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Monthly Archives: March 2014
Rand Paul, Republican presidential hopeful, finds support in Berkeley, of all places
Posted: March 20, 2014 at 9:42 am
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. right, sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday, March 12, 2014. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo)
BERKELEY -- Nobody should be surprised that Rand Paul got so warm a welcome Wednesday, even in a city whose name is often preceded in conversation by "The People's Republic of..."
After all, the junior U.S. Senator from Kentucky and likely contender for 2016's Republican presidential nomination is following in his father's footsteps by drawing crowds of enthusiastic young followers, particularly on college campuses, wherever he goes.
And his policies -- particularly criticizing government surveillance programs, avoiding military actions that aren't vital to national security, and rethinking the war on drugs -- draw voters from across the spectrum, including some of Berkeley's famed lefties.
"He's a serious contender," said Bruce Cain, a political expert who directs Stanford University's Bill Lane Center for the American West. "He can come to the Bay Area and plausibly look for money, which is not the case with Sarah Palin or some of the other people on the right."
The younger Paul has found that money at a series of local fundraisers Tuesday and Wednesday, and tapped his young activist base with a speech Wednesday afternoon at UC-Berkeley's International House.
In a speech peppered with references to Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451" and Pink Floyd's "Wish You Were Here," Paul told a crowd of about 400 that he will call for creation of a bipartisan committee to probe and reform the intelligence community. Much like the post-Watergate Church Committee of the 1970s, "It should watch the watchers."
"Your rights, especially your right to privacy, are under assault," he said, noting the National Security Agency has said its surveillance programs treat lawmakers like any other Americans.
"Digest exactly what that means. If Congress is spied upon without their permission, who exactly is in charge of the government?"
Just as Edward Snowden broke the law by leaking information about these programs, so too did Director of National Intelligence James Clapper break the law by lying to Congress, Paul said. The nation is under watch by "an intelligence community that's drunk with power, unrepentant and unwilling to relinquish power," he said. "The sheer arrogance of this: They're only sorry that they got caught. Without the Snowden leaks, these spies would still be doing whatever they please."
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Rand Paul, Republican presidential hopeful, finds support in Berkeley, of all places
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Rand Paul finds support in Berkeley, of all places
Posted: at 9:42 am
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., right, sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday, March 12, 2014. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo)
BERKELEY -- Nobody should be surprised that Rand Paul got so warm a welcome Wednesday, even in a city whose name is often preceded in conversation by "The People's Republic of..."
After all, the junior U.S. Senator from Kentucky and likely contender for 2016's Republican presidential nomination is following in his father's footsteps by drawing crowds of enthusiastic young followers, particularly on college campuses, wherever he goes.
And his policies -- particularly criticizing government surveillance programs, avoiding military actions that aren't vital to national security, and rethinking the war on drugs -- draw voters from across the spectrum, including some of Berkeley's famed lefties.
"He's a serious contender," said Bruce Cain, a political expert who directs Stanford University's Bill Lane Center for the American West. "He can come to the Bay Area and plausibly look for money, which is not the case with Sarah Palin or some of the other people on the right."
The younger Paul has found that money at a series of local fundraisers Tuesday and Wednesday, and tapped his young activist base with a speech Wednesday afternoon at UC-Berkeley's International House.
In a speech peppered with references to Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451" and Pink Floyd's "Wish You Were Here," Paul told a crowd of about 400 that he will call for creation of a bipartisan committee to probe and reform the intelligence community. Much like the post-Watergate Church Committee of the 1970s, "It should watch the watchers."
"Your rights, especially your right to privacy, are under assault," he said, noting the National Security Agency has said its surveillance programs treat lawmakers like any other Americans.
"Digest exactly what that means. If Congress is spied upon without their permission, who exactly is in charge of the government?"
Just as Edward Snowden broke the law by leaking information about these programs, so too did Director of National Intelligence James Clapper break the law by lying to Congress, Paul said. The nation is under watch by "an intelligence community that's drunk with power, unrepentant and unwilling to relinquish power," he said. "The sheer arrogance of this: They're only sorry that they got caught. Without the Snowden leaks, these spies would still be doing whatever they please."
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Rand Paul finds support in Berkeley, of all places
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Rand Paul 2016: Front-runner or overrated? (+video)
Posted: at 9:41 am
Sen. Rand Paul has won several recent straw polls and surveys, and his brand of libertarianism seems to be on the rise in his party. But anointing him the early GOP front-runner for 2016 may be going too far.
Is Rand Paul really the front-runner for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination? Theres some chatter to that effect at the moment among Washingtons pundit class. It was sparked by last weekends victory for the Kentucky senator in another straw poll, this one at the Northeast Republican Leadership Conference. Then CNN/ORC released a poll on Sunday with Senator Paul leading the list of potential nominees for GOP and GOP-leaning voters.
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As CNN notes, thats a feat that Pauls father, Ron Paul, never accomplished in all his years running for president.
Plus, Paul is already making good use of his fathers base of committed donors, notes Washington Post political expert Chris Cillizza. Hes done well in the early-voting states of Iowa and New Hampshire. Pauls brand of libertarianism seems to be on the rise in his party, particularly among young Republicans.
Its past time people start taking him seriously as a potential Republican nominee, Mr. Cillizza writes.
Well, sure. Paul himself seems intent on making a serious run. Where his fathers presidential efforts seemed more purely ideological, based on promoting the libertarian brand, Paul is doing the sort of stuff you do if you actually plan on trying to win the thing. Thus hes established an alliance of sorts with the very establishment Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell, his fellow Kentuckian.
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Rand Paul 2016: Front-runner or overrated? (+video)
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Guest column: Libertarianism 101, by leader of The Cato Institute
Posted: at 9:41 am
By Robert A. Levy
Naples
Chairman, The Cato Institute
Libertarianism is a political philosophy grounded on these propositions: Adult individuals have the right and responsibility to decide important matters about their own lives, but they may not infringe on the equal rights of others. Governments role is to secure those rights. The key word, from the Declaration of Independence, is secure, not grant. We do not get our rights from government. Individuals have natural rights, independent of government. Thats a bedrock libertarian principle and, its fair to say, the Founders were libertarians.
Within that framework, consider the polemic against libertarianism by Rev. Michael P. Orsi (Libertarian Candidate Not Good, Naples Daily News, March 16) as reduced to five assertions:
1. Extreme individualism is contrary to the common good.
Libertarians understand the necessity of cooperation to attain personals goals. My colleague, Tom Palmer, observes that individuals can never actually be self-sufficient, which is precisely why we must have rules to make peaceful cooperation possible. Government enforces those rules. The risk, however, is that rules too extensive will produce, not a common good for all, but rather a veneer for a system of special favors to secure largesse for the politically connected at the expense of others. By contrast, individualism promotes the common good, spontaneously, as long as no commanding power preempts freely chosen actions.
2. Belief in every man for himself is incompatible with concern for the poor.
From an ethical perspective, it may be morally right to help the poor; but in a completely free society we should have a political right not to do so. Put differently, a theory of justice is not always congruent with a theory of politics. One can condemn bad conduct without empowering government to take remedial action. Yes, charity is a virtue. But government-compelled charity is a contradiction in terms a political act that negates real charity, which must be voluntary, not coerced.
As it happens, the evidence proves conclusively that more wealth including a greater abundance for the poor is a by-product of individual liberty.
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Guest column: Libertarianism 101, by leader of The Cato Institute
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DARPA,NATO,Nano transhumanist NOT your scientific PROJECT! – Video
Posted: at 9:41 am
DARPA,NATO,Nano transhumanist NOT your scientific PROJECT!
By: TheHighonYah
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DARPA,NATO,Nano transhumanist NOT your scientific PROJECT! - Video
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Human rights chair gets own Martial Law compensation
Posted: at 9:40 am
by Angela Casauay Posted on 03/19/2014 5:14 PM |Updated 03/19/2014 6:00 PM
CLOSURE. Commission on Human Rights chair Loretta Ann Rosales gets her P50,000 compensation from winning a class suit against former president Ferdinand Marcos in Hawaii over human rights violations. Photo by Commission on Human Rights
MANILA, Philippines The government official tasked to uphold human rights is a victim of human rights violations herself, and on Tuesday, March 18 nearly 3 decades after the Marcos regime ended she finally received a compensation for her ordeal.
Commission on Human Rights (CHR) chair Loretta Ann Rosales personally received a check worth P50,000 as one of the 9,539 human rights victims during the Martial Law who won a private class suit against former President Ferdinand Marcos in Hawaii.
Rosales an activist and a human rights advocate was raped and tortured by the military during the Marcos regime, according to a report from the South China Morning Post a portion of which was republished by its author Raissa Robles in her website.
The compensation recognizes the sacrifices of the Martial Law heroes and martyrs who had given their lives to attain democracy and freedom, Martial Law Files Project of the Commission on Human Rights (MLFP-CHR) Manager Myrna Jimenez said in a statement.
Aside from Rosales, claimants all over the country have been receiving checks worth P50,000 since January 21, 2014.
On February 7, at least 170 human rights victims received their compensation in Cagayan de Oro City. (READ: Martial Law victims in Northern Mindanao receive compensation)
The amount awarded to each claimant was sourced from the proceeds of the sale of an 1899 painting by French artist Claude Monet previously owned by Imelda Marcos. The painting was sold for $10,000.
Checks to be issued until March 21
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Human rights chair gets own Martial Law compensation
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Sri Lankan government amplifies its dirty tactics during UN session
Posted: at 9:40 am
The Sri Lankan governments ongoing dirty tactics to silence and smear dissidents are a brazen attempt to deflect criticism as the country faces fresh scrutiny at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, Amnesty International said today.
The Council is due to vote next week on a resolution calling for an international investigation into alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in Sri Lanka during the protracted and bloody internal armed conflict with the LTTE (Tamil Tigers). Since the end of the conflict in May 2009, the government under President Mahinda Rajapaksa has pursued a crackdown on its critics.
Sri Lanka must put an end to the campaign of intimidation and dirty tactics against outspoken human rights defenders, journalists, lawyers and families of the disappeared, said Peter Splinter, Amnesty International Representative to the United Nations in Geneva.
The hasty release of two prominent human rights activists yesterday after their detention on 16 March is a welcome development, the organization said. But behind their case are a number of other peaceful activists who have been detained in recent months in a bid to stamp out dissent.
While its positive that the human rights defenders Ruki Fernando and Father Praveen Mahesan have been released, the world must not be fooled. The fact remains they should never have been arrested in the first place. The Sri Lankan authorities must stop repressing critical voices and ensure the safety of all those who peacefully express inconvenient truths about the countrys post-war human rights situation, said Peter Splinter.
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Sri Lankan government amplifies its dirty tactics during UN session
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Foul smells keep post office closed
Posted: at 9:40 am
March 19, 2014 Updated Mar 20, 2014 at 4:18 AM EDT
Richford, NY (WBNG Binghamton) The Town of Richford's post office has been closed since October 2013 when customers say they could smell urine and human feces from the tenant next door.
Post Office officials said the landlord has been neglectful and needs to fix the problems with the tenant next door before the building can be reopened.
The Richford post office shares its building with a residential tenant.
The Post Office said the landlord, Pete McLaren, hasn't rectified the situation since its employees left.
Sharon Mertz, a customer, said she could smell urine and feces when she picked up her mail.
"When I would go into the post office, there was definitely a very strong odor, very strong," Mertz said.
Mertz does not always have access to a car when her husband is out of town on business making it impossible to pick up her mail from the office in Berkshire every day.
Something she says is important to do for her husband's job.
"I pick up our personal mail, I pick up our daughter and son in law's mail," Mertz said. "And if he's on the road, we can't get it for one or two days. With his business, he needs to be able to get his mail."
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Foul smells keep post office closed
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A look into the future of libraries with futurist Garry Golden and Tech Guru Al Car – Video
Posted: at 9:40 am
A look into the future of libraries with futurist Garry Golden and Tech Guru Al Car
Join Garry for this follow-up webinar, along side tech guru Al Carlson, where attendees will have an opportunity to hear from Garry, and then to interact wit...
By: TBLibraryConsortium
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A look into the future of libraries with futurist Garry Golden and Tech Guru Al Car - Video
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Celebrated Philosopher explains female squirting – Video
Posted: at 9:40 am
Celebrated Philosopher explains female squirting
Douglas Rushkoff, Author of Present Shock, explains the danger of always needing to replace what you have with something better, and how the female orgasm ma...
By: Amish Futurist
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Celebrated Philosopher explains female squirting - Video
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