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Democrats and Double Standards at the NYT: ‘Respected Voice’ Robert Byrd vs. ‘Foe of Integration’ Strom Thurmond

The New York Times marked the death early Monday morning of veteran Democratic Sen. Robert Byrd of West Virginia, who served a record 51 years in the U.S. Senate, with an online obituary by former Times reporter Adam Clymer. While acknowledging Byrd’s Klan past and his pork-barrel prodigiousness, Clymer’s lead also emphasized Byrd’s proud fight as the keeper of Congressional prerogatives. The obituary headline was hagiographic: ” Robert Byrd, Respected Voice of the Senate, Dies at 92 .” While Clymer’s opening statement on Byrd wasn’t exactly laudatory, it did not match the paper’s hostile treatment of the passing of two veteran Republican senators accused of racial prejudice: Sen. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina and Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina. Clymer’s lead paragraph: Robert C. Byrd, who used his record tenure as a United States senator to fight for the primacy of the legislative branch of government and to build a modern West Virginia with vast amounts of federal money, died at about 3 a.m. Monday, his office said. He was 92. The bulk of Clymer’s obituary for Byrd may have been written some time ago, as is customary. Clymer retired from the Times in 2003, after a career of bashing President Bush and prominent conservatives , while defending old-guard Democrats like Sen. Ted Kennedy. Clymer acknowledged what he called Byrd’s changing perspective, moving from conservative to liberal over the years, and in the 16th paragraph brought up Byrd’s membership in the Ku Klux Klan in the 1940s and his filibuster of the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Mr. Byrd’s perspective on the world changed over the years. He filibustered against the 1964 Civil Rights Act and supported the Vietnam War only to come to back civil rights measures and criticize the Iraq war. Rating his voting record in 1964, Americans for Democratic Action, the liberal lobbying group, found that his views and the organization’s were aligned only 16 percent of the time. In 2005, he got an A.D.A. rating of 95. Mr. Byrd’s political life could be traced to his early involvement with the Ku Klux Klan, an association that almost thwarted his career and clouded it intermittently for years afterward. …. Mr. Byrd insisted that his klavern had never conducted white-supremacist marches or engaged in racial violence. He said in his autobiography that he had joined the Klan because he shared its anti-Communist creed and wanted to be associated with the leading people in his part of West Virginia. He conceded, however, that he also “reflected the fears and prejudices” of the time. After noting criticism from watchdog groups over Byrd’s reputation as the “king of pork,” Clymer followed up: West Virginians were grateful for the help. Senator John D. Rockefeller IV, Democrat of West Virginia and the state’s junior senator since 1985, said Mr. Byrd had meant “everything, everything” to the state. Mr. Byrd knew, he said, that “before you can make life better, you have to have a road to get in there, and you have to have a sewerage system and all those things, and he has done that for most of the state.” Bob Wise, a Democrat who was West Virginia’s governor from 2001 to 2005, once said that what Mr. Byrd had done for education — “the emphasis on reading and literacy” — mattered even more than roads. And Clymer’s dubious observation that Byrd “was never a particularly partisan Democrat” would surprise many familiar with Byrd’s non-stop excoriation of Bush over the Iraq War. Byrd authored a 2004 book titled “Losing America: Confronting a Reckless and Arrogant Presidency.” Clymer mentions the book but leaves off the provocative subtitle, simply calling it “Losing America.” He was never a particularly partisan Democrat . President Richard M. Nixon briefly considered him for a Supreme Court appointment. Mr. Dole recalled an occasion when Mr. Byrd gave him advice on a difficult parliamentary question; the help enabled Mr. Dole to overcome Mr. Byrd on a particular bill. In contrast is the Times’s treatment of veteran Republican Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina, who died on Independence Day 2008. The headline: ” Jesse Helms, Unyielding Beacon of Conservatism, Is Dead at 86 .” Steven Holmes’s obituary for Helms began: Jesse Helms, the former North Carolina senator whose courtly manner and mossy drawl barely masked a hard-edged conservatism that opposed civil rights, gay rights, foreign aid and modern art, died early Friday. He was 86. Clymer’s Byrd obituary didn’t mention that Byrd, like Helms, voted on a measure to bar the National Endowment for the Arts of funding “obscene” or “indecent” work. Clymer also wrote the obituary for centennial Republican Sen. Strom Thurmond, who died on June 26, 2003. Like Byrd, Thurmond was a former segregationist (he made his mark as the States’ Rights Candidate in 1948 and became a Republican in 1964) who later reconciled with blacks and became proficient in earning pork for his state. The Times’s headline the following day left no room for doubt: ” Strom Thurmond, Foe of Integration, Dies at 100 ,” although Clymer’s lead sentence didn’t mention race. (Hat tip Mark Finkelstein of NewsBusters .)

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Democrats and Double Standards at the NYT: ‘Respected Voice’ Robert Byrd vs. ‘Foe of Integration’ Strom Thurmond

Tiger and Elin Woods Reunite For Daughter Sam’s Birthday, Barely Keep it Civil

For Tiger Woods and Elin Nordegren, it’s no longer a question of whether or not they’ll remain together, but whether or not they’ll remain civil toward each other. The pair reunited for the first time in months this past weekend to throw a birthday party for their daughter Sam, but were just barely civil with each other. According to sources, the party for Sam (whose birthday was June 18, during the U.S. Open) was scheduled for 4 p.m. Saturday and was to last two hours. Tiger didn’t show up until 4:55, however, and he brought his office manager Kathy and another woman with him, making Elin Woods understandably angry. Fortunately, “they put aside their differences for the good of their daughter when a big birthday cake rolled in,” a source familiar with the situation revealed. RELATIVELY AMICABLE : Tiger and Elin’s relations could be better … and worse . “Clearly this was Tiger trying to make it up to Sam. He wasn’t there on her birthday so he wanted to have a party for her and be there,” the source added. Despite the strained relationship between them, “Elin went along with it. Despite their differences they both want to do what is best for their children.” In any case, Tiger and Elin spending time together for Sam’s party was a rare event, even though Elin lives in a rented house approximately a mile away. He’s already playing the field again, supposedly. Whether those rumors are true or not, things have passed the point where reconciliation seems possible. Sources close to the pair say that Tiger and Elin are about to sign a divorce settlement and that it’s almost official, although nothing has been signed yet. I’m a card-carrying member of …

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Tiger and Elin Woods Reunite For Daughter Sam’s Birthday, Barely Keep it Civil

Breaking: Sen. Robert Byrd Dies at 92

Sen. Robert Byrd died early Monday.  Joe Holley of the Washington Post began with a mildly surprising label for a senator who was a Bush-bashing hero of the anti-war left this decade (with a lifetime American Conservative Union rating of 28): Robert C. Byrd, a conservative West Virginia Democrat who became the longest-serving member of Congress in history and used his masterful knowledge of the institution to shape the federal budget, protect the procedural rules of the Senate and, above all else, tend to the interests of his state, died at 3 a.m. Monday at Inova Fairfax Hospital, his office said. Mr. Byrd had been hospitalized last week with what was thought to be heat exhaustion, but more serious issues were discovered, aides said Sunday. No formal cause of death was given. Starting in 1958, Mr. Byrd was elected to the Senate an unprecedented nine times.He wrote a four-volume history of the body, was majority leader twice and chaired the powerful Appropriations Committee, controlling the nation’s purse strings, and yet the positions of influence he held did not convey the astonishing arc of his life. They did include his time in the Ku Klux Klan, in paragraph nine. He also wrote this sentence (perhaps this is his idea of what earned the label “conservative”): As chairman of the Senate Appropriations subcommittee on the District from 1961 to 1969, he reveled in his role as scourge, grilling city officials at marathon hearings and railing against unemployed black men and unwed mothers on welfare.

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Breaking: Sen. Robert Byrd Dies at 92

U.S. Senator Robert Byrd, Longest-Serving Congress Member in History, Has Been Hospitalized in Serious Condition

Sen. Robert Byrd hospitalized in serious condition By the CNN Wire Staff June 27, 2010 5:41 p.m. EDT Washington (CNN) — Sen. Robert Byrd, the 92-year-old Democrat from West Virginia who is the longest-serving Congress member in history, has been hospitalized in serious condition, his office said Sunday. Byrd was admitted to a Washington area hospital last week and his condition is “seriously ill,” according to the statement by his office. Initially thought to be suffering from heat exhaustion and severe dehydration, Byrd was expected to remain in hospital for “not more than a few days,” the statement said. “However, upon further examination by his doctors, other conditions have developed which has resulted in his condition being described as 'serious,' ” the statement concluded. West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin said in a statement Sunday that he and his wife “are thinking about and praying for Sen. Byrd and his family.” “We are truly hopeful that he gets well soon because West Virginians need his leadership in Washington,” the statement said. “Sen. Byrd is a true champion for our state.” Slowed by illness in recent years, Byrd spent six weeks in the hospital in 2009 due to a staph infection. Last November, he became the longest-serving member of Congress at more than 57 years, surpassing the old record set by Arizona Democrat Carl T. Hayden. Byrd also is the only person elected to nine full terms in the Senate. He served six years in the U.S. House before becoming a senator, and has never lost an election. added by: EthicalVegan

Police attempt (and fail) to clear crowds amid G20 unrest

Go Toronto! http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/TopStories/20100626/summit-protests-100626/ Heavily armed riot police are attempting to clear crowds out of downtown Toronto, several hours after black-clad vandals raged through the city in protest of the G20 summit. In the heart of the city, four police cars have been torched and officers have used tear gas. There are reports that police fired rubber bullets to disperse the crowds, which Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair could not confirm. Before midnight, about 200 protesters gathered at the Novotel hotel close to the lakeshore. Many sat on the ground, holding signs, as riot police moved in and made arrests. As midnight approached, at least 150 arrests had been made and officials said that number could rise overnight. “I want to assure you that the persons responsible will be held accountable,” Blair told reporters. “We are working hard to maintain order and restore the rule of law.” Only a few blocks from the mayhem, G20 leaders are meeting at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre. The violence escalated after a splinter group broke away from a large and peaceful group of protesters who began marching around 1 p.m. local time. Though the number of protesters appeared to dwindle into the evening, flashpoints continued to occur around the city. At the Ontario legislature, mounted police and riot officers attempted to disperse a crowd of demonstrators and onlookers. At one point, a CTV producer working on the scene was taken into police custody. CTV reporter Scott Laurie questioned police officers about the arrest but was not given an immediate answer. Laurie said the employee was wearing his media accreditation. Moments later, the crowd then re-grouped and marched southward down Yonge Street. Toronto Mayor David Miller said at a news conference that the so-called anarchists are simply criminals who are determined to cause as much destruction as possible. “It was a deliberate act by people who make it their business to commit these acts,” he said. “Am I angry? Absolutely.” Miller spoke to reporters at about 6 p.m. local time, nearly five hours after the protest erupted into violence. Video footage captured earlier in the day showed that many of the violent protesters were changing out of their black clothes and blending into the larger crowds. The Prime Minister's Office released a statement on Saturday evening, saying: “Free speech is a principle of our democracy. But the thugs that prompted violence earlier today represent in no way shape or form the Canadian way of life.” Earlier, the black-clad protesters smashed up a police cruiser and smashed its windshield along Queen Street, as other demonstrators hurled bottles and sticks at a solid line of riot police. As police donned gas masks and mounted units rode into the city's core on horses, the violent protesters lit garbage on fire and tipped over recycling containers. They also smashed vehicles in and grabbed stones from nearby homes. News media vehicles were also targeted and vandalized. A concert at the Air Canada Centre has been cancelled, hospitals in the downtown core have been locked down and the Eaton Centre was also closed. Earlier on Queen Street, next to the MuchMusic building, the violent protesters attempted to break southward through a tight line of riot police. Three protesters involved in the confrontation suffered injuries. According to reports from the scene, some were bleeding from the head. Moments later, another standoff occurred a few blocks west, where protesters reportedly tossed sticks at police and chanted “let us go.” Earlier, thousands of demonstrators gathered at the Ontario legislature Saturday morning to hear speeches. While protest organizers promised a family-friendly demonstration, a splinter group calling itself the “Get off the Fence contingent” announced plans to challenge the heavy security cordon around the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, where the G20 summit began Saturday afternoon. Around 1 p.m., two protesters were arrested near the downtown core and allegedly found with an “incendiary device.” Unconfirmed reports from the scene said the pair was carrying Molotov cocktails. (video at link) added by: animalia_libero

NBC’s Williams Blames Obama’s Plummeting Approval on Getting Dragged Into Gulf Oil Leak

Unlike Katie Couric on Monday night , on Wednesday evening NBC’s Brian Williams didn’t hide the bad news for President Obama in the network’s latest poll, but Williams and Savannah Guthrie sure seemed to lament the public mood’s swing against Obama as Williams attributed it to how Obama “had to touch” the gulf oil leak, “he had to own it and now he’s getting tagged with how he’s reacting to it.” As if Obama had nothing to do with it, Guthrie agreed he’s “had a barrage of bad headlines on some of these very issues of leadership, handling a crisis…” “If you’re the White House looking at these numbers we’re about to debut tonight, there isn’t much here that’s encouraging right now,” Williams warned of the NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey findings. Guthrie agreed: “There’s not a lot of good news in this poll for the White House. Gushing oil, persistent unemployment the real problem.” Online, MSNBC.com’s headline also ascribed Obama’s troubles to the gulf: “ Spill drags the President’s rating down .” The subhead, over the posting by NBC News Deputy Political director Mark Murray, emphasized a bright spot in areas Guthrie noted declines : “A silver lining for Obama is that his personal scores are still strong.” Guthrie recounted how “for the first time ever in our poll, more disapprove of the President than approve” and how “we saw big drops in issues like likability, compassion, leadership, relatability, handling of a crisis. Why?” She explained: “The oil spill. 50 percent said they disapprove of how the President has been handling this oil spill. 42 percent say they approve.” That prompted Williams to rue: What’s so interesting here, the advice to the President for weeks was “if you touch it, you own it” – meaning the oil spill crisis. But the public anger was such that he had to touch it, he had to own it and now he’s getting tagged with how he’s reacting to it. (Monday night: “ CBS Poll Finds Tough Numbers for Obama on Oil Leak, But Couric Hides Them ”) From the Wednesday, June 23 NBC Nightly News: BRIAN WILLIAMS: We’re back, as promised, with our new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. It says a lot about the mood of this country right now, how Americans are feeling these days about their President and even the upcoming November elections. Now, if you’re the White House looking at these numbers we’re about to debut tonight, there isn’t much here that’s encouraging right now. Our White House correspondent Savannah Guthrie has paid us a visit here in New York tonight with the numbers. Savannah, welcome, good evening. SAVANNAH GUTHRIE: Good evening, Brian. As you said, there’s not a lot of good news in this poll for the White House. Gushing oil, persistent unemployment the real problem. Let’s look at the top line number: the approval rating for President Obama. It has never been this low, 45 percent. For the first time ever in our poll, more disapprove [48%] of the President than approve. Is the country headed in the right direction? This is the question that pollsters and White House advisers watch closely. This is the highest number of the presidency: 62 percent say this country is on the wrong track, 29 percent say it is going in the right direction. You know, Brian, even advisers have gone through these policy changes, things that the public expressed doubt about. Likability of the President, those leadership qualities he’s always rated high. This is the first time really our poll has shown a drop in those, plummeted in some cases. You see, this is his worst personal rating — 47 percent positive, 40 percent negative. We saw big drops in issues like likability, compassion, leadership, relatability, handling of a crisis. Why? The next number, Brian, might tell the story. The oil spill. 50 percent said they disapprove of how the President has been handling this oil spill. 42 percent say they approve — by the way, we did this poll after the Oval Office address last week, after the President secured $20 billion from BP. And then finally, some good news for Republicans. They edged out Democrats when we asked, “Who would you like to control Congess?” 45 percent said Republicans, 43 percent said Democrats. This is a number that is always tight, but the Republicans edged out the Democrats in this one. BRIAN WILLIAMS: What’s so interesting here, the advice to the President for weeks was “if you touch it, you own it” – meaning the oil spill crisis. But the public anger was such that he had to touch it, he had to own it and now he’s getting tagged with how he’s reacting to it. GUTHRIE: No question about it and let’s face it, he had a barrage of bad headlines on some of these very issues of leadership, handling a crisis, compassion. So, perhaps not surprising that he’s taken a hit there.

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NBC’s Williams Blames Obama’s Plummeting Approval on Getting Dragged Into Gulf Oil Leak

Why Hasn’t Racism Been Blamed For Obama’s Poor Response to the Oil Spill?

When Hurricane Katrina destroyed New Orleans in 2005, numerous media members blamed racism for President Bush’s supposedly poor response to the disaster. According to LexisNexis, there were almost 1,000 reports in the nine weeks following the storm’s passage through the Gulf of Mexico that tied racism to the government’s post-hurricane strategy. Five years later, as oil slams the same region and polls show the public actually more unhappy with the response to this crisis than they were after Katrina hit, no such nefarious connection is being espoused. Why? Consider the media firestorm the following remark by rapper Kanye West set off just a few days after the hurricane hit New Orleans (video follows with transcript and commentary): I hate the way they portray us in the media. If you see a black family, it says they’re looting. See a white family, it says they’re looking for food. And you know that it’s been five days because most of the people are black. And even for me to complain about it, I would be a hypocrite because I’ve tried to turn away from the TV, because it’s too hard to watch. I’ve even been shopping before I’ve even given a donation. So now I’m calling my business manager right now to see what is the biggest amount I can give, and just to imagine if I was down there, and those are my people down there. So anybody out there that wants to do anything that we can help with the set up the way America is set up to help the poor, the black people, the less well-off as slow as possible. I mean, the Red Cross is doing everything they can. We already realize a lot of people that could help are at war right now, fighting another way, and they have given them permission to go down and shoot us…George Bush doesn’t care about black people. Moments after this was uttered on live television, CNN’s Larry King asked guest Jesse Jackson about it: LARRY KING, CNN: Jesse, I understand that Kanye West, a rapper at the NBC telethon tonight, unscripted, said that President Bush, George Bush does not care about black people. Do you have that feeling? JESSE JACKSON: Well, he responded mighty late and mighty slow. There was one response to the tsunami and some years ago to the — a response to the Armenian earthquake crisis, but he came in five days late, with platitudes. And in the case of 9/11, he came in two days later and embraced all those who were involved. There’s a sense of alienation, a sense of distance, and we don’t feel good about it. I hope that there will be renewed commitment, not to just involve Mr. Bush and Mr. Clinton, but why not involve people like Congressman Bennie Thompson from Mississippi and Cynthia Cleo Fields (ph) and Senator Bigenfiggis (ph). We… KING: But you don’t… JACKSON: … ought to have a sense of being a part of this, and we’re not. KING: You don’t think he doesn’t care? JACKSON: Well, he does not show it. And that’s the — that’s the rub. And we need to know, we need to have access for dialogue, and we don’t have it. CNN was all over this story doing numerous segments about it in the coming days, but the supposedly most trusted name in news was certainly not alone in advancing this truly disgraceful theory. All three broadcast network news divisions reported this possible connection as did most American newspapers such as the New York Times, the Washington Post, USA Today, the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Tribune, etc. Magazines also did stories about what the disaster said of race relations in this country. The disgusting notion that Bush’s response was due to racism was espoused for years by press members and still is to this very day. Potentially even worse, this assertion helped make Bush a lame duck less than a year into his final term while assisting the Democrats to take back Congress in 2006 as well as the White House in 2008. As a result, this ugly contention will likely be a part of our 43rd President’s legacy unless sane minds in the future fight to counter it.   Yet, no such connection to the government’s pathetic response to the current disaster in the very same region is being made. Why?  Consider that a recent CBS News/New York Times poll found: Just 32 percent say Mr. Obama has a clear plan to deal with the oil leak, while 59 percent (including 64 percent of Gulf coast residents) say he does not. The numbers are not much better among those who watched the president’s Oval Office speech on the spill last week, with 35 percent of that group saying he has a clear plan and 56 percent saying he does not. If Bush was still President, would media blame racism for his lack of a plan? As the answer seems an almost certain “Yes,” why is that?  Regardless of the reason, the press would be dead wrong just as they were about Bush’s response to Katrina. Despite their assertions, whatever the White House did or didn’t do after that hurricane hit had ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with the race of those effected. That was a disgusting assertion back then that should never have been made or advanced by anyone in our media. BUT, if they were going to make such a connection then, and would if Bush was still in the White House, that they’re not espousing it now despite how absurd it would be makes the way they treated our 43rd President even more reprehensible.   Less so is the lack of curiosity about what is the reason for Obama’s pathetic handling of this crisis. Former New York City major Rudy Giuliani said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” last week that the response to this oil spill would have been swifter and better coordinated if it happened in the Atlantic Ocean and was impacting the East Coast. Assuming he’s right — and I believe he is — why would that be? Should government’s response to a disaster relate to what states are impacted by it? Such does seem to be the case with the current Administration which seemed quite disinterested in the recent devastating floods in Tennessee. Not surprisingly, the press also largely ignored that disaster. So what gives here? Are some people in this country entitled to greater federal assistance in an emergency than others? Aren’t we all Americans, or are some inherently more so? Finally, if folks in the media believe as I do that this response would have been different if the spill was battering East Coast beaches with oil, where are the questions and the investigations into why that is, or is such curiosity only acceptable when a Republican is in the White House?

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Why Hasn’t Racism Been Blamed For Obama’s Poor Response to the Oil Spill?

The City Recap: From Trash to Treasure

Olivia Palmero doesn’t care what Erin Kaplan’s opinion is. This was a central theme of The City last night, as it is in every episode. But rarely are feelings in this feud declared so overtly. Talk about taking it to a new level! Meanwhile, will Roxy Olin actually prove her worth? Amazingly, these much-maligned aspiring fashionistas both boosted their stock in a solid episode of The Hills spinoff, which continues to entertain and surprise. We begin THG’s +/- recap of last night’s The City, “One Girl’s Trash,” with Olivia preparing for a shoot with Ke$ha by visiting the Trash & Vaudeville store: TRASH THIS : We often do, but Olivia surprisingly salvaged the Ke$ha shoot . The owner suggests a pair of spiked boots which Kyle asks Olivia to try on. She does but refuses to walk around the store in them. Too much effort for O. Plus 3 . Whitney Port is preparing to showcase her collection at a buyers’ event. Too bad Roxy is her right-hand man … woman. Minus 4 , because she’s a total liability. At the office, Kate goes over the items for the Ke$ha shoot. Plus 5 for when Seth asks Olivia if Erin approved the accessories and Olivia does not give a f*%k.

Hillary Clinton: Gay Rights Are Human Rights

Obama, Clinton vow to defend gay rights, adding 'it's not who we are as Americans' By Elise Labott, CNN Senior State Department Producer June 23, 2010 1:48 a.m. EDT Washington (CNN) — President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton pledged to end violence and discrimination against gays and lesbians at home and abroad Tuesday, as the Obama administration moves to extend further benefits to gays working in the federal government. “It's not right, it's not who we are as Americans, and we're going to put a stop to it,” Obama told a raucous White House reception honoring Gay and Lesbian Pride Month. Earlier, Clinton received several standing ovations from a standing-room only crowd of several hundred during her address at an event co-hosted by the State Department's Office of Civil Rights and GLIFAA, the organization for Gays and Lesbians in Foreign Affairs Agencies. “We are moving together in the right direction,” said Clinton. “We reaffirm our commitment to protect the rights of all human beings.” The White House event invited politicians and government officials as well as lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender American from across the country, including young people “who have stood up for equality,” said White House spokesman Shin Inouye. At a similar event last year, six months after Obama took office, participants expressed frustration over what they called a lack of progress in confronting discrimination issues that the president had promised to resolve. This time, Obama received loud applause, cheers and whistles as he cited steps his administration has taken, including a new hate crimes law, extending federal benefits to gay employees and a push for an employee discrimination bill. The Obama administration is expected to announce Wednesday that gay workers will be able to take medical leave to care for the sick or newborn children of their same-sex partners as part of the Family and Medical Leave Act, which generally allows those working for companies with 50 or more employees to take 12 unpaid weeks off to care for newborns or children with serious health issues. “And finally, we're going to end “don't ask, don't tell,” Obama said Tuesday of the policy that prohibits openly gay and lesbian soldiers from military service. A bill that would repeal the policy after a Pentagon review is completed in December is before Congress, the president noted. “We have never been closer to ending this discriminatory policy, and I'm going to keep on fighting until that bill is on my desk,” he said to cheers. Attending the event was Janice Langbehn of Lacey, Washington, who was denied hospital visitation rights when her partner of 18 years, Lisa Pond, was stricken with a fatal brain aneurysm while on vacation in Florida. Obama mentioned her story on Tuesday, calling the way she was treated “wrong” and “cruel.” Earlier, Clinton said she is asking embassies in Africa and elsewhere to report on rights of the local lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities. The State Department also is placing more attention on ensuring gays around the world have access to HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment, and providing grants to human rights activists who are persecuted either because they are gay or defend gay rights, she said. “These dangers are not gay issues. This is a human rights issue,” Clinton said. She drew more rousing applause when she declared “human rights are gay rights and gay rights are human rights,” a variation on the phrase she famously delivered in Beijing 10 years ago declaring “women's rights are human rights.” Clinton said she is equally concerned about creating an environment at the State Department in which gay employees feel valued and “can give 100 percent.” That is why, she said, she supported offering equal benefits to same-sex partners of State Department employees, a move that encouraged Obama to authorize such benefits for gays throughout the federal government. She noted the State Department also has made it easier for transgender people to change their passports and, for the first time, the agency's “equal opportunity statement” will include gender identity. It already includes sexual orientation. CNN's Suzanne Malveaux contributed to this report added by: EthicalVegan

Jessie Lunderby Playboy Pics Create Controversy, Jailer Placed on Leave

Jessie Lunderby is a detention officer in Arkansas. She dreams about becoming an undercover cop one day, which is ironic… … because her new Playboy.com spread has men dreaming about her, under their covers! But the blonde beauty, who has been named Cyber Girl of the Week by that magazine, has come under fire for her decision to pose naked. In fact, KSLA News reports Lunderby was placed on “administrative leave” for the photo, even though she says she cleared it with her bosses and it was taken on her own time. Specifically, the Fayetteville native s being investigated for “conduct unbecoming of an officer.” Hey, someone that wears even less clothing than Miley Cyrus ! But does that really apply in this case? Lunderby actions have no bearing whatsoever on her job. Does the Washington County Sheriff’s Office really have control over the decisions its employees make in their free time? That’s the question we’re asking readers now: Should Jessie Lunderby receive any punishment for her Playboy photos?

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Jessie Lunderby Playboy Pics Create Controversy, Jailer Placed on Leave