Tag Archives: mayor

New Orleans: Systemic Police Brutality Exposed

Bio Jordan Flaherty is a New Orleans-based journalist and works with the Louisiana Justice Institute. He was the first writer to bring the story of the Jena Six to a national audience, and his award-winning reporting from the Gulf Coast has been featured in a range of outlets including the New York Times, Mother Jones, and Argentina's Clarin newspaper. Jordan just published released his new book called “FLOODLINES: Community and Resistance from Katrina to the Jena Six”. t's hard to believe all this took place in america, not mexico or venezuela… Transcript PAUL JAY, SENIOR EDITOR, TRNN: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Paul Jay. And now joining us again from our studio in Washington is Jordan Flaherty. He's the author of the book Floodlines: Community and Resistance from Katrina to the Jena Six. Thanks for joining us again, Jordan. JORDAN FLAHERTY, AUTHOR AND JOURNALIST: Thank you, Paul. It's a pleasure. JAY: So one of the things that people have talked about after Katrina is the role of the police and the Armed Forces particularly. But a lot has come to light about the role of the New Orleans police and abuses of power. Tell us a bit about what people are looking at. But also, was this an anomaly, where, you know, police went nuts in the course of a storm? Or was this kind of normal New Orleans police behavior that is just getting looked at because of the storm? FLAHERTY: The first thing to understand, Paul, is in those first days after the storm, suddenly the media coverage shifted from sympathy to the people trapped on rooftops, the victims of this disaster, to portraying people as criminals, as looters, as armed gangs roving the streets, shooting at police helicopters, raping infants. We later found out those stories were false. But they were propagated by the chief of police, who said that infants were being raped in this Superdome; by the mayor, who said that there was lawlessness on the street, that he declared martial law, even though no such thing exists under Louisiana law. The governor of the state of Louisiana—Kathleen Blanco at the time—said, I'm sending in the National Guard troops; they're locked and loaded, they've been trained to shoot to kill, and I expect they will. JAY: Now, hang on for a sec. You're saying there were no incidents? Or some incidents were exaggerated to look like it was a bigger phenomenon than it was? FLAHERTY: I'm saying those incidents that were specifically talked about that were incredibly outrageous, like infants being raped in mass numbers in the Superdome—there was no raping of infants that anyone's documented that happened in the Superdome. Shooting at rescue helicopters—again, no one's documented where that happened, although that was widely talked about at the time. Another incident that was talked about, the second-in-charge of the police department said he heard officers radioing in saying they needed more ammo, they were running out of ammo, like they were in a wartime situation. Again, this call never actually happened. So these major incidents that were talked about never happened. There were certainly people, both police officers and regular civilians, that were taking goods out of stores, mostly food and water to feed people in their community. But the massive, violent outbreak that was talked about in the news that was used to demonize people, that actually didn't happen. JAY: So why do people think the police were doing this? I mean, what's in it for them to exaggerate the issue? FLAHERTY: I think it was a time of chaos. It's hard to imagine, if you weren't in the city, what it was like there, but we never imagined this entire city would be underwater. Everything was unimaginable. Everything seemed like we were in a fantasy world. And so many of the things that actually did happen seemed like they couldn't possibly have happened. For example, one thing that really did happen is people were trying to cross out of the city over the Crescent City Bridge, and they were met by armed police from the suburb of Gretna that didn't want people of New Orleans in their city, and they shot at the people from New Orleans and forced them to turn back. This seemed like fiction when we first heard about it. Many of the police killings that happened in that period after Katrina seemed like fiction. It was hard to believe any of this. It was a time of almost mass hysteria. added by: treewolf39

Today Co-Hosts Kathie Lee Gifford and Hoda Kotb Endorse New Bloomberg Smoking Ban

In the fourth hour of Thursday’s Today show NBC’s Kathie Lee Gifford and Hoda Kotb took a strong stance against the right to smoke, pretty much everywhere, as both endorsed Mayor Mike Bloomberg’s proposed ban that goes several steps further than just restaurants. During the opening chat session of the hour, Kotbe announced: “So some good news in New York City…Mayor Bloomberg is considering banning smoking in all places like parks, beaches and Times Square.” Gifford also praised the move declaring that ” Second-hand smoke is a bigger killer than asbestos or a lot of other things” but later seemed to contradict herself as she proclaimed: “I’m all for personal rights. I’m becoming more and more of a libertarian the older I get.” The following is the full exchange as it was aired on the September 16 Today show: HODA KOTB: So some good news in New York City if you are against people smoking in public. Mayor Bloomberg is considering banning smoking in all places like parks, beaches and Times Square. [On screen headline: “Butt Out, NYC Mayor Proposes Ban On Smoking At Parks, Beaches”] KATHIE LEE GIFFORD: Outside of public buildings, everywhere? Everywhere? All public places? KOTB: That’s, I’m, I have to say I’m kind of for that. GIFFORD: Well remember the outcry when he first banned it in restaurants? Everybody said, “Nobody is gonna, it’s gonna hurt everybody. Nobody’s gonna go to restaurants any more.” KOTB: Right. GIFFORD: Really? People get hungry. KOTB: Yeah. They still go. GIFFORD: But, but they smoke outside. You know it’s so funny that, that would be announced today. Because yesterday I left our building and some of our best friends, around here, do smoke. And they’ve been battling with it! KOTB: Sure. GIFFORD: They would really love to be able to quit but they can’t so far. KOTB: Yeah. GIFFORD: As I walked out, I mean it was into, and it was a beautiful day yesterday- KOTB: Gorgeous. GIFFORD: -into this, this like, this- KOTB: Cloud. GIFFORD: More than that. Yeah, like a heavy duty- KOTB: Cloud. GIFFORD: And, and, and my, my hair stunk the whole way home. KOTB: Yeah, yeah. GIFFORD: I was gasping for breath because I’m, you know- KOTB: Asthmatic. GIFFORD: -I’m highly allergic to it. So it’s, it’s one thing to do it to yourself, and I’m sorry anybody is addicted because it’s, a terrible, terrible addiction. But second-hand smoke is a bigger killer than asbestos or a lot of other things as well. KOTB: Right and I do, there are some states that do not ban it in restaurants. I think there are 26 that do, around the country. So a lot of them still don’t. GIFFORD: Yeah. KOTB: I think a lot of people are starting to get on the bandwagon. But there is nothing worse than sitting on the beach, like enjoying the- GIFFORD: The fresh air! KOTB: And then there comes this waft of smoke and literally, and you can’t really move away. Because you move and the wind changes or you go somewhere, like you’re gonna be in it, no matter what. GIFFORD: Yeah. KOTB: But I’ll bet you this is gonna have, there will be a lot of outcry over this. GIFFORD: There will be outcry, there will be. Maybe it’ll help some people give it up better. You know they won’t have any option- KOTB: Right. GIFFORD: But the, the other thing is you know, the thing is about a personal right. I’m all for personal rights. I’m becoming more and more of a libertarian the older I get. The more they take away our rights, the more I’m saying, excuse me, wait a minute! But I don’t think any right that we have, should infringe on the rights of other people. KOTB: Right. GIFFORD: And that’s the basic problem with the, with the smoking. KOTB: I agree with that. I agree with that. GIFFORD: Okay.

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Today Co-Hosts Kathie Lee Gifford and Hoda Kotb Endorse New Bloomberg Smoking Ban

Entire Police Force Resigns in Mexican Town

In the drug-plagued western state of Michoacan, meanwhile, the entire 45-man police force resigned in the town of Purepero on Tuesday, saying their jobs were too dangerous, Mayor Luis Alberto Tellez Pulido said. Soldiers and state police temporarily took over patrolling duties in the town of 25,000. It was the second town in Michoacan to face such a mass resignation in less than a year. In December, all the town officials in Tancitaro, Michoacan, resigned, also claiming their jobs were too dangerous. A month later, a new town government took over and fired the entire police force, suspecting its officers were in league with drug gangs. Michoacan is considered the home territory of the violent La Familia drug cartel, which has mounted several ambush-style attacks on police. http://www.brandonsun.com/world/breaking-news/police-force-resigns-in-mexican-to… http://sportimes.com.mx/portal/images/stories/redesdepoder/redes15eptiembre/renu… added by: ibrake4rappers13

Scarborough: Right-Wing Bloggers Criticizing Mika For Cutting Off Pastor Jones Are ‘Crazy People’

Crazy? I’ll give you crazy . . . Last Friday Mika Brzezinski and Morning Joe engaged in some strange and possibly unprecedented TV “journalism.”  They invited Terry Jones—the potentially Koran-burning pastor—on the show via live feed, gave former Newsweek editor Jon Meachem the chance to lecture him about Christianity and implore him not to proceed with his plan . . . then summarily cut the feed without giving Jones the chance to say word one in response. “We don’t really need to hear anything else” declared Mika , as she shut down the pastor’s microphone. A number of bloggers, including NB’s own Matt Hadro and me , noted and criticized Mika’s bizarre move.  But there was Joe Scarborough on the show today, mockingly writing off Mika’s critics as “crazy people.” Joe’s contemptuous comment came in response to guest Joe Conason’s observation that, judging by the response in the blogosphere, NYC Mayor Mike Bloomberg’s muscular support of the Ground Zero Mosque has probably put paid to any possible presidential ambitions on his part. JOE CONASON: [Bloomberg] made what I think was a highly-praiseworthy decision to sacrifice the idea of running nationally when he took such a strong stand. If you read what people are saying about him in the blogosphere — JOE SCARBOROUGH: Who cares?  Who reads that crap? CONASON: I do.  It’s my job. SCARBOROUGH: You know what? There’s going to be anger. Of course we all read blogs, too.  There are people outraged, I mean, there are people outraged on the right that Mika didn’t give time to that preacher that wants to burn Korans and get American troops killed overseas.  So there’re crazy people on both sides. Instead of school-yard name-calling, it would have been interesting to hear Scarborough’s serious defense—if one he has—of inviting a guest on with knowledge aforethought that he was going to be lectured and not accorded an opportunity to respond.  

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Scarborough: Right-Wing Bloggers Criticizing Mika For Cutting Off Pastor Jones Are ‘Crazy People’

Snooki Busted For Texting While Driving

Newark mayor calls ‘Jersey Shore’ star out after she tweets while stuck in traffic. By Gil Kaufman Snooki Photo: Jerritt Clark/ Getty Images After making a plea deal to avoid a disorderly conduct charge and jail time on Wednesday (September 8), “Jersey Shore” star Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi vowed to turn over a new leaf. The pint-sized “Shore” party starter took offense at comparisons to troubled actress Lindsay Lohan after her appearance in a Seaside Heights, New Jersey courtroom, and Snickers’ lawyer promised that his client was done with running afoul of the law. Well, that was fast. Snooks, 22, hasn’t been arrested, but she did break one of the Garden State’s laws — and doing so landed her a virtual smackdown from telegenic Newark mayor Cory Booker. “Ugh stuck in newark traffic is no fun,” Snooki tweeted just hours after leaving the court room on Wednesday. Less than half an hour later, a still-exasperated Snooki added , “Omg why I got a stick shift I will never know. Stop and go traffic I’m killen myself here :(.” But then, according to the Huffington Post , Newark boss Booker caught wind of the tweets and reminded the big-haired reality star that, technically, she was breaking the law. New Jersey passed a text messaging while driving ban in 2008. The first offense carries a $100 fine, which can be levied even if the driver hasn’t been pulled over for another traffic infraction. “Snooki! I’m the mayor where R U so I can give u a ticket 4 texting & driving we needs revenue!” he tweeted . Booker had some help from a follower, who wrote, “Cory! Hasn’t she heard of Oprah’s No Phone Zone pledge?” a reference to TV titan Oprah Winfrey ‘s drive to get her fans to agree not to text while driving to increase safety on the roads. “Definitely going 2 tell @Oprah on her. @sn00ki needs an intervention,” Booker replied . Though Snooki didn’t respond to the Mayor’s threat, Booker did get some props from United States Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood, who tweeted , “Thanks for spreading the word about the dangers of texting while driving @Corybooker!” Snooki and her “Jersey Shore” castmates will present a Moonman at Sunday’s MTV Video Music Awards . Related Photos Jersey Shore (Season 2) | Snooki

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Snooki Busted For Texting While Driving

Mexico Mayor Has Been Gunned Down Inside His Own Office

Mexican mayor gunned down inside own office By the CNN Wire Staff September 8, 2010 9:29 p.m. EDT Mexican President Felipe Calderon condemns the “criminal and cowardly” killing. STORY HIGHLIGHTS * The mayor of El Naranjo was killed in his office * Four gunmen arrived at the city hall * Two stayed outside and two entered to shoot the mayor, authorities say (CNN) — The mayor of El Naranjo, Mexico, in the central state of San Luis Potosi was gunned down and killed inside his office Wednesday, officials said. Witnesses say that four armed and hooded men stepped out of a white truck at city hall, the San Luis Potosi government said in a statement. Two of the men posted themselves outside, and two went inside and to the top floor of the building, where they entered the mayor's office and shot him, the statement said. The attack happened in broad daylight, at about 1:30 p.m. (2:30 p.m. ET), and was brazen even by the standards of Mexico's violent drug cartel wars. At least seven mayors in various Mexican states have been assassinated in 2010. Mexican President Felipe Calderon condemned the “criminal and cowardly” killing of the mayor. “The federal government reiterates that it will continue working for the security of the citizens, with all the available resources of the state,” Calderon said. Alexander Lopez Garcia assumed office in October of last year as a candidate for an alliance between the Revolutionary Institutional Party (PRI), and the Ecologist Green Party. CNN's Mariano Castillo and Nick Valencia contributed to this report. added by: EthicalVegan

Slate: Free Exercise of Religion? No, Thanks. | The Taming and Domestication of Religious Faith Is One of the Unceasing Chores of Civilization

Free Exercise of Religion? No, Thanks.The taming and domestication of religious faith is one of the unceasing chores of civilization. By Christopher Hitchens Posted Monday, Sept. 6, 2010, at 11:39 AM ET A recent blizzard of liberal columns has framed the debate over American Islam as if it were no more than the most recent stage in the glorious history of our religious tolerance. This phrasing of the question has the (presumably intentional) effect of marginalizing doubts and of lumping any doubters with the anti-Catholic Know-Nothings, the anti-Semites, and other bigots and shellbacks. So I pause to take part in a thought experiment, and to ask myself: Am I in favor of the untrammeled “free exercise of religion”? No, I am not. Take an example close at hand, the absurdly named Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. More usually known as the Mormon church, it can boast Glenn Beck as one of its recruits. He has recently won much cheap publicity for scheduling a rally on the anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.'s March on Washington. But on the day on which the original rally occurred in 1963, the Mormon church had not yet gotten around to recognizing black people as fully human or as eligible for full membership. (Its leadership subsequently underwent a “revelation” allowing a change on this point, but not until after the passage of the Civil Rights Act.) This opportunism closely shadowed an earlier adjustment of Mormon dogma, abandoning its historic and violent attachment to polygamy. Without that doctrinal change, the state of Utah was firmly told that it could not be part of the Union. More recently, Gov. Mitt Romney had to assure voters that he did not regard the prophet, or head of the Mormon church, as having ultimate moral and spiritual authority on all matters. Nothing, he swore, could override the U.S. Constitution. Thus, to the extent that we view latter-day saints as acceptable, and agree to overlook their other quaint and weird beliefs, it is to the extent that we have decidedly limited them in the free exercise of their religion. One could cite some other examples, such as those Christian sects that disapprove of the practice of medicine. Their adult members are generally allowed to die while uttering religious incantations and waving away the physician, but, in many states, if they apply this faith to their children—a crucial element in the “free exercise” of religion—they can be taken straight to court. Not only that, they can find themselves subject to general disapproval and condemnation. Advertisement It was probably the latter consideration that helped impel the majority of American Orthodox Jews to give up the practice of metzitzah b'peh, a radical form of male circumcision that is topped off, if you will forgive the expression, by the sucking of the infant's penis by the rabbi or mohel so as to remove any remaining blood or debris. A few tiny sects still cling to this disgusting ritual, which in New York a few years ago led to a small but deadly outbreak of herpes among recently circumcised babies. On that occasion, despite calls for a ban on the practice from many Jewish doctors, the vastly overrated Mayor Michael Bloomberg chose an election year to say that such “free exercise” should not be interfered with. We talk now as if it was ridiculous ever to suspect Roman Catholics of anything but the highest motives, yet by the time John F. Kennedy was breaking the unspoken taboo on the election of a Catholic as president, the Vatican had just begun to consider making public atonement for centuries of Jew-hatred and a more recent sympathy for fascism. Even today, many lay Catholics are appalled at the Vatican's protection of men who are sought for questioning in one of the gravest of all crimes: the organized rape of children. It is generally agreed that the church's behavior and autonomy need to be modified to take account both of American law and American moral outrage. So much for the naive invocation of “free exercise.” One could easily go on. The Church of Scientology, the Unification Church of Sun Myung Moon, and the Ku Klux Klan are all faith-based organizations and are all entitled to the protections of the First Amendment. But they are also all subject to a complex of statutes governing tax-exemption, fraud, racism, and violence, to the point where “free exercise” in the third case has—by means of federal law enforcement and stern public disapproval—been reduced to a vestige of its former self. Now to Islam. It is, first, a religion that makes very large claims for itself, purporting to be the last and final word of God and expressing an ambition to become the world's only religion. Some of its adherents follow or advocate the practice of plural marriage, forced marriage, female circumcision, compulsory veiling of women, and censorship of non-Muslim magazines and media. Islam's teachings generally exhibit suspicion of the very idea of church-state separation. Other teachings, depending on context, can be held to exhibit a very strong dislike of other religions, as well as of heretical forms of Islam. Muslims in America, including members of the armed forces, have already been found willing to respond to orders issued by foreign terrorist organizations. Most disturbingly, no authority within the faith appears to have the power to rule decisively that such practices, or such teachings, or such actions, are definitely and utterly in conflict with the precepts of the religion itself. Reactions from even “moderate” Muslims to criticism are not uniformly reassuring. “Some of what people are saying in this mosque controversy is very similar to what German media was saying about Jews in the 1920s and 1930s,” Imam Abdullah Antepli, Muslim chaplain at Duke University, told the New York Times. Yes, we all recall the Jewish suicide bombers of that period, as we recall the Jewish yells for holy war, the Jewish demands for the veiling of women and the stoning of homosexuals, and the Jewish burning of newspapers that published cartoons they did not like. What is needed from the supporters of this very confident faith is more self-criticism and less self-pity and self-righteousness. Those who wish that there would be no mosques in America have already lost the argument: Globalization, no less than the promise of American liberty, mandates that the United States will have a Muslim population of some size. The only question, then, is what kind, or rather kinds, of Islam it will follow. There's an excellent chance of a healthy pluralist outcome, but it's very unlikely that this can happen unless, as with their predecessors on these shores, Muslims are compelled to abandon certain presumptions that are exclusive to themselves. The taming and domestication of religion is one of the unceasing chores of civilization. Those who pretend that we can skip this stage in the present case are deluding themselves and asking for trouble not just in the future but in the immediate present. added by: EthicalVegan

The Closer Season 6 Episode 9 – Last Woman Standing

Watch The Closer S6E9: Last Woman Standing Brenda’s will now handle the case of an actress who have been brutally murdered, where her lead is the online dating service that the said actress was in to. With this, she also is getting ready for the interview with the mayor regarding the job as the chief of police that she is still having second thoughts about. The new installment of The Closer which is entitled ” War Zone ” is the detective hit TV show’s 9th episode of the

Worst Candidate Interview Ever

Well, this is awkward and quite embarrassing. Chris Young is running as a Democrat for the mayor-ship of Providence, R.I. I'm willing to bet the local TV station didn't quite expect “Coffee with the Candidates” to go this poorly. added by: punman

Cross Pollinating Ideas- NYC Hires New Sustainability Director from Portland

David Bragdon is headed to NYC photo: Daily Journal of Commerce Last week, Mayor Bloomberg announced that David Bragdon will take over as NYC’s new Director of the Mayor’s Office of Long-Term Planning & Sustainability, the office responsible for the creation and implementation of PlaNYC , the City’s twenty year vision for a more sustainable, more populated New York City. Bragdon was most recently the president of the

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Cross Pollinating Ideas- NYC Hires New Sustainability Director from Portland