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marmar
marmar's Journal
marmar's Journal
May 1, 2013
Howard Zinn on class in America Pt4: A reinvigorated labor movement needed for a great social upheaval
Happy May Day !!! ..... A little Howard Zinn for inspiration:
Howard Zinn on class in America Pt4: A reinvigorated labor movement needed for a great social upheaval
May 1, 2013
from YES! Magazine:
Star Treks George Takei: Putting Facebook Fame to Good Use
Famous for his role as Dr. Sulu on Star Trek, today George Takei uses the popularity of his kitchy humor to promote discussion about the rights of women and LGBT people.
by Mark Engler
posted Apr 30, 2013
[font size="1"]George Takei at the Chicago Gay and Lesbian Pride. Photo by Zesmerelda.[/font]
I was a relative latecomer to Facebookand a skeptic, too. Well into the Obama era, I was parroting the standard criticisms that people who havent actually spent time on the platform like to recycle: chiefly, Why would I want to know what a bunch of my old classmates and distant acquaintances just had for breakfast?
Ive come around. Its always unnerving to be hooked to a giant corporation, and I still keep my guard up a little. But once I got to using Facebook it quickly became clear why it has a mass following. Its a fun way to keep in touch with friends, a useful source of interesting links (link up with some media-savvy users and youll have a customized news feed thats hard to beat), and an effective means of affectionately razzing extended family members (when a cousins March Madness bracket started doing far worse than mine, I somehow made time in my busy schedule to gloat).
And then theres the joy of seeing posts from George Takei.
Takeia seventy-five-year-old actor most famous for playing Mr. Sulu on the original Star Trekis friendly and warm-hearted, matter-of-factly out of the closet, always ready with a pun, and unabashedly nerdy (items that combine or conflate the Star Wars and Star Trek universes are a subspecialty of Takeis). If there is a more beloved personality in the world of social networking, I havent met him or her. ...................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.yesmagazine.org/happiness/star-trek-george-takei-fighting-for-equality-funny-cat-photos
Star Trek’s George Takei: Putting Facebook Fame to Good Use
from YES! Magazine:
Star Treks George Takei: Putting Facebook Fame to Good Use
Famous for his role as Dr. Sulu on Star Trek, today George Takei uses the popularity of his kitchy humor to promote discussion about the rights of women and LGBT people.
by Mark Engler
posted Apr 30, 2013
[font size="1"]George Takei at the Chicago Gay and Lesbian Pride. Photo by Zesmerelda.[/font]
I was a relative latecomer to Facebookand a skeptic, too. Well into the Obama era, I was parroting the standard criticisms that people who havent actually spent time on the platform like to recycle: chiefly, Why would I want to know what a bunch of my old classmates and distant acquaintances just had for breakfast?
Ive come around. Its always unnerving to be hooked to a giant corporation, and I still keep my guard up a little. But once I got to using Facebook it quickly became clear why it has a mass following. Its a fun way to keep in touch with friends, a useful source of interesting links (link up with some media-savvy users and youll have a customized news feed thats hard to beat), and an effective means of affectionately razzing extended family members (when a cousins March Madness bracket started doing far worse than mine, I somehow made time in my busy schedule to gloat).
And then theres the joy of seeing posts from George Takei.
Takeia seventy-five-year-old actor most famous for playing Mr. Sulu on the original Star Trekis friendly and warm-hearted, matter-of-factly out of the closet, always ready with a pun, and unabashedly nerdy (items that combine or conflate the Star Wars and Star Trek universes are a subspecialty of Takeis). If there is a more beloved personality in the world of social networking, I havent met him or her. ...................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.yesmagazine.org/happiness/star-trek-george-takei-fighting-for-equality-funny-cat-photos
May 1, 2013
from truthdig:
Wall Street Is Killing Dodd-Frank One Regulation at a Time
Posted on Apr 30, 2013
By Thomas Hedges, Center for Study of Responsive Law
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce released a letter this month outlining the changes it would like to see made to the Dodd-Frank Act, whose full implementation has been delayed for almost three years now. The chambers Fix, Add, Replace (FAR) agenda to alter Dodd-Frank insists that Congress already compromised attempt to avoid another financial meltdown is too ambitious. The law is failing, the chamber says, because it aimed to tackle too much.
Trying to eliminate all risks and risk taking will hinder our ability to fund new ideas, startups, and expansion in our Main Street economy, chamber President and CEO Tom Donohue wrote on the groups Free Enterprise website. Reasonable risk taking drives innovation, jobs and growth.
The FAR plan advises Congress to establish checks and balances for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which means the chamber wants bipartisan leadership at a regulator the group fears could be headed by someone like Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren or former Commodity Futures Trading Commission head Brooksley Born, both of whom are critical of Wall Street.
The chamber also wants to weaken whistle-blower laws that it believes undermine strong corporate compliance programs and to streamline regulators through consolidation, in essence downsizing regulatory agencies and banning mandatory audit firm rotationsa measure that prevents auditors from getting too comfy with the companies they oversee. ...................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/wall_street_is_killing_dodd-frank_one_regulation_at_a_time_20130430/
Wall Street Is Killing Dodd-Frank One Regulation at a Time
from truthdig:
Wall Street Is Killing Dodd-Frank One Regulation at a Time
Posted on Apr 30, 2013
By Thomas Hedges, Center for Study of Responsive Law
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce released a letter this month outlining the changes it would like to see made to the Dodd-Frank Act, whose full implementation has been delayed for almost three years now. The chambers Fix, Add, Replace (FAR) agenda to alter Dodd-Frank insists that Congress already compromised attempt to avoid another financial meltdown is too ambitious. The law is failing, the chamber says, because it aimed to tackle too much.
Trying to eliminate all risks and risk taking will hinder our ability to fund new ideas, startups, and expansion in our Main Street economy, chamber President and CEO Tom Donohue wrote on the groups Free Enterprise website. Reasonable risk taking drives innovation, jobs and growth.
The FAR plan advises Congress to establish checks and balances for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which means the chamber wants bipartisan leadership at a regulator the group fears could be headed by someone like Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren or former Commodity Futures Trading Commission head Brooksley Born, both of whom are critical of Wall Street.
The chamber also wants to weaken whistle-blower laws that it believes undermine strong corporate compliance programs and to streamline regulators through consolidation, in essence downsizing regulatory agencies and banning mandatory audit firm rotationsa measure that prevents auditors from getting too comfy with the companies they oversee. ...................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/wall_street_is_killing_dodd-frank_one_regulation_at_a_time_20130430/
May 1, 2013
from Right Wing Watch:
Deace: Jason Collins Coming Out Shows 'How Indoctrinated an Aspect of our Culture Has Become'
Submitted by Brian Tashman on Monday, 4/29/2013 1:40 pm
Conservative talk show host Steve Deace seems to be upset that NBA player Jason Collins decision to come out of the closet is being warmly received by his fellow players and fans, and posted on his Facebook page that his story demonstrates perfectly how indoctrinated an aspect of our culture has become. Deace goes on to say that gay rights supporters are basically fascists and is angry that he is being labeled intolerant.
Deace also lamented that while Tim Tebow, who today was released by the New York Jets, gets killed by liberal sportswriters while Collins received praise: Apparently preferring to have sex with other guys is a profile in courage nowadays. ....................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/deace-jason-collins-coming-out-shows-how-indoctrinated-aspect-our-culture-has-become
Right-wing derangement over Jason Collins
from Right Wing Watch:
Deace: Jason Collins Coming Out Shows 'How Indoctrinated an Aspect of our Culture Has Become'
Submitted by Brian Tashman on Monday, 4/29/2013 1:40 pm
Conservative talk show host Steve Deace seems to be upset that NBA player Jason Collins decision to come out of the closet is being warmly received by his fellow players and fans, and posted on his Facebook page that his story demonstrates perfectly how indoctrinated an aspect of our culture has become. Deace goes on to say that gay rights supporters are basically fascists and is angry that he is being labeled intolerant.
Deace also lamented that while Tim Tebow, who today was released by the New York Jets, gets killed by liberal sportswriters while Collins received praise: Apparently preferring to have sex with other guys is a profile in courage nowadays. ....................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/deace-jason-collins-coming-out-shows-how-indoctrinated-aspect-our-culture-has-become
May 1, 2013
"The Rich Don't Always Win" - But They Usually Do
Thursday, 25 April 2013 09:27
By Salvatore Babones, Truthout | Op-Ed
Once upon a time there was a land of milk and honey called the United States of America. America was a great country, but it faced a powerful enemy, the evil Soviet Union. In 1959, there was a trade exhibition of American products in Moscow, the capital of that evil empire. The vice president of America, one Richard Milhous Nixon, attended the exhibition on America's behalf.
A 29-year-old future journalist named William Safire was there at the exhibition representing the American building industry. Doing his job very well, he steered Nixon and his Soviet nemesis, Nikita Khrushchev, toward a walk-through display of the typical American home.
As they toured the model American home, Nixon and Khrushchev debated the relative merits of the American and Soviet systems. The debate came to a climax in the kitchen, and so it went down in history as the "kitchen debate."
Khrushchev argued that the Soviet Union had surpassed America in rockets and high technology. Nixon responded by showing Khrushchev around the model American kitchen with its modern 1950s appliances. Nixon told Khrushchev how any ordinary American, a military veteran or a steelworker earning $3 an hour (worth $24 today), could afford a brand-new home with modern appliances. And he was right. ..................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/15991-the-rich-dont-always-win-but-they-usually-do
"The Rich Don't Always Win" - But They Usually Do
"The Rich Don't Always Win" - But They Usually Do
Thursday, 25 April 2013 09:27
By Salvatore Babones, Truthout | Op-Ed
Once upon a time there was a land of milk and honey called the United States of America. America was a great country, but it faced a powerful enemy, the evil Soviet Union. In 1959, there was a trade exhibition of American products in Moscow, the capital of that evil empire. The vice president of America, one Richard Milhous Nixon, attended the exhibition on America's behalf.
A 29-year-old future journalist named William Safire was there at the exhibition representing the American building industry. Doing his job very well, he steered Nixon and his Soviet nemesis, Nikita Khrushchev, toward a walk-through display of the typical American home.
As they toured the model American home, Nixon and Khrushchev debated the relative merits of the American and Soviet systems. The debate came to a climax in the kitchen, and so it went down in history as the "kitchen debate."
Khrushchev argued that the Soviet Union had surpassed America in rockets and high technology. Nixon responded by showing Khrushchev around the model American kitchen with its modern 1950s appliances. Nixon told Khrushchev how any ordinary American, a military veteran or a steelworker earning $3 an hour (worth $24 today), could afford a brand-new home with modern appliances. And he was right. ..................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/15991-the-rich-dont-always-win-but-they-usually-do
May 1, 2013
via truthdig:
You Should Care That Obama Is Going to Pick Tom Wheeler to Head the FCC
Posted on Apr 30, 2013
Forget the CIA. The Federal Communications Commission is like the fourth branch of American government, and its officials are not elected.
President Obama is reported to want venture capitalist, telecommunications executive and former Obama campaign volunteer Tom Wheeler to chair the commission. So why should you care?
Think about it this way: The Bill of Rights has a lot of pull in this country and the First Amendment protects freedom of speech, but that doesnt stop the FCC from fining anyone who uses speech it deems inappropriate. The commission can not only fine, it can revoke licenses. CBS? Here today, gone tomorrow. Broadcasters are so intimidated by the FCCs power to censor, even those that are exempt from traditional rules police themselves and mind their manners.
Think about it another way: The telecommunications industry controls the pipes and airwaves over which all of our communicationswhether TV shows or emailsare sent, and it bows to whom? The FCC commissioners. ...........(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/you_should_care_that_obama_is_going_to_pick_tom_wheeler_to_head_the_fcc_201/?ln
You Should Care That Obama Is Going to Pick Tom Wheeler to Head the FCC
via truthdig:
You Should Care That Obama Is Going to Pick Tom Wheeler to Head the FCC
Posted on Apr 30, 2013
Forget the CIA. The Federal Communications Commission is like the fourth branch of American government, and its officials are not elected.
President Obama is reported to want venture capitalist, telecommunications executive and former Obama campaign volunteer Tom Wheeler to chair the commission. So why should you care?
Think about it this way: The Bill of Rights has a lot of pull in this country and the First Amendment protects freedom of speech, but that doesnt stop the FCC from fining anyone who uses speech it deems inappropriate. The commission can not only fine, it can revoke licenses. CBS? Here today, gone tomorrow. Broadcasters are so intimidated by the FCCs power to censor, even those that are exempt from traditional rules police themselves and mind their manners.
Think about it another way: The telecommunications industry controls the pipes and airwaves over which all of our communicationswhether TV shows or emailsare sent, and it bows to whom? The FCC commissioners. ...........(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/you_should_care_that_obama_is_going_to_pick_tom_wheeler_to_head_the_fcc_201/?ln
May 1, 2013
from truthdig:
Wall Street Is Killing Dodd-Frank One Regulation at a Time
Posted on Apr 30, 2013
By Thomas Hedges, Center for Study of Responsive Law
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce released a letter this month outlining the changes it would like to see made to the Dodd-Frank Act, whose full implementation has been delayed for almost three years now. The chambers Fix, Add, Replace (FAR) agenda to alter Dodd-Frank insists that Congress already compromised attempt to avoid another financial meltdown is too ambitious. The law is failing, the chamber says, because it aimed to tackle too much.
Trying to eliminate all risks and risk taking will hinder our ability to fund new ideas, startups, and expansion in our Main Street economy, chamber President and CEO Tom Donohue wrote on the groups Free Enterprise website. Reasonable risk taking drives innovation, jobs and growth.
The FAR plan advises Congress to establish checks and balances for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which means the chamber wants bipartisan leadership at a regulator the group fears could be headed by someone like Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren or former Commodity Futures Trading Commission head Brooksley Born, both of whom are critical of Wall Street.
The chamber also wants to weaken whistle-blower laws that it believes undermine strong corporate compliance programs and to streamline regulators through consolidation, in essence downsizing regulatory agencies and banning mandatory audit firm rotationsa measure that prevents auditors from getting too comfy with the companies they oversee. ...................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/wall_street_is_killing_dodd-frank_one_regulation_at_a_time_20130430/
Wall Street Is Killing Dodd-Frank One Regulation at a Time
from truthdig:
Wall Street Is Killing Dodd-Frank One Regulation at a Time
Posted on Apr 30, 2013
By Thomas Hedges, Center for Study of Responsive Law
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce released a letter this month outlining the changes it would like to see made to the Dodd-Frank Act, whose full implementation has been delayed for almost three years now. The chambers Fix, Add, Replace (FAR) agenda to alter Dodd-Frank insists that Congress already compromised attempt to avoid another financial meltdown is too ambitious. The law is failing, the chamber says, because it aimed to tackle too much.
Trying to eliminate all risks and risk taking will hinder our ability to fund new ideas, startups, and expansion in our Main Street economy, chamber President and CEO Tom Donohue wrote on the groups Free Enterprise website. Reasonable risk taking drives innovation, jobs and growth.
The FAR plan advises Congress to establish checks and balances for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which means the chamber wants bipartisan leadership at a regulator the group fears could be headed by someone like Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren or former Commodity Futures Trading Commission head Brooksley Born, both of whom are critical of Wall Street.
The chamber also wants to weaken whistle-blower laws that it believes undermine strong corporate compliance programs and to streamline regulators through consolidation, in essence downsizing regulatory agencies and banning mandatory audit firm rotationsa measure that prevents auditors from getting too comfy with the companies they oversee. ...................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/wall_street_is_killing_dodd-frank_one_regulation_at_a_time_20130430/
May 1, 2013
from Civil Eats:
Rethinking Agriculture: National Climate Assessment Provides (Another) Reason
By Mia Macdonald on April 30, 2013
Pastoralists in Kenya, rice farmers in India, and industrial feedlot operators in the U.S. have all contended with the increased frequency of drought and erratic weather. New agricultural ideas and actions are essential amid rising climate stress, a growing human population, widespread degradation of ecosystems, and rampant food insecurity; nearly one billion people regularly dont get enough to eat.
Agriculture isnt just affected by the effects of climate change. Its also a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs). According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the U.S. agricultural sector was responsible in 2011 for 7.2 percent of U.S. GHGs. This doesnt include emissions from indirect agricultural activities, like clearing grasslands or forests to create farmland, or the fossil fuels burned when transporting agricultural products.
U.S. agriculture is heavily tilted toward large-scale, resource-intensive production of animals and the corn and soybeans that feed them. Corn, soybeans, and hay are the U.S.s three largest crops. It might be hard to believe, but less than 2 percent of U.S. farm acres grow vegetables or pulses (beans and legumes) and less than 2 percent are planted with fruit or tree nuts.
The U.S. food system is also vulnerable to global warming. The draft National Climate Assessment, prepared by more than 200 scientists for the U.S. government and recently released for public comment, says this: Production of all commodities will be vulnerable to direct impacts from changing climate conditions on crop and livestock development and yield. ...................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://civileats.com/2013/04/30/rethinking-agriculture-national-climate-assessment-provides-another-reason/
Rethinking Agriculture: National Climate Assessment Provides (Another) Reason
from Civil Eats:
Rethinking Agriculture: National Climate Assessment Provides (Another) Reason
By Mia Macdonald on April 30, 2013
Pastoralists in Kenya, rice farmers in India, and industrial feedlot operators in the U.S. have all contended with the increased frequency of drought and erratic weather. New agricultural ideas and actions are essential amid rising climate stress, a growing human population, widespread degradation of ecosystems, and rampant food insecurity; nearly one billion people regularly dont get enough to eat.
Agriculture isnt just affected by the effects of climate change. Its also a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs). According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the U.S. agricultural sector was responsible in 2011 for 7.2 percent of U.S. GHGs. This doesnt include emissions from indirect agricultural activities, like clearing grasslands or forests to create farmland, or the fossil fuels burned when transporting agricultural products.
U.S. agriculture is heavily tilted toward large-scale, resource-intensive production of animals and the corn and soybeans that feed them. Corn, soybeans, and hay are the U.S.s three largest crops. It might be hard to believe, but less than 2 percent of U.S. farm acres grow vegetables or pulses (beans and legumes) and less than 2 percent are planted with fruit or tree nuts.
The U.S. food system is also vulnerable to global warming. The draft National Climate Assessment, prepared by more than 200 scientists for the U.S. government and recently released for public comment, says this: Production of all commodities will be vulnerable to direct impacts from changing climate conditions on crop and livestock development and yield. ...................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://civileats.com/2013/04/30/rethinking-agriculture-national-climate-assessment-provides-another-reason/
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Member since: Fri Oct 29, 2004, 12:18 AM
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