Tag Archives: Cnn

MSNBC News Anchor David Shuster Suspended Indefinitely

huffingtonpost High profile news anchor David Shuster has been indefinitely suspended by MSNBC,an American cable news channel, for participating in a test of a new show for competing news channel CNN Suspension for Shuster took effect just days after the New York Observer reported that he was on a pilot show CNN taped recently. “David has been suspended indefinitely,” a network spokesman said Tuesday morning. “..Mr Shuster’s test was unacceptable..be punished appropriately…” Shuster’s contract with MSNBC is reportedly expires this year in December. CNN’s pilot episode featuree Shuster and National Public Radio’s Michael Martin. MSNBC and CNN are competing for airtime ratings having  Fox News well ahead of both, so doing a pilot episode for one while working for the other is a major problem. Shuster has been a correspondent and anchor for MSNBC since 2002, and has covered such major events as Hurricane Katrina and Presidential campaigns. He was also part of MSNBC’s daily anchor rotation. Before MSNBC, he worked at the Fox News Channel from 1996 to 2002 as a Washington, DC based correspondent. Shuster previously ran afoul of MSNBC management when, in 2008, he was suspended for two weeks after making a joke the network found “irresponsible and inappropriate.” He was allowed on air to apologize and then suspended. MSNBC News Anchor David Shuster Suspended Indefinitely is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Atheists Cite Resurgence as They Gather on Easter Weekend for Annual Convention

By John Blake, CNN April 3, 2010 10:09 a.m. EDT While millions of Christians worldwide will celebrate Easter this weekend, David Silverman has other plans. Silverman will join about 300 atheists in a Newark, New Jersey, hotel ballroom to proclaim another message: The atheist movement in America is growing. Silverman will participate in the 36th annual American Atheists National Convention at the Newark Liberty Renaissance Hotel. He'll also try to clear up a misconception: Atheists aren't immoral, and they don't worship Satan. That's what many people assume when he tells them that he belongs to an atheist group, Silverman says. “We have a lot of wonderful people,” he said. “I haven't sacrificed any Christian babies. I haven't danced naked under the stars. I haven't stolen anything.” What Silverman is doing instead is talking up the “resurgence” among atheists. He says atheists once felt isolated and misunderstood. Two events changed that, he says: the rise of the Internet and the election of George W. Bush. Bush's polarizing presidency showed people how bad things could turn “if religion was in charge,” he said. The Internet showed atheists that they weren't alone, as they sought out and encouraged one another. “Closet atheists are coming out all over the country,” Silverman said, estimating that his group has 4,000 members. “Anybody can go on the Internet and read blogs, Facebook pages, and know that there are millions like them.” Those who ask why people need God are also raising their public profile in other ways. Richard Dawkins, author of “The God Delusion,” and Sam Harris, author of “The End of Faith,” have best-selling books questioning the need for religion. Silverman says a coalition of groups, including American Atheists, met with White House officials in February to discuss more tolerance for nonbelievers. He takes pains to say that atheists respect those who believe otherwise. But if that's so, why hold a convention on Easter weekend? Silverman chuckled at the question. “It's not a slam against Easter,” he said. “We always have our national convention on Easter weekend. The hotels are cheap, and everybody has time off.” added by: EthicalVegan

Jesse James on Nazi Photo: Just a Joke!

Jesse James claims that Nazi pic making the rounds is really just a joke. Seriously, who among us hasn’t donned a Nazi hat and saluted Hitler in a photograph?! Running some serious damage control for his much-maligned client, the cheater’s lawyer says the hat in the Jesse James Nazi photo does not make him a Nazi. In fact, it was just a joke, and a gift – from a Jewish mentor! Ah, the obligatory “I totally have Jewish friends” excuse! You knew it was only a matter of time. The phot may have been in poor taste, but it was given as a gag to James by his Jewish godfather, attorney Joe Yanny said, denying that he’s an anti-Semite. Moreover, Yanny said James lived for a month in an Israeli kibbutz. So he’s basically Jewish himself, and totally down with those peeps. Lay off Jesse James! NO NEO-NAZI: Jesse James’ lawyer denies he is . Yanny refused to talk about the James-Bullock marriage, which unraveled when Michelle McGee – who also has Nazi pics out there – alleged an affair with him. “I understand people’s desire in newsworthy stories, but I would hope that by now this wasn’t such a newsworthy story such that his basic rights and privacy aren’t continuously invaded in an improper manner,” Yanny told CNN. He said “99 percent” of what has published about James in recent weeks is untrue … which we highly doubt. The foursome account ? Maybe that’s untrue. But the Nazi pic and affairs themselves seemed ridiculous at first, too . In any case, James is in rehab “to deal with personal issues” in a bid to save his marriage to actress Sandra Bullock, a spokeswoman for James said. “He realized that this time was crucial to help himself,” his rep said. “I request that his rights in regards to privacy and medical matters be respected.” Sandra Bullock should …

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Jesse James on Nazi Photo: Just a Joke!

Jay Leno Tells Joy Behar ‘Conan Got Screwed’

Backstage at ‘The Tonight Show,’ Behar interviewed the host about the late-night battle. By Kyle Anderson Jay Leno and Joy Behar backstage at “The Tonight Show” Photo: CNN It has been a month since Jay Leno returned to his seat behind the desk of “The Tonight Show,” following a prolonged three-way battle between himself, former “Tonight Show” host Conan O’Brien and NBC. Since O’Brien closed up shop, he has started one of the best Twitter feeds on the Internet and is about to embark on a national tour (cleverly dubbed the Legally Prohibited From Being Funny on Television Tour ). Meanwhile, Leno surged ahead of longtime rival David Letterman in the ratings, and he remains willing to speak out about the fiasco that unfolded at the beginning of the year. “The View” host Joy Behar was a guest on “The Tonight Show” on Tuesday, and in a behind-the-scenes video blog she filed for CNN , Leno spoke frankly about what happened at NBC. “Conan got screwed,” he said. “I got screwed. I mean, this is TV. The reason show business pays a lot of money is so when you get screwed, you’ve got something left over. If you’re a nurse or a cop and you get screwed out of your pension, you’re screwed out of your pension. On TV, at least you walk away with some money.” Leno told Behar that he feels bad about how O’Brien was treated and hopes that the spirit of competition between them will continue. “Conan was treated terribly, and I was treated terribly. I think Conan will come back and he’ll be strong, and we’ll all compete against one another. It should be me against Letterman against Conan against [Jimmy] Kimmel, and then we’ll see who wins.” Behar then called Kimmel “a bit of a turncoat,” referring to the incident in January when he went on “The Jay Leno Show” and slammed the host . But Leno is letting that water flow under the bridge. “What are you gonna go? Welcome to showbiz,” he said. “All comics are friends. When you go on stage, your job is to blow the other guy off the stage. I get it! That’s the way it works. You don’t impede someone else’s opportunity, but when you go out there, that’s what you do.” Are you watching “The Tonight Show” with Jay Leno as host? Let us know in the comments!

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Jay Leno Tells Joy Behar ‘Conan Got Screwed’

Russia: Dozens Killed in Moscow Subway Blasts

March 29, 2010 2:19 a.m. EDT Moscow (CNN) — Explosions rocked a pair of central Moscow subway stations during morning rush hour Monday, killing at least 37 people and wounding 10 others, Russia's Emergency Situations Ministry said. The first blast occurred about 8 a.m. at Lubyanka subway station. That explosion killed 25 people — 14 aboard the train and 11 on the platform. The Lubyanka station is near the Kremlin and the nation's intelligence service, the Federal Security Service. Another blast happened about 30 minutes later at Park Kultury station, on the same train line. The Emergency Situations Ministry reported 12 dead in the second explosion. Russian TV said the blast killed 15 people and injured at least 10 others. Millions of commuters use the Moscow metro system every day. Are you there? Send CNN photos, video text Officials immediately cast suspicion on Chechen separatists for the explosions. A female suicide bomber in August 2004 killed nine people and herself, and wounded 51 others, when she detonated a bomb outside a subway station in northeastern Moscow. In February 2004, a suicide bomber detonated a bomb on a Moscow metro train, killing 40 people and injuring 100 others. A suicide attack in 2003 killed 15 people at a Moscow concert. Chechen terrorists killed hundreds in 2004 at a school in Beslan, Russia. They also were suspected in the downing of two Russian airplanes that year in an attack that killed 89. Chechnya is a southwestern Russian republic, in the Caucasus Mountains region. The Chechens have long fought for independence from Russia. Chechnya's population of 600,000 to 800,000 is primarily made up of Sunni Muslims and Russian Orthodox Christians. Thousands have been killed and 500,000 Chechen people have been displaced in their conflict with Moscow. CNN's Matthew Chance contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

What’s Really Behind Those Philadelphia ‘Flash Mobs’: A Breakdancing Crew [Flash Mobs]

Flash mobs terrifying business owners in Philly are said to have been inspired by “Twitter messages to ‘come to South Street.'” That is bullshit: Twitter didn’t cause these flash mobs; neither did “social-networking”. It was a dance crew. This past Saturday night, a violent “flash mob” of teenagers summoned by social-networking websites was supposed to randomly materialize and wreack havoc on South Street in Philadelphia. There was no flash mob, besides the one made up of CNN and Fox News crews, and Philadelphia mayor Michael Nutter and his police entourage, who locked down the area in an attempt to head off the blood-crazed teens. Did the massive police presence and network news cameras successfully prevent a repeat of last week’s destructive South Street flash mob? We believe there’s a much more boring reason: The dance crew Team Nike didn’t happen to have a performance scheduled that night. Philadelphia is currently a city besieged by flash mobs. If you’ve been following the news out of Philly, it seems like there’s some sort of extended Web 2.0 Watts riots going down. ” Another Flash Mob Rocks South Street: In the ‘Tsunami,’ Chants of ‘Burn the city!’ ” blared the Philadelphia Inquirer after a flash mob last Saturday night, March 20th. There have been either three or four large gatherings of—mostly African-American—teens in Philadelphia in the past three months, depending on whose doing the counting. They have turned violent, with some kids smashing up stores and beating up passersby. The March 20th mob was the latest, and it featured some of the worst violence yet . The key aspect of the story, repeated in almost every news account, is that these weren’t just normal groups of teens: They were “flash mobs” ” organized through social networking Web sites. ” Citizens are freaking out: Four days after last Saturday’s, the University of Pennsylvania warned students of an impending flash mob near their campus. Police showed up in force; nothing happened . And the spectre of hundreds of rampaging black teens able to assemble with a few mouse clicks has captivated a social media-obsessed press . We covered the flash mob on South Street that actually happened on March 20th with a heavy emphasis on the social-networking angle. The Times led with the social networking angle, too: ” Mobs Are Born as Word Grows by Text Message .” The Philadelphia Daily News singled out Twitter to blame for the March 20th mob. Inspired by Twitter messages to “come to South Street,” police say hundreds – business owners say thousands – of young teens stampeded down South Street in waves, jumping on top of cars, knocking over pedestrians and fighting and cursing. But, uh, about those Tweets? Here are the results of a Twitter search for “come to south street” from March 20th-March21st Jessika521’s tweet on March 20th at 2:47PM at her friend Brainbangley was the only “come to south street” tweet before the flash mob. The other results were about the Daily News article, after the flash mob took place . Unless all these teens had protected accounts, or the flash mob was entirely organized before 3PM, there’s no way this was a Twitter-mobilized mob. The mob didn’t even begin until around 9, so that’s highly unlikely. (Hilariously, Jessika521 later posted a tweet about a New York Times journalist asking her on Formspring.me if she had been at the flash mob. Her answer: “What the fuck?” She was probably just shopping.) In fact a close reading of the news accounts shows that, far from a roaming mob of teens who just all happened to tweet the same thing at the same time, the majority of these “flash mobs” were actually street performances organized by Team Nike, which is, as far as we can tell, a break-dancing crew made up of teens wearing big white Nike T-shirts. Here’s what two teens told the court during a hearing about the March 20th “flash mob” : Two teens… also said informal, neighborhood dance groups with a presence on MySpace had been at the heart of the gatherings. One dance group identified in court, Team Nike, posted a video on YouTube this week showing about a dozen teens on South Street dressed in what appeared to be homemade Team Nike shirts. The teens dance and shout slogans, but are peaceable throughout. At one point, the message “We got tha whole South Street following us Team Nike” flashes on the screen. The team members are, in fact, shown at the head of a large crowd. Here’s video of Team Nike at the March 20th “flash mob”: And during a hearing for teens arrested in a February 16th “flash mob” that rampaged through The Gallery, a local mall, one teen said: One 15-year-old Gratz student took the blame for sparking the large gathering at the Gallery. He said he is involved in a dance group called Team Nike and that mall security guards let the teens dance there. On Feb. 16 he said he put a “friend blaster” message on MySpace that the dance group was headed to the Gallery to make a video. “Anybody who thinks this is a flash mob, it’s my fault,” the teen said. “This time, it was too many people . . . They ain’t flash mobs. They’re dance groups.” Another 15-year-old Gratz student also said that informal, neighborhood dance groups are at the heart of the gatherings. He said the groups throw parties and sometimes identify themselves with homemade shirts and hoodies. (emphasis mine.) Here’s video of the Krush Groove Crew dancing at the Gallery—apparently a popular spot for Philly breakdancers: Just like that, two out of three (four?) flash mobs are explained. Sorry, CNN, they weren’t mobs of angry black teens empowered by Twitter and looking for something to smash: They were breakdancing concerts. Yes, the kids were perhaps “summoned” by social-networking messages from Team Nike members, just like people are “summoned” to any show or concert. And we’re guessing these kids summoned their friends, who summoned their own and things reached that snowballing point where they get out of hand. Like, imagine a Justin Bieber concert with no security. This explanation is a whole lot less scary than the irrational, all-destroying hive mind that many people seem to think is driving these “teenage flash mobs” as they sweep the city via “social-networking”. This is probably why media accounts have largely overlooked it. The New York Daily News ominously wrote of the February 16th flash mob: “Police suspect the 100 teens gathered at The Gallery on Market St. after organizing the incident on Facebook or Twitter.” No mention was made of the possible Team Nike connection, as if the entire point of the gathering was to cause an “incident.” A puzzled psychologist instead could only offer: “social phenomena have to start somewhere.” The Philadelphia Inquirer asks: ” What’s behind ‘flash mobs?’ ” They suggest everything from “boredom” to “urban inequality” to “the dynamics of large groups.” Yes, those are certainly all at play! But more immediately, we believe we have found your “incident,” your terrifying, unknowable “social phenomena.” This is what’s behind the Philly flash mobs: Presenting: Team Nike. Maybe instead of tooling around Philadelphia trying to guess where the next flash mob is going to happen, Philly authorities can instead try to find Team Nike and their breakdancing buddies a safe place to hold their next street show. If not, we can predict where and when the next street show will get out of hand—er, dangerous flash mob will be summoned. According to one Team Nike member’s MySpace page , they’re planning on “shutting down” 40st on April 10th. See you at the flash mob! Look at this face and tremble, for it is the face of a flash mob: Also, check out their show next month. Should be poppin’!

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What’s Really Behind Those Philadelphia ‘Flash Mobs’: A Breakdancing Crew [Flash Mobs]

Eazy-E ‘Paved The Way,’ MTV’s Sway Calloway Says

Fifteen years after Eazy’s death, MTV correspondent gives us some insight into his friend’s genius. Eazy-E Photo: Ruthless Records The appearance was rebellious, the music was revolutionary, the history is legendary. Eazy-E changed not just what we say in music and how we listen to it, but also the business of hip-hop. Friday (March 26) is the 15-year anniversary of Eazy-E’s death from AIDS complications. Eazy is still loved, and our very own Sway Calloway had the pleasure of calling E a friend. Here, Sway, in his own words, gives us insight into the genius of Eric “Eazy-E” Wright. Independent Thinker Eric “Eazy-E” Wright was a friend of mine. It was a certain appeal about Eazy-E. Little girls liked him. The revolutionaries liked him, because he spoke his mind. He was easy to market, and he had a distinct voice. I met him through his music first, through N.W.A. If you were from the West Coast, it was kinda like you idolized them because they were capable. They did things that other West Coast acts couldn’t do, and we didn’t know why. What was the ideology behind it? But those guys were able to bust through regional boundaries. And a lot of it, I found out later, had to do with Eazy-E Wright’s genius; the dude was a branding genius. He wasn’t necessarily a good rapper, admittedly so. He wasn’t a great producer, admittedly so. He was somebody who knew how to market music, and he knew how to build brands. At the time N.W.A came out, the majority of the music biz was being spearheaded from New York. All the platforms — from media to television to radio — you had to break in New York in order to get national recognition. The only thing was, you couldn’t really get record deals in New York if you weren’t from New York, because you didn’t have that New York swagger or New York accent, and the music business was basically being controlled from the East Coast. So Eazy-E created Ruthless Records, and through independent distribution, he was able to build an underground swell for his company and for N.W.A and create his own audience in a way no one had seen. Man, I remember that dude came to Oakland, California, and N.W.A was on this bill at the Oakland Coliseum that had Eric B. & Rakim, it had UTFO, it had Whodini on it and this group N.W.A, and they weren’t the opening act. And we didn’t understand: “How come they’re not the opening act?” They were just coming out at that time, and we found out later that Eazy-E was actually the promoter of that concert. So what he did by promoting that concert, he brought the other groups that already had brand recognition and audiences and he put his group in front of the same audience. They ripped the stage up, so when people walked away, instantly they knew who N.W.A was. He did that up and down the West Coast, and then he went into regions of the country that the West Coast appealed to, that also had disadvantages in terms of excelling in the music business, like the Midwest, Kansas City, the South, Texas. Then you start seeing companies like Rap-a-Lot Records came out, and they had Geto Boys, MC Breed. All these other artists start coming out from different places other than the East Coast. And even in the Southeast, you saw Luke Skywalker Records, started by Uncle Luke with his group 2 Live Crew. A lot of that was made possible because of Eazy-E’s influence. He kinda paved the way for independent-minded companies to come out and exist in this music business without having major distribution or major marketing budgets behind them. Since then, that’s just been the way of the West Coast. People just came out independent; they didn’t think major. Everlasting Influence What N.W.A did was what hip-hop was always meant to do: It was, as Chuck D put it, the CNN of the streets. So when hip-hop started spreading on a national level, it didn’t do it by mainstream means; it did it by word of mouth. And I think what Eazy-E was able to do was master that ideology in everything that he approached. Whether it was concerts, releasing music or merchandising, he became popular through word of mouth first. He didn’t have P1 stations, which are like the big radio stations in the major market, spinning his records in rotation. But he had the word on the street. And he built an organic swell. That was the way you had the most credibility. That was the way to be heard if you were a rap group back then. It wasn’t through the MTVs that you have now or BETs that you have now. It wasn’t through the major radio stations that you have now, like the Power 106s in LA and KMEL in the Bay or Hot 97s here in New York. It was through the streets. And if you could capture the streets, then you already had a built-in fanbase and that word of mouth spread was the best way to actually get exposure. Because he has independent means of getting his music out through one-stop distribution channels and small distributors like California Record Distributors and City Hall Distribution and George Daniel’s music room in Chicago, he was able to get into the mom-and-pop stores. He took care of the mom-and-pop stores before he took care of the big retail chains. Because of that, he was instantly in the ‘hood. He didn’t need the shine. Unfiltered Defiance One big component to [N.W.A’s] cause was their message. It was raw, gritty, truthful. People could identify with it. They represented a voice that came from the streets that wasn’t otherwise being heard. The key was he learned how to market it. They were called “N—as with Attitudes.” You got a group called N—as with Attitudes? Back then, it was unheard of. Even the name itself was shocking. That was bold, that was cocky, it was pompous. It was also empowering. They talked about police brutality, the government. They talked about things that went on that you wouldn’t know about unless you lived in the ‘hood. Some of it they glamorized, but we could all identify with it. There were girls who acted like “Strawberry, Strawberry.” There were crack-heads. There were dope dealers. There were people killing folks on a day-to-day basis. You weren’t hearing that in music. A combination of all those things is how he was able to sell all those records. It was unheard of. They did timeless things. Classic to me is when, whether it’s persona, music or different forms of art, is when you’re able to capture something in the moment that hadn’t been done. But you do it in a way that transcends geographical boundaries, ethnic boundaries, religious boundaries, and it appeals to everybody across the board. Something in their message still appeals to what we complain about in 2010. How has Eazy-E’s music impacted your life? Share your memories in the comments section below. Related Photos N.W.A. Founder Eazy E Remembered Related Artists N.W.A.

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Eazy-E ‘Paved The Way,’ MTV’s Sway Calloway Says

Decision Makes School Chief Hated; Loved

Central Falls, Rhode Island (CNN) — Superintendent Frances Gallo combed the classrooms of embattled Central Falls High School. Teachers and students were gone for the day. Gallo was hunting for a particular item: an effigy of President Obama. She hoped the rumor of its existence wasn't true. Gallo had fired all the high school teachers just a month earlier, igniting an educational maelstrom in Rhode Island's smallest and poorest community while winning praise from the president. The teachers union lampooned her; hate mail flooded her inbox. For weeks, she'd prayed every morning for the soul of the man who wrote: “I wish cancer on your children and their children and that you live long enough to see them die.” It was one thing to take barbs from opponents — another thing altogether if the division was infecting classrooms. Teachers assured the superintendent that the school battle wasn't seeping into lesson plans. So, when CNN asked her about the rumor of the effigy, Gallo took it upon herself to get to the bottom of it. She entered the school in the dark of night Monday. She started her room-to-room sweep on the first floor. The first was clean, then the next and the next. Yet newspaper headlines about the controversy, Gallo says, were plastered nearly everywhere. What are the teachers doing? she thought. Most were local papers with banner headlines: “Teachers fired.” Others highlighted Obama's support of Gallo, an endorsement that turned an already tense situation into a firestorm. In this Democratic stronghold, teachers wondered: How could the president they supported turn his back on them? Some peeled Obama bumper stickers off their cars. Gallo knew Obama's endorsement would create further uproar. She just didn't know how bad it would get. She continued making her way through the school, clearing the first two floors. She was disheartened by the newspaper postings but relieved she hadn't found the offensive item. One floor to go. She climbed the steps and entered a classroom. There it was. “You couldn't miss it.” An Obama doll, about a foot tall, hung by its feet from the white board; the doll held a sign that said, “Fire Central Falls teachers,” she says. Recounting her discovery later, Gallo broke down in tears. A flood of emotions poured out, the raw toll of all that has transpired in recent weeks. When she confronted the teacher responsible, she says he responded that it was “a joke to him.” The teachers, she says, have “no idea the harm they're doing.” She thought of Obama's words: Students get only one shot at an education. “I've tried to explain this over and over again: The children here are very disturbed by the actions of their teachers, and they're torn apart because they also love them.” It's lonely being a voice for change. 'Miracles Happen Everyday' Central Falls is a town of more than 18,000 people — most of them Hispanic immigrants — living within 1.5 square miles. “Ripley's Believe It Or Not” once dubbed the town, about 10 minutes from Providence, the most densely populated in the nation. The school is an ornate brick building with decorative columns. A housing project backs up to the campus. A marquee outside the school reads: “Daily reflection on your efforts and outcomes will improve both.” Just a few blocks away, Gallo works from a modest building that looks as if it were once a home. A wall in the superintendent's office is decorated with Central Falls High T-shirts. “Don't talk trash … recycle it,” one says. Above her door is a sign: “Miracles Happen Everyday.” It keeps her grounded, she says, reminding her that “my kids are going to learn.” Gallo arrived in Central Falls in 2007, knowing a tough job loomed ahead. The school had already been designated one of the lowest-performing in Rhode Island. “I have never once looked away from a challenge or put children second,” she says. The school has been failing for the last seven years. Its graduation rate stands around 48 percent. Math proficiency is a paltry 7 percent. Reading scores have improved by 21 percentage points in the last two years, but still lag far behind with 55 percent able to read at grade level, according to school officials. Like the town's population, most of the 800 students at Central Falls are Hispanic. For many, English is a second language. Teachers say the population is so transient, the statistics are skewed: Dozens of students enroll as freshmen but move before their senior year. Those students get counted in the low graduation rate. It's a difficult environment in which to teach, teachers say, and they do their best. Gallo says union contracts, or “scar tissue,” are so thick and dense that instituting reform is difficult. Gallo says she didn't want to take the drastic measure of firing all 93 teachers, support staff and administrators. Yet her decision to do so instantly made her one of the boldest school administrators in the nation — loathed and loved, reviled and applauded. “I never anticipated this. Never,” Gallo says. On the wall behind her desk is a framed quotation: “Courage doesn't always roar. Sometimes courage is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying, 'I will try again tomorrow.' ” added by: Crenshaw_Brothers

Do they have the votes on health care?

The buzz today is that this weekend is going to see a nail-biter of a vote in the House on health care reform. The Democrats insist they've got the votes to pass the Senate version (but they're going to need every single Democrat to get in line and vote for it). The GOP meanwhile is pledging to do every single thing in its power to block the bill or diminish it. Is it going to finally pass? Is this version going to be worth the wait? How has your opinion of the bill shifted/changed over through this process? From CNN: http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/03/18/health.care.fails/ added by: afitzgerald

The Spy Who Wronged Me: The New York Times’ Messy Entanglement With an Ex-Spook [Spooks]

The New York Times reported this morning that an off-the-books intelligence operation may be assassinating people in Pakistan with the help of a sketchy former spook—the same guy that the Times hired to save reporter David Rohde ‘s life. Dexter Filkins and Mark Mazzetti’s Page One story on a secret contractor-run intelligence program in Afghanistan and Pakistan offers a weird view into the intersection of the media business and the world of spycraft, not to mention the hazards of a newspaper like the Times hiring a private army led by an arguably crazy ex-spy. The story recounts the development of a “network of private contractors in Afghanistan and Pakistan to help track and kill suspected militants” that operated under the cover of “a benign government information-gathering program,” and Mazzetti and Filkins refer darkly to the involvement a legendary former CIA operative named Duane “Dewey” Clarridge as evidence that something was fishy about the whole thing. They describe Clarridge as “a former top C.I.A. official who has been linked to a generation of C.I.A. adventures, including the Iran-Contra scandal,” which is a nicer way of saying Clarridge was involved in the illegal mining of Nicaraguan harbors and indicted in 1991 for lying to Congress about arms shipments to Iran (he was pardoned by President George H.W. Bush in 1992 ). Clarridge is a legendary old spook in intelligence circles, and the Times says the Defense Department official who ran the program “would occasionally brag to his superiors about having Mr. Clarridge’s services at his disposal.” As the story discloses, the Times once also had Clarridge’s services at its disposal. He was hired, through his employer American International Security Corporation, in 2008 to secure the release of kidnapped Times reporter David Rohde from his Taliban captors in Pakistan. When Rohde was first kidnapped, the Times and its insurer AIG sought out a security firm called Clayton Consultants to handle the case. Clayton’s strategy, and expertise from prior cases it had worked on, was to negotiate a ransom. But after negotiations stalled, Rohde’s family became anxious and insisted that the Times pursue a dual-track approach: Clayton would continue the ransom route, but the Times also hired AISC and Clarridge to prepare a paramilitary snatch-and-grab operation. A team assembled by Clarridge was at one point suited up and ready to assault a location where they believed Rohde was being held, according to New York magazine , but the operation was called off at the last minute. Rohde and his translator Tahir Ludin eventually escaped on their own in June of last year. But Clarridge soon began causing headaches for the Times . He freely talked to reporters off the record—ABC News’ Brian Ross is said to be in regular contact with him—and began spreading rumors that the story of Rohde’s escape was a sham. Ross and New York both reported that contractors hired by the Times had paid bribes to Rohde’s guards , contradicting the Times ‘ claims that it had paid no ransom and suggesting that Rohde’s escape was a planned operation. According to one contractor who worked on Rohde’s case, Clarridge was inflating his role in facilitating Rohde’s escape in an effort to justify AISC’s enormous fees. The contractor says Clarridge routinely supplied inaccurate intelligence about Rohde’s whereabouts—on the day Rohde escaped from a safehouse in Miram Shah, Waziristan, the source said, Clarridge was claiming that he was being held in an entirely different location. The rumor campaign against the Times culminated in a series of Twitter posts by independent warblogger Michael Yon, who caused a stir in November by writing that “ex-CIA officers helped pay off release for Rohde” to the tune of “millions” of dollars. Yon’s claims attracted a flurry of attention, and Rohde responded that he would “never have written a five-part series [detailing his captivity and escape] based on a lie.” In December, in response to inquiries from Gawker, Rohde wrote that “money was paid to individuals who claimed to know our whereabouts, but I do not believe that the guards who lived with us were bribed. As I have repeatedly said, our guards did not help us during our escape. In addition, no one has been able to name the guards who lived with us.” According to one Times insider, the paper suspected Clarridge was behind the rumors and confronted him, but took him at his word when he denied it. “There’s no ill will toward Clarridge,” the insider says. “Getting accurate information out of the tribal areas is extraordinarily difficult.” But another source familiar with Clarridge’s involvement in the Rohde episode says the Times was furious, and threatened in December to withhold payment from AISC, claiming that the leaks and rumors constituted a violation of the contract. AISC, the source says, was considering legal action against the paper. The tension seems to have defused, however. Reached at his home in California, Clarridge told Gawker that the Times and AISC “came to some sort of a negotiated settlement,” before declining to answer further questions for the record. A Times spokesman says “We have no billing dispute with AISC, and AISC has no billing dispute with us.” And the Times insider insists that the dispute was “about money and hours,” not any involvement Clarridge may have had with the bribery rumors. Clarridge, who is in his late 70s, is a strange man, and has a reputation among reporters who have spoken to him of making outrageous and contradictory statements. In September 2009, he sent a political screed via e-mail, obtained by Gawker, to a wide contact list under the subject heading “Senator McCarthy Was Right.” In it, he complained of the influence of “far left vermin (FLV) as they are known in the bug business” and hailed the imminent right-wing insurrection: “We won the Cold War; now we will win The War of the Authoritarians, which will be a civil war in the USA and such catastrophes are always exquisitely nasty.” The prospect of the Department of Defense hiring an indicted perjurer who advocates “civil war in the USA” to run an off-the-books intelligence operation is strange enough without adding in his prior ugly entanglement with the New York Times . The fact that it was the Times itself who blew the lid off his involvement makes the whole thing unbelievably incestuous. (The Times insider, for what it’s worth, says the story was not motivated by a vendetta against Clarridge: “He came up very late in the reporting, and once he did, we had to put him in there with a disclosure of his previous involvement with the Times.”) The program started with an idea from, of all people, former CNN executive and Sharon Stone-dater Eason Jordan . He proposed a DOD-funded web site, similar to his post-CNN project Iraq Slogger, that would cover Afghanistan and Pakistan. The DOD loved the idea and funded it to the tune of $22 million, but the money was diverted, the Times says, to the secret intelligence network by Michael Furlong, a DOD official and former Air Force officer with “extensive experience in psychological operations.” Jordan’s web site, Afpax, did get off the ground, but he says he only received two slight payments from the DOD funding the work. The rest of the money allocated for the project went somewhere else—presumably to the secret network. It wasn’t Jordan’s first run-in with psy-ops. While he was in charge of newsgathering for CNN, he invited active duty psy-ops operatives with the Army to intern in CNN’s Atlanta headquarters . “Psyops personnel, soldiers, and officers, have been working in CNN’s headquarters in Atlanta through our program ‘Training With Industry,'” an Army spokesperson admitted in 2000. The program was immediately discontinued once people figured out that it’s not such a good idea to invite professional liars to help deliver cable news and study how to better lie to news organizations. So he probably should have known better.

Link:
The Spy Who Wronged Me: The New York Times’ Messy Entanglement With an Ex-Spook [Spooks]