone to the last tracked location, press 1. To speak to a Storm Trooper, press 2."
"I pledge allegiance, to the note, that bears a pic of Ben Franklin. And to the republic, from which it came, f*ck you pay me." Parent
You know it's getting bad out there when the top Democrat sounds like a self-serving WSJ Op-Ed..
Parent
Divide and economically conquer...a tale as old as time.
With a working persons party like this, who needs enemies! And pay no attention to that crotchety old clown Bernie Sanders...he's just a distraction. Parent
The question is, does the investor class here have any civic responsibility over and above parasitizing it's temporary host-nation? Parent
The problem will exist until people have the same freedom to go where the getting is good, same as the freedom money has. Till then money will go where the people are desperate and trapped. And brave people will continue to break unjust laws to escape that trap.
Don't forget Haiti and all the fine work the Clinton Foundation did in building sweatshops there. Parent
BTW - I take it you use a computer and talk to customers. Have you considered that your job could be done by someone in India with the picking/shipping done by people who the authorities don't know are here?
The small town I retired to use to have 6 factories that employed about 7000 people. It now has 2 that employ about 1200 people... The local schools are near collapse, downtown looks like 1929 and much of the old middle class homes section is bad shape.
But it does have 2 Mexican restaurants and a Walmart..... Parent
But Trump has the magical wall Mexico will fund...
It would be nice if the idiots that brought us the trillion dollar war that would pay for itself would learn from their mistakes and not get sold another 'someone else will pay for it' fiasco that has zero chance of succeeding. Parent
One manufacturer we rep tried outsourcing their tech support to India...didn't last a year. Sales plummeted...it might fly in some industries, not water heaters. No plumber in the USA wants to troubleshoot an electronic ignition heater that won't ignite with some schmuck with a script in India who's never seen our product.
As for my gig, they are welcome to try (came here looking for a job, leave here looking for a job) but I doubt it would work...local reps gotta be local. And I'd feel bad for the poor slob in India who had to deal with some of the winners I deal with daily;) Parent
(Poutine is popular in Wisconsin, not that Walker knows any history -- or he would know that the state, for more than a century before it became part of the U.S., was part of Nouvelle France. And many of us are descendants of French Canadians.)
A few more national media finally appear to be figuring out that Walker is a pandering fool. Parent
Political poseurs with nothing to offer besides bluster can fool many people into being strong leaders--something to note for 2016. And, yes, Dr. Krugman is talking about Trump, but also, Christie, whose tough guy act played well until it didn't. Now, he is just pathetic, says Krugman. "he did not change, he just came into focus."
And Jeb! What happened to him? asks Krugman. The best governor ever, the smart Bush. He never existed. As can be seen by his campaign. And, then there is Scott Walker, the man to watch. And, the brilliant Bobby Jindal.
Just "a cult of personality built around undeserving politicians." "Someday, Trump will have his Katrina moment when voters see him for what he is. but don't count on it happening anytime soon." opines Krugman. .
Here, educate yourself.
Link Parent
The reasoning the Bush administration gave for why active duty military and the largest rotary wing fleet in the military would stand down was that the Iraq War planners felt committing to Katrina would interfere with their unhampered war effort.
When everything went completely to hell and they had to call Honore in, he basically executed the plan that those who cared and were at Ft Rucker proposed, with staging in Mobile. Parent
The sheer size and power of that approaching hurricane alone, relative to the region it was about to decimate, undoubtedly should've clued those back in Washington that local state and municipal authorities would be very quickly overwhelmed by both the extraordinary urgency of the situation, and the obvious magnitude of the effort needed to evacuate an entire city of 500,000 from harm's way, amongst others.
Yet, the Bush administration inexplicably decided to stand down and do nothing, to their everlasting infamy and shame. And so, the impending natural disaster that was due to occur anyway was compounded manifold into an unspeakable tragedy by an almost willful neglect.
It was an act of incompetence and dereliction so stunning in its breadth and scope that it likely bordered on criminal. In the end, even the normally accommodating folks at Fox News were compelled to scream at George W. Bush to do something, in the face of the obvious horror which was unfolding before everyone's eyes.
Aloha. Parent
Behind the scenes, a power struggle emerged, as federal officials tried to wrest authority from Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco (D). Shortly before midnight Friday (8/27/05 - 32 hours before landfall), the Bush administration sent her a proposed legal memorandum asking her to request a federal takeover of the evacuation of New Orleans, a source within the state's emergency operations center said Saturday. The administration sought unified control over all local police and state National Guard units reporting to the governor. Louisiana officials rejected the request after talks throughout the night, concerned that such a move would be comparable to a federal declaration of martial law. Some officials in the state suspected a political motive behind the request. "Quite frankly, if they'd been able to pull off taking it away from the locals, they then could have blamed everything on the locals," said the source, who does not have the authority to speak publicly.
The administration sought unified control over all local police and state National Guard units reporting to the governor. Louisiana officials rejected the request after talks throughout the night, concerned that such a move would be comparable to a federal declaration of martial law. Some officials in the state suspected a political motive behind the request. "Quite frankly, if they'd been able to pull off taking it away from the locals, they then could have blamed everything on the locals," said the source, who does not have the authority to speak publicly.
WaPost
You see Donald, the state must request help. The Demos in charge were so eat up in politics they wouldn't.
And who can forget all those buses just setting there. Empty while the mayor dithered.
At 5:00 PM EDT,(Sat 8/27 about 36 hours before Katrina hit) New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin announced a state of emergency and a called for a voluntary evacuation. He added that he would stick with the state's evacuation plan and not order a mandatory evacuation until 30 hours before the expected landfall.
What a shame. How criminal. Parent
We all knew that this was the mother of all monster hurricanes, the biggest and most potent in a generation. Yet for whatever their reasons offered in retrospect, the president and his staff stood down and failed to act, and then continued to do so even as the levees broke and the city of New Orleans flooded. The guy even flew off to Arizona to attend a political fundraiser, rather than attend to the emergency!
We all saw and remember what happened, Jim, and we all remember how President Bush and his cabinet had to literally be shamed into action. And given the bipartisan nature of the criticism that was leveled at him from practically all quarters, it's quite obvious that partisanship had nothing to do with it.
George W. Bush proved that week to be every bit as ignorant, incompetent, reckless and reality-challenged, as even his most vociferous of opponents had heretofore accused him of being in the years prior to Katrina.
That hurricane ripped the blinders off a lot of Americans, and for the first time they finally saw Bush for what he truly was, a clueless phuque who had absolutely no business being in the Oval Office. A mere handful of words spoken on national TV served to reduce his arrogant swagger to a pathetic lame-duck irrelevance -- "Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job."
And no amount of post-event revisionism on your part will ever change that.
But the Bush administration had a moral and ethical obligation to take charge in the face of the obvious looming threat posed by both Katrina's size and its power, which had been amazing everyone well before the storm even first made landfall
Did you really read my comment?
Behind the scenes, a power struggle emerged, as federal officials tried to wrest authority from Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Babineaux Blanco (D). Shortly before midnight Friday (8/27/05 - 32 hours before landfall), the Bush administration sent her a proposed legal memorandum asking her to request a federal takeover of the evacuation of New Orleans, a source within the state's emergency operations center said Saturday.
How do you suggest that Bush should have done that?? Air strike or just an armored attack?
Who is to blame? Bush for trying to take charge and fix, or the Demos?
Some officials in the state suspected a political motive behind the request. "Quite frankly, if they'd been able to pull off taking it away from the locals, they then could have blamed everything on the locals," said the source, who does not have the authority to speak publicly.
Good Lord!!!!! The locals rejected it because of pure politics. They didn't want take the chance that they might be blamed. I have seen CYA's but that is a most damning example.
Think, Donald. If your claim that Bush's actions could have saved people is true ....then the Demos's actions to refuse help killed people.
And while FEMA wasn't perfect, the response to Katrina was faster than the response to Andrew. Proving that bureaucracies are slow learners, but they do learn. Naval assets, hospital ships and helicopters followed close behind Katrina and were rescuing people within hours of Katrina passing.
I hate to pop your bubble but helicopters don't operate well in very high winds.
Katrina was deadly. Its winds affected people well up the Mississippi flyway, hundreds of miles away. I lost two trees myself and another remains bent at a 60 degree angle. Local resources were taxed and communication between responders was hampered by a lack of a common frequency plan and a fractured command and control system made worse by LA's playing CYA games. Parent
BTW your link is pure fiction. Parent
But the actual fact of the matter is that the mountain has always been called Denali by most Alaskans, native and non-native alike. The mountain and its vicinity were designated a national Park by Congress in February 1917, but only on condition that both be officially renamed after our nation's most imperialistic president, which has been a particular sore point with Alaska's native peoples.
With the passage of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act in 1980, the name of Mt. McKinley National Park was officially changed to Denali National Park and Preserve, when its parklands were combined with those of surrounding Denali National Monument. However, the U.S. Board on Geographic Names refused to recognize any such change in the name of the mountain itself, and so it officially remained Mt. McKinley until today's executive order.
Kudos to Obama for doing the right thing.
I bet he could have hugged Obama's neck when he heard about this latest bit of arrogant stupidity. Parent
He won't be the next president.
There's more of us than there are of you. Parent
You can lie, but the numbers won't. Parent
You ain't gonna do it again. Parent
C'mon, Jim. You sound so confident, and you like to gamble, soooo ... Parent
So while you may have the seats in congress - you certainly don't have the voter numbers. And gerrymandering won't help win presidential elections. Parent
Both McCain and Romney were not popular with the Repub base. But even so, had as many Repubs voted for Romney as they did McCain, Romney would have won.
The real question is, what else will Obama do to help get the base out?? Parent
BTW - I see that no one around here has even mentioned it. Parent
Jim it's never going to be 1950 again where you're going to be on the top of the heap because of the color of your skin. Where you get special privileges because of the color of your skin and everybody else knew "their place". Parent
Surveillance video from the gas station showed Goforth, 47, had just come out of a convenience store after he had pumped gas and that Miles got out of his red truck, she said. "He runs up behind Deputy Goforth and puts the gun to the back of his head and shoots. Deputy Goforth hits the ground and then he continues to unload his gun, shooting repeatedly into the back of Deputy Goforth," Anderson said. Goforth was shot 15 times and a witness saw the shooting, Anderson said. She said the shell casings match the .40-caliber Smith and Wesson handgun found at Miles' home.
"He runs up behind Deputy Goforth and puts the gun to the back of his head and shoots. Deputy Goforth hits the ground and then he continues to unload his gun, shooting repeatedly into the back of Deputy Goforth," Anderson said.
Goforth was shot 15 times and a witness saw the shooting, Anderson said. She said the shell casings match the .40-caliber Smith and Wesson handgun found at Miles' home.
Link
Do police lives matter?
And I missed out on all those special deals and so did the rest of the poor people of all colors. Parent
The point of BLM is not that any life matters less. The hashtag reppresents the idea that there are issues faced in black communities that are not faced elsewhere.
Advocacy for specific issues is just that. I'd think you would understand that. That's what our representative democracy is about. Parent
Pigs in a blanket - Fry'em like bacon
It appears that the advocacy is to kill cops. Parent
The meaning is police should be subject to the same scrutiny as those they police. Parent
There is a creeping anarchy spilling into our streets, with the police sometimes fighting it, sometimes contributing to it and sometimes paying the ultimate price for it.
It's a little late to start pointing fingers at anybody for the random acts of violence that has enveloped us.
Another 16 months of this please! And don't forget the 500,000 presidential pardons. Parent
FYI. Little known. Parent
It's interesting that McKinley was the nominee, not the elected Pres. when the gold-standard loving prospector "discovered" and named the mountain. But Boehner asserts "McKinley" was chosen to honor McKinley's legacy as Pres.
BTW, the NYT comments re the GOP protest are very amusing. Such as: let them name Ohio for McKinley! Parent
in Ohio, Republicans have started building a brick wall to keep immigrants from scaling the hill Parent
Further, it's not as Denali is some obscure geographic point off the beaten path. the mountain is so massive that it can be seen from Anchorage, which is 150 miles away. And if you doubt that, then please check out this webcam from Denali Towers in Anchorage, because it's a bright, beautiful and clear day up there and there it is, rising in the distance.
"For decades, Alaskans and members of our congressional delegation have been fighting for Denali to be recognized by the federal government by its true name. I'm gratified that the president respected this." - Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska
"I'd like to thank the president for working with us to achieve this significant change to show honor, respect, and gratitude to the Athabascan people of Alaska," Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska
e.g. Columbus discovered America because his culture didn't know it existed. Some white guy discovered Mt McKinley because no one from his culture knew about it.
Think of someone telling you, "Hey, there's this great restaurant over at the yacht basin that I just discovered." Parent
And, it does seem that Trump is the perfect xenophobic candidate for you. Parent
As upsetting as that reality may be for you one-religion, one-language, one-party, one-race folks.. Parent
The myth of cultural homogeneity is often touted by those persons whose primary goal or desire is the demonization and / or marginalization of entire groups or sub-groups of people, for the former's own perceived personal benefit. Sad to say, it's a tactic which has repeatedly proved successful throughout history.
And it simply typifies the problem you pose here. You barge headlong into other people's conversations with ad hominem provocations, without every really pausing to actually consider what anyone is actually saying.
Your mindlessly confrontational behavior, and your generally unpleasant demeanor which accompanies it, serves only to degrade and coarsen the overall quality of the dialogue here. And quite frankly, it's beyond tiresome.
I've got better things to do than dance to your tune. Parent
The point is that you are so strung up over diversity that everything the Europeans did is bad and evil.
Guess what. By our standards today they were mean. But they didn't do human sacrifices and they didn't practice ritual cannibalism. Parent
You're singing a little wildly there, aren't you, fella? Parent
That took quite a bit of courage in the early '50's.
That you don't want to discuss the bad things that the Native Americans did is just another demonstration that the Left must always apologize for and blame America.
No wonder Obama immediately launched his apology tour after being sworn in and can't find it in himself to attack ISIS in frontal and effective manner.
He is his Mother's sun. Parent
To be sure, some native people's practices of cannibalism were absolutely abhorrent. But really, how is that any worse than, say, the old English custom of drawing and quartering one's enemies, both real and perceived, or burning alive at the stake those persons who were accused of sorcery and witchcraft?
You impart a wholly false sense of moral superiority when you imply otherwise, through your deliberate omission of comparable facts which fail to meet the standards of your desired narrative. Further, you consistently fail to grasp who was and is in the position to exercise ultimate social control. Newsflash: it's not black people, regardless of the fact that the current president is African-American.
After all, it wasn't the native peoples of the Congo who slaughtered half the population of Belgium between 1880 and 1910. It wasn't the native kingdoms of Africa which divided the entirety of Europe into respective colonial holding and spheres of influence. And it wasn't African-Americans who enslaved white Southerners. Rather, it was all vice versa.
That some white people occasionally fall victim to wanton violence perpetrated by people of color, while completely inexcusable, does not therefore mitigate the prevailing circumstances by which the white people of this country continue to freely deny non-white people their humanity and their dignity as fellow human beings.
It makes one wonder if your preferred focus isn't on suppressing the most superficial aspects of racism, such as calling black people the N-word, while willfully ignoring racism's far more corrosive and potent latent effects, which can otherwise lead people to view entire demographics of "others" with an undue collective suspicion.
Early Europeans Practiced Human Sacrifice
Oops (again!), Jim! Parent
Now admittedly, by our standards, it wasn't very civilized, but at least they waited awhile before perpetrating the Holocaust and inventing the atom bomb (top that, Injuns!) Parent
You poor white guys really feel persecuted, no? Parent
Not taking anything away from the early sailors in the Pacific. Maybe the best book on the subject is A Song For Satawal
The early native sailors used songs along the lines of "sail towards the setting sun till the waves break on the port quarter then turn right till you see flying birds and then follow them". To help remember the song they used a string of different colored and shaped shells.
But the bottom line is the European sailors around the time of Columbus were developing methods of navigation that allowed them to replicate their voyages and the ability to communicate where they had gone for history, something the Pacific natives really could not do. Parent
But the bottom line is the European sailors around the time of Columbus were developing methods of navigation that allowed them to replicate their voyages and the ability to communicate where they had gone for history, something the Pacific natives really could not do.
The Polynesians were the greatest navigators who ever sailed a vast and undifferentiated ocean. They found every speck of land in the Pacific, with the notable exception of the Galapagos.
The idea that they found every island, and DIDN'T find the Americas is ludicrous. Chicken bones have been found in Peru that pre-date Columbus. Chickens are native to southeast Asia. Sweet potatoes, native to Peru, are now grown in Tahiti showing that the Polynesians were able to bring this new food item back across the Pacific.
The Chumash Indians of the California coast used fishing and boat building methods not used by any other Native Americans, but which are used by Polynesians. One cultural similarity could be a coincidence, but two maritime similarities suggest communication. Parent
But the key to world navigation is rounding the great capes and no one I know of has claimed anyone but Europeans were the first to do that. Parent
ragebot: "But the bottom line is the European sailors around the time of Columbus were developing methods of navigation that allowed them to replicate their voyages and the ability to communicate where they had gone for history, something the Pacific natives really could not do."
Pacific islanders didn't just wander the oceans aimlessly, stumbling upon islands in haphazard fashion. They knew exactly where they were going and further, they made repeated trips of vast distances between various island groups.
Polynesian, Melanesian and Micronesian cultures have also enjoyed longstanding traditions of oral histories, which they used to meticulously document indigenous knowledge, skills, and past events in their respective people's lives through the generations.
In Hawaiian culture, there's Papakū Makawalu, a rather revolutionary methodology for its time which fully integrates traditional language and cultural practices within a discipline of astute observation of the world around you. Papakū Makawalu encourages you to understand the universe holistically, and examine and grasp the relationships of various segments in a given ecosystem, rather than merely examine each in a wholly arbitrary and piecemeal fashion, as though they've nothing to do with one another.
That white people didn't (and don't) understand the indigenous languages or refused to recognize native accomplishments in navigation and other fields doesn't mean that therefore, Pacific islanders were incapable of recounting their own histories or documenting / understanding the world around them -- which is actually a rather insidious form of racism, if you think about it.
Further, place names often provide specific reference points to their navigational skills and prowess. For example, the westernmost point of the Hawaiian island of Kaho'olawe is called Ke'ala'ikahiki, which literally translates in English as "the way to Tahiti."
Lawe mai i ka ma'alea a ku'ono'ono. Take wisdom and let it run deep.
Or did you read the part about Johan Muller who produced a well respected ephemeris many of the early European navigators relied on. This is the key to why early European sailors could navigate. It was possible to do it using the stars for navigation when combined with basic instruments.
Columbus, and other early European navigators also relied heavily on the Viking history (mostly oral but some written) of trips to North America.
I am not taking anything away from the early Pacific sailors. Just pointing out they did not have a reliable ephemeris or knowledge of the movements of stars, planets, and moon. They also did not have a standard written language to document their travels or describe to others their methods of navigation.
The Europeans not only had an advantage in methods of navigation due to having an ephemeris and knowledge of how things moved in the heavens they also had much more seaworthy boats and ships. Again I am not taking anything away from early Pacific sailors, just noting that a larger more seaworthy ship with better knowledge of the heavens are big advantages in traveling the oceans. And a written language that survives the ages is also an advantage in keeping knowledge of navigation and discovery alive.
If you bother to read A Song For Satawal you will note the writer points out the sailors in Carolina today (and the author as well) are sadden by the fact that the songs the islanders use for navigation are being forgotten along with the bead strings used to help remember how to navigate. One of the things the book tries to do is keep this knowledge alive. That was one of the reasons I liked the book so much, it was an attempt to save the culture of early Pacific sailors. Parent
But in Feb. 1917, when the park was created, President McKinley's assassination at the hands of anarchist Leon Czolgosz 16 years earlier was still fresh in the minds of many Americans, particularly in Washington. In "the Age of Imperialism," he was seen by a lot of people as some sort of political martyr. Therefore, the formal renaming of Denali as "Mt. McKinley" was part of the natural order of things as they existed at the time.
Pervasive skepticism amongst the predominately white scholar class about the Polynesians' ability to sail between distant island groups throughout the Pacific and Indian Oceans during the first millennium, A.D., was only finally dispelled in 1976, with the first trip to Tahiti of the Hawaiian twin-hulled voyaging canoe Hokulea, a remarkable feat which was accomplished solely by the crew's reliance upon the ancient Pacific Island art of navigation by the stars.
As a direct result of that accomplishment, as well as subsequent voyages undertaken by Hokulea which continue to this very day, western academia has begun the painstaking reassessment of the history of Pacific Islanders, by examining and assessing Malayo-Polynesian oral histories as recounted by native 'oli (chants), such as the Hawaiian Kumulipo.
Because as local native historians and cultural practicioners such as John Osorio, Han-unani Kay-Trask, the late Mary Pukui and the late 'Iolani Luahine have long contended, the true history of indigenous peoples long predates the white man's "discovery" of them.
Ohio's congressional representatives should let Denali be Denali. It's time to end the perennial defensive action against Alaskans who want to allow one of their state's grandest natural features to be known officially by its real name....The mountain has sacred significance that long predates the United States. Ohio should gracefully concede. Parent
The renaming of Mt. McKinley has got the people over at the Millard Fillmore Rest Stop very nervous #next -- Scott Paulsen (@heymrpaulsen) August 31, 2015
-- Scott Paulsen (@heymrpaulsen) August 31, 2015
Liberal elites trying to make American children ashamed of their heritage..blah blah
Texas PTA stuff.. Parent
And of course, the Ohio congressional delegation perceives today's reversion to the mountain's original name as some sort of slight to the state's native son William McKinley, when it's really got nothing at all to do with either Ohio or the 25th president.
It was simply the right thing to do. Parent
The stoopid is hurting at record levels today. Parent
Admittedly anecdotal and a small sample, but there you go. I don't think even Sarah Palin will argue this one. Parent
Predictably and tiresomely, Republicans are already criticizing Obama for removing the name of Mt. McKinley
From your own link:
The Ohio delegation's disappointment at the decision cut across party lines. "We must retain this national landmark's name in order to honor the legacy of this great American president and patriot," Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan, whose district includes McKinley's hometown of Niles, in eastern Ohio.
"We must retain this national landmark's name in order to honor the legacy of this great American president and patriot," Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan, whose district includes McKinley's hometown of Niles, in eastern Ohio.
Democratic Representative Tim Ryan, who like McKinley was born in Niles, [Ohio,] is also unhappy.
And from the NYTimes:
Senator Lisa Murkowski, Republican of Alaska, introduced legislation in January to rename the peak
During a segment on the Black Lives Matter movement on Monday morning, "Fox and Friends" host Elisabeth Hasselbeck suggested that the organization be labeled a hate group. Fox brought on conservative African-American writer Kevin Jackson to discuss the Saturday Black Lives Matter protest at the Minnesota State Fair and the Friday shooting of a Texas sheriff's deputy. "Kevin, why has the Black Lives Matter movement not been classified yet as a hate group?" Hasselbeck asked Jackson during the segment. "How much more has to go in this direction before someone actually labels it as such?" "Well they should do it, but unfortunately it's being financed by the leftists," Jackson said in response. "Ironically it's people that have nothing, really no concern at all about black lives."
Fox brought on conservative African-American writer Kevin Jackson to discuss the Saturday Black Lives Matter protest at the Minnesota State Fair and the Friday shooting of a Texas sheriff's deputy.
"Kevin, why has the Black Lives Matter movement not been classified yet as a hate group?" Hasselbeck asked Jackson during the segment. "How much more has to go in this direction before someone actually labels it as such?"
"Well they should do it, but unfortunately it's being financed by the leftists," Jackson said in response. "Ironically it's people that have nothing, really no concern at all about black lives."
I don't know which is worse, Hasselbeck's question, or Jackson's answer.
I do not agree with the easy dismissal of FOX talent, that they are stupid.
They're not stupid, and that's worse. Parent
They may indeed be worse than stupid, but that doesn't necessarily mean that they're not plain stupid as well. Parent
The 420 Games 5K in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park on August 16th awarded $500 in marijuana credit to the male and female winners.
5k? F#ck that I'll buy my own weed;) Parent
the pic is priceless
I think they should go with The Crazy Chicken Brothers.
(Breaking Bad joke)
Still. I PREFER to believe it. If the right wing can do it do can I. Parent
Nightmare On Elm St is a work of art
RIP Parent
It's like a master class in cheep effective special effects. Parent
"Schneider suggests that fans read Craven's last column, which ran in June. It's a tale that has Craven flying with the birds, using an ultralight that allows him to travel through time. Schneider says it was a fitting and "elegiac" final piece.
Schneider said, of his friend, "He was the sweetest sort of avuncular character you could care to meet. I don't know anyone who knew him who didn't feel lucky to know him. And his imagination was so unique."
He added, "We will not soon find another bird columnist like him."" Parent
MOREHEAD, Ky. (AP) -- On Tuesday morning, Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis' office denied the licenses to at least two couples. At first, Davis remained in her office with the door closed and blinds drawn. But she emerged a few minutes later, telling the couples and the activists gathered there that her office is continuing to deny the licenses "under God's authority."
In a separate development, the Kentucky attorney general is mulling whether to appoint a special prosecutor to investigate whether she violated the state official misconduct statute when her office refused to issue a license to a Rowan County gay couple. Official misconduct is a misdemeanor punishable by up to 365 days in jail. A public servant is guilty of it when, "with intent to deprive another person of a benefit," he or she refrains "from performing a duty imposed upon by law or clearly inherent in the nature" of his office or "violates any statute or lawfully adopted rule or regulation" relating to it.
Official misconduct is a misdemeanor punishable by up to 365 days in jail.
A public servant is guilty of it when, "with intent to deprive another person of a benefit," he or she refrains "from performing a duty imposed upon by law or clearly inherent in the nature" of his office or "violates any statute or lawfully adopted rule or regulation" relating to it.
It's all well and good that she believes she only answers to God, but He doesn't sign her paychecks.
In other legal news:
A federal judge in Washington on Monday exempted the group March for Life from ObamaCare's controversial contraception mandate, which the group touted as a victory for secular, not just religious, objections to the rule. U.S. District Court Judge Richard Leon, an appointee of President George W. Bush, ruled that allowing exemptions to the birth control rule only for religious groups violates the Constitution's guarantee of equal protection. March for Life praised the ruling as "the first one to be granted in favor of an organization opposed to the mandate for pro-life reasons based on science and moral convictions rather than religion."
U.S. District Court Judge Richard Leon, an appointee of President George W. Bush, ruled that allowing exemptions to the birth control rule only for religious groups violates the Constitution's guarantee of equal protection.
March for Life praised the ruling as "the first one to be granted in favor of an organization opposed to the mandate for pro-life reasons based on science and moral convictions rather than religion."
How significant is this?
[does it matter that the so-called science March of Life relies on is junk science?] Parent
I would bet, looking at the video, this person is one of those "nondenominational" fanatics. Like my former boss. It's the hair. I've never seen her feet but I would bet the skirt is long. Parent
Unfortunately, so I read, the next in line is another in her family, which has controlled the patronage position for years. They all want to be martyrs to their cause -- and keep that salary in the family.
Time to send in the troops, as Ike had to do, to finally enforce a Supreme Court ruling in the recalcitrant areas still fighting the War Between the States? Parent
This little drama will be interesting to watch. Parent
At death's door I shouted I knocked and I pounded I demanded the lock Be unbolted for me.
I was not found praying But shivering and saying It's colder in heaven When you're just passing through.
The wonder it faded The voice it restated It's colder in heaven But much warmer with blues.
Rich as a bird Free as a word Beaten into the air By a fresh young wing.
Claws round a wire A visual choir As loud as a stare As drowned as the spring.
Yes truth wants to be told But not `til it's so old That's most of the witnesses Can't hear anymore.
It likes to be stroked To be mirrored and smoked That's why I am beating Upon this deaf door.
I demanded the lock Be unbolted for me But those sensitive bastards Will not let me in yet.
ScottW714: "I will never understand the appeal of Christianity, I understand the implied threat of hell, but doesn't seem why most worship. Kudos to the Pope for actually practicing the teachings of jesus, seems like the others could learn a thing or two about mercy."
... a basic human foible and conundrum that's long plagued mankind, which is that one can be entirely and adamantly religious without ever being at all spiritual.
Although I'm a practicing Roman Catholic, I also personally subscribe to the belief that there are many paths to the same destination, and therefore it is not at all necessary for one to subscribe to any particular religious dogma in order to attain spiritual enlightenment.
And sometimes in matters of personal faith, it is eminently advisable to keep one's own counsel and act as one sees fit personally, and not as another might otherwise insist or direct according to said dogma. That's why we each have a conscience.
Aloha.
I don't much understand all the judgment at the earthly level when, presumably, all is forgiven at the next level. Maybe religion is still assuming and presuming that we mere mortals cannot on our own exercise good moral judgment without the fear of the fires of hell; to me it's just way too controlling, and seriously messes with people's minds. Maybe it's supposed to, I don't know, but sometimes I think it borders on abusive.
With respect to abortion, what the pope said was:
he will allow priests "discretion to absolve of the sin of abortion those who have procured it and who, with contrite heart, seek forgiveness for it" during the holy year beginning December 8.
Charlie Pierce - a Catholic himself - had these observations/thoughts:
OK, all the usual disclaimers apply. It's only for a year. It's based on the idea that a woman who chooses to have an abortion needs absolution in the first place, which is pretty damned patronizing and paternalistic all on its own. It assumes that they need to be "contrite." In sum, it is indeed the smallest splinter of a smidgen of an iota of change. All of that is true. However, and this is a big however, this is anything but a tiny change in the way that HMC does her daily business. Papa Francesco has taken this decision away from the bishops--including those American wingnuts who want politicians who support a woman's right to choose refused communion and/or excommunicated--and placed it in the privacy of the confessional, where it is between a woman and her parish priest. Papa Francesco is not stupid. He knows that it was in the confessional where Paul VI's egregiously wrong and egregiously anti-human encyclical banning artificial birth control, Humanae Vitae, crawled off and expired. It died in hundreds of thousands of whispered conversations between parishioners and priests who were embarrassed by the document. HV is a dead letter among most Catholics because of millions of individual acts of private subversion on the part of clergy and laity. In many ways, this is the pope recognizing that a right to privacy is inherent in the decision. Moreover, the subtext of this latest pronouncement is that Papa Francesco feels he has bigger fish to fry than policing the sexytime of his flock, and that he doesn't fully trust the members of the Clan of the Red Beanie with the job, either. This remains a very interesting auld fella.
It's based on the idea that a woman who chooses to have an abortion needs absolution in the first place, which is pretty damned patronizing and paternalistic all on its own. It assumes that they need to be "contrite." In sum, it is indeed the smallest splinter of a smidgen of an iota of change. All of that is true.
However, and this is a big however, this is anything but a tiny change in the way that HMC does her daily business. Papa Francesco has taken this decision away from the bishops--including those American wingnuts who want politicians who support a woman's right to choose refused communion and/or excommunicated--and placed it in the privacy of the confessional, where it is between a woman and her parish priest.
Papa Francesco is not stupid. He knows that it was in the confessional where Paul VI's egregiously wrong and egregiously anti-human encyclical banning artificial birth control, Humanae Vitae, crawled off and expired. It died in hundreds of thousands of whispered conversations between parishioners and priests who were embarrassed by the document. HV is a dead letter among most Catholics because of millions of individual acts of private subversion on the part of clergy and laity.
In many ways, this is the pope recognizing that a right to privacy is inherent in the decision. Moreover, the subtext of this latest pronouncement is that Papa Francesco feels he has bigger fish to fry than policing the sexytime of his flock, and that he doesn't fully trust the members of the Clan of the Red Beanie with the job, either. This remains a very interesting auld fella.
[I broke what was one long paragraph into smaller chunks to make it easier to read, and the bold is mine, too]
The same subject as HUMANS but far more compellingly handled.
"A controller operates as part of a team of a dozen soldiers, plus vehicles, plus reinforcements on alert, plus aircraft for evacuations, plus logistics. To insert controller teams into the battles for Fallujah or Ramadi requires a commitment on the order of thousands of Americans."
Also tucked in the op-ed is this quote: "The Iraqi government dismissed them [the right Iraqi officers] after our forces left in 2011. The Sunnis were then oppressed, and the Islamic State surged in."
Written by Bing West--former assistant secretary of defense and Marine who has written several books about the Iraq war.
And possibly both.
"Republicans Wary of Donald Trump's Populist Tone on Taxes"
I'm honestly coming to the conclusion that Trump is possibly the least-bad Republican option - and not just because he'd lose the general election in a landslide.
I find him personally racist and sexist and an abhorrent human being. And I think he's the best the GOP has to offer. What a state of affairs we are in.
What is happening now is extraordinary and unprecedented. You're getting to see four years worth of fairly recent emails from the Secretary of State. You should be happy. Bob Woodward was delighted when he heard the news. Because this never happened before. Because her name is Clinton the media must do a thorough anal exam. Parent
Hillary's network problems Parent
There was a sizable list of folks employed by the Clinton Foundation who had email accounts on the network.
I view calling someone Nixon like almost as bad as calling them Hitler like.
Bottom line is not only did Hillary take a hit with 150 more redacted emails being found but her server is also less secure than before due to its network architecture. Parent
Under intense questioning, Toner conceded that the review of about 7,000 pages of emails in the latest batch has uncovered the 150 communications 'that have been subsequently upgraded classified.' He emphasized that 'the information we've upgraded was not marked classified at the time the emails were sent.' But Toner seemed to hedge his bets against future decision-making inside the U.S. Intelligence Community. [...] Toner also said he did not know of any cases of emails that were already released undergoing another round of scrutiny with an eye toward identifying more classified documents. 'That's not our belief,' he said. 'We stand by what's been released.' The Associated Press reported that all of the newly classified material in the latest batch was upgraded to 'confidential,' not to the higher 'top secret' level that applied to two emails identified a month ago.
He emphasized that 'the information we've upgraded was not marked classified at the time the emails were sent.' But Toner seemed to hedge his bets against future decision-making inside the U.S. Intelligence Community.
Toner also said he did not know of any cases of emails that were already released undergoing another round of scrutiny with an eye toward identifying more classified documents.
'That's not our belief,' he said. 'We stand by what's been released.'
The Associated Press reported that all of the newly classified material in the latest batch was upgraded to 'confidential,' not to the higher 'top secret' level that applied to two emails identified a month ago.
So...e-mails that were not previously marked or deemed classified have NOW been deemed so.
But, hey - thanks for treating us all to the Daily Mail, a tabloid rag that is so clearly biased, so clearly trying to make news out of nothing, that it's obvious why you've gravitated to it.
And why my reaction to this non-news is more or less, "so what?" Parent
Trump 37 Bush 9 Carson 9 Huckabee 6 Rubio 6 Walker 5 ...and so on
Dem:
Clinton 52 Sanders 23 Webb 2 O'Malley 1 Chafee 1
The real story is contained deeper in the poll. In May, when the Register last polled, 27 percent of likely Iowa GOP caucus-goers viewed Trump favorably while 63 percent regarded him unfavorably. In the new poll, which was released Saturday night, Trump's favorable number is at 61 percent and his unfavorable at 35 percent.
Trump leading Carson by 14 Clinton leading Sanders by 35 Parent
;-D Parent
Donald Trump would defeat Kanye West in a hypothetical presidential match-up, according to a survey released Monday. Market research firm Echelon Insights said Trump leads in every age demographic, except for the 25-34 bracket, which voted in favor of West by an 8-point margin. The poll of 500 adults using Google Consumer Surveys has the real estate tycoon drawing 38 percent support and the hip-hop mogul finishing with 21 percent support; 41 percent remain undecided:
Market research firm Echelon Insights said Trump leads in every age demographic, except for the 25-34 bracket, which voted in favor of West by an 8-point margin.
The poll of 500 adults using Google Consumer Surveys has the real estate tycoon drawing 38 percent support and the hip-hop mogul finishing with 21 percent support; 41 percent remain undecided:
Russia begins military intervention against IS in Syria
Russian fighter pilots, jets and helicopters will begin arriving in Syria in the coming days to join in the offensive against the Islamic State (IS) ...
According to Western diplomats, Russian expeditionary forces have already arrived in Syria to set up camp in an Assad-controlled airbase near Damascus ....
This was discussed on the Dianne Rehm show the other day. Seems Russia and the U.S. are talking again. The enemy of my enemy is my friend.
-Mr Spock
Still, it's a helluva quote.
-Kirk
You mean they are actually going to forgive other Christians for their 'sins', and this is news. Thought the entire appeal of g.o.d. was the forgiveness.
I never really got why people would worship a place that is very judgmental, so much so that few probably pass their standards, including many of their own. If it was a relationship, it would be an abusive one.
Lot of self-loathing brought on by low self-esteem form the judgmental church.
I will never understand the appeal of Christianity, I understand the implied threat of hell, but doesn't seem why most worship.
Kudos to the Pope for actually practicing the teachings of jesus, seems like the others could learn a thing or two about mercy.
As seen on Yahoo: Jeb Bush hit back at Donald Trump on Tuesday, releasing a scathing campaign ad that reveals the "real Donald Trump."
The 90-second attack ad shows Trump over the years endorsing single-payer health care, raising taxes on the wealthy and Hillary Clinton as a good negotiator against Iran.
"Hillary Clinton I think is a terrific woman," Trump is shown saying. One clip shows Trump identifying as pro-choice -- a no-no in Republican politics; he's also shown saying he identifies more as a Democrat.
Some set up..
Believe me, some days I wish I could push my stress onto something greater or that all the bad people in life will eventually get theirs, or that when I die I don't become worm food, but I can't.
My GF says, just think how surprised you will be when you wake in heaven. I don't have the heart to tell he than me version of an eternity in bliss would in no way include her. Just kidding.
For the record, I do actually believe that something we would consider organic created everything, but I don't believe it/they gives a S what we or any other creature does.
Previously, bishops determined what, if any, priests under their control in each individual diocese, could provide absolution to a women confessing to what the Church still believes is the sin of abortion.
Now, Pope Francis has said, all priests may provide absolution for this sin without first getting approval from their bishop. Getting an abortion is still a sin for which a woman must be grievously sorry. A sin she intends to never again commit.
I do not think this is as big a change as Pierce seems to believe. It is an administrative change, not a theological change.
And actually, Catholic dogma DOES have a position of primacy in the Christian world, as (according to the Pew Research Center ), 50.1% of all Christians are Catholic. Approximately 1.2 billion people on planet Earth are Catholic. While many Catholics (especially in America) may disagree with some or all of the teachings, it doesn't change the fact that the Church us still a player on the world stage, more so than say Lutheranism.
So yeah, when the Pope speaks, people tend to listen.
Long skirt.
I told you so.
Yeah, Howdy she sure looked like one of those wackos because of the hair. However, now that you have seen the entire outfit, you can tell she's part of the Duggar cult.
I'm not Catholic. What the Pope says or decrees may be interesting, or thought-provoking, but as the saying goes, "he's not the boss of me."
Oh I forgot it is all supply and demand, market rules....
riiiight.....
Some call it leading from behind, I call it kicking them in the rear.