Monday, November 02, 2015

TOMORROW IS ELECTION DAY!

Prevent Electile Dysfunction!

VOTE-VOTE-VOTE-VOTE!!!

If you don't vote in EVERY election, people who don't approve of you will make important decisions regarding you and your body!
 
VOTE-VOTE-VOTE-VOTE!!!

From Daily Beast: Hobby Lobby Christianly steals Biblical-era antiquities

As Betty Bowers, America's Best Christian, said, "The pious owners of Hobby Lobby stole artifacts from Iraq, routinely falsifying customs forms. Apparently, laws requiring you to tell the truth violate their Religious Liberty, too."

Exclusive: Feds Investigate Hobby Lobby Boss for Illicit Artifacts

One of America’s most famously Christian businesses is amassing a vast collection of Biblical antiquities. The problem is some of them may have been looted from the Middle East.
In 2011, a shipment of somewhere between 200 to 300 small clay tablets on their way to Oklahoma City from Israel was seized by U.S. Customs agents in Memphis. The tablets were inscribed in cuneiform—the script of ancient Assyria and Babylonia, present-day Iraq—and were thousands of years old. Their destination was the compound of the Hobby Lobby corporation, which became famous last year for winning a landmark Supreme Court case on religious freedom and government mandates. A senior law enforcement source with extensive knowledge of antiquities smuggling confirmed that these ancient artifacts had been purchased and were being imported by the deeply-religious owners of the crafting giant, the Green family of Oklahoma City. For the last four years, law enforcement sources tell The Daily Beast, the Greens have been under federal investigation for the illicit importation of cultural heritage from Iraq.

These tablets, like the other 40,000 or so ancient artifacts owned by the Green family, were destined for the Museum of the Bible, the giant new museum funded by the Greens, slated to open in Washington, D.C., in 2017. Both the seizure of the cuneiform tablets and the subsequent federal investigation were confirmed to us by Cary Summers, the president of the Museum of the Bible.

From its founding in 1970, the Greens’ Hobby Lobby chain has been more than simply a suite of craft stores. The Greens have used it as a model of a business run on Christian values. Stores are closed on Sundays in order to give employees time to attend church. The company employs four chaplains, and offered a free health clinic to staff at its headquarters long before free health care came into political vogue. The Greens have also used the Hobby Lobby platform to spread their Christian message far and wide: The company annually places full-page ads celebrating—in their words— “the real meaning of Christmas, Easter, and Independence Day” in newspapers across the country.



But the Greens went from evangelical players to bona fide Christian celebrities in June of 2014 when they won a Supreme Court case, Burwell v. Hobby Lobby. It granted them exemption from the Obamacare mandate to provide certain forms of contraception to their employees; forcing the company to do so, the Supreme Court ruled, would have violated the Greens’ deeply-held Christian beliefs.

(Editor's note: in effect, Hobby Lobby was awarded a line-item veto on their taxes based on beliefs rather than actual scientific truth--they wrongly proclaimed that forms of contraception they dislike are abortifacients. Isn't that rich? A line-item veto that's not even based on reality. I'd like a line-item veto so that I don't have to pay my taxes to the rich or to fight wars of choice and corporate greed. Don't you wish you were rich enough to declare which taxes you didn't feel like paying? What gives them the right to decide which forms of health care their employees receive? That would be like telling their employees they're not allowed to buy lobster using salary received from Hobby Lobby because God hates shellfish. Yes, the whole "shellfish are an abomination" thing really is in the Bible. Leviticus 11:9-12 to be exact.)

If the investigation ends with a decision to prosecute, on either criminal or civil charges, the Greens may be forced to forfeit the tablets to the government. There may also be a fine involved. The Green family, who successfully forced the federal government to legally recognize their personal moral standards, now find themselves on the other side of the docket, under suspicion of having attempted to contravene U.S. laws.

***

When Summers spoke with us, he made it sound as if the ongoing federal investigation was simply the result of a logistical problem. “There was a shipment and it had improper paperwork—incomplete paperwork that was attached to it.” That innocuous phrase—“incomplete paperwork”—makes it sound as if some forms were simply missing a date or a signature. That is rarely the case with questionably-acquired ancient artifacts—and were the problem merely logistical, the chances are slim that it would take four years to resolve.

Summers suggested that the tablets were merely “held up in customs,” as if this was merely a case of bureaucratic delays. “Sometimes this stuff just sits, and nobody does anything with it.” But an individual close to the investigation told us that investigators have accumulated hundreds of hours of interviews, which doesn’t sound like bureaucratic delay—and which also suggests that there is more at stake here than merely a logistical oversight.



An attorney familiar with customs investigations explained that they often center on improperly filled out paperwork. There are two types of customs declarations: informal entry and formal entry. Informal entry is generally for shipments that have a collective monetary value of under $2,500; formal entry is for anything above that. In cases where people are trying to bring something into the country that they shouldn’t, one of the common ways to do so is to undervalue whatever the item is, often by misidentifying it, so that it goes through the expedited informal-entry process rather than the more closely scrutinized formal entry.

If someone looking to bring antiquities into the U.S. knows that the artifacts should never have left their country of origin, or lack proper provenance, the only way to get them through customs is to lie: about the country of origin, about the country of export, about the value, about the identity. (This happened recently in the case of a Picasso worth $15 million, which was listed on the customs declaration as a “handicraft” worth $37.) One source familiar with the Hobby Lobby investigation told us that this is precisely what happened in this case: The tablets were described on their FedEx shipping label as samples of “hand-crafted clay tiles.” This description may have been technically accurate, but the monetary value assigned to them—around $300, we’re told—vastly underestimates their true worth, and, just as important, obscures their identification as the cultural heritage of Iraq.


Did Hobby Lobby's CEO Plunder Iraq For His Own Evangelical Museum?




***

Steve Green, the CEO of Hobby Lobby, admitted that among his family’s extensive collection they might have some illegally-acquired antiquities, though he denied having ever knowingly done anything wrong. “Is it possible that we have some illicit [artifacts]? That’s possible,” he told us for a story slated to appear in a forthcoming issue of The Atlantic. It seems unlikely that this case, however, is one of simply misunderstanding the relevant laws. The paperwork misidentifying the antiquities as “tile samples” certainly suggests otherwise. What’s more, however, in the summer of 2010, Patty Gerstenblith, a law professor at DePaul University working in the area of cultural heritage, met privately with the Greens in order to explain to them precisely these issues: how to do due diligence with regard to provenance and how to watch out for legal complications with regard to antiquities sales. It cannot be said that the Greens were totally ignorant of the world in which they were engaging. And a year later, the Greens imported the tablets that have now become the subject of the federal investigation.

The Greens are worth $4.5 billion or so. If they are indeed prosecuted, no fine could make a significant dent in their financial well-being. But for a company and a family that have built their reputation on a particular set of Christian values, this investigation may hurt more than any financial penalty could.

********************************************
In this Information Age, ignorance is a CHOICE.
 
Ignorance isn't just what you don't know--it's also what you WON'T know.
********************************************

News Flash: Guns DO Kill People--over 30,000 per year in the U.S.

Dot Calm's shadow here ...

A Tea Party Evangelical friend of mine believes that very few people die from gunshot injuries each year in America.

He swears that maybe a few hundred or a few thousand at most lose their lives prematurely this way.

But instead of comforting yourself with a lie or pretending that our way of life--or, in this case, death--is so wonderful that all of Europe is falling all over themselves to line up and duplicate it, you can look it up for yourself and get the truth.

Seriously.

Just go Google it.

If you do, you'll find real statistics, like from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

I know, I know ... real statistics aren't nearly as comforting as what you can get from the right-wing echo chamber, but according to the CDC, over 30,000 Americans died from firearm injuries in 2013 (http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/injury.htm).

From what I see surfing the statistics, this number has been consistent in recent years.

30,000.

Dead Americans from firearms.

When we were looking at 5 possible cases of Ebola in the United States, right wing heads exploded.

But OVER 30,000 gun deaths?

Nah, nothing to see here.

Let President Obama visit the NEXT school shooting massacre and ignore THIS one, Ben Carson said.

How many days will that take?

At the rate we're going, we're due any day now.

Seriously, Tea Bags.

Don't claim to know something you don't--or won't--because you're either too lazy to look it up or just can't tolerate an objective reality that differs from your beloved made-up fantasy.

News flash: objective reality is a thing.

From DKos: GOP blames Hillary for their own humiliation

Mon Oct 26, 2015 at 09:30 AM PDT

Committee Chairman U.S. Representative Trey Gowdy (R-SC) speaks to reporters after questioning Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in a day-long testimony before the House Select Committee on Benghazi, on Capitol Hill in Washington October 2
 
Why yes, those ARE beads of sweat!

Interesting whine from Rep. Trey Gowdy, still smarting over getting owned by Hillary Clinton during his Benghazi Committee inquisition last week.
CHUCK TODD: [...] It sounds like you may regret how you went about questioning Secretary Clinton, that maybe you should've done some of it off camera and only some of it on camera. What do over do you want? 
TREY GOWDY:
Well, Chuck it was a voluntary interview. I didn't send the subpoena to Secretary Clinton. It was a voluntary interview, and she wanted it to be in public. I wrote a letter several months ago giving her an option. And she chose public. And that's well within her right. 
I can just tell you that of the 50-some odd interviews we have done thus far, the vast majority of them have been private. And you don't see the bickering among the members of Congress and private interviews. You don't see any of that. So the venue that is most constructive--
Given Gowdy's committee's history of selective out-of-context leaks and irrelevant questions (see: Blumenthal, Sidney), of course they want to do this shit in secret! Just last week we saw what happens when the light of day is shined on their proceedings: A jumbled mess of conspiracy theories, irrelevant tangents, and politically-motivated attacks.
 
It was much easier to work on getting Clinton's poll numbers down when the committee could claim it was merely a non-partisan exercise in truth finding (with a pliant and naive political media playing along with that fantasy). Now? Not so much. Not only have key Republicans admitted the nefarious purpose of the committee, but everyone has now seen it with their own two eyes. And if Republicans were humiliated in the process? That's only because it was so obvious they have nothing.
 
Remember, this is the same committee that is still petrified at the idea that people will see what really happened during its questioning of Sidney Blumenthal, voting along party lines to keep that truth from the American people. As for the 50 interviews conducted in private? Release those, too! And the attendance logs as well, so we can see which Republicans showed up when a non-Clinton personality was on the hot seat. Looking at you, Trey.

From DKos: Ben Carson HAD a contract with magic beans maker

Fri Oct 30, 2015 at 08:38 AM PDT

U.S. Republican presidential candidate Dr. Ben Carson speaks at the North Texas Presidential Forum hosted by the Faith & Freedom Coalition and Prestonwood Baptist Church in Plano, Texas October 18, 2015.  REUTERS/Mike Stone      TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY    
So when Ben Carson called it "total propaganda" that he had "an involvement" with nutritional supplement company Mannatech, was he defining "involvement" as only meaning romantic involvement, or something? Because, uh ...
Dr. Ben Carson's business manager acknowledged Thursday that the Republican presidential candidate did have a "contract" with a medical supplement company at some point.  
Armstrong Williams told CNN's Jake Tapper that he negotiated the retired neurosurgeon's contract himself.
But it's okay, Williams assures us, because one time, "showing his integrity," Carson replaced a script he'd been given (negotiated by Williams) for a Mannatech promotional video and replaced it with his own words. And also, "sometimes you may not always know all the details because there are some things that are negotiated that you're unaware of. Like the script."
 
Are we to take from this that for years, Carson just went and promoted Mannatech without being aware of exactly what his business relationship with the company was, while behaving with complete personal integrity, and as far as he knew was telling the truth when he said he had no involvement with Mannatech, because he didn't realize he'd had a contract with them? I'm ... not sure that's the best testimony to the managerial skills one might want in a president.

From DKos: Kasich laments GOP insanity

Wed Oct 28, 2015 at 03:01 AM PDT

GOP Presidential Candidate goes ballistic - What has happened to our Party

by Egberto Willies

John Kasich appeared in a pre-debate rally in Ohio on Tuesday. He was fed up. He appeared exasperated. He went ballistic in a section of his speech.

"Do you know how crazy this election is?" John Kasich said. "Let me tell you something. I've about had it with these people. Let me tell you why. We got one candidate that says we ought to abolish Medicaid and Medicare. You ever heard anything so crazy as that, telling our people in this country who are seniors or about to be seniors that we're going to abolish Medicaid and Medicare." Kasich was referring to statements Ben Carson made.

"We got one person saying we ought to have a 10% flat tax," Kasich said. "That would drive up the deficit in this country by trillions of dollars that my daughters would spend the rest of their lives having to pay off. You know what I say to them. Why don't we have no taxes? Just get rid of them all. And then a chicken in every pot on top of it." He was likely referring to statements made by Ben Carson, Ted Cruz, and Rand Paul.

"We got one guy that says we ought to take 10 or 11 million people and pick them up, where the—I don't know where, we're going to go in their homes, their apartments. We're going to pick them up and we're going to take them to the border and scream at them to get out of our country," Kasich said. "Well that's just crazy. That is just crazy." Of course John Kasich was referring to Donald Trump and his anti-immigrant stances and promise to deport 11 million immigrants.

"We got people proposing healthcare reform that is going to leave, I believe, millions of people without adequate health insurance," Kasich continued. "What has happened to our party? What has happened to the conservative movement?"

John Kasich's explosion of justifiable disdain for what his party has become may seem bold to many. The reality of the state of the Republican Party makes his utterances likely fatal. He likely will not be the Republican nominee.

(Click HERE for the original article and video.)