Tag Archives: pregnancy

Amanpour Elevates British Journalist Who Sees ‘Culture of Hate’ in U.S., Time to Divide Up Our ‘Pie’

Christiane Amanpour elevated a liberal British journalist, with little U.S. television experience, to the This Week roundtable where she presumed the government must run the economy and distribute the economic pie while she took pot shots at how the efforts to control illegal immigration proves America’s descent into a “culture of hate.” Gillian Tett , U.S. Managing Editor of the London-based Financial Times newspaper, began by insisting, that to respond to stagnant employment numbers: “The big question now is can the economy keep growing if the government doesn’t keep pumping in money?” Applying a European economic model, Tett fretted “that so much of America in the last few decades has been about trying to focus on growing the pie, not worrying about how to divide it up” as Americans didn’t “worry about social equity and things like that.” But, showing little faith that Obamanomics will work, she ruminated, “if we are entering a period when the pie is stagnant, the question that’s going to be very political is how do you divide that pie up?” In her final remark on unemployment, she warned “you really are starting to see the beginnings of a culture of hate, of finger-pointing, of scape-goating.” Minutes later, however, in a discussion of the proposal to modify the 14th amendment to end automatic citizenship through birth, Tett assumed those dark days have already arrived: “It’s quick fix soundbite politics in this culture of hate and this, you know, scape-goating that’s going on right now.” Others on Amanpour’s panel: Politico’s John Harris, New Yorker’s George Packer and former Bush speechwriter Michael Gerson. Last week, on reviewing Amanpour’s debut: “ Amanpour Slums to Take on U.S. Politics, Flummoxed Pelosi’s Victories Aren’t Better Appreciated ” Comments from Gillian Tett during the roundtable on the August 8 This Week with Christiane Amanpour: > I think it’s important to realize that it illustrates is that the President, right now, is at an important juncture point. For the last year, we’ve had some growth in the American economy, but much of that’s been due to government aid, government spending, or what economists call an inventory rebuild – basically, companies and shops ran down their stocks back in late 2008, they rebuilt them, but that process is kind of finished. And the big question now is can the economy keep growing if the government doesn’t keep pumping in money? > The problem in a way, in a sense the social contract in America., the American dream is starting to fragment because for years America’s prided itself on having an unemployment rate that was a lot lower than Europe’s, but it didn’t have a social safety net like Europe. Now, in a sense, it doesn’t have a social safety net, and yet, shockingly, the unemployment rate is approaching European levels, in some cases actually exceeding it. And that’s a real challenge, not just in an economic sense, but in a political sense too about what is the American dream? > What’s fascinating is that so much of America in the last few decades has been about trying to focus on growing the pie, not worrying about how to divide it up because if you keep growing the pie, through innovation, through private sector enterprise, then you don’t have to worry about social equity and things like that. But if we are entering a period when the pie is stagnant, the question that’s going to be very political is how do you divide that pie up? > And poisonous as well. You really are starting to see the beginnings of a culture of hate, of finger-pointing, of scape-goating. And that could fuel the way for some very nasty, very negative politics going forward.   > [on amending 14th amendment] It’s quick fix soundbite politics in this culture of hate and this, you know, scape-goating that’s going on right now.

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Amanpour Elevates British Journalist Who Sees ‘Culture of Hate’ in U.S., Time to Divide Up Our ‘Pie’

Maddow Guest Harris-Lacewell Describes Abortion Providers as ‘Termination Services’

That’s odd, those describing themselves as pro-choice usually aren’t this candid when it comes to abortion. On her MSNBC show Thursday night, Rachel Maddow spoke with Princeton professor Melissa Harris-Lacewell about Republican Senate candidates Rand Paul, Sharron Angle and Ken Buck opposing abortion, including for pregnancies conceived through rape or incest. Harris-Lacewell said this in response to a question from Maddow — MADDOW: So what would be the consequences of having a whole bunch of new sitting senators, elected to the US Senate, who are opposed to abortion not just in all regular cases but also cases in which the pregnancy resulted from rape or incest? HARRIS-LACEWELL:  Well, I mean, I think we’ve already seen the consequences of having a significant portion of even one party, even the party out of power, with a very strong anti-reproductive choice agenda. We saw it for example in the health care fight where somehow, you know, abortion became the central issue in a comprehensive health care reform bill, the central issue became controlling women’s right to choose, controlling women’s fertility, not giving women the ability to control their own, but having the government do it. So, I think clearly every time we move more aggressively against women’s reproductive rights, the more that we will see the consequences show up in everything from health care policy to, you know, potentially actually moving towards reducing the opportunities for women to, uh, you know, actually find healthy, safe termination services. As a conservative you get used to liberals euphemizing on abortion, to the point that when a left winger speaks with something resembling clarity, it’s enough to make you catch your breath. Naomi Wolfe, author of “The Beauty Myth” and “Fire With Fire: The New Female Power and How It Will Change the 21st Century” and as staunch a feminist as you’re likely to encounter, lamented her fellow pro-choicers’ tendency toward evasion in a widely read 1995 essay in The New Republic titled “Our Bodies, Our Souls: Rethinking pro-choice rhetoric.” Among the passages I’ve highlighted — At its best, feminism defends its moral high ground by being simply faithful to the truth: to women’s real-life experiences. But, to its own ethical and political detriment, the pro-choice movement has reliquished the moral frame around the issue of abortion. It has ceded the language of right and wrong to abortion foes. The movement’s abandonment of what Americans have always, and rightly, demanded of their movements — an ethical core — and its reliance instead on a political rhetoric in which the fetus means nothing are proving fatal. … Clinging to a rhetoric about abortion in which there is no life and no death, we entangle our beliefs in a series of self delusions, fibs and evasions. And we risk becoming precisely what our critics charge us with being: callous, selfish and casually destructive men and women who share a cheapened view of life. In the following pages, I will argue for a radical shift in the pro-choice movement’s rhetoric and consciousness about abortion: I will maintain that we need to contextualize the fight to defend abortion rights within a moral framework that admits that the death of a fetus is a real death … Many pro-choice advocates developed a language to assert that the fetus isn’t a person, and this, over the years, has developed into a lexicon of dehumanization. Laura Kaplan’s “The Story of Jane”, an important forthcoming account of a pre-Roe underground abortion service, inadvertently sheds light on the origins of some of this rhetoric: service staffers referred to the fetus — well into the fourth month — as “material” (as in “the amount of material that had to be removed …”) … In one woman’s account of her chemical abortion, in the January/February 1994 issue of Mother Jones, for example, the doctor says, “By Sunday you won’t see on the monitor what we call the heartbeat …” How can we charge that it is vile and repulsive for pro-lifers to brandish vile and repulsive images if the images are real? … We would be impoverished by a rhetoric about the end of life that speaks of the ill and the dying as if they were meaningless and of doing away with them as if it were a bracing demonstration of our personal independence. … After Harris-Lacewell’s brief lapse into candor, however, she reverted to form, blaming the economic downturn for what she decries as harsher criticism of abortion from Republicans ( click here for link to segment on Maddow site; Harris-Lacewell’s remarks quoted below start at 2:32) — HARRIS-LACEWELL: You’ve been doing a lot of history tonight and so I just want to pause and maybe do a quick history lesson here and remind your viewers that what’s happening is, we’re in a period of deep economic anxiety and often when America is in a period of economic anxiety, it starts looking around for individuals to blame. And sometimes the very best place to start asserting control is right in the middle of a woman, in her uterus. … the search for scapegoats also extending to the first minority candidate of either major party, thereby ensuring his defeat in November 2008. No, that didn’t happen either, nor does economic malaise account for shifting public sentiment against abortion (as embodied by Paul, Angle and Buck), a dynamic that long preceded the recession. (After I mentioned Harris-Lacewell’s remarks to a friend, he sent me a link to a great piece at The Onion, titled “U.S. Out of My Uterus,” that dovetails with Harris-Lacewell’s views.) In May 2009, eight months after the economic slump began,  Gallup found that more respondents described themselves as pro-life than pro-choice, and by the substantial margin of 51 to 42 percent — This is the first time a majority of U.S. adults have identified themselves as pro-life since Gallup began asking this question in 1995. The new results, obtained from Gallup’s annual Values and Beliefs survey, represent a significant shift from a year ago, when 50 percent were pro-choice and 44 percent were pro-life. Prior to now, the highest percentage identifying as pro-life was 46 percent, in both August 2001 and May 2002. Would less than a year of economic insecurity account for the shift? I suggest three other causes extending over the past decade, including one that occurred in the same timeframe as the Gallup polling — increased use of ultrasound technology that revealed unborn babies to their parents as never before, widespread revulsion and a Supreme Court ruling against partial-birth abortion, and finally, Sarah Palin. In a provocative Weekly Standard article in April 2009 titled “Honor Killing, American-Style,” Sam Schulman elaborated on the “reaction of horror — visceral, immediate, and continuing — to the Sarah Palin phenomenon of last fall” — We can understand it if we think of one particular affront that Palin presented to the best among us: flamboyant nubility. Sarah Palin decided to carry her Down Syndrome baby to term. Bristol Palin not only decided to give birth to her illegitimate baby, but may have been encouraged to do so by her mother. Babies are born in these circumstances every day. But in the judgment of our most worldly women and of our most persnickety men, these births, however commonplace, offend propriety. To have one such baby may be regarded as a misfortune; to have both seems like carelessness. The unapologetic fertility of this ordinary Alaska family became an obstacle that prevented many from thinking clearly about anything that Sarah Palin might have touched — John McCain, free trade, low taxes, the war on terror. A kind of honor-rage descended, and those whom it touched ran amok. And why not? In the language of honor, the fertility of the Palin women, mother and daughter, was shameless, and Palin didn’t have the decency to be ashamed. (emphasis added) That same Gallup poll found an even split among those most dug in on abortion — 23 percent opposed in all circumstances, 22 percent not wanting any restrictions. Thus, a majority of respondents fall into “the mushy middle,” as described by pro-choice defector Norma McCorvey, better known by the legal pseudonym of “Jane Roe” in Roe v. Wade. “McCorvey still supports abortion rights through the first trimester — but is horrified by the brutality of abortion as it manifests more obviously further into a pregnancy,” Wolfe wrote in her New Republic essay. ” ‘Have you ever seen a second-trimester abortion,’ she asks. ‘It’s a baby. It’s got a face and a body, and they put him in a freezer and a little container.’ ” A “mushy middle” that discerns a moral difference between the single mother with too many mouths to feed who contemplates abortion after unexpectedly becoming pregnant — and the teenage girl who wants a late-term abortion so she can fit into her prom dress. A broad swath of the populace leaning more toward the ever popular Palin and away from abortion apologists.

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Maddow Guest Harris-Lacewell Describes Abortion Providers as ‘Termination Services’

Lily Allen Is Pregnant

‘Lily Allen and Sam Cooper are very happy to confirm that Lily is expecting their first child,’ a rep for Allen confirmed. By Eric Ditzian Lily Allen Photo: George Pimentel/ WireImage Lily Allen revealed last September that she was preparing to take a break from music, declining to renew her record contract and saying she had no plans whatsoever to release a new album anytime soon. And while she plans to put her music career on hold after fulfilling her current performance commitments, she’ll have anything but a ton of free time in the future. The 25-year-old Allen has announced that she and her boyfriend are set to become parents. “Lily Allen and Sam Cooper are very happy to confirm that Lily is expecting their first child,” her rep told People . “Lily’s professional commitments will carry on as normal, including a scheduled performance at the Big Chill this weekend.” Allen posted a photo of herself holding up a copy of the U.K.’s The Sun, with the oversized headline “Lily: I’m Preggers,” on Twitter . Allen tweeted, “Not quite front page worthy but anyways…surreal.” Cooper and Allen have been dating since July 2009. “It goes without saying we are both absolutely delighted,” she told The Sun . “Sam treats me differently. He’s told me he’ll look after me forever. That’s what I’ve always wanted — someone to look after me. We’ve never had one argument and there’s absolutely nothing about him that annoys me. He’s not impressed by what I do.” Allen revealed the pregnancy after receiving a scan at the end of her first trimester. In December 2007, she and then-boyfriend Ed Simmons of the Chemical Brothers announced that they were pregnant, but she ultimately suffered a miscarriage. Related Artists Lily Allen

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Lily Allen Is Pregnant

Jamie Yeo pregnant

Jamie Yeo, 33, may be in for a high-risk pregnancy as she suffers from renal agenesis, a condition that caused her to be born with only one kidney and had affected her reproductive system. Television host Jamie Yeo is 14 weeks pregnant with a baby girl, reported The New Paper. Yeo#39;s ex-husband, MediaCorp deejay Glenn Ong, confirmed the pregnancy, saying the ESPN Star Sports presenter had sent him an SMS him on Monday to apologise for hurting him as well as to share the news of her pregnancy

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Jamie Yeo pregnant

Scott Stapp, Wife Welcome Son!

Scott Stapp and his wife Jaclyn welcomed a son named Daniel at 3:01 p.m. on Sunday, July 4, the Creed frontman has announced via Twitter. “It is such a true blessing to be a father and husband,” Stapp writes . “Again, I am reminded of how deeply I love, how deeply I respect, how deeply I admire and how deeply I appreciate my best friend, my only love, my wife – Jaclyn.” Sweet. Scott and Jaclyn Nesheiwat Stapp earlier this year. Daniel Issam Stapp is the little guy’s full name. The couple are also parents to daughter Mil

Scott Stapp wife Jaclyn baby bump picture

Scott Stapp and wife Jaclyn are also parents to daughter Milán Hayat, 3½, and son Jagger, 11. The Stapps announced the pregnancy in December, sharing the s-ex of the baby and the name they had chosen in February. It’s a Fourth of July baby! Scott Stapp and wife Jaclyn welcomed son Daniel Issam Stapp at 3:01 p.m. on Sunday, July 4, the Creed frontman has announced via Twitter. “It is such a true blessing to be a father and husband,” Stapp, 36, writes. “Again, I am reminded of how deeply I love

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Scott Stapp wife Jaclyn baby bump picture

Best of Inhabitots: Top 7 Green Pregnancy Tips

+ Start your pregnancy right with some of our favorite suggestions, from practicing prenatal yoga to avoiding exposure to BPA . + Are you really eating for two? Learn&emdash;and bust&emdash;some common myths about

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Best of Inhabitots: Top 7 Green Pregnancy Tips

Diego Luna and Camila Sodi baby born

The Abel director Diego Luna, 30, and Camila Sodi, 24, announced the pregnancy in January. The couple Diego Luna and Camila Sodi, who wed in 2008, welcomed daughter Fiona at 10:15 a.m. on Thursday, July 1 in Mexico City. She weighed 6 lbs. It’s a girl for actors Diego Luna and Camila Sodi! “We’re very grateful to everyone who has been thinking of us and who has respected the intimate moment we’re experiencing now — the arrival of the family’s newest member,” the proud parents said in a statem

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Diego Luna and Camila Sodi baby born

Bethenny Getting Married, Becoming Emotional, Planning Her Special Day: A Recap

Seven months pregnant and nearing her wedding day, Bethenny Frankel almost lost it completely this week. But then Jason Hoppy came through for her and viewers of Bethenny Getting Married were treated to a happy ending. The entire episode is recapped below by our THG correspondent… Yay!

Landon Donovan and Bianca Kajlich separated

Landon Donovan, 28, is separated from his wife, actress Bianca Kajlich, but they are not divorced – a fact the U.S. soccer star emphasized last week, after he and Kajlich shared an emotional phone call following his winning goal against Algeria. His team crashed out of the World Cup this weekend, and now Landon Donovan faces a personal crisis: a forthcoming report from a U.K. newspaper in which a British woman claims she is pregnant with Donovan#39;s child. Regarding the pregnancy report, Dono

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Landon Donovan and Bianca Kajlich separated