Friday, December 11, 2015

********************************************
Coming soon!
Don't forget:
Nationwide Baby-Drop Day
is almost here!

Starting at midnight, December 22, 2015,
just drop off your unwanted baby, child,
(or husband)
at the nearest anti-choice location.

Just look for any Catholic church,
any evangelical Christian church,
or the home or office of any
Tea Partier, Christian, or Republican.

When in doubt, just leave the bundle
on the hood of a car
with one of the above bumper stickers
(anti-science bumper stickers work, too).

Then walk away, knowing that
they'll welcome your gift
as coming from almighty God Himself.

Remember:
If they want to make YOUR decisions,
then give them the consequences
of THEIR decisions!
********************************************

Those looney libs at Defense News are at it again!

There are two articles here.

Key points from the first article: words do matter, and Trump's words at home may haunt us abroad for years to come; Arab states historically prefer Republicans to Democrats because Republicans have the closer mindset; US-Arab relations have relied mostly on historical relationships with the Bush family; and Dems tend to creep out the Arab states by pushing for democracy and democratic reforms.

The second article brings up a great point: sending in U.S. ground troops to Syria could backfire by making US rather than IS the target--those currently fighting IS with us could turn and fight us with IS. The article somewhat inferred Republicans in Senate might be holding Pentagon funding hostage if they don't get their way regarding how it's spent (i.e., sending in ground troops)...?

Trump's Muslim Comments Could Sever GOP's Deep Ties in Gulf


 
DUBAI and WASHINGTON — Anti-Muslim sentiments issued from front-runners in the Republican primary could damage the party's future security engagements with Gulf Arab leaders, experts warn.

Since the terrorist attacks in Paris, some GOP candidates have ridden a wave of anti-Muslim commentary. But the issue came to a head Dec. 7, when Donald Trump, comfortably ahead in most polls among GOP candidates, called for "a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States." This followed previous calls from Trump for surveillance on mosques and a database of Muslims living within the US.

Two days later, 10 Gulf Arab leaders condemned the "hostile, racist" remarks made against Muslims and Syrian refugees.

"The supreme council expressed its deep concern at the increase of hostile, racist and inhumane rhetoric against refugees in general and Muslims in particular," the Gulf Cooperation Council said in a statement at the GCC heads of state meeting in Riyadh.

While other candidates and Republican leaders distanced themselves from Trump's latest statement — presidential hopeful Sen. Lindsey Graham pointedly told Trump to "go to hell" after his comments — other GOP candidates such as Jeb Bush and Ted Cruz have previously called for halts to immigration of Muslim refugees while suggesting it is OK to accept Christian refugees.

And Trump's comments appear to be in line with the Republican electorate. According to findings from a Bloomberg Politics/Purple Strategies PulsePoll, almost two-thirds of likely 2016 Republican primary voters favor Donald Trump's call to temporarily ban Muslims from entering the US, while more than a third say it makes them more likely to vote for him.

But what plays in the homeland does not always work abroad, and the wave of anti-Muslim sentiment could come back and harm the GOP in the future, analysts warn.

"Such statements will definitely affect the relationship between the Republican Party and the Gulf despite it being made for local consumption," said Abdullah Baabood, director of the Gulf Studies Program at Qatar University.

"Local populations in the Gulf now are more aware because of widespread media and Internet access, this will cause an embarrassment for the GCC governments if and when they deal with a new Republican administration," Baabood said. "This will hurt [the Republican Party] internally. They might lose not only the moderate voices but also Muslim voices. This also gives them a bad reputation in the Arab and Islamic world, whose support they need in their current war."

The Pentagon said Dec. 9 that such statements would be counterproductive to their ongoing fight against the Islamic State group, also known as ISIL.

"Anything that tries to bolster, if you will, the ISIL narrative that the United States is somehow at war with Islam is contrary to our values and contrary to our national security," Department of Defense press secretary Peter Cook said. "We are, as I mentioned, working with Muslim nations right now. We want to, in essence, take the fight to ISIL with the help of Muslims and others around the world. And anything that somehow challenges that, we think would be counterproductive to our national security."

Historically, Republican administrations have had closer ties with GCC leaders than their Democratic counterparts, Baabood said.

"This is election propaganda, however Republicans are closer in mindset to GCC governments while the Democrats are not," Baabood said.

GCC leaders prefer the Republican Party to the Democratic Party, he said, because the Democrats have been more rigid in their dealings over the years.

"[The Democrats] have also been trying to influence democratic agendas in the Gulf populations in the past, which make the Gulf leaders uncomfortable," he said.

Emirati political analyst and author Abdel Khaleq Abdullah said that the relationships between the Republican Party and the Gulf have been developed by the Bush family after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990.

"The relationship between the Republicans and the GCC governments has been focused on the Bush family's personal relations with GCC leaderships," Abdullah said. Despite that, he expects that the GCC governments' inner circles are taking these statements seriously.

The business community around the Gulf has taken a stand by removing any Trump-related products or affiliations.

"It's a case against an individual and not a party; it might end up being a bubble that pops later," he added.

"It's very, very destructive," said Nawaf Obaid, visiting fellow at the John F. Kennedy school and previous adviser to Saudi officials. "We're going to be hearing about this for years to come, what Donald Trump said."

Retired US Marine Corps Gen. James Jones, former national security adviser to President Barack Obama and now chairman of the Atlantic Council's Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security, said last week that people overseas take "our politicians much more seriously than Americans do."

Added Barry Pavel, former special assistant to the president and senior director for defense policy and strategy on the National Security Council staff: "I think it's corrosive, and we're in a world now where it's not just nation-states who have power, but nonstate actors, and people have power and connectivity.

"When you see mass shootings once a week, Muslim or otherwise, and then you see statements from one of the leading party's presidential candidates that people of a certain religion should not be allowed into the United States, a country that was founded on immigration, it's yet another detriment of others' perceptions of us," Pavel said.

Pavel added that such statements have contributed to a perception of an erosion in US influence and role as a model.

"I think that we seem to misunderstand as a government and as a people that we are operating from a very significant deficit right now, a deficit of pubic perception of US leadership, and we really need to start digging out of the hole and not digging deeper," he said.

The rising support from Republican voters, according to Dania Al Khatib, a UAE-based specialist in US-Gulf relations, is evidence of an isolationist US strategy.

"America is already disengaging from the Gulf, there is an isolationist policy," she said. "First of all [such speech] will go back and affect [the US] one way or the other through the propagation of extremism; number two, their mistakes in the region starting with how they dealt with Iraq and now with Syria are evidence of a strong isolationist movement."

Khatib said that America is no longer interested in the Gulf.

"They used to look to Saudi Arabia to counterbalance Iran, but now they are friends with Iran," she said. "The second reason is the oil; the US will be an exporter by 2020 so there are no more strategic interests in the Gulf."

Carter Cautions US Ground Troops Would 'Americanize' ISIS Fight

Defense Secretary Ash Carter discussed the threat of ISIL and the need for a military campaign that denies ISIL 'any safe territorial haven.' VPC

 
Correction: Due to a reporting error, an earlier version of this article published at 2:02 p.m. ET misattributed a quote by Sen. Mike Lee to Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz.

WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Ash Carter told lawmakers on Wednesday that adding a significant US ground force to the fight against the Islamic State group would “Americanize” the fight and fuel “a call to jihad” in Iraq and Syria.

The Pentagon is urgently calling on Congress to lift a hold on $116 million in funding for its rebooted Syria train-and-equip program after Gen. Lloyd Austin, the chief of US Central Command, revealed its stunning failure at a Capitol Hill hearing in September. The $500-million program had only a handful of trained Syrian fighters left.

Despite pressure from lawmakers, Carter said that he and Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have not recommended sending US ground troops. The US has deployed about 3,500 US troops to Iraq in noncombat roles, and Carter announced last week that it would deploy a new “specialized expeditionary force” to augment US special operations forces there and assist local forces.

“While we certainly have the capability to furnish a US component to such a ground force, we have not recommended this course of action for several reasons,” Carter told the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC). “In the near-term, it would be a significant undertaking that, realistically, we would embark upon largely by ourselves; and it would be ceding our comparative advantage of special forces, mobility, and firepower, instead fighting on the enemy’s terms. In the medium-term, by seeming to Americanize the conflicts in Iraq and Syria, we could well turn those fighting ISIL or inclined to resist their rule into fighting us instead.”

This raised the ire of SASC Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz., who questioned Carter’s logic — arguing that as long as the Islamic State controls its stronghold, Raqqa, that it will be able to orchestrate attacks and grow into neighboring countries, like Libya. McCain pressed for the US to be part of a larger multinational force to “go in there and take those people out.”

“There is 20[,000] to 30,000 of them,” McCain said. “They are not giants.”
In a sign the White House and Pentagon are intensifying their efforts, Carter said he is willing to send American helicopters and troops to Anbar province to help the Iraqi military forces close in on and seize Ramadi from Islamic State militants.

“The United States is prepared to assist the Iraqi army with additional unique capabilities to help them finish the job, including attack helicopters and accompanying advisers if circumstances dictate and if requested by Prime Minister [Hader al-] Abadi,” Carter said.

His comments came amid reports that the Iraqi security forces have advanced into downtown Ramadi and seized a key military operations center.
Hundreds of US troops are deployed in Anbar province, but their mission has been limited primarily to inside-the-wire training activities at Al Asad Air Base and Taqaddum Air Base.

Carter, in his last appearance before the committee, said “we’re at war” with the Islamic State, also called ISIL or ISIS. Since then, 14 people died a San Bernardino, California, couple inspired by the terror group, prompting President Obama to make a televised address reassuring the nation a strategy to defeat the Islamic State is in place.
After the Nov. 13 terrorist attacks in Paris, and intensified by San Bernardino, Obama has come under increased scrutiny from lawmakers — particularly Republicans — for not adopting a more aggressive strategy to wipe out Islamic State group strongholds in Iraq and Syria.

US forces have been involved in airstrikes and training assistance in the region for 16 months without a new military force authorization for the mission, which Obama called for Congress to provide in the televised address.

On Wednesday, Carter said the targeting force — operating at the invitation of the Iraqi government — will be used to gather intelligence, conduct raids more frequently, capture Islamic State leaders and free hostages, Carter said.

“We want this expeditionary targeting force to make ISIL and its leaders wonder when they go to bed at night, who’s going to be coming in the window,” Carter said.

One tenet of the administration’s strategy is to develop capable, motivated, local ground forces, with US and coalition forces enabling them. A US presence, military officials worry, would prove a recruiting tool for the Islamic State.

“If we fall into the trap of radical Islamic violent extremists baiting us into a ground fight, we’re actually doing exactly what they want us to do,” said Air Force Gen. Paul Selva, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs.

Because the territory ISIS occupies is mostly Sunni, the Pentagon would like to see indigenous local Sunni fighters working with the support of Sunni Arab allies from the region. Despite their initial participation in the air campaign, however, Gulf allies are “disinclined” to provide ground troops, particularly as they are preoccupied with the war in Yemen, Carter said.

Carter “urgently” called on Congress to lift "holds" on the final tranche of funds in the Syria equipping program, which amounts to about $116 million dollars. The Pentagon is seeking the money to provide and transport ammunition, weapons, and other equipment for anti-ISIS fighters in Syria, like the Syrian-Arab Coalition.

“We need these funds to provide and transport ammunition, weapons and other equipment to further enable the progress being made against ISIL in Syria by partners like the Syrian-Arab coalition,” Carter said.

McCain pushed back, citing an obligation to taxpayers. The previous effort yielded a handful of fighters for roughly $40 million spent, a result Carter acknowledged as “disappointing.”

While the previous program sought to build fighting units, the new program is working with existing units such as the Syrian Arab Coalition. Rather than vet fighters to the individual level, the US has vetted the allegiances of  20 of the group’s leaders, which with a force of 1,600, is working their way through three villages in eastern Syria, Carter said.

The US does not exercise command and control over these forces, but “we exercise influence,” Selva said. The relationship is “transactional” with the US providing ammunition and advice to strike specific targets.

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, asked whether the fighters share the same goals and vision for Syria as the US, and whether those goals might one day shift out of alignment.

Selva declined to provide a full answer outside of a classified setting, but said, “Today they share the goal of wanting to take their homes back and beat ISIL in doing so. And that is necessary and sufficient to get at the fight in eastern Syria and working our way back towards Raqqa."

Staff writer Andrew Tilghman contributed to this report.

Another jewel from my True Conservative (NOT Tea Party) friend David Franke

Personally, I am not opposed to immigration. My families came over just after the turn of the last century. All the hysteria about Syrians and Muslims in this country reminds me of how miserably we treated the "Japs" during and after WWII. Internment camps, anyone? Not the proudest moment in our history. Why we as a nation would want to relive that gross hatred and injustice is beyond me. David also makes a point about democracy: our founding fathers knew that unbridled democracy can be harmful--just look at today's "low information voters." They tried to balance fair representation with good government because they knew that mob justice is no justice.

David says, "Donald Trump is turning out to be a great constitutional and political science teacher.  Not a scholar, mind you—I am not claiming that he actually knows anything about anything, much less the Constitution.  But he is teaching us why democracy may NOT be the best idea since sliced bread.

"One reason is the “stampede” effect—where everyone agrees what has to be done, yesterday, and you risk being stomped to a pulp under the feet of said everyone if you dare offer a contrary opinion or course of action.  Right now, for example, everyone agrees that The Donald’s proposal to ban (at least temporarily) all Muslim immigrants is (a) “blatantly unconstitutional” and (b) political suicide.  This is so obvious to everyone that nobody bothers to crack open a law book on the subject.  Politically correct emotions are all that is necessary.

"Except for James Taranto of The Wall Street Journal (below).  He definitely thinks it may not be political suicide, and he offers some suggestions of why it may actually be constitutional.  As a foot soldier of democracy, you really should read his article just to see that there may be a second opinion on these matters (horrors!).  I am not a Trump fan, I do not like his Muslim-exclusion plan for a number of reasons, I don’t think it is necessary, and I doubt very seriously that I will vote for him—if anyone—but I do find it stimulating occasionally to turn off the lights, climb under the covers of my bed, turn on my pocket flashlight, and secretly read from The Forbidden Book of Politically Incorrect Delusions.  Join me.  I won’t tell on you."

OK, David, m'dear--I crawled under my covers with my flashlight and read, so I guess I'm telling on myself.

Did Trump Just Win?


His Muslim-exclusion idea is likely to prove popular.

By James Taranto
Dec. 8, 2015 2:48 p.m. ET

The Onion “reports” that “increasingly nervous local man Aaron Howe responded to Donald Trump’s call to ban Muslims from entering the U.S. Monday by once again stating this would be the end of the Republican frontrunner’s campaign, sources confirmed.” It’s the seventh time since June that the area man has offered such a prediction. The Onion is satirical, of course, but in real life a similar story could have been written about any number of people, including political pundits.

For our part, we’ve forecast the end of Trump’s campaign maybe four or five times. But not this time. Trump’s proposal, whatever the merits, looks to us like a political masterstroke, in large part because of the overwrought reactions it has prompted from Democrats, Republicans and the media alike.

Here’s the proposal, as announced in a press release yesterday titled “Donald J. Trump Statement on Preventing Muslim Immigration”:

Donald J. Trump is calling for a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country’s representatives can figure out what is going on. According to Pew Research, among others, there is great hatred towards Americans by large segments of the Muslim population. Most recently, a poll from the Center for Security Policy released data showing “25% of those polled agreed that violence against Americans here in the United States is justified as a part of the global jihad” and 51% of those polled, “agreed that Muslims in America should have the choice of being governed according to Shariah.” Shariah authorizes such atrocities as murder against non-believers who won’t convert, beheadings and more unthinkable acts that pose great harm to Americans, especially women.

Mr. Trump stated, “Without looking at the various polling data, it is obvious to anybody the hatred is beyond comprehension. Where this hatred comes from and why we will have to determine. Until we are able to determine and understand this problem and the dangerous threat it poses, our country cannot be the victims of horrendous attacks by people that believe only in Jihad, and have no sense of reason or respect for human life. If I win the election for President, we are going to Make America Great Again.”

The Washington Post has a summary of reactions from Trump’s rivals for the GOP nomination:

Most of Trump’s GOP rivals issued statements opposing Trump’s idea. [Jeb] Bush wrote Monday on Twitter that Trump is “unhinged,” while Ohio Gov. John Kasich said the proposed ban “is just more of the outrageous divisiveness that characterizes his every breath.” New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie called it “a ridiculous position,” and Sen. Marco Rubio (Fla.) tweeted: “His habit of making offensive and outlandish statements will not bring Americans together.” [Ted] Cruz said in an NBC interview that “there are millions of peaceful Muslims around the world.”

Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (S.C.) said Trump’s escalating rhetoric about Islam endangers U.S. soldiers and diplomats operating in the Muslim world: “The effects of this statement are far-reaching.”

Democratic reactions were similar in tone and even higher in volume. And in an interview with radio host Hugh Hewitt, Dick Cheney said: “I think this whole notion that somehow we can just say no more Muslims, just ban a whole religion goes against everything we stand for and believe in. I mean, religious freedom’s been a very important part of our history and where we came from.”

As for the pundits, the left-wing ones said what you’d expect. Self-proclaimed centrist John Avlon declared at the Daily Beast: “This is a time for choosing between our best traditions and our worst fears. If you care about the Constitution, the time has come to take a stand against Trump.” But Avlon only fulminates; he offers not a word of legal analysis.

National Review’s Jim Geraghty does offer a few words. He cites Article VI of the Constitution, which provides that “no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States,” and the First Amendment’s Free Exercise clause.

In the New York Times, an Ivy League law professor weighs in:

Putting the policy into practice would require an unlikely act of Congress, said Stephen Yale-Loehr, a professor of law at Cornell and a prominent authority on immigration.

Should Congress enact such a law, he predicted, the Supreme Court would invalidate it as an overly restrictive immigration policy under the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment.

“It would certainly be challenged as unconstitutional,” he said. “And I predict the Supreme Court would strike it down.”

All of these claims are mistaken. Quite obviously the Constitution’s provision on religious tests for public office has no application to immigration policy. The Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment is equally irrelevant, as it applies only to states. (It does prohibit state discrimination against aliens, including in some contexts illegal aliens, but decisions about which aliens to admit are entirely under federal purview.)

Yale-Loehr is correct that the Trump proposal requires an act of Congress, but that act has already been enacted. Title 8, Section 1182 of the U.S. Code provides in relevant part:

Whenever the President finds that the entry of any aliens or of any class of aliens into the United States would be detrimental to the interests of the United States, he may by proclamation, and for such period as he shall deem necessary, suspend the entry of all aliens or any class of aliens as immigrants or nonimmigrants, or impose on the entry of aliens any restrictions he may deem to be appropriate.

What about the First Amendment? Would a religious exclusion for immigrants violate their right to free exercise?

That is a novel legal question; as far as we know Congress has never enacted, nor the executive branch practiced, such an exclusion. But the 1972 case Kleindienst v. Mandel strongly suggests the Trump proposal would pass muster.

Ernest Mandel, a Belgian journalist and self-described “revolutionary Marxist,” planned to visit the U.S. for an academic conference. He was denied entry pursuant to a (since-repealed) law that excluded aliens “who advocate the economic, international, and governmental doctrines of world communism or the establishment in the United States of a totalitarian dictatorship” or “who write or publish . . . the economic, international, and governmental doctrines of world communism or the establishment in the United States of a totalitarian dictatorship.”

Mandel and his colleagues argued that the exclusion violated the right to free speech. In a decision for a 6-3 majority, Justice Harry Blackmun wrote (citations omitted):

It is clear that Mandel personally, as an unadmitted and nonresident alien, had no constitutional right of entry to this country as a nonimmigrant or otherwise.

The appellees concede this. Indeed, the American appellees assert that “they sue to enforce their rights, individually and as members of the American public, and assert none on the part of the invited alien.”

The case, therefore, comes down to the narrow issue whether the First Amendment confers upon the appellee professors, because they wish to hear, speak, and debate with Mandel in person, the ability to determine that Mandel should be permitted to enter the country or, in other words, to compel the Attorney General to allow Mandel’s admission.

To that question, the justices also answered “no.” That’s not to say Mandel had no free-speech rights under the U.S. Constitution. Had the government sought to forbid publication of his work, or to prevent or punish his participation in the conference by electronic means from outside the country, he would have had a strong claim.

But the government’s authority to set immigration policy, at least as applied to nonresident aliens, outweighs any free-speech claim an alien may wish to assert. Logic would suggest the same is true of the First Amendment’s other protections.

(The Hill’s Ben Kamisar reports that he asked the Trump campaign yesterday if the ban would also apply to U.S. citizens, and a spokesman replied: “Mr. Trump says, ‘everyone.’ ” Excluding U.S. citizens from re-entering the country would be plainly unconstitutional. Trump later backtracked, consistent with the generally offhand character of his campaign. It’s worth emphasizing that like “Muslim databases,” this very bad idea originated with a reporter, not Trump.)

The proposal itself, however, was not so offhand. Andrew Prokop of the young-adult website Vox argues that Trump had two “strategic objectives” in mind:

First, he ensures his continued dominance of the headlines.

Second, he proves to the segment of Americans who might secretly agree with him that, once again, he’s willing to say the things ordinary politicians of both parties won’t.

But why “secretly”? Another Vox article, written by Zack Beauchamp and also published yesterday, calls attention to a poll by the Public Religion Research Institute that asked respondents if they agreed with the statement “The values of Islam are at odds with American values and way of life.”

Vox’s headline announces the results for Republicans, 76% of whom agree. But the view is shared by a majority of all respondents (56%) and independents (57%) and a substantial minority of Democrats (43%). Blacks and Hispanics are evenly divided, and majorities of every Christian subpopulation, including black Protestants, agree.

Our own view of the question is complicated. Certainly Islam and the American way of life are compatible inasmuch as America is capable of welcoming Muslims who are not Islamic supremacists. On the other hand, it’s always struck us that categorical statements to the effect that Islam is “a religion of peace” are far more hortatory than empirical—which is to say that there is a gap between Islam as it actually exists and Islam as President Bush or President Obama would like it to be. How wide that gap is, and how dangerous, we do not know.

Thus Trump’s proposal for a pause in Muslim immigration “until our country’s representatives can figure out what is going on” strikes this columnist as entirely reasonable. That’s not to say it’s necessarily a good idea. There are potential costs in American-Muslim relations both internationally and domestically, and humanitarian costs as well. There are practical questions about how it would be implemented. The religious-freedom argument, although legally empty, is not without moral force.

Instead of debating the proposal in a reasoned way, the political class—both parties—and many in the media are treating it as a thoughtcrime. Yet the PRRI poll suggests a large majority of Americans are thinking along similar lines.

The Washington Examiner’s Philip Klein summed up the politics in a tweet yesterday: “@realDonaldTrump will get days of coverage in which GOP rivals, Obama, Clinton, media, will all sound same. This is bad for him how?”

DKos headlines

If you do nothing else, read the cartoons. I really liked "Modest climate change goals."

As for stories, "Mother of well-known conservative blogger and pundit shoots holes in his story'' was pretty funny, if unintentionally so. The piece by the British soldier was excellent--a wonderful reminder that there are good people and evil people of every color and creed. Don't miss the article about Scalia's racist comments. I was shocked that anyone on SCOTUS would utter such insanity, let alone in public. He should be removed from the bench and put out to pasture where his bigotry won't affect so many American lives.

  • Muhammad Ali drops the spooky left on Trump and other Republican Islamophobes


  • Just what has Hillary done?


  • UT releases statement on planned 'staged mass shooting' on campus, advocates won't like the response


  • Vigilante woman who fired at shoplifters has been sentenced, vows to 'never help anyone again'


  • Sign if you agree with Bernie Sanders: Private prisons that profit from human suffering are an abomination and we must end this practice.


  • 15 things you didn't know about Bernie Sanders


  • All white jury convicts Oklahoma cop of raping black women


  • Cartoon: Fear-based campaigning


  • Wacky Trump supporter who 'never was involved in politics' was a birther Republican state rep


  • Sign if you agree with Bernie: Give everyone the option to bank at the Post Office.


  • Cartoon: The never-ending death spiral


  • Major electric utility dumps ALEC over Clean Power Plan


  • U.S. Department of Transportation investigating Alabama drivers license office closures


  • Senate Republicans block vote on key counterterrorism nominee: 'We’re going home for Christmas.'


  • Diver in the Cayman Islands captures video of a cruise ship's anchor heavily damaging a coral reef


  • Sign if you agree with Bernie: Do not sell sacred Native American land to foreign corporations, pass the Save Oak Flat Act.


  • Hillary: 'Trump is no longer funny ... not only shameful and wrong, it's dangerous. Enough.'


  • Crowdsourcing the 50-State Strategy: Finding Democratic candidates for uncontested races


  • Great Scott! Trump stripped of ambassador role and honorary degree


  • White House: Donald Trump just disqualified himself from becoming president
  •    
       
  • Mother of well-known conservative blogger and pundit shoots holes in his story


  • Sign if you agree with Bernie Sanders: Wall Street is causing reckless inequality.


  • Justice Scalia said some crazy racist sh#t today in the Supreme Court


  • Philadelphia's mayor called Donald Trump an 'a$$hole' and it is a thing of beauty


  • Watch a bald eagle named Uncle Sam try to attack Donald Trump during a photoshoot


  • Sign if you agree with Bernie: The rhetoric and fear mongering about syrian refugees from Republicans is abhorrent.


  • GOP in panic mode: Will Mitt Romney try to save the day, or must RNC steal nomination from Trump?


  • When wounded British soldier is asked to support Islamaphobia, he pens tremendous response


  • Cartoon: Here we are again


  • Sign if you agree with Bernie: Banking at the Post Office should be reinstated to save money and provide revenue to the Post Office.


  • Jeb! is sure that Trump's hate-filled rhetoric and bigotry are part of a plot to get Hillary elected


  • After it is revealed that Wu-Tang Clan's one-off album sold to jerk, they give $$$$ to charity


  • Flying the B-52: Part 1


  • GOP front runner says he is NOT bothered people compare him To Hitler


  • Open carry gun advocates planning a 'mock shooting' at the University of Texas during finals week


  • Cartoon: Modest climate change goals


  • Suspected Planned Parenthood shooter: 'I am a warrior for the babies'


  • CA policeman rapes 21-year-old with internal 'cavity search' & department attempts to bribe her


  • 'Go to break, go to break right now!' MSNBC host cuts off a rambling Donald Trump

  • AlterNet summaries

    Adam Johnson, AlterNet
    The NYPD charged the assailant with two hate crimes. READ MORE»

    Amanda Marcotte, Salon
    In the U.S. and Latin America, there's an increase in stalking and intimidating pro-choice activists and doctors. READ MORE»

    Adam Johnson, AlterNet
    Supreme Court ruling could end affirmative action. READ MORE»

    By Philip Weiss, Mondoweiss
    Israel practices many of the policies that Trump wants the U.S. to implement. READ MORE»

    By Aleena Karamally, Huffington Post
    My Islam may not be right for you, but I am not asking you to embrace it. READ MORE»

    By John Vibes, The Free Thought Project
    One incident took place in Michigan, where three men from Texas were arrested after buying prepaid phones from a Wal-Mart. READ MORE»

    By Travis Gettys, Raw Story
    A woman who posted the photos said she was threatened and offered bribes to remove the images from her Facebook page. READ MORE»

    By Democracy Now, Democracy Now!
    The largest single displaced community is Syrians, with 4 million refugees forced outside Syria’s borders by the ongoing conflict. READ MORE»

    By Gustavo Arellano, The Guardian
    All that racist nonsense Donald Trump is pulling on you is the same thing he was doing to Mexicans in America a few months back. READ MORE»

    By Dave Johnson, Campaign for America's Future
    Senate cafeteria worker protests continue as Sen. Warren joins. READ MORE»

    By Keith Knight, AlterNet
    We all need these during the holidays. READ MORE»

    Steven Rosenfeld, AlterNet
    From bedside reading to the 2016 campaign trail. READ MORE»

    Kali Holloway, AlterNet
    We've hit a new tipping point, say Pew Researchers. READ MORE»

    Paul Rosenberg, Salon
    Nixon's Silent Majority, neither silent nor a majority, runs Congress and propels Trump. How did this happen? READ MORE»

    By Cady Zuvich, The Center for Public Integrity
    Super PAC ad funded by wealthy conservatives with ties to Marco Rubio, Jeb Bush. READ MORE»

    By Noam Chomsky, The Real News Network
    Bombing begets more terror. READ MORE»

    By Carrie Weisman, AlterNet
    The vagina has been seen as a symbol of strength and fertility—and sometimes punishment. READ MORE»

    By Vijay Prashad, CounterPunch
    They have been making millions of dollars each day by selling oil from the Iraqi oil fields near Mosul. READ MORE»

    By Tom Tomorrow, AlterNet
    How the right would handle the refugee issue. READ MORE»

    By Simon Reid-Henry, University of Chicago Press
    We need a new kind of politics that addresses how rich privilege is directly related to the plight of the poor. READ MORE»

    By Bethania Palma Markus, Raw Story
    DeLemus was one of the state lawmakers who fought to keep Obama’s name off state ballots because they believed he was a 'treasonous liar.' READ MORE»

    By Alex Wodak, Gideon Warhaft, The Guardian
    After two ecstasy deaths at the Stereosonic festivals, it’s imperative that we get our facts straight about the drug, or more young people will die. READ MORE»


    Tom Engelhardt, Tom Dispatch
    If you want to be fearful of anything, don’t get into your vehicle, since that’s where 32,000 Americans die every year. READ MORE»

    Roberto Lovato, AlterNet
    Indigenous leaders want to expand the concept of human rights into a movement that will protect animals, rivers and forests. READ MORE»

    Kali Holloway, AlterNet
    New surveys of Republican voters find his plan to ban Muslim immigration is striking a chord. READ MORE»

    By Janet Allon, AlterNet
    Offend everyone except white people and have everyone on TV talk about it for days. READ MORE»

    By Adam Johnson, AlterNet
    The best way to internalize the scope of gun violence in America is to see its proximity to us. READ MORE»

    By Kali Holloway, AlterNet
    Because what we desperately need is easier access to more guns. READ MORE»

    By Sophia Tesfaye, Salon
    New Hampshire Union-Leader editorial is unflinching in its rebuke of the Texas Senator. READ MORE»

    By Laura Flanders, AlterNet
    Between 2007 and 2013 net worth for white families rose from roughly 5 to roughly seven times greater than Black family worth. READ MORE»

    By Kali Holloway, AlterNet
    The store slashes the salaries of those who oversee staff who exercise their right to unionize. READ MORE»

    By Dan Roberts, The Guardian
    Conservative justices give sympathetic hearing in Fisher v. University of Texas. READ MORE»

    By Jen Hayden, DailyKos
    Uncle Sam did not seem to like The Donald or his hair. READ MORE»

    By David Edwards, Raw Story
    The waiver allows the school to ban LGBT students and anyone else who does not fit their religious ideology. READ MORE»

    Janet Allon, AlterNet
    "If Cheney's against you, you've gone too far," said the host of The Nightly Show. READ MORE»

    Phillip Smith, AlterNet
    Funny stuff from the Seattle Police Department. READ MORE»

    Keith Knight, AlterNet
    At this rate, mass shootings won't come as a surprise. READ MORE»

    By Pepe Escobar, CounterPunch
    Syria goes way beyond a civil war — it’s a vicious 'Pipelinestan' power play. READ MORE»

    By Sean Illing, Salon
    Neo-fascism is on the rise in Europe, and there are echoes of it in Donald Trump's increasingly dangerous rhetoric. READ MORE»

    By Timothy Johnson, Media Matters
    According to experts, people should evacuate or hide and only confront an active shooter as "a last resort." READ MORE»

    By Sophia Tesfaye, Salon
    ‘Donald Trump is standing on a platform of hate that the Republican Party built for him,’ the Senate minority leader tweeted. READ MORE»

    By David Edwards, Raw Story
    He predicted that law enforcement officers would one day need to be saved by 'a group of my citizens.' READ MORE»

    By Elena Ugrin, The Watchers
    Record-breaking smog levels — 40 times of what the World Health Organizations considers safe — has engulfed the Chinese capital. READ MORE»

    By Sam Thielman, The Guardian
    The firearms giants saw gun sales rise more than 15% to $125 million in the past three months. READ MORE»

    By AlterNet Staff, AlterNet
    Just a few uplifting words can have a huge impact. READ MORE»