Tag Archives: brookings

Hoy In Mi Gente News: White Population Growing Because More Latinos Check White On Census

Damn the ‘Tino’s are selling out. SMH. The Ethnicity vs. Race issue is rearing up again thanks to the latest census data which shows whites are up by 6% thanks to Latinos who identify as such. The white population in the U.S. is growing – thanks to Hispanics. So say the latest census figures, which found a big jump in the number of Hispanics who listed themselves as white on the 2010 census forms. Those forms specifically stated that Hispanic is an ethnicity, not a race. The result was a sudden six percent increase in white Americans. “It really surprises me, that is a significant shift,” said Claudio Remeseira, a Columbia University professor and editor of “Hispanic New York: A Sourcebook.” “In general, most Latinos tend to think of themselves as white. But the issue of how Latinos identify themselves by race has always been complicated.” For example, most Dominican immigrants – even dark-skinned Dominicans – would say they are white “because they have historically perceived themselves as not black” like their neighbors in Haiti, Remeseira said. In all, the number of people in the “white alone” category jumped by 12.1 million over the last decade to 223.6 million, the census showed. Whites now represent 72% of the U.S. population and account for nearly half of the total population increase since 2000. Take out the Hispanics, however, and whites account for 64% of the population, according to the figures. They were 69% of the population just a decade ago. Hispanics continue to be the nation’s fastest growing group. The percentage that identified themselves as white jumped in the past decade from 48% to 53%. The portion that marked “some other race” dropped from 42% to 37%. Also, for the first time, the largest group of multiracial Americans are like President Obama – half black, half white. “There is no question that racial lines are blurring in the United States, said William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution. “Strong gains in interracial marriages and higher mixed-race identification among youth suggest that past racial categories will need to be radically changed or even dispensed with in the next two or three decades.” This race business is so tricky isn’t it? And crazy how the Haiti vs. DR issue immediately comes up. Do you see nothing wrong with Latinos identifying as White, or do you think it’s just plain ol’ denial? Source

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Hoy In Mi Gente News: White Population Growing Because More Latinos Check White On Census

‘Apollo 18’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know

We shed some light on the mysterious lunar adventure. By Eric Ditzian “Apollo 18” Photo: Dimension Films Let’s give the folks responsible for “Apollo 18″ some credit: The viral marketing campaign behind their moon-landing horror flick has been convincing enough that NASA has had to come out and declare , ” ‘Apollo 18’ is not a documentary. The film is a work of fiction.” We’re not exactly convinced the American public was starting to believe Apollo 18 wasn’t, in fact, a canceled moon mission but, as the film suggests, a cover-up to hide a gruesome lunar run-in with alien life forms. Nor are we certain a government statement will have any effect on conspiracy-minded kooks other than to make them think, “See, man, I told you — they’re hiding something!” “Apollo 18,” for its part, certainly is hiding something. The Weinstein Company is following the “Paranormal Activity” playbook, doling out only pieces of information about the “found-footage” film and hoping moviegoers shell out cash this weekend to find out the full story. We’ve gathered all those pieces together so you’ll know everything there is to know about “Apollo 18” before hitting the theater. Word of the project first popped up last fall. “Wanted” director Timur Bekmambetov was spearheading the effort, a story that would take the existing urban legend about Apollo 18 and inject some alien scares into it. A press release declared that Bekmambetov had been hired to shoot a documentary about the Russian space station and came across never-before-seen footage of the space disaster in Russia’s archives. Trevor Cawood, a visual-effects vet from the “Matrix” films, came onboard to direct, but he was quickly replaced by Spanish filmmaker Gonzalo Lopez-Gallego. The new director, in turn, was soon joined by a teaser poster : an astronaut’s boot print next to an alien creature’s print and the tagline looming above: “There’s a reason we’ve never gone back to the moon.” The trailer touched down on the Web in February. And we were immediately freaked out. What was up with the dusty, cracked space helmet? And that gnarly looking infection? And the zombie-looking dude? Questions — many, many gross questions. But we started to piece some of them together. NASA and the Department of Defense sent two astronauts to the moon on a secret mission in 1972. They discovered some non-American footprints. Had the Russians been there too? Hmmm. One of the NASA astronauts was bitten by some kind of alien creature, leading to a psychotic breakdown. Damnnnnn. Thus began the cover-up. Or the conspiracy theories. Heck, even NASA might have seen something coming, as an agency-commissioned study , called the Brookings Report, seems to predict the “discovery of artifacts from alien life forms on the surfaces of the Moon, Mars or Venus.” Spooky! All shall be revealed Friday (September 2), when “Apollo 18” hit theaters. Before then, we’ve got one last piece of video to bring you — and freak you the eff out. It’s got a terrified Russian astronaut, shaky footage of the lunar landscape and, well, we’re not exactly sure what happens at the end. But we’re pretty sure things didn’t end well for the spaceman. Check out everything we’ve got on “Apollo 18.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Apollo 18’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know

In NBA Matrimony-dom News: Bobcats Forward Tyrus Thomas Makes Jaime Collins A “Real Actual” Basketball Wife

Welcome Jaime Collins — now Jaime Thomas into the real actual “Basketball Wives” Club . Charlotte Bobcats forward Tyrus Thomas traded vows with the lovely Jaime earlier this summer (July 9) at Louisiana’s Old State Capitol in Baton Rouge. Don’t they make a lovely couple? Keep flipping for more photos from their special day

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In NBA Matrimony-dom News: Bobcats Forward Tyrus Thomas Makes Jaime Collins A “Real Actual” Basketball Wife

8 Big Cities Where Minorities Are The Majority

Well, it’s not surprising news that the white population in America is dwindling but the Tea Party, the KKK and other fear-promoting groups may just jump at the new demographic data recently released by the Brookings Institute.

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8 Big Cities Where Minorities Are The Majority

A Look At New Orleans Five Years After Hurricane Katrina

Despite many locals having permanently relocated, the city continues to recover from one of the biggest disasters in U.S. history. By Jayson Rodriguez, with additional reporting by Rahman Dukes and Steven Roberts Inside the Louisiana Superdome after Hurricane Katrina Photo: MTV News Five years ago, a New Orleans native by the name of Terrell became separated from his family — his mother, his sister, his brother and his nieces — in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina when he volunteered to help neighbors to safety during the category 5 natural disaster. His story wasn’t unlike the ordeals experienced by many other residents in the Gulf Coast region at the time. Down and hard up on his luck, the young man was determined to reunite with his loved ones. “I haven’t slept since Monday, just transporting people through the flood to the Superdome,” he told MTV News’ Sway at the time, referring to the New Orleans Saints football stadium where survivors were temporarily housed. “It’s a boat that I found and I’m walking through the water pulling a boat of young people and elderly people just to get them out of harm’s way. Three o’clock this morning, I’m pulling the boat and I see a guy, he was holding his baby, floating in the water, they were dead. I had to take a whole ‘nother route. This is what I seen with my own eyes.” Despite the difficult challenges, two days later Terrell found his family in Houston at the Astrodome, where they had been evacuated to for safety concerns. It was only one story of hope fulfilled. But this enduring example represents what’s been going on in the city since: the resolve and persistence of those affected overcoming the odds through sheer will and pride and with a flare for the dramatic. From the Superbowl-winning New Orleans Saints to the residents of Louisiana coming together once again to fight through another setback, namely the BP oil spill, this corner of the country has proven to be the bedrock of our nation. A study released earlier this month by the Greater New Orleans Community Data Center and the Brookings Institution shows that the city’s residents are better off financially than they were five years ago, according to CNN . However, with as many as 1,800 people killed during the storm and a larger number of natives having permanently relocated to Houston, Atlanta, towns in Mississippi and other area cities, the findings may be skewed. Tourism, though, is still a key contributor to the city’s success and the pulse of the city’s economy. While nowhere near the levels it was pre-Katrina (10 million-plus visitors a year), the number of tourists arriving to the city known for his musical legacy, culinary treats and Mardi Gras festivities has grown steadily from 3.7 million the year after the storm to nearly 8 million last year, according to an ABC News report. And while corruption had been a larger part of the New Orleans government and executive leadership in the past, earlier this year, democratic mayoral candidate Mitch Landrieu was elected to lead the city, with a staggering 66 percent of the vote and carrying 365 out of 366 voting precincts. Landrieu’s speech during his swearing-in ceremony perhaps best captured the new spirit of New Orleans and may ultimately prove to be the message the city wishes to send to the world. “That first step is to declare that we are no longer recovering, we are no longer rebuilding. Now, we are creating,” Landrieu told his constituents in May. “Let’s stop thinking about rebuilding the city we were and start dreaming about the city we want to become. The world deserves a better New Orleans. So, people of New Orleans, hear this: Today is a new day. Today is a new time.”

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A Look At New Orleans Five Years After Hurricane Katrina

Zing! Paul Krugman Says Rep. Paul Ryan’s ‘Drenched in Flimflam Sauce’: But Own Source Disputes Him

Paul Krugman’s Friday column in the New York Times attacked Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, who has dared to present an intellectually honest budget, as ” The Flimflam Man .” Joseph Lawler at the American Spectator calls it ” unusually partisan even by Krugman’s standards ” and he’s right; Krugman calls Ryan’s efforts a “fraud,” Ryan himself “a flimflam man” whose work is (zing!) “drenched in flimflam sauce.” But Krugman’s attack backfired when his main source for his argument, the left-of-center Tax Policy Center, disputed his claim of bad faith on the part of Ryan. Krugman let his trademark petulance show, griping that the Washington Post was too nice to Ryan in a recent front-page article, and went further on his nytimes.com blog Friday morning , calling Post journalists economic ignoramuses: “One thing that has been overwhelmingly obvious in the discussion of Paul Ryan’s roadmap is that lots of people who should know better — including, alas, reporters at the Washington Post — don’t know how to read a CBO report.” (Incidentally, Krugman, feeling the heat from non-fawning blog commenters offering substantive challenges to his glib economic assumptions , now limits the length of those comments.) One depressing aspect of American politics is the susceptibility of the political and media establishment to charlatans. You might have thought, given past experience, that D.C. insiders would be on their guard against conservatives with grandiose plans. But no: as long as someone on the right claims to have bold new proposals, he’s hailed as an innovative thinker. And nobody checks his arithmetic. Which brings me to the innovative thinker du jour: Representative Paul Ryan of Wisconsin. Mr. Ryan has become the Republican Party’s poster child for new ideas thanks to his “Roadmap for America’s Future,” a plan for a major overhaul of federal spending and taxes. News media coverage has been overwhelmingly favorable; on Monday, The Washington Post put a glowing profile of Mr. Ryan on its front page, portraying him as the G.O.P.’s fiscal conscience . He’s often described with phrases like “intellectually audacious.” But it’s the audacity of dopes. Mr. Ryan isn’t offering fresh food for thought; he’s serving up leftovers from the 1990s, drenched in flimflam sauce. Krugman’s gripes about Ryan’s call for “steep cuts in both spending and taxes” include the arguments that Ryan’s proposed spending cuts aren’t feasible, wouldn’t reduce the deficit, and would “cut benefits for the middle class while slashing taxes on the rich” while claiming “the plan would raise taxes for 95 percent of the population” and cutting Medicare. He got most of his points from “the non-partisan Tax Policy Center,” which is affiliated with two left-of-center groups, the Brookings Institution and the Urban Institute. Showing intellectual integrity, The Tax Policy Center actually came to Ryan’s defense this afternoon (hat tip Joseph Lawler at The American Spectator): Krugman alleges fraud because CBO did not score the revenue side of the Congressman’s plan.  (This is correct as the Joint Committee on Taxation is responsible for providing the official revenue score of tax legislation.) Instead, CBO assumed that total federal tax revenues will be equal to “those under CBO’s alternative fiscal scenario…until they reach 19 percent of gross domestic product in 2030, and to remain at that share of GDP thereafter.” Contrary to Krugman’s claims, this assumption is not unjustified . Ryan has explicitly stated that he is willing to work with the Treasury department to adjust the rates on his tax reform plan to “maintain approximately our historic levels of revenue as a share of GDP.” Since 1980 the federal tax revenue has been about 18 percent of GDP. Krugman pulled out his paranoia card at the end, insinuating that Washington is just so intimidated by the resurgent GOP (“deference to power” — what power?) that it’s afraid to call them out on their obvious intellectual fraud, a pretty laughable charge: So why have so many in Washington, especially in the news media, been taken in by this flimflam? It’s not just inability to do the math, although that’s part of it. There’s also the unwillingness of self-styled centrists to face up to the realities of the modern Republican Party; they want to pretend, in the teeth of overwhelming evidence, that there are still people in the G.O.P. making sense. And last but not least, there’s deference to power — the G.O.P. is a resurgent political force, so one mustn’t point out that its intellectual heroes have no clothes . But they don’t. The Ryan plan is a fraud that makes no useful contribution to the debate over America’s fiscal future. While Reason editor Peter Suderman admits that “flimflam sauce” is a “really devastating” comeback, he also has problems with Krugman’s analysis .

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Zing! Paul Krugman Says Rep. Paul Ryan’s ‘Drenched in Flimflam Sauce’: But Own Source Disputes Him

Democrat-Backed Terror Bill Would ‘Gut Miranda Rights’

A bill that would give law enforcement more leeway during interrogations of people deemed a public security risk would “gut” the rights afforded to people who have been arrested, critics say. The bill, put forward at the end of last week by US House Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), appears to have the unofficial backing of the Obama administration, at least in principle. The Enemy Belligerent Interrogation, Detention and Prosecution Act of 2010 would extend to four days the period of time that law enforcement has to question a terrorist suspect before bringing the suspect before a judge. Currently, as Schiff explains in a press statement, officials have six hours to present a suspect before a judge. Statements taken after that time would be inadmissible. Schiff's bill would give interrogators four days, provided the US attorney general or Director of National Intelligence sign off on it. The bill also includes a clause expressing Congress' belief that authorities can delay reading a national security suspect's Miranda rights “for as long as is necessary.” In his efforts, Schiff appears to have the unofficial backing of Attorney General Eric Holder. In May, in the wake of the Times Square bombing attempt, Holder said he wanted Congress to modify the public-safety exception to Miranda rights to make it easier to interrogate terrorists. (The Supreme Court has ruled that Miranda rights can be overlooked in certain national security situations, but backers of new legislation say the exception is not large enough.) In TV interviews, Holder said he wanted to see an expansion of the exception to Miranda rights, and that he would work with Congress to make that happen. Schiff told Politico that he got “no formal endorsement” from the Obama administration for his bill, but Politico reports that the Department of Justice is reviewing the legislation. Blogger Marcy Wheeler calls Schiff's proposed law a “gutting of Miranda rights.” She points to comments by Ben Wittes of the Brookings Institution, who supports the legislation and said it should “focus more on suspects who pose a national security threat rather than those sought in connection with particular terrorism-related crimes,” according to Politico. To Wheeler, that suggests that many more people than just terrorism suspects could be caught in the new rules. “So can an environmental activist lose Miranda rights under this bill?” Wheeler asks. “Can Quakers?” Ken Gude of the Center for American Progress described the bill to Politico as “a proposed solution to a problem that doesn’t exist. … Whatever the political theater surrounding Miranda warnings, the FBI obtained valuable intelligence information from both the underwear and Times Square bombers under the existing rules.” (a little more @ link) added by: Omnomynous

Biden: Stimulus projects moving faster than expected

Vice President Joe Biden will claim Thursday that the $787 billion stimulus plan “is doing more, faster, more efficiently, and more effectively than we had hoped.” In a speech planned to mark the 200-day mark since the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act took effect, Biden will say that $62.5 billion in tax cuts have been delivered, $1.9 billion contracts have been awarded to small businesses, and more than 10,000 transportation projects approved. In many areas, he'll say that work has exceeded goals: *Work has started on 2,200 highway projects, for example, 700 more than the expected at this stage.

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Biden: Stimulus projects moving faster than expected