Tag Archives: law

Lady Gaga Calls Japan Bracelet Lawsuit ‘Misguided’

Suit claiming singer profited from inflated shipping and sales tax is ‘without merit,’ rep says. By Gil Kaufman Lady Gaga Photo: Ian Gavan/ Getty Images Just days after a Michigan-based law firm filed suit against Lady Gaga over claims that the singer’s charity overcharged fans for the shipping costs of her Japan-boosting bracelets and made money on the earthquake relief effort, a spokesperson for Mother Monster said the legal action was “misguided.” The suit from 1-800-LAW-FIRM alleges that the $5 bracelets — which Gaga rushed out shortly after the devastating March earthquake and tsunami — had an unnecessary $3.99 shipping cost and sales tax added on and that Gaga made money on them after promising that all proceeds would go to benefit disaster victims. “I Designed a Japan Prayer Bracelet. Buy It/Donate here and ALL proceeds will go to Tsunami Relief Efforts. Go Monsters,” Gaga tweeted on the day the earthquake struck. According to E! Online , Gaga’s publicist issued a statement on Tuesday responding to the claims. “This misguided lawsuit is without merit and unfortunately takes attention away from the kind deeds of the fans around the world who are supporting the people of Japan,” read the statement, which was issued days after Gaga performed in MTV Japan’s concert to raise funds for earthquake relief. “The entire $5 donation made with the purchase of each bracelet is going to support the disaster relief. No

Terrence Howard On Racism And The Judicial System [VIDEO]

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Actor Terrence Howard , who is currently playing District Attorney Joe Dekker on Law & Order: SVU ,  took a break from taping to offer his thoughts on racism and the judicial system. “As long as there are humans on the planet there will be some sense of racism until everybody looks exactly the same” he begins. “Which we will never…” He goes on to speak on the the role plays in racism and the importance of addressing the topic in a public forum like a television show.  In an up-coming episode Dekker’s cousin is accused of raping a woman and he must defend him. In taking the case he finds out that his aunt was raped by The Klan in the 1960s. “The rapes that occurred in the civil rights activist era against young African-American women, who through no fault of their own [were] gang raped by white men and then discredited by calling them prostitutes, people got away with that for years and it’s contributed to our lack of faith in our judicial system today. It will be hundreds of years before the ugly markers of those actions are done away with.” LAW & ORDER: LOS ANGELES returns next Monday, April 11th RELATED POSTS: Terrence Howard’s Wife Files For Divorce Top 10 Black Sports Movies Of All Time Get A Sneak Peek At Jennifer Hudson & Terrence Howard In “Winnie” [VIDEO]

Terrence Howard On Racism And The Judicial System [VIDEO]

Terrence Howard On Racism And The Judicial System [VIDEO]

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Actor Terrence Howard , who is currently playing District Attorney Joe Dekker on Law & Order: SVU ,  took a break from taping to offer his thoughts on racism and the judicial system. “As long as there are humans on the planet there will be some sense of racism until everybody looks exactly the same” he begins. “Which we will never…” He goes on to speak on the the role plays in racism and the importance of addressing the topic in a public forum like a television show.  In an up-coming episode Dekker’s cousin is accused of raping a woman and he must defend him. In taking the case he finds out that his aunt was raped by The Klan in the 1960s. “The rapes that occurred in the civil rights activist era against young African-American women, who through no fault of their own [were] gang raped by white men and then discredited by calling them prostitutes, people got away with that for years and it’s contributed to our lack of faith in our judicial system today. It will be hundreds of years before the ugly markers of those actions are done away with.” LAW & ORDER: LOS ANGELES returns next Monday, April 11th RELATED POSTS: Terrence Howard’s Wife Files For Divorce Top 10 Black Sports Movies Of All Time Get A Sneak Peek At Jennifer Hudson & Terrence Howard In “Winnie” [VIDEO]

Terrence Howard On Racism And The Judicial System [VIDEO]

Judge Who Ruled Health Care Reform Unconstitutional Owns Piece of GOP Consulting Firm [Conflicts]

Henry E. Hudson, the federal judge in Virginia who just ruled health care reform unconstitutional, owns between $15,000 and $50,000 in a GOP political consulting firm that worked against health care reform . You don’t say! More

CNN’s Velshi: Ban Catholic Churches From Oklahoma City Because of McVeigh?

CNN’s Ali Velshi engaged in moral relativism on Wednesday’s Newsroom as he editorialized on the controversial planned mosque near Ground Zero. Velshi worried about the precedent that might be set if a government “assisted” in moving its site: ” Timothy McVeigh was raised Catholic. Do we then entertain petitions of moving Catholic churches away from the Oklahoma bombing site? ” The anchor, a Canadian Shia Muslim of the minority Ismaili sect , closed out the 2 pm Eastern hour of Newsroom with his regular “XYZ” commentary, which he devoted to the controversy. Velshi began by stating that it was “an emotional topic, and one I wasn’t sure I should bring up in these last few minutes.” He then launched into a short explanation of the 1st Amendment’s protection of religious liberty, echoing, in a way, his colleague Roland Martin’s constitutional defense of the mosque on Tuesday night : VELSHI: Did you know that, as an American citizen, you have two freedoms granted by the First Amendment of the Constitution, when it comes to religion? The first part is known as the Establishment Clause. The Establishment Clause essentially says the government can’t pass laws that will establish an official religion. This is commonly interpreted as the separation of church and state. The second one is the Free Exercise Clause, and it prevents the government from interfering with or controlling a person’s practice of his or her religion. Religious freedom is an absolute right in this country, and it includes the right to practice any religion, or no religion at all, for all Americans. After briefly touching on how many of the early American colonists came to North America for religious freedom, the CNN anchor moved on to his morally relativistic argument: VELSHI: Suppose our government leaders or New York state leaders do step in, in some capacity, whether official or non-official, and assist in moving the mosque elsewhere. Then what? What kind of precedent does that set? Timothy McVeigh was raised Catholic. Do we then entertain petitions of moving Catholic churches away from the Oklahoma bombing site? I’m sure you’re thinking it sounds ridiculous, but ask yourself, is it ridiculous because Catholicism is familiar to you, or, is your argument that what he did was different, or is your argument that Timothy McVeigh didn’t kill in the name in Allah? Actually, the comparison is ridiculous, because, as his own network acknowledged the morning after McVeigh’s execution , that the murderer was ” baptized in the Catholic Church as a boy, but had stopped practicing and recently described himself as agnostic .” Moreover, as the terrorist himself admitted , he bombed the Oklahoma City federal building as a ” retaliatory strike; a counter attack, for the cumulative raids (and subsequent violence and damage) that federal agents had participated in over the preceding years ( including, but not limited to, Waco ).” McVeigh did not carry out the attack in the name of the Christian God or in the name of the Catholic Church. On the other hand, Al Qaeda issued a fatwa in 1998 , which declared that killing “Americans and their allies…is an individual duty for every Muslim who can do it in any country in which it is possible to do it… in accordance with the words of Almighty God .” Velshi concluded his commentary by stating that it didn’t matter whether Americans were for or against the planned mosque: ” If you’re an American citizen and choose to remain in this country, then whether you are against or you are for the Islamic center and mosque should be irrelevant. I say ‘should be,’ in an ideal world, because, as an American citizen- well, we should all be for the Constitution that so many have fought, lived, and died for , including the 2,976 souls who died on September 11th at Ground Zero, at the Pentagon, and in a field in western Pennsylvania.” The anchor wasn’t the first CNN personality to bring in the Catholic Church into the mosque controversy. A week earlier, Rick Sanchez bizarrely wondered whether nvestigating the funding behind the planned mosque near Ground Zero would lead to investigations into Catholic and/or Mormon funding: ” If you start going into who is giving money…you’ve got to go to Rome and start asking where the money is going into Rome….and you have to go the Mormons and ask…what are they doing with their money? ” The full transcript of Ali Velshi commentary from Wednesday’s Newsroom: VELSHI: Time now for the ‘XYZ’ of it. It’s a controversial topic: the Islamic center and mosque near Ground Zero. It’s an emotional topic, and one I wasn’t sure I should bring up in these last few minutes with you, but you’ve talked about it with me on Facebook and Twitter, so here goes. Did you know that, as an American citizen, you have two freedoms granted by the First Amendment of the Constitution, when it comes to religion? The first part is known as the Establishment Clause. The Establishment Clause essentially says the government can’t pass laws that will establish an official religion. This is commonly interpreted as the separation of church and state. The second one is the Free Exercise Clause, and it prevents the government from interfering with or controlling a person’s practice of his or her religion. Religious freedom is an absolute right in this country, and it includes the right to practice any religion, or no religion at all, for all Americans. The founders of this country crossed the ocean in the early 1600s, seeking freedom of religion from an oppressive church and government. I don’t know how the situation in downtown New York will play out, but I know these are potentially dangerous times for our freedoms. Suppose our government leaders or New York state leaders do step in, in some capacity, whether official or non-official, and assist in moving the mosque elsewhere. Then what? What kind of precedent does that set? Timothy McVeigh was raised Catholic. Do we then entertain petitions of moving Catholic churches away from the Oklahoma bombing site? I’m sure you’re thinking it sounds ridiculous, but ask yourself, is it ridiculous because Catholicism is familiar to you, or, is your argument that what he did was different, or is your argument that Timothy McVeigh didn’t kill in the name in Allah? For every religion under the heavens, there will always be extremists. The key is to understand that the extremist do not make up the masses. Linda Lee on Facebook wrote to me today, ‘Islam and terrorism are not synonymous. By fighting for the mosque [sic] for those reasons, you are supporting bin Laden’s idea that the West is at war with Islam. Please don’t be the cause of what you are so desperately trying to fight,’ end quote. If you’re an American citizen and choose to remain in this country, then whether you are against or you are for the Islamic center and mosque should be irrelevant. I say ‘should be,’ in an ideal world, because, as an American citizen- well, we should all be for the Constitution that so many have fought, lived, and died for, including the 2,976 souls who died on September 11th at Ground Zero, at the Pentagon, and in a field in western Pennsylvania. That’s my ‘XYZ.’

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CNN’s Velshi: Ban Catholic Churches From Oklahoma City Because of McVeigh?

CBS ‘Evening News’ Bemoans Lack of Diversity in FDNY

On Monday’s CBS Evening News, anchor Katie Couric praised the heroism of the New York City Fire Department but fretted: “…a federal judge says something is missing in their ranks: Diversity.” Correspondent Jim Axelrod began a report on the topic by noting: “Fire Captain Paul Washington has a big problem with his department.” Washington declared the FDNY to be “all-white, lily white.” Axelrod described how “Eight years ago, the fire department was 92 percent white and only 2.8 percent black, in a city that was 24 percent black. A disparity that remains largely unchanged.” A sound bite was featured from Columbia Law School Professor Suzanne Goldberg, who like Couric, noted the department’s heroism, but went on to describe the lack of diversity as a “singular embarrassment.” Touting how “a federal judge agreed” with Goldberg, Axelrod explained: “…the hiring test to become one of New York’s bravest was not just discriminatory, but illegal. [The judge] ordered the city to fix it.” As Axelrod mentioned the judge’s ruling, a few sample questions from the supposedly discriminatory test appeared on screen. One set of questions asked applicants to respond to a particular firefighting scenario: “What would be the most direct entrance for firefighters to take to save the children?…The probable cause of the fire was?…How many ways can firefighters enter the house?” Axelrod never cited any specific criticisms of the entrance exam. Even so, a clip was played of Washington claiming: “Blacks don’t fare as well as whites on this test, probably due to the disparity in education.” Axelrod added: “Now the judge says the city has been dragging its feet and tightened the screws, appointing a special master to ensure New York does what big cities like Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Boston, and Miami did long ago when they were sued.” Acknowledging opposition to the judge’s ruling, Axelrod mentioned: “FDNY Deputy Chief Paul Mannix doesn’t think New York needs to follow their example.” In an exchange with Mannix, Axelrod pressed: “Look at Los Angeles. Look at Philadelphia. Look at Boston.” Mannix replied: “Quotas. Quotas. Quotas.” Axelrod insisted: “Whatever your method, they corrected racial imbalance.” Mannix responded: “By using quotas, and we are against quotas.” Axelrod continued: “Mannix believes the current FDNY test focuses too much on producing a racially diverse department and not enough on identifying the strongest candidates regardless of race.” Mannix explained: “You’re asking me to make my job more dangerous to – to satisfy a social engineering experiment.” Axelrod’s report concluded with another sound bite from Goldberg: “I find it shocking that the fire department looks like it does today. And the city is fighting the decision and threatening appeal rather than going ahead and giving the city the fire department that it deserves.” A final sound bite of Washington was also played: “I want to see black New Yorkers share in this job, because, as I say, it’s not a good job, it’s a great job.” Axelrod proclaimed: “The only thing Paul Washington wants to change about this great job is the way New York City decides who gets it.” Here is a full transcript of the segment: 6:44PM KATIE COURIC: The fire department here in New York City is one of the most respected in the world and second only to Tokyo in size. The FDNY has well over 11,000 firefighters and officers, and their heroism on 9/11 and on many other occasions is legendary. But as Jim Axelrod reports, a federal judge says something is missing in their ranks: Diversity. JIM AXELROD: New York City Fire Captain Paul Washington has a big problem with his department. PAUL WASHINGTON: This fire department has been all-white, lily white, for almost 150 years now. And I mean, it has to end. AXELROD: Eight years ago, the fire department was 92 percent white and only 2.8 percent black, in a city that was 24 percent black. A disparity that remains largely unchanged. A group of African-American firefighters sued. SUZANNE GOLDBERG [COLUMBIA LAW SCHOOL]: The fire department in New York on the one hand is tremendously heroic, and the whole world knows about its heroism. And on the other hand, we have this kind of singular embarrassment. AXELROD: Last January, a federal judge agreed, ruling the hiring test to become one of New York’s bravest was not just discriminatory, but illegal. He ordered the city to fix it. WASHINGTON: Blacks don’t fare as well as whites on this test, probably due to the disparity in education. AXELROD: Now the judge says the city has been dragging its feet and tightened the screws, appointing a special master to ensure New York does what big cities like Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Boston, and Miami did long ago when they were sued. They now have much greater diversity, but FDNY Deputy Chief Paul Mannix doesn’t think New York needs to follow their example. Look at Los Angeles. Look at Philadelphia. Look at Boston. PAUL MANNIX: Quotas. Quotas. Quotas. AXELROD: Whatever your method, they corrected racial imbalance. MANNIX: By using quotas, and we are against quotas. AXELROD: Miami, in particular, expanded recruitment by targeting young minorities still in public schools with high school EMT training classes. Today they have firefighters like Maurice Kemp to show for it. That’s Chief Maurice Kemp, the department’s first African-American in charge. MAURICE KEMP: Like all other major city departments, it doesn’t come without a struggle. I mean, we have to be conscious of the fact that we need to be diverse. AXELROD: Mannix believes the current FDNY test focuses too much on producing a racially diverse department and not enough on identifying the strongest candidates regardless of race. MANNIX: You’re asking me to make my job more dangerous to – to satisfy a social engineering experiment. AXELROD: Mannix doesn’t officially speak for the city, but both the fire department and the mayor declined our request for an interview. In a statement, the city said that it disagrees with the court’s findings that these tests were discriminatory and intends to appeal. The city says next time it hires, the incoming class will be one-third minority. But no new firefighters have been hired in the last two years and no one knows when the city will hire again. GOLDBERG: I find it shocking that the fire department looks like it does today. And the city is fighting the decision and threatening appeal rather than going ahead and giving the city the fire department that it deserves. WASHINGTON: I want to see black New Yorkers share in this job, because, as I say, it’s not a good job, it’s a great job. AXELROD: The only thing Paul Washington wants to change about this great job is the way New York City decides who gets it. Jim Axelrod, CBS News, New York.

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CBS ‘Evening News’ Bemoans Lack of Diversity in FDNY

ARIZONA 1070 DOES NOT GO OVER WELL WITH YOUNG PHOENIX!

racism is on an uprise in arizona and instead of just talking about it i have decided to start art instalations really raising the question – can you tell an illegal immegrant when u see one …REALLY? ARIZONA NEEDS HELP TO ABOLISH THIS LAW!!! RACISM IS TOXIC! added by: estee_arie

May Day Madness: Reportedly Over a Million Take the Immigration Battle to the Streets [Worst Law Ever]

Arizona may have set a record for the most immediately unpopular law ever. The measure to force cops to ask brown-looking people for immigration papers was condemned by Obama. Now people are taking to the streets to show their displeasure. More

Sometimes Joe Biden frustrates me, but other times I just love the guy. This is one of those times.

I could not have said it better myself Mr. Vice President.

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Sometimes Joe Biden frustrates me, but other times I just love the guy. This is one of those times.

Alex Jones – Joseph Stack Austin Plane Crash

It seems that the Joseph Stack plane crash into the IRS building could have in fact been a “staged” event to blame the Truth movement for “dangerous” domestic “terrorists”. Alex Jones does a good job explaining why this could be a setup. Join The Illuminati (Msg Me). SUBSCRIBE TO MY CHANNEL.

http://www.youtube.com/v/-NYZM6lfx3I?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

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Alex Jones – Joseph Stack Austin Plane Crash