Tag Archives: texas

BP faced with $10 billion lawsuit over Texas City toxic release

Just as BP began celebrating a proclaimed success in its Gulf of Mexico catastrophe, the company now finds itself in the woeful position of facing a $10 billion lawsuit over a 40-day toxic chemical release in Texas City, Texas earlier this year. A $10 billion class action lawsuit was filed Tuesday on behalf of 2,000 claimants against oil behemoth BP after the company engaged in a 40-day upset during April and May that released at least 538,000 pounds of known toxins into the Texas City skies. The event began just two weeks before the company became very well-known over its Deepwater Horizon incident in the Gulf of Mexico. Tony Buzbee, a Texas attorney who also represents Gulf coast residents impacted by the Deepwater Horizon oil disaster, filed the suit on Tuesday for his clients seeking compensation for “health effects including all symptoms associated with acute benzene exposure,” according to The Telegraph( http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/energy/oilandgas/7925565/BP-hit-… ). As reported earlier by Digital Journal( http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/294675 ), the toxic leak, or upset, occurred at BP’s Texas City refinery from April 6 to May 16, releasing hundreds of thousands of pounds of toxins into the air, including benzene, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen oxides. In a ProPublica( http://www.propublica.org/article/bp-texas-refinery-had-huge-toxic-release-just-… ) report of the incident, company officials were aware of the situation, underestimated its severity, and kept the plant in production to allay the chance of investors’ worries. It notes “the company’s corporate culture favors production and profit margins over safety and the environment. The 40-day release echoes in several notable ways the runaway spill in the Gulf. BP officials initially underestimated the problem and took steps in the days leading up to the incident to reduce costs and keep the refinery online.” Buzbee, already involved in legal action against BP as he represents 15 Deepwater Horizon rig workers, dozens of fisherman, dock workers, and restaurants – all impacted by the Gulf of Mexico debacle – is a prominent Houston lawyer with a solid record in winning settlements from oil companies, Mother Jones reports( http://motherjones.com/blue-marble/2010/06/rigs-fire-i-told-you-was-gonna-happen ). The lawsuit over the Texas City incident alleges “tens of thousands of individuals were injured and had his or her long-term health put in jeopardy after being exposed to extremely high levels of Benzene and other toxic chemicals while working at the BP Texas City Refinery or by simply living or working in Texas City,” according to Yahoo News( http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_upshot/20100803/bs_yblog_upshot/bp-faces-10-billio… ). The lawyer is seeking “punitive damages against BP in excess of $10 billion.” added by: toyotabedzrock

Chace Crawford Says Gritty ‘Twelve’ Role Is A ‘Departure’

‘It’s good to kind of do something different,’ the ‘Gossip Girl’ star says of playing a drug dealer. By Jocelyn Vena Chace Crawford Photo: Jim Spellman/ WireImage The movie “Twelve” and the CW’s “Gossip Girl” have a lot in common. They both take place in New York City. Both are about rich kids doing bad things. And Chace Crawford happens to star in them. Crawford, however, is quick to point out that he has little in common with neither drug dealer White Mike nor playboy Nate. “Neither, I guess. I’m from Texas, it’s a different story,” he laughed to MTV news at the “Twelve” premiere last week about comparisons with his characters. “I had to learn the cadence of the city and the way they operate things,” Crawford explained. “Nate’s not up to much [next season], I guess there’s several other girls coming along, but … it’s good to kind of do something different and switch up and have a nice dichotomy,” he added about his role in “Twelve.” While the gritty drama, in theaters now, offered him the chance to portray an edgier side, Crawford admitted that the shooting location also proved ideal, as did the chance to work with director Joel Schumacher. “I wanted to work with Joel, first of all,” he said. “We had a big long meeting about it and it was of high interest for me to work with him. And it was good; it was a good departure from ‘Gossip Girl.’ It worked out well because I’m in the city.” Plus, Crawford also got to act alongside rapper 50 Cent . “I thought he might have some sort of persona he was trying to project, but he’s easygoing,” Crawford said of his co-star. “He’s not trying to create some character. He wants to be a serious actor. I respect it. He was getting his tattoos lasered off while we were shooting and we had some good talks. I mean, he’s cool. He lives in Connecticut and he’s a super nice guy. Very intellectual.” What do you think of Chace playing a drug dealer in his new movie? Is it a good chance to stretch his acting chops? Tell us in the comments! Check out everything we’ve got on “Twelve.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Photos ‘Gossip Girl’ Cast Supports Chace Crawford At New York Premiere Of ‘Twelve’

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Chace Crawford Says Gritty ‘Twelve’ Role Is A ‘Departure’

Teacher arrested for having sex with 12-year-old student

Lucinda Caldwell, 38-year-old fifth-grade teacher at Cable Elementary School, San Antonio, Texas, has been arrested on suspicion of sexually assaulting a 12-year-old boy, one of her students. Police say that the boy reported she took him to a hotel and performed sex acts on him. In late February staff members alerted the vice prinicpal and the princpal that they had suspicions about an over-friendly teacher with a particular student. On the first week of March the prinicpal was told Caldwell held a private tutoring session with the 12-year-old at Cable Elementary. The Principal once again reprimanded Caldwell and removed the child from the class. Caldwell was arrested last Saturday after the boy's father awoke to find his son missing, according to an arrest warrant affidavit He went outside to look for him and saw the teacher drive up to the house. The father recognized the car because of past “dealings” with Caldwell, the affidavit said. When the father approached the car, Caldwell took off. He followed her in his own vehicle to Hondo, where she was pulled over and arrested. Read More: http://femalesexoffenders.com/fso/index.php/the-news/154-lucinda-caldwell added by: b2r

Omar Thornton: "I Killed the 5 Racists That Were Bothering Me". 9 Total Are Now Dead.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eM-1XnAWvLY http://www.mefeedia.com/news/32255459 http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504083_162-20012557-504083.html Whether they were racist or not is not the issue. The issue is that this man decided to take the law into his own hands and he should absolutely be held completely accountable for all of his actions. Race or insanity should not hold up as defenses for his terrible actions. ____________________________________________________________________ MANCHESTER, Conn. — A warehouse driver who a union official said was caught on video stealing beer from the distributorship where he worked went on a shooting rampage there Tuesday, killing eight people and wounding two before committing suicide. Omar Thornton, 34, pulled a handgun after a meeting in which he had been offered the chance to quit or be fired, Manchester Police Chief Marc Montminy said. Among those killed was Thornton's union representative at the meeting. The gunman, who was black, had complained of racial harassment and said he found a picture of a noose and a racial epithet written on a bathroom wall, the mother of his girlfriend said. Her daughter told her that Thornton's supervisors told him they would talk to his co-workers. Brett Hollander, whose family owns the distributorship, said, “I can assure you there has never been any racial discrimination at our company.” And a union official said Thornton had not filed a complaint of racism with the union or any government agency. Thornton had been caught on videotape stealing beer, Teamsters official Christopher Roos said. “It's got nothing to do with race,” Roos said. “This is a disgruntled employee who shot a bunch of people.” Thornton's girlfriend had been with him the night before the rampage and had no indication he was planning it, said her mother, Joanne Hannah. On Tuesday morning, about 50 to 70 people were in the warehouse about 10 miles east of Hartford during a shift change when the gunman opened fire around 7 a.m., Hollander said. Adding to the chaos at the warehouse was a fire, which was put out. Montminy said he didn't know how the fire started, but didn't think it was set. The shooting was over in a matter of minutes, Montminy said. The victims were found all over the complex, and authorities don't know if Thornton fired randomly or targeted specific co-workers, Montminy said. After shooting his co-workers, Thornton called his mother, Hannah said. “He wanted to say goodbye and that he loved everybody,” Hannah said. Thornton was alive when police got to the scene but killed himself before officers got to him, Montminy said. A police sharpshooter had approval to fire on Thornton when he killed himself, an official with knowledge of the scene told the AP on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss it. Hannah said her daughter, Kristi, had dated Thornton for the past eight years. Kristi Hannah did not return calls for comment. “Everybody's got a breaking point,” Joanne Hannah said. Hannah described Thornton as an easygoing guy who liked to play sports and video games. She said he had a pistol permit and had planned to teach her daughter how to use a gun. Hollander's cousin, Steve, who's a vice president at the company, was shot in the arm and the face. Hollander said he thought his cousin would be OK. Steve Hollander would not comment when reached on his cell phone. Police declined to release the names of those killed. Among the dead was Bryan Cirigliano, 51, of Newington, president of Teamsters 1035, according to the union. He had been Thornton's representative at Tuesday's disciplinary hearing, the union said. Bill Ackerman, a 51-year-old warehouseman, also was killed, said his girlfriend, Stephanie Laurin. “I was like, 'Where's Billy, where's Billy?' and they said they hadn't seen him. And then one of his co-workers told me … that he saw the shooter go to where Billy's room is that he works in,” she said. “I was just praying to God that he was OK.” Ackerman, who enjoyed playing golf and rooting for the Boston Red Sox, had worked for the company for about 20 years, she said. The Hartford Courant identified another victim as Victor James, 59, of Windsor. Two victims were being treated at Hartford Hospital. The rampage was the nation's deadliest since 13 people were fatally shot at Fort Hood, Texas, in November. A military psychiatrist is charged with 13 counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder in that case. In Connecticut, a state lottery worker gunned down four supervisors in 1998 before committing suicide, and six people were killed in 1974 in botched robbery at a bakery in New Britain. Two men were convicted of that crime. On Tuesday, a few dozen relatives and friends of the victims gathered a few miles away at Manchester High School. Outside, people talked, hugged and cried. Others talked on cell phones. Police officers from numerous agencies and police and fire vehicles surrounded the warehouse, on a tree-lined road in an industrial park just west of a shopping mall. Thornton listed Hoffman's Gun Center & Indoor Range in Newington as among his interests on his Facebook page. A company official declined to comment. Thornton filed for bankruptcy protection a decade ago. His Chapter 7 petition in 2000 listed $4,850 in assets, including a 1994 Chrysler Concorde, and more than $15,000 in liabilities — primarily debt on credit card and student loan payments. His debts were discharged in March 2001 and the case was closed the following month. The Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities said Hartford Distributors has never had any complaints filed against it. The Hollander family is widely respected in Manchester, said state Rep. Ryan Barry, a lifelong resident. He said the family-owned Hartford Distributors sponsors local sports teams and the family is civic-minded. “Everybody knows the Hollanders as good, generous, upstanding people,” Barry said. “They're embedded in the community. Everyone knows Hartford Distributors. They treat their employees very well and they're part of the fabric of the town.” In a statement, Connecticut Gov. M. Jodi Rell offered condolences to the victims' families and co-workers. “We are all left asking the same questions: How could someone do this? Why did they do this?” she said. added by: keithponder

Cooking With Gallup, Per RedState: Generic Congressional Poll Changes Sample Base, Improves Dems’ Standing

There are lots of creative ways to generate an artificial sense of momentum for a foundering political party. Based on information provided at its own report, it appears that the Gallup polling organization may have come up with a new one. Gallup didn’t merely play with percentage of Democrats, Republicans, and Independents between poll dates. In the case of a generic Congressional poll done on July 12-18, the organization switched to a significantly different sampling base. Whereas previous efforts on the topic sample registered voters, the July 12-18 poll sampled all adults. RedState’s Neil Stevens notes that in the transition, what was a one-point generic ballot lead for Democrats a week earlier using registered voters  zoomed to six points in the July 12-18 tabulation of “all adults.” Stevens posted on this yesterday (HT HyScience ), and benchmarked the latest poll to one done from May 24-30 (bolds are mine): Remember on June 2 when Republicans took a big lead in the Gallup generic ballot? I used it to project conservatively a 45 seat Republican gain in the House. This was a poll of registered voters, according to Gallup’s Survey Methods notes: Results are based on telephone interviews conducted May 24-30, 2010, with a random sample of 1,594 registered voters , aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia, selected using a random-digit-dial sampling technique. But now on July 19 that Democrats are showing a big lead, despite the fact that Gallup’s pretty graph now is titled Candidate Preferences in 2010 Congressional Elections, Among Registered Voters, the sampling is different: Results are based on telephone interviews conducted as part of Gallup Daily tracking July 12-18, 2010, with a random sample of 1,535 adults , aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia, selected using random-digit-dial sampling. Catch the difference? The Republicans lead with a sample of Registered Voters, but the Democrats lead with a sample of Adults. Someone who trusted Gallup’s pretty, but lying, picture would never have noticed. It is terribly dishonest for Gallup to string together two different polls as one series, as Gallup does not only in their graphs, but in their write-ups as well. Assuming all is as Stevens details, poll cooking doesn’t get much more blatant than this. I suppose it’s conceivable that Gallup’s disclosure is in error, but in the current political and economic environment, it’s more than a little hard to take that Democrats have achieved significant generic Congressional ballot gains in the past week. Gallup’s post implies that the improvement occurred because “the U.S. Senate passed a major financial reform bill touted as reining in Wall Street.” Paraphrasing tennis great John McEnroe in one of his less than perfect moments : They cannot be serious. It will be interesting, and telling, to see if Gallup sticks with the much less predictive “all adults” metric in future reports on the topic, switches back to registered voters, and/or quietly flushes its latest effort down the memory hole at some future point. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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Cooking With Gallup, Per RedState: Generic Congressional Poll Changes Sample Base, Improves Dems’ Standing

Attacking ‘Ideologically Slanted’ Journalism, Media Critic Blames Conservatives

A journalist with a political agenda is not necessarily a dishonest one, and a journalist who claims to be objective is not necessarily honest. These are useful facts to bear in mind as media liberals call for Andrew Breitbart’s head. Breitbart posted video of recently-fired USDA official Shirley Sherrod claiming she considered race in allocating federal agriculture funds. The apparent racism was debunked when the entire video surfaced, showing that Sherrod had actually discouraged such actions. “This is what happens” wrote Eric Deggans for the St. Petersburg “when ideologically-focused noise machines are treated like real news outlets.” Conspicuously absent in Deggans’s screed is any mention of the recently-discovered attempt by liberal commentators to maliciously – and falsely, by their own admission – brand their ideological opponents as racists. Also absent: any mention of the litany of instances of dishonest and counter-factual reporting from the purportedly “objective” media. Let’s take those in order. For those completely disconnected from the realm of political journalism, the Daily Caller recently unearthed a 2008 effort by a number of the left’s leading reporters and commentators to bury the Rev. Wright scandal , which almost sank Barack Obama’s presidential campaign. “Pick one of Obama’s conservative critics,” wrote Spencer Ackerman, then a blogger with the Washington Independent, “Fred Barnes, Karl Rove, who cares — and call them racists.” The phrase “who cares” demonstrates that neither Ackerman nor anyone who took his advice cared if the targets of this smear campaign was racist. Malicious intent is self-evident. Why did Deggans completely omit this bit from his piece? He chose to focus only on Breitbart, who, he claims, had no part in editing the video in question nor knowledge that the context of the video contradicted the apparent racism he thought he was exposing. Obviously Breitbart has a significant interest in proclaiming his lack of culpability for dishonest journalistic practices. But no one has provided any evidence contradicting his claims. But the point is that Ackerman and his JournoList cohorts planned on portraying commentators as racist when they knew the opposite to be true. On its face, that is a more condemnable journalistic offense. While this glaring double standard undermines Deggans’s credibility in discussing honest reporting, the numerous examples of similar journalistic malfeasance on Old Media’s part – conveniently omitted from Deggan’s column – undermines the argument itself. Deggans speculates on what the intended impact was of Breitbart’s video: unveiling video so explosive that media outlets are pushed to jump on the story without properly vetting it, amplified through hundreds of like-minded platforms. Mainstream media outlets get sucked into the frenzy by allegations that moving slowly is evidence of liberal bias, while all involved are pressured to shut down the story quickly as possible with a resignation or similar action… Once again, mainstream news outlets have been accused of bias in moving slowly to cover a story trumpeted by ideologically slanted media outlets — the Washington Post’s ombudsman even chided his own newspaper for moving too slowly on the story… But Sherrod’s case shows exactly why fair-minded news outlets should be careful — taking time to make sure these stories trumpeted by media outlets with clear political agendas are examined carefully. It’s time to put the brakes on a runaway media culture open to manipulation and subversion; outlets moving slowly on stories shouldn’t necessarily be penalized. In other words, by Deggans’s account, “ideologically slanted” media outlets, simply by their nature, encourage a lackluster approach to the news by the “fair-minded media outlets,” who are working either to avoid being pre-empted on a story, or to avoid being accused of bias. But then the issue is not the format of the news – who reports it through which medium – but rather the standards of journalism at play. Deggans fails to account for the litany of cases in which traditional – what he calls “fair minded” – media outlets have committed journalistic malpractice strikingly similar to those of which Breitbart stands accused. Just to take two high profile examples, “fair-minded” outlets have leveled very serious false allegations against the last two Republican candidates for president. In 2004, of course, CBS “60 Minutes” anchor Dan Rather’s career ended after the supposedly-groundbreaking documents showing that George W. Bush had failed to follow orders and was excused from basic duties during his stint in the Texas Air National Guard were complete forgeries. Not only were the documents fake, not only did CBS move forward with the report without vetting the story properly, but it was in fact ideologically-driven bloggers – the type Deggans thinks are “hurting America” – who exposed the story as the fraud that it was. Four years later, the New York Times printed a front-page story suggesting that then-GOP presidential candidate John McCain had had an affair with lobbyist Vicki Iseman. There was no evidence whatsoever to back up the claim, but the Times ran it anyway. By the end of the day, when it was clear the story was a sham, the paper was furiously backpedaling and trying to shift the public’s focus away from its shoddy journalistic practices. Before it could, though, the story spread like wildfire – another phenomenon Deggans erroneously attributes uniquely to new media. As Brent Bozell wrote at the time , The mystique of the New York Times remains so great in the media establishment that within hours, the network morning shows all rumbled forward with furrowed brows chanting it was a crisis…for McCain. CBS morning host Harry Smith found a bombshell hedged with a may-have: “This bombshell report that Republican front-runner John McCain may have had a romantic relationship with a lobbyist who was a visitor to his office and traveled with him on a client’s corporate jet.” On ABC, former Clinton sex-denier George Stephanopoulos laughably claimed this could be an earthquake. On a scale of one to ten, with ten being fatal, George guessed this flimsy slime bubble was a “six or a seven…a damaging story, there’s no doubt about that.” On NBC, Tim Russert said the story would “play out today in a very big way.” In sum, “ideologically slanted” journalists are not inherently less honest than Old Media’s “fair minded” reporters, nor are they necessarily more sloppy with their verification. The truth is the truth, regardless of one’s politics. Breitbart’s video was clearly dishonest (whether or not he intended it to be). But let’s not pretend that dishonesty in journalism is confined to the digital right.

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Attacking ‘Ideologically Slanted’ Journalism, Media Critic Blames Conservatives

Tim Tebow Penetrates Colt McCoy’s Wedding Song

Filed under: Tim Tebow , TMZ Sports Texas Longhorns legend Colt McCoy got married this weekend — and even at his own wedding party, Colt was upstaged by his former college rival Tim Tebow … and Tim wasn’t even there. During the celebrations, McCoy got a special country music serenade… Read more

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Tim Tebow Penetrates Colt McCoy’s Wedding Song

Two Chupacabra’s Shot In North Texas…”It Was Ugly, Real Ugly.” (CHUPACABRA VIDEO)

Chupacabra, Mysterious Animal, Allegedly SPOTTED In Texas 7-14-2010 Huffingtonpost.com Chupacabras, literally “goat suckers,” are legendary creatures said to roam Mexico, Puerto Rico and parts of the United States. Once called the “Bigfoot of Latino culture,” there have been many stories about these unidentified animals. Chupacabras are said to kill livestock and tear them to pieces; they are often portrayed as a cross between a dog and a wolf. Two Chupacabra’s Shot In North Texas…”It Was Ugly, Real Ugly.” (CHUPACABRA VIDEO)… http://ctpatriot1970.wordpress.com/2010/07/14/chupacabra-video/ Animal Control Office Frank Hackett described the animal involved in the most recent sightings: “All I know is, it wasn’t normal. It was ugly, real ugly. I’m not going to tell no lie on that one.” added by: ctpatriot1970

Experts to Obama: You Can’t Ignore Islamic Ideology Behind Terrorism

The Obama administration’s reluctance to acknowledge and confront the religious motivation behind Islamist terrorism is not helping the counter-terror effort, leading experts warn in a new report.   The administration’s recently released National Security Strategy (NSS) defines the enemy as “al-Qaeda and its terrorist affiliates,” but Washington Institute for Near East Policy report argues that it is a bigger one – “the extremist ideology that fuels and supports Islamist violence.”   Authors J. Scott Carpenter, Matthew Levitt, Steven Simon and Juan Zarate contend that just because ideology is not the only driving force behind violent Islamic terrorism does not mean it can be ignored.   Instead, the administration should recognize Islamism as “the key ideological driver” behind the threat posed by al-Qaeda and other radical Islamist groups, and prioritize an effort to combat the ideology, they say.   “To be sure, officials need to make very clear that they do not consider Islam itself a danger, only the distorted version of Islam perpetrated by radical extremists. But they – and, in particular, the president – must also come to terms with the fact that individuals implicated in each of the recently exposed plots in the United States were imbued with a common radical ethos.”   In keeping with President Obama’s agenda of reaching out to the Islamic world administration officials have moved away from terminology that could cause offense when discussing violent terrorism or extremism. Radical Yemen-based cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, pictured above, has called both the Fort Hood shooting suspect and the Nigerian who tried to bomb a Detroit-bound passenger plane on Christmas Day 2009 his “students.”   The NSS unveiled in May used variations of the phrase “al-Qaeda and its affiliates” repeatedly in identifying the enemy.  The word “Islam” appeared twice – the U.S. was not fighting a war against Islam, it said, and “neither Islam nor any other religion condones the slaughter of innocents.”   When he previewed the document in a speech several days before the launch, Obama’s counter terrorism advisor, John Brennan, said, “Our enemy is not terrorism because terrorism is but a tactic.”   “Nor do we describe our enemy as jihadists or Islamists because jihad is holy struggle, a legitimate tenet of Islam meaning to purify oneself or one’s community.”   (The NSS released by the Bush administration in 2006 stated that “the struggle against militant Islamic radicalism is the great ideological conflict of the early years of the 21st century.” It also called Islam “a proud religion” that “has been twisted and made to serve an evil end.”)   Nidal Malik Hasan, the U.S. Army major accused of killing 13 people at Fort Hood, Texas last November; Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian arrested after trying to bomb a Detroit-bound aircraft on Christmas Day 2009; and Faisal Shahzad, the Pakistani-American who tried to detonate a car bomb at Times Square on May 1, were all evidently inspired by Islamist propaganda.   The Washington Institute for Near East Policy report released this week says that U.S. national security is being undermined by a deepening “ideological competition within Islam.”   “The competition is between a modern, predominantly pluralistic view of the world and an exclusionary, harsh, and equally modern ideology that appeals to a glorious past, places aspects of religious identity above all others, and relies on a distorted interpretation of Islam,” it says. Radical Islamists like Adam Gadahn, pictured here praising Fort Hood shooting suspect Nidal Hasan in a March 2010 al-Qaeda propaganda video, use the Koran and other Islamic texts to justify their jihad against the West. (Image: LauraMansfield.com) “The conflict between these two visions constitutes a struggle for the hearts and minds of the majority of Muslims, who abhor violence, but who – out of sympathy, apathy, or fear – will not or cannot confront the extremists in their communities. Any strategy, therefore, that does not skillfully contest the claims and actions of radical extremism cannot succeed.”   The authors recommend that the administration broaden cooperation with foreign governments, NGOs and others “to empower credible Muslim voices to marginalize” Islamist radicals.   At home and abroad, the government should more effectively identify and support Muslim opinion-leaders who can provide alternative influences to “radicalizers” in their communities.   Other recommendations include prioritizing the importance of human rights and democracy in Arab countries – with Egypt’s looming political changes “a key test for the administration’s approach.”   And in engaging with the Muslim community at home, the authors suggest that the government reach out not only to the most vocal organizations, but also to the most representative.   “Some prominent Muslim American groups have questionable links to banned groups that should disqualify them as trusted government partners in the effort to combat extremism,” the report says. “Others, perhaps less vocal and often active at a more local level, warrant greater institutional recognition and support.”   The report did not elaborate, but two U.S. Muslim groups that receive considerable media exposure, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), were both named by the Justice Department in 2007 as “unindicted co-conspirators” in its case against the Holy Land Foundation in Texas, which was subsequently found guilty of raising money for Hamas. Islamist terror groups like Hamas’ Izzidin al-Qassam, whose logo features a Koran and other Islamic imagery, describe their missions in religious terms. Experts say the Obama administration’s counter-terror effort cannot ignore the religious motivation driving extremists. (Image: Izzidin al-Qassam Web site)   Debates over how governments should tackle the ideology driving terrorism are also underway in Britain, where “homegrown” Muslim terrorists have carried out several deadly attacks in recent years.   Five years ago last week, four terrorists – three of them British-born – killed 52 people and themselves on London’s subway and a bus.   At an event marking the anniversary hosted at the Chatham House think tank, counter terrorism experts and officials were critical of elements of a government program that aims to stop people from becoming terrorists or supporting violent extremism.   The strategy, known as “Prevent,” provides government funding to local organizations deemed to be best placed to counter the ideology of violent extremism.   “Participants argued that there was a fine dividing line between supporting communities in trying to stop people turning to terrorism and stigmatizing communities as a threat to the rest of society,” according to a report by BBC Radio, a co-sponsor of the invitation-only Chatham House event.   The Prevent strategy came under close scrutiny earlier this year after a cross-party parliamentary committee carried out an in-depth inquiry into the program.   The inquiry found that the strategy was causing mistrust and suspicion in the Muslim community. It said organizations and projects receiving Prevent funding were seen as tainted, and many Muslims felt the government was trying to create a “moderate” Islam, by funding and promoting some organizations over others.   “We do not think it is the job of Government to intervene in theological matters,” the committee said in its report.   It also argued that the program was placing too much emphasis on religion as a factor driving people to violent extremism.   “There has been a pre-occupation with the theological basis of radicalization, when the evidence seems to indicate that politics, policy and socio-economics may be more important factors in the process,” it said.   The relative importance of socio-economic factors in driving British Muslims to Islamist terrorism has been widely disputed.   In a newly-released directory of Islamist attacks and convictions in the U.K. over the past decade, the Center for Social Cohesion, a British think tank focusing on extremism, reported that at least 31 percent of the individuals involved “had at some point attended university or a higher education institute.”   And at the time of the attack or criminal proceeding, 42 percent of the individuals were either employed or in full-time higher education.   The Center for Social Cohesion said its analysis “does not support the assertion made by some that there is a correlation between terrorist activity and low educational achievement and employment status.”   Abdulmutallab, the would-be Christmas Day bomber, was a mechanical engineering graduate of one of Britain’s most prestigious institutions, University College London, where he also headed the Islamic Society in 2006-2007.   Crossposted at NB sister site CNS News

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Experts to Obama: You Can’t Ignore Islamic Ideology Behind Terrorism

Student Sues for $1 Million challenge made on Dateline NBC

A Texas law student who took a defense lawyer's $1 million challenge from a “Dateline NBC” interview is suing for the money he claims he is owed. Dustin Kolodziej of the San Antonio area said attorney James Mason offered in a “Dateline NBC” interview he would pay $1 million to anyone who could prove him wrong in claiming his client, Nelson Serrano, could have made it from Florida's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport to the La Quinta Inn, a 3-mile distance, in under 28 minutes, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported Monday. “I challenge anybody to show me. I'll pay them a million dollars if they can do it,” Mason told the interview. Serrano was convicted of killing four people in Bartow, Fla., in 1997 and the prosecution's case hinged on his ability to reach the inn in the time frame. Kolodziej said he got off a plane at the airport, took his car from the parking garage and made it to the inn in just 19 minutes, capturing the whole experience on a camcorder. However, Mason refused to pay the $1 million reward, claiming the offer was a figure of speech. Kolodziej's lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Atlanta, alleges breach of contract, claiming Mason's statements on “Dateline” constituted a verbal contract. “What this case boils down to is would a reasonable person believe that this is legitimate,” said David George, a lawyer for Kolodziej. “Think about the context. He's on 'Dateline,' national TV, and his client is on death row. That is not a joking context.” added by: Stoneyroad