International News:
Mark Thompson to leave pubcaster in fall
via Variety – Latest News http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118055849
interesting things
International News:
Mark Thompson to leave pubcaster in fall
via Variety – Latest News http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118055849
A thief swiped a $150,000 Salvador Dali painting from an upper East Side art gallery earlier this week, police said Thursday night. The painting was lifted about 4:15 p.m.
When I was recently back in my Georgia stomping grounds to attend to multiple family medical emergencies, I didn’t have much time to get back in touch with state and local politics. I did notice, as always, the ongoing Mississippification of Georgia partisan allegiances, the realignment of the two major parties on largely racial lines. Lots of dogcatchers in rural parts of the state are changing parties. The State Capital is firmly in GOP hands. And in the exurban precincts where most of my extended family resides, “Obama” is pretty much a curse word to white folks, most especially white folks whose tangible interests are not being well-served by their new GOP overlords.
As in other Republican-dominated parts of the country, a lot of the political action is within the GOP, with no degree of craziness being off-bounds for those who want to persistently argue the party is still dominated by crypto-liberal RINOs who batten off Big Government and in their hearts insufficiently love Jesus (or perhaps more accurately, the vengeful Old Testament God whose highly selective quotations sound like an unholy mixture of the less restrained hate-rants of Ayn Rand and James Dobson). Conspiracy theories abound, as illustrated by this fascinating report from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution‘s intrepid political blogger Jim Galloway:
If you’ve been shopping for a sizable reason to vote against metro Atlanta’s transportation sales tax next month, but have been unable to find one that’s XXL or larger, try this on:
The tax and the people behind it are part of a United Nations plot called Agenda 21.
Laugh if you like. The topic is now center stage in Cobb County, as part of the debate over the penny sales tax, and the contest for chairman of the county commission as well.
Those who aren’t hardcore GOP will need a bit of background. Agenda 21 is also known as the “Rio Declaration on Environment and Development,†and was adopted in 1992 at a conference in Brazil.
In most languages, the report is a vacuous U.N. document that declares the need for a “sustainable†world environment. But to a certain segment of those who speak Republican, it is a secret declaration of war.
At the state GOP convention in Columbus last month, delegates overwhelmingly condemned Agenda 21 as an attempt to “outlaw private property and redistribute wealth.â€
At a debate in Paulding County two weeks ago, state Sen. Bill Heath, R-Bremen, criticized Republican challenger Bill Carruth for labeling Agenda 21 a mere “conspiracy theory.â€
“It’s not a conspiracy. This is the real McCoy,†said Heath, in dead earnest. “Their vision is to essentially conquer the world through limiting everything we do, incrementally taking our liberties away from us.â€
It seems, according to an assortment of Republican primary candidates seeking votes in the July 31 primaries, that the U.N.’s tentacles are reaching Georgia via the inelegantly named “T-SPLOST,” a regional one-cent sales tax surcharge devoted to transportation projects that will be voted on separately in the state’s twelve economic development planning regions on the self-same July 31 ballot. The initiative is being avidly backed by that well-known one-worlder, Georgia right-wing Republican Governor Nathan Deal, along with most of the state’s GOP leadership, which has taken tardy notice of the fact that traffic congestion (particularly in metro Atlanta) has reached Third World Metropolis levels. Not wanting to violate their reflexive no-new-taxes pledges, these GOPers are punting the decision to voters.
This craven if vaguely responsible action is what’s got the wingnuts really stirred up. And it’s not just about higher taxes, but the awful specter of regional government aimed at encouraging godless hippie alternative transportation.
via Political Animal http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/political-animal-a/2012_06/the_un_makes_final_plans_to_co038086.php
![]()
Takeshi Miyakawa, the artist who was arrested when his “I Love New York” bag art installation was mistaken for a bomb, has passed a mental health exam. Miyakawa, whose sweet project landed him at Riker’s Island for five days, told NY1:
I did the installation to send a simple message. I love New York too, to people in the street. It’s such a positive and simple message. I thought it was going to work out fine. There was some misunderstanding. I’m sorry about that.
He should watch himself. Presumably gushing about wanting to share his love of the city with his fellow New Yorkers is what made the court think he might be crazy in the first place. Unfortunately, Miyakawa’s ordeal still isn’t over. He’s still facing charges for planting false bombs, reckless endangerment, and criminal nuisance, and is scheduled to be back in court on July 19.
Read more posts by Margaret Hartmann
Filed Under:
takeshi miyakawa
,bomb scare
,art
,crimes and misdemeanors
,neighborhood news
,brooklyn
via Daily Intel http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2012/06/brooklyn-artist-deemed-sane-following-bomb-scare.html
![]()
Those running for Congress this year are faced with a problem: Tradition (and common sense) dictates that they mention what office they’re seeking in their ads. However, in the 30 or so seconds they have to win over voters, no one wants to bring up a legislative body known for its ineffectiveness, abysmally low approval ratings, and tendency to kill enjoyable Internet memes. That’s why candidates across the country are turning to a new strategy. They hope that omitting words like Congress, senator, and representative from commercials will encourage voters to elect them to take on the fat cats in some vague location where laws come from.
According to the Washington Post, this high-stakes version of Taboo isn’t limited to first-time office-seekers. Even incumbents are touting their homespun values and promising to change things in Washington, without mentioning that they’ve already had several terms to accomplish that task. For example, in a recent ad, Martin Heinrich, a candidate from New Mexico, declares that the state’s problems “won’t be solved by the powers that be in Washington,” without mentioning that he sort of is one of those powers. Heinrich has been a member of the House since 2009, and now he’s running for Senate (that detail might be easy to miss, since the word “Senate” only appears in tiny fonts at the end of the ad).
Congressional approval ratings have actually been up in recent months, but a jump from 10 percent to 17 percent isn’t all that impressive. Republican strategist and admaker Mark McKinnon tells the Post, “The best and only thing candidates can do is to vigorously point out every reason why you are not like the rest of your colleagues.†It’s too bad that incumbents have rejected “do things that make people hate us less” as a campaign strategy.
Read more posts by Margaret Hartmann
Filed Under:
congress
via Daily Intel http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2012/06/candidates-wont-mention-congress-in-ads.html
CHICAGO (AP) — Twenty-five Illinois couples were prepared for a long legal fight when they joined lawsuits challenging the state’s ban on gay marriage. Turns out they won’t get one – at least not from the attorneys who would normally be responsible for defending the state’s laws….
via AP Top Headlines At 10:18 a.m. EDT http://hosted.ap.org/specials/bluepage.html
Larry Ellison, the billionaire CEO of Oracle, has struck a deal to buy the bulk of the Hawaiian island of Lanai.
via WSJ.com: Today's Most Popular http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304898704577479293757609000.html?mod=rss_Today’s_Most_Popular
The Yonkers Public Library brings in about $400,000.00 a year in late or missing book fees: $0.10 per book for most books, $0.50 for new releases. Librarian Margo Reed was able to put away more than $160,500.00 by skimming a bit off the top of these nominal fines. For the past seven years, Reed used white out to fudge the late fee paperwork after pocketing what was in the library’s deposit bag.
And she would have gotten away with it, too, if the library hadn’t hired a new business manager. The Yonkers Library director, Stephen Force said, “I was shocked when I saw the records. When you looked at them, it was very obvious something was going on.†Well, yeah. I can’t remember the last time I saw someone legitimately use Liquid Paper.
For her part, the library bandit has been sentenced to six months in the Westchester County Jail, and five years’ probation after that for grand larceny and filing false tax returns. Reed is said to be both remorseful and hopeful she will be able to make restitution for the stolen money. (Photo: CCAC North Library/Flickr)
Neil Cavuto, who suffers from multiple sclerosis, is defending Ann Romney‘s use of dressage to treat her own MS. Also called hippotherapy or equine treatment, it “refers to the use of horseback riding as a treatment for medical conditions, namely for treating walking difficulties,†Cavuto said yesterday on his Fox News program. Cavuto specifically referenced MSNBC during the segment:
So go ahead and have a good stupid laugh over Ann and her horses and whether they have anything to do with her illness. Ignore the fact she got really into this big-time about the time she was diagnosed with this illness — you might want to look that up. It just seems odd to me that a network with the very letters “M-S†in its name wouldn’t resist making fun of someone who has to live with MS every day … These guys taking pot shots at Ann Romney are horse’s asses.
Although Cavuto does not mention any specific MSNBC anchor, Lawrence O’Donnell took on the topic of dressage on “The Last Word†Monday, saying:
Now, this is not in any way to make light of Ann Romney’s difficulty with MS, it’s obviously a very difficult thing to bear … Dressage does not appear in any of the more traditional courses of treatment. And if it’s true that dressage is how wildly rich people deal with this very difficult personal health problem, then why, why does the horse appear on Mitt Romney’s tax return as a business expense, that in 2010 produced a $77,000 business deduction?
Romney recently sat down for an interview about her health with Fox News contributor Dr. Marc Siegel. That interview will air tonight on “Special Report.†Watch Cavuto’s segment here:
Watch the latest video at video.foxnews.com
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
The super PAC is stockpiling nearly $30 million to use against President Obama and other Democrats.






via POLITICO Top Stories http://www.pheedcontent.com/click.phdo