Tag Archives: policy

Krauthammer: Obama’s “Working On Language That Will Disguise A Failure”

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Agree with Hengler here , Obama is the first President in our history who has refused the title leader of the free world : More evidence ? President Barack Obama is resisting pressure to deliver an Oval Office speech explaining his policy on Libya — in part, because he doesn’t want to equate what he regards as a smaller, time-limited mission with the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Continue reading →… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Flopping Aces Discovery Date : 25/03/2011 03:16 Number of articles : 2

Krauthammer: Obama’s “Working On Language That Will Disguise A Failure”

Lady Gaga, Katy Perry React To ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Repeal

Ellen DeGeneres, Pink and more celebrate historic Senate vote on Twitter. By Mawuse Ziegbe Members of the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network join Lady Gaga at the 2010 MTV VMAs Photo: Getty Images The armed forces’ controversial “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy will soon be history. On Saturday (December 18), the Senate voted to repeal the 17-year-old measure that bars openly gay men and women from serving in the military. The bill passed by a 65-31 margin, according to CNN , which included eight republicans and one independent who joined the Democrat-backed initiative. President Obama will sign the bill into law next week. “Today, the Senate has taken an historic step toward ending a policy that undermines our national security while violating the very ideals that our brave men and women in uniform risk their lives to defend. By ending ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,’ no longer will our nation be denied the service of thousands of patriotic Americans forced to leave the military, despite years of exemplary performance, because they happen to be gay. And no longer will many thousands more be asked to live a lie in order to serve the country they love,” the president said in a statement . Calls to dismantle the policy ramped up this year with stars such as Lady Gaga decrying the measure and demonstrations cropping up around the nation. On Wednesday, the Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who had been crusading to end the policy, tweeted to Gaga after the vote, “We did it! #DADT is a thing of the past.” Gaga, who arrived at the 2010 MTV VMAs with openly gay service members who had been discharged or left the military due to the policy, made viral videos and spoke at a September rally calling for the end of DADT, tweeted about her emotional reaction to the vote. “Can’t hold back the tears+pride. We did it!i Our voice was heard + today the Senate REPEALED DADT. A triumph for equality after 17 YEARS,” she wrote . Openly gay talk-show queen Ellen DeGeneres tweeted , “Thank you Senators for pushing us one step closer towards full equality.” Katy Perry showed her support for the repeal of DADT by responding to a missive that fellow songstress Pink retweeted. “SUPPORTING ALL OUR TROOPS!” Perry added to Pink’s retweet, “RT @Pink: Congrats 2 US!!! REPEAL of DADT & 17 years of allowing Human Rights Violations. There’s hope after all!” Former army lieutenant and gay-rights activist Dan Choi, who has called for an end to the policy since he was discharged from service after publicly coming out in 2009, also gave his take on the vote. “Thank you, Democrats, for your leadership,” he tweeted . “There: I said it. Also, thank you 8 Republicans. You’re on the right side of history.” MTV News also caught up with student Bridget Todd , who once questioned President Obama about DADT during the commander-in-chief’s “A Conversation with President Obama” forum in October. Although Todd said she was skeptical of the president’s commitment to ending the policy after the Obama administration asked for stay blocking a judge’s ruling that the measure is unconstitutional, she said the Senate vote has restored some of her faith in the U.S. leader. “I think it’s fantastic. I’m over the moon about it,” Todd said. “It’s sort of strange that it’s 2010 and we’re dealing with this so I’m happy that it’s done, I’m happy that it’s gonna be over with. “I think I said that he displayed an alleged commitment to gay equality,” she continued. “I think that this sort of proves that perhaps he is actually committed to these issues. They’re not just sort of political talking points that you use to get elected — that this is something that he is willing to make happen.” What do you think about the Senate voting to repeal DADT? Let us know in the comments! Related Videos Lady Gaga Rallies Against ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Related Artists Lady Gaga Katy Perry

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Lady Gaga, Katy Perry React To ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Repeal

Lady Gaga, Katy Perry React To ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Repeal

Ellen DeGeneres, Pink and more celebrate historic Senate vote on Twitter. By Mawuse Ziegbe Members of the Servicemembers Legal Defense Network join Lady Gaga at the 2010 MTV VMAs Photo: Getty Images The armed forces’ controversial “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy will soon be history. On Saturday (December 18), the Senate voted to repeal the 17-year-old measure that bars openly gay men and women from serving in the military. The bill passed by a 65-31 margin, according to CNN , which included eight republicans and one independent who joined the Democrat-backed initiative. President Obama will sign the bill into law next week. “Today, the Senate has taken an historic step toward ending a policy that undermines our national security while violating the very ideals that our brave men and women in uniform risk their lives to defend. By ending ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,’ no longer will our nation be denied the service of thousands of patriotic Americans forced to leave the military, despite years of exemplary performance, because they happen to be gay. And no longer will many thousands more be asked to live a lie in order to serve the country they love,” the president said in a statement . Calls to dismantle the policy ramped up this year with stars such as Lady Gaga decrying the measure and demonstrations cropping up around the nation. On Wednesday, the Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who had been crusading to end the policy, tweeted to Gaga after the vote, “We did it! #DADT is a thing of the past.” Gaga, who arrived at the 2010 MTV VMAs with openly gay service members who had been discharged or left the military due to the policy, made viral videos and spoke at a September rally calling for the end of DADT, tweeted about her emotional reaction to the vote. “Can’t hold back the tears+pride. We did it!i Our voice was heard + today the Senate REPEALED DADT. A triumph for equality after 17 YEARS,” she wrote . Openly gay talk-show queen Ellen DeGeneres tweeted , “Thank you Senators for pushing us one step closer towards full equality.” Katy Perry showed her support for the repeal of DADT by responding to a missive that fellow songstress Pink retweeted. “SUPPORTING ALL OUR TROOPS!” Perry added to Pink’s retweet, “RT @Pink: Congrats 2 US!!! REPEAL of DADT & 17 years of allowing Human Rights Violations. There’s hope after all!” Former army lieutenant and gay-rights activist Dan Choi, who has called for an end to the policy since he was discharged from service after publicly coming out in 2009, also gave his take on the vote. “Thank you, Democrats, for your leadership,” he tweeted . “There: I said it. Also, thank you 8 Republicans. You’re on the right side of history.” MTV News also caught up with student Bridget Todd , who once questioned President Obama about DADT during the commander-in-chief’s “A Conversation with President Obama” forum in October. Although Todd said she was skeptical of the president’s commitment to ending the policy after the Obama administration asked for stay blocking a judge’s ruling that the measure is unconstitutional, she said the Senate vote has restored some of her faith in the U.S. leader. “I think it’s fantastic. I’m over the moon about it,” Todd said. “It’s sort of strange that it’s 2010 and we’re dealing with this so I’m happy that it’s done, I’m happy that it’s gonna be over with. “I think I said that he displayed an alleged commitment to gay equality,” she continued. “I think that this sort of proves that perhaps he is actually committed to these issues. They’re not just sort of political talking points that you use to get elected — that this is something that he is willing to make happen.” What do you think about the Senate voting to repeal DADT? Let us know in the comments! Related Videos Lady Gaga Rallies Against ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Related Artists Lady Gaga Katy Perry

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Lady Gaga, Katy Perry React To ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Repeal

CNN’s Larry King Hits Biden From the Left on Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell

CNN host Larry King channeled the left's frustration with the Obama administration on Thursday's Larry King Live as he questioned Vice President Joe Biden about their approach on overturning the military's “don't ask, don't tell” policy: ” You were against it, as I understand? Certainly, the President is against it. Most of the administration is against it …. So why is this our policy? ” King had Mr. Biden on as his sole guest during the first half hour of his program, and brought on Second Lady Jill Biden to join her husband for the remainder of the program. The host raised the controversial issue immediately before Mrs. Biden came on, and besides noting how “most of the administration” is against the policy, he stated that ” apparently, they polled troops- they're against it, and you poll America- they're against it .” On October 29, 2010, The Washington Post cited unnamed “multiple people familiar with the findings” of a Defense Department survey of active-duty and reserve military, which apparently found that “a majority of active-duty and reserve service members…would not object to serving and living alongside openly gay troops,” but the actual results would not be available until December 1, when a “Pentagon report…regarding how the military would end enforcement of the “don't ask, don't tell” law” is released. However, only two years ago, The Military Times, in their annual poll of active-duty service members , revealed that 58% were opposed to the repeal of “don't ask, don't tell.” Moreover, General James Conway, who stepped down as commandant of the Marine Corps on October 22 of this year, stated in an October 15 interview that “as many as 95% of Marines would be uncomfortable serving alongside openly gay troops.” read more

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CNN’s Larry King Hits Biden From the Left on Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell

Will the Fed’s policies touch off inflation and dollar depreciation? Or is inflation not the problem?

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is under fire for a quantitative easing policy which some say will lead to debasing our currency, inflation, or even superinflation. Others have suggested that inflation is not the issue; the real question we should be asking is if quantitative easing will improve the domestic economy. Will this policy

Major Theater Chain Breaks ‘No Unrated Films’ Policy This October

In an unprecedented move, AMC theaters have agreed to play the unrated version of Hatchet 2 this October, breaking with the chain’s long-running refusal to play NC-17 or unrated films. A week later the remake of I Spit on Your Grave will also go out unrated. Until now, major movie theater chains haven’t budged on this policy, which meant that studios for the most part refused to fund movies that might not get an R-rating. Could this move usher in a new era where American filmmakers aren’t afraid to make explicit movies for adults?

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Major Theater Chain Breaks ‘No Unrated Films’ Policy This October

MSNBC’s Contessa Brewer Openly Supports Gay-Rights Cause in DADT Ruling

In a brief interview with the openly-gay former Army Lt. Dan Choi MSNBC anchor Contessa Brewer gave her vocal support to his cause, hoping that the military’s policy of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” ends soon. Brewer has covered the issue quite one-sidedly in the past on behalf of the gay rights side. She has hosted many gay-rights advocates on her news hour and has barely covered the other side of the DADT issue. Examples: here , here , and here . Brewer was covering the ruling of a federal judge in California that “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” is unconstitutional. The judge has not yet issued a final ruling, but plans to do so in two weeks. Brewer’s lone guest in the segment was Choi, an outspoken advocate and poster boy for the military gay-rights movement, who was arrested this past spring for chaining himself to the White House fence in protest of DADT. The news anchor first asked the lieutenant how he felt about the ruling. Then she commented that the DADT policy bans, which include bans on intimate conduct between gays and speaking about loved ones, act as a “severe impediment to dealing effectively” for soldiers far from home. At the end of the short interview, Brewer told Choi that she stands with him and thinks that “justice delayed is justice denied,” hoping that the final ruling on the matter comes soon. A transcript of the segment, which aired on September 10 at 12:47 p.m. EDT, is as follows: CONTESSA BREWER: It has been a long time coming, but this may be the end of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” A federal judge in California has ruled that the military’s ban on openly-gay service members is unconstitutional. The judge says she will issue a final ruling, ending the policy for good, in about two weeks. Former Army Lt. Dan Choi, an outspoken opponent of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” he’s an Iraq War veteran, and in April he handcuffed himself to the gates of the White House in a protest of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” Was arrested, spent a night in prison and was discharged from the military in July. Lt. Dan Choi joins me now. Good to see you, sir. DAN CHOI: Good to see you, Contessa. BREWER: What’s your reaction to this judge’s ruling? CHOI: It’s a victory today for the Constitution. The judge reiterated the Bill of Rights, and some of our most foundational principles of freedom, the freedom of expression, free speech. And when you have a policy as vicious as “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” that abridges that free speech and says “You cannot say the truth to your commander or to your best friends. You cannot say three words, ‘I am gay,'” or “You are not allowed to express your commitment to your lover or your partner by saying three words ‘I love you'” – that’s absolutely against not only the Constitution, but against America. It’s against integrity, it’s against our American values – BREWER: She says it actually bars people from enjoying intimate conduct, and bars them from speaking about their loved ones while serving in uniform, and it bans them from including information in a personal communication that could reveal their homosexuality. If you’re deployed, you’re away from your support system, that’s a severe impediment to dealing effectively, to operating effectively in our nation’s armed forces. But she says she’s not going to issue a final ruling for two more weeks. What should happen right now from our nation’s leaders, not just this judge? CHOI: Well you’re absolutely right. For the soldiers not only that are in combat, but the ones that come back home and have to deal with so many issues of Post Traumatic Stress or depression or even suicide – which is skyrocketing in the military – I don’t see how our leaders can stand by and do nothing.  But in this case, if the President and his Justice Department do nothing, do not appeal, do not lift a finger that will waste any energy, waste any statements, or waste any money defending “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” than what we might see is an absolute victory not only for gay veterans, but for our whole military. We don’t have to fire people for being honest anymore, and we can bolster and reiterate not only our Bill of Rights in our Constitution, but our American value of love. BREWER: Dan, I appreciate it. I stand with you. And I do think that justice delayed is justice denied, and I hope to see this policy end soon.    

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MSNBC’s Contessa Brewer Openly Supports Gay-Rights Cause in DADT Ruling

Turkish Energy Minister to Environmentalists: If You Hate Our Policy So Much, Stop Using Energy

Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yıldız visits the Greenpeace office in Istanbul’s Beyoğlu district. Photo via Bursa Burada . The persistently high temperatures that have many parts of Turkey sweltering also have the country’s air conditioners crank… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Turkish Energy Minister to Environmentalists: If You Hate Our Policy So Much, Stop Using Energy

Famous Chinese Artist Paints Polluted Waters

Original 12th-century paintings by Ma Yuan (left) and Zhang Hongtu’s contemporary reworkings (right) to show the effects of agricultural pollution (top) and dams (bottom). Images via Foreign Policy . Zhang Hongtu has never shied away from tough subjects. The New York-based Chinese-American artist has used his paintings to tackle Chinese propaganda, consu… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Famous Chinese Artist Paints Polluted Waters

WaPo Highlights ‘Local Opinion’ Politicizing Nun’s Death in Favor of ‘Comprehensive Immigration Reform’

The Washington Post has an opinion blog entitled “All Opinions Are Local.” Print edition editors regularly pick from the blog to excerpt a post to the editorial page under the heading “Local Opinions.” Today’s entry, “Stop the torrent of hate after a deadly drunk-driving crash,” was filed by one Simone Campbell of Washington, whom the Post noted “is executive director of Network, a Catholic social justice advocacy group.” The online edition bears a much blander headline, “A proper tribute to Sister Denise,” referring to Denise Mosier, the nun who was killed in a Sunday car crash by repeat DUI offender and illegal immigrant Carlos Martinelly-Montano. In her 3-paragraph piece, Campbell essentially lumped xenophobes and racists in with conservative critics of law immigration enforcement, slamming “hate speech” on “The Post’s online comments section” and insisting that Martinelly-Montano’s immigration status did not cause “this tragedy.” Campbell then promptly proceeded to politicize Mosier’s death by arguing that “comprehensive immigration reform” would “be a proper tribute to Sister Denise’s memory.” The Post did not note that Campbell’s group Network supports a “Realistic path to earned legalization for people in the U.S. without status,” in other words, amnesty to immigrants in the United States illegally.  What’s more, by publishing Campbell’s mini-screed, the paper passed over a more measured, conservative post by Paige Winfield Cunningham of the blog Old Dominion Watchdog.  In her 8-paragraph August 4 post, “The human cost of immigration dysfunction,”   Cunningham cautioned against politicizing a tragedy, but noted that doesn’t excuse ignoring the policy implications of lax immigration enforcement: Victims exist on both sides of every issue. They’re easy to find on the left side of the immigration debate — for example, the children of illegal immigrants whose parents constantly fear deportation and struggle to create a life better than the one they left behind. On the other side of the debate, victimization is often expressed in large numbers that fail to communicate individual suffering — like how health-care services funded by taxpaying citizens are strained by millions who don’t pay. But this week, a tragic accident involving three Benedictine sisters from Richmond offered the right a story of how deportation gridlock hurts real people. One of the nuns was killed and two were left in critical condition after their vehicle collided with a car driven by 23-year-old Carlos A. Martinelly-Montano, an apparently illegal immigrant who was charged in the accident with DUI for the third time. It’s ironic that the crash occurred in Prince William — the county known as the toughest in the state on immigration. Prince William has been something of a microcosm of the larger debate since it enacted a policy in 2008 requiring officers to check immigration status upon arrest. In the first full year of the policy, 13 percent of arrests for DUI were suspected illegal immigrants, according to the 2009 Prince William County Police Report . Illegal immigrants also constituted 10 percent of drivers without licenses and 9.4 percent of drivers in hit-and-run accidents. The Benedictine Sisters have warned against using Monday’s accident for political gain, saying they “are dismayed and saddened that this tragedy has been politicized and become an apparent forum for the illegal immigration agenda.” But these three nuns, and the victims of other such accidents, shouldn’t be ignored. Space considerations may have factored into the Post not running Cunningham’s item in full, but it could have posted an excerpt lengthy enough for print but just enough to tease readers to check out the Post website. Instead, Post editors opted to run an editorial by a professional left-wing activist over a local political blogger.  It’s not surprising given the Post’s editorial bent, perhaps, but it is a disservice to print edition readers given the marked contrast between Campbell’s simplistic, boilerplate screed and Cunningham’s measured tone, which is the furthest thing possible from Campbell’s straw man of pseudonymed blog commenters venting their spleens with anti-immigrant hate.

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WaPo Highlights ‘Local Opinion’ Politicizing Nun’s Death in Favor of ‘Comprehensive Immigration Reform’