Tag Archives: wright

Sarah Palin Responds to Gabrielle Giffords Tragedy; Decries "Mindless Finger Pointing"

In a new video, Sarah Palin has decried the shooting of Gabrielle Giffords , along with the finger-pointing she believes has made her a scapegoat of sorts. Slamming critics who say she bears blame, she says “We must reject the idea that [when] a law is broken, society is guilty rather than the lawbreaker.” Check out her full video response here and comment below: Sarah Palin Speaks on Gabrielle Giffords Shooting Sarah drew criticism after it was discovered that Rep. Giffords was targeted in Palin’s crosshairs map of GOP takeover opportunities released last fall. Palin says media figures “manufacture a blood libel that serves only to incite the very hatred and violence they purport to condemn. That is reprehensible.” Pointing fingers at finger-pointing, the former Governor adds: “We are better than the mindless finger pointing we endured in the wake of the tragedy.” What do you think? Is Sarah Palin partly to blame?

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Sarah Palin Responds to Gabrielle Giffords Tragedy; Decries "Mindless Finger Pointing"

Chely Wright Speaks on Death Threats, Reaction to Sexual Orientation

Chely Wright came out as a gay country artist in May 2010. But while some critics may believe that announcement was publicity-driven, Wright says the result has been anything but positive for her career. “I haven’t talked about the negative,” Wright said this week. “You won’t hear me bitching and moaning on my Facebook about the hate mail I’ve gotten. My life has been threatened. I get nasty letters every day, ‘I’m through with you Chely Wright, you’re going to hell.'” Has Wright received support from fellow singers? Only from Mary Chapin Carpenter, at least in public. “They wouldn’t want their fans to know they were LGBT friendly,” the singer says of private messages other stars have offered. “There are also artist friends who I never heard from again. There are a lot of other people in the industry that I had a friendly email relationship with, or would occasionally text with, that I have not heard a word from.”

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Chely Wright Speaks on Death Threats, Reaction to Sexual Orientation

Mena Suvari Talks Garden of Eden

The actress — who famously shaved her head for the role — talks about taking on Hemingway.

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Mena Suvari Talks Garden of Eden

Meet the Creators: Will Wright on the Inspiration for Creation

Will Wright — creator of The Sims , Spore , and now Bar Karma — explains where the concept of a community-developed show came from.

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Meet the Creators: Will Wright on the Inspiration for Creation

When a Priest is Your Fixer

To document border crossings, Christof Putzel needed a “fixer” — a contact who helps a journalist manage logistics on the ground. His turned out to be the local priest.

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When a Priest is Your Fixer

Welcome to Creation Studios

Want to participate in the world’s first TV show created by its audience? Creator Will Wright explains the concept behind “television of tomorrow,” Walt Disney-style. TV YOU CONTROL: BAR KARMA PREMIERES SATURDAY at 11/10c

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Welcome to Creation Studios

Hey Fox Fans, Your Favorite Network Is Part-Owned By a Saudi Prince Whose Family Rules By Sharia Law

Maybe Newtie could persuade Rupert Murdoch to have his partners build some synagogues and churches and end all this unpleasantness. The stridency with which Fox News personalities attack the downtown Islamic center — red meat for the millions who tune in each night — is an example of the often uneasy relationship and occasionally diverging interests between many of News Corp.’s properties, in this case Fox News and its parent corporation. For example, News Corp.’s second-largest shareholder, after the Murdoch family, is Prince Alwaleed bin Talal (pictured above), the nephew of Saudi Arabian King Abdullah, and one of the world’s richest men. Saudi Arabia, which is ruled by Alwaleed’s uncle King Abdullah, is, of course, an authoritarian petro-monarchy that actually is governed by Sharia law and is known as one of the top global sponsors of terrorism. A spokesperson for the Saudi embassy in Washington says that while Alwaleed is part of the royal family, he isn’t a member of the government, but rather a private citizen. I doubt all those Fox news patriots know that the same News Corp that’s owned by a Wahhabist Saudi prince just donated a million dollars to the Republican party. Of course they’ll never find out because the only network they watch is the same terrorist funded network that’s doing it. But if they were to hear about it, considering that they all seem to be so worried about the terrorists coming to kill them in their beds, I would imagine they’d be uncomfortable about getting all their news from a network that’s partially owned by one of “them.” And I’d be very surprised if they were sanguine about a scary Muslim donating to their patriotic political party. Why next thing you know they’ll be trying to build community centers near Ground Zero. At the very least, this whole thing is very insensitive, don’t you think? After all, some people really hate Muslims and it’s very unpleasant for them to have to watch news networks that are owned by them and be asked vote for a Party that’s funded by them. I’m not saying that Murdoch should be forced to stop donating millions to Republicans or partnering with Saudi princes who believe in Sharia law. I just think it’s common sense that he wouldn’t do it in the first place. added by: vixxxen618

When Aviators Become Vapor Trail Artists

Aerobatics have existed for almost as long as flight itself. The same impulse of endeavor that drove the Wright brothers to launch man into the air at Kittyhawk in 1903, drove those who followed to explore the limits of just what an airplane could do. added by: ritubpant1

WaPo Obit Tones Down Climate Scientist’s Recent Attack on ‘Hitlerian Lies’ and ‘Gun-Toting Rightwingers’

The Washington Post obituary for liberal climate scientist Stephen Schneider, a media favorite over the years to promote the allegedly ironclad certainty of global warming, replayed a very recent jeremiad against “Hitlerian lies” by conservatives in the wake of Climategate. But the Post’s version of his remarks toned him down and excised his attacks on “gun-toting rightwingers” who are Limbaugh and Beck fans. T. Rees Shapiro reported: His passionate views on the climate debate occasionally attracted vitriol from extremist groups. An FBI investigation recently found he was named on a neo-Nazi “death list,” and Dr. Schneider said he received hundreds of hate e-mails a day. “What do I do? Learn to shoot a magnum? Wear a bulletproof jacket?” Dr. Schneider said. “I have now had extra alarms fitted at my home, and my address is unlisted. I get scared that we’re now in a new Weimar Republic where people are prepared to listen to what amounts to Hitlerian lies about climate scientists.” Nonetheless, Dr. Schneider said he believed it was important for scientists to communicate with the public and spread their understanding of climate data and findings. “If we do not do the due diligence of letting people understand the relative credibility of claimants of truth, then all we do is have a confused public who hears claim and counterclaim,” Dr. Schneider said in a recent interview with Climate Science Watch. “When somebody says ‘I don’t believe in global warming,’ I ask, ‘Do you believe in evidence? Do you believe in a preponderance of evidence?’ ” For a fuller version of Schneider’s remarks, we turn to the leftist British newspaper The Guardian  on July 5, in which correspondent Leo Hickman warned “Climate scientists in the US say police inaction has left them defenceless in the face of a torrent of death threats and hate mail.” Schneider sounds less like a scientist and more like an activist:   Schneider described his attackers as “cowards” and said he had observed an “immediate, noticeable rise” in emails whenever climate scientists were attacked by prominent right-wing US commentators, such as Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh . “[The senders] are not courageous people,” said Schneider. “Where are they getting their information from? They just listen to assertions made on blogs and rightwing talkshows. It’s pathetic .” Schneider said the FBI had taken an interest earlier this year when his name appeared on a “death list” on a neo-Nazi website alongside other climate scientists with apparent Jewish ancestry. But, to date, no action has been taken. “The effect on me has been tremendous,” said Schneider. ” Some of these people are mentally imbalanced. They are invariably gun-toting rightwingers. What do I do? Learn to shoot a Magnum? Wear a bullet-proof jacket? I have now had extra alarms fitted at my home and my address is unlisted. I get scared that we’re now in a new Weimar republic where people are prepared to listen to what amounts to Hitlerian lies about climate scientists.” The Post obituary made no reference whatsoever to Schneider’s arguments in the 1970s that the real peril was global cooling . That apparently would have been too much of a concession to the gun-toting rightwingers.

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WaPo Obit Tones Down Climate Scientist’s Recent Attack on ‘Hitlerian Lies’ and ‘Gun-Toting Rightwingers’

Morning Joe Libs Sweep Sherrod, Voter Intimidation Under Carpet: Let’s Not ‘Scratch A Sore’

It’s pretty hard—even for media liberals—to defend a guy in paramilitary duds swinging a billy club outside a polling site, or a government official bragging about having declined to do everything in her power to help someone because of the white color of his skin.  So on today’s Morning Joe, Margaret Carlson, Norah O’Donnell and Mike Barnicle were obliged to engage in a modicum of hand-wringing over the incidents.  But once having discharged that duty, the trio set about doing what libs do best: finding ways to minimize the matters and excuse the MSM’s failure to cover them. To be sure, Carlson did call the statement by the USDA official “hateful” and said one should be “ashamed.” And Norah O’Donnell and Mike Barnicle agreed with Joe Scarborough that the MSM can fairly be criticized for undercovering these stories. But then the three started their excuse-a-thon: Carlson: “I mean, there’s more [racism] on one side [whites] then the other,” though that didn’t change the fact that what Sherrod did was wrong. O’Donnell: On this [Sherrod] particular case, while this egregious in my mind, it is an isolated, we believe, incident.  There’s no suggestion that the USDA is doing this as a systematic problem.  So I worry that in a climate that there have now been, that there is an effort to pile up a lot of these racially-charged stories , that concern me about things, that we’re, you know, setting up these black versus white stories in this country, that these instances are, because, are trying to create some kind of narrative about where we are in this country.  And that makes me nervous.  Do you know what I’m trying to say?  Do you know what I’m trying to say?   Barnicle: Out there, in this big large universe beyond television, that people are more obsessed with other issues like their jobs and their incomes than they are with what someone said in March working for the Department of Agriculture. After agreeing that if the polling site intimidators would, if white, have been immediately arrested and that there would have been more media coverage, Barnicle continued . . . BARNICLE: At this point, the incessant coverage of it, with all of the questions, it’s like scratching a sore.  That’s all it’s doing. It’s pulling a scab. As Joe Scarborough observed: “But who’s covered it? Fox has covered it, but even the Washington Post said nobody else has covered it.” After Scarborough accused the MSM of ignoring the stories, Carlson had the last word. CARLSON: Maybe not ignored.  I mean, there’s so many stories that slip by and go through the cracks , you don’t know . . . They did prosecute the guy who was holding the billy club at an almost all-black precinct.  So, intimidating white voters at an all-black precinct?  would you go to another precinct where there might be more [abruptly ends at hard commercial break]. Let’s summarize the libs’ arguments:  The media shouldn’t make too much of all this. The Sherrod thing was an isolated case. Covering these stories is just going to stir up bad feelings.  And anyhow, the stories aren’t that important, compared to the economy.  And, hey, lots of stories slip through the media cracks: these just happened to be two of them. And you know, the voter intimidation was really pretty harmless.   All of which goes to prove a point that Scarborough made: with media liberals who think like this, were the racial tables turned, these stories would have been the subject of 28-part front page series.

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Morning Joe Libs Sweep Sherrod, Voter Intimidation Under Carpet: Let’s Not ‘Scratch A Sore’