TaxProf Blog: The IRS Scandal, Day 591:
"The Treasury Department released four new redacted pages of documents about the White House’s role in the Internal Revenue Service targeting scandal, bringing the total number of pages released up to 31 — a whole one percent of the total number of pages.
A federal court judge in the advocacy firm Cause of Action’s lawsuit against the Treasury inspector general set Jan. 30 as a starting date to begin briefings on whether or not the firm can get at the documents.
The Cause of Action federal court case for the documents was successful, thanks to the Freedom of Information Act.
But the Justice Department began trying to delay the release of the documents by a matter of two weeks. Treasury Secretary and former Obama White House chief of staff Jacob Lew then seized the documents."
Important stuff you won't get from the liberal media! We do the surfing so you can be informed AND have a life!
Sunday, December 21, 2014
10 Political Misconceptions About Canada
10 Political Misconceptions About Canada - Listverse
10Canada Has Free Healthcare And An Excellent System
Thomas Clement Douglas is the recognized founder of socialized medicine and is regarded as a national hero by many Canadians to this day.
Perhaps if Mr. Douglas was alive today to see the state of Canada’s national healthcare system, he might be calling for reform if not a complete overhaul.
That overhaul is not just a plausible whim of fancy, but is actually completely necessary in order for Canada’s healthcare system to survive into the future.
Today, most provinces and territories fund the system with just under half of their total budget revenues.
By 2037, however, that percentage is expected to rise sharply.
If it doesn’t, the healthcare system that Canadians know and enjoy simply will not survive.
Even today, the state of healthcare in Canada is shaky at best with a severe shortage of doctors and other health professionals.
The number of professionals needs to increase considerably to close the gap and keep pace with the nation’s aging population.
Add to that the current long waiting times for both medical procedures andapproved drugs within the country, and one can see that the problems which are beginning to emerge within the system will hemorrhage over time into a cancer on the system itself.
Lastly, healthcare is never “free.” All Canadians pay for it one way or another through taxes and transfer payments between provinces and territories. Even after paying the appropriate taxes just to keep the system running, many medical procedures and most healthcare equipment are not covered under the system and, after age 65, most Canadians can expect to pay just over $5,000 a year to maintain their health out of their own pocket, after taxes.
The problem with the socialist Canadian healthcare system is best summed up in a quote by the former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who once famously said, “The problem with socialism is that sooner or later you run out of other people’s money.” Perhaps no other country on Earth faces this harsh truth more directly than Canada does.
10Canada Has Free Healthcare And An Excellent System
Thomas Clement Douglas is the recognized founder of socialized medicine and is regarded as a national hero by many Canadians to this day.
Perhaps if Mr. Douglas was alive today to see the state of Canada’s national healthcare system, he might be calling for reform if not a complete overhaul.
That overhaul is not just a plausible whim of fancy, but is actually completely necessary in order for Canada’s healthcare system to survive into the future.
Today, most provinces and territories fund the system with just under half of their total budget revenues.
By 2037, however, that percentage is expected to rise sharply.
If it doesn’t, the healthcare system that Canadians know and enjoy simply will not survive.
Even today, the state of healthcare in Canada is shaky at best with a severe shortage of doctors and other health professionals.
The number of professionals needs to increase considerably to close the gap and keep pace with the nation’s aging population.
Add to that the current long waiting times for both medical procedures andapproved drugs within the country, and one can see that the problems which are beginning to emerge within the system will hemorrhage over time into a cancer on the system itself.
Lastly, healthcare is never “free.” All Canadians pay for it one way or another through taxes and transfer payments between provinces and territories. Even after paying the appropriate taxes just to keep the system running, many medical procedures and most healthcare equipment are not covered under the system and, after age 65, most Canadians can expect to pay just over $5,000 a year to maintain their health out of their own pocket, after taxes.
The problem with the socialist Canadian healthcare system is best summed up in a quote by the former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who once famously said, “The problem with socialism is that sooner or later you run out of other people’s money.” Perhaps no other country on Earth faces this harsh truth more directly than Canada does.
History for December 21
History for December 21 - On-This-Day.com:
Benjamin Disraeli 1804 - Author, statesman: "No government can be long secure without a formidable opposition.", Joseph Stalin (Dzhugashvili) 1879 - Georgian Marxist revolutionary and later dictator of USSR (1928-53), Phil Donahue 1935 - TV host ("The Phil Donahue Show"), known for pioneering the audience-participation style of TV talk shows.
Frank Zappa 1940 - Musician (The Mothers of Invention, Valley Girl (w/daughter Moon)), Carl Wilson (The Beach Boys) 1946 - Musician (The Beach Boys), Samuel L. Jackson 1948 - Actor ("Pulp Fiction," "A Time to Kill")
Chris Evert 1954 - Tennis player, she won her first Wimbledon title in 1974 at age 19, Ray Romano 1957 - Actor,comedian ("Everybody Loves Raymond"), Kiefer Sutherland 1966 - Actor ("The Lost Boys," "Young Guns," "A Time to Kill"), son of actor Donald Sutherland
1620 - The "Mayflower", and its passengers, pilgrims from England, landed at Plymouth Rock, MA.
1898 - Scientists Pierre and Marie Curie discovered the radioactive element radium.
1937 - Walt Disney debuted the first, full-length, animated feature in Hollywood, CA. The movie was "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs."
1945 - U.S. Gen. George S. Patton died in Heidelberg, Germany, of injuries from a car accident.
1968 - Apollo 8 was launched on a mission to orbit the moon. The craft landed safely in the Pacific Ocean on December 27.
1978 - Police in Des Plaines, IL, arrested democrat John W. Gacy Jr. and began unearthing the remains of 33 men and boys that Gacy was later convicted of killing.
1988 - 270 people were killed when Pan Am Boeing 747 exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, due to a terrorist attack.
1998 - The first vaccine for Lyme disease was approved.
Benjamin Disraeli 1804 - Author, statesman: "No government can be long secure without a formidable opposition.", Joseph Stalin (Dzhugashvili) 1879 - Georgian Marxist revolutionary and later dictator of USSR (1928-53), Phil Donahue 1935 - TV host ("The Phil Donahue Show"), known for pioneering the audience-participation style of TV talk shows.
Frank Zappa 1940 - Musician (The Mothers of Invention, Valley Girl (w/daughter Moon)), Carl Wilson (The Beach Boys) 1946 - Musician (The Beach Boys), Samuel L. Jackson 1948 - Actor ("Pulp Fiction," "A Time to Kill")
Chris Evert 1954 - Tennis player, she won her first Wimbledon title in 1974 at age 19, Ray Romano 1957 - Actor,comedian ("Everybody Loves Raymond"), Kiefer Sutherland 1966 - Actor ("The Lost Boys," "Young Guns," "A Time to Kill"), son of actor Donald Sutherland
1620 - The "Mayflower", and its passengers, pilgrims from England, landed at Plymouth Rock, MA.
1898 - Scientists Pierre and Marie Curie discovered the radioactive element radium.
1937 - Walt Disney debuted the first, full-length, animated feature in Hollywood, CA. The movie was "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs."
1945 - U.S. Gen. George S. Patton died in Heidelberg, Germany, of injuries from a car accident.
1968 - Apollo 8 was launched on a mission to orbit the moon. The craft landed safely in the Pacific Ocean on December 27.
1978 - Police in Des Plaines, IL, arrested democrat John W. Gacy Jr. and began unearthing the remains of 33 men and boys that Gacy was later convicted of killing.
1988 - 270 people were killed when Pan Am Boeing 747 exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, due to a terrorist attack.
1998 - The first vaccine for Lyme disease was approved.
Saturday, December 20, 2014
Fox's Ed Henry Grills W.H. Over Executive Action Dishonesty | The Daily Caller
Fox's Ed Henry Grills W.H. Over Executive Action Dishonesty | The Daily Caller:
"Obama often mentions the fact that he has issued less executive orders than his predecessors, but as Henry noted, a recent USA Today story showed that President Obama has issued many more “presidential memoranda“– executive orders in all but name — than any other president."
"Obama often mentions the fact that he has issued less executive orders than his predecessors, but as Henry noted, a recent USA Today story showed that President Obama has issued many more “presidential memoranda“– executive orders in all but name — than any other president."
Former WH Space Program Advisor: Climate Change ‘Greatest Scientific Fraud in History’
Former WH Space Program Advisor: Climate Change ‘Greatest Scientific Fraud in History’:
"John Casey, a former White House space program advisor and current president of the Space and Science Research Corporation, says that there has been roughly $30 billion dollars spent the past 30 years to make a “weak scientific theory,” the theory of man-made global warming or climate change, into something valid is “the greatest scientific fraud in history.”
"John Casey, a former White House space program advisor and current president of the Space and Science Research Corporation, says that there has been roughly $30 billion dollars spent the past 30 years to make a “weak scientific theory,” the theory of man-made global warming or climate change, into something valid is “the greatest scientific fraud in history.”
What could possibly go wrong?------Sharpton to have say over how Sony makes movies
Sharpton to have say over how Sony makes movies | New York Post:
"Coming to a theater near you: Al Sharpton.
Hollywood came to the Rev. Al Thursday as embattled Sony exec Amy Pascal met privately with the black leader for 90 minutes in a bid to fix the fallout from the cyberhacking leak of embarrassing, racially charged emails.
Pascal agreed to let Sharpton have a say in how Sony makes motion pictures, in an effort to combat what he called “inflexible and immovable racial exclusion in Hollywood.”
“We have agreed to having a working group deal with the racial bias and lack of diversity in Hollywood,” said Sharpton.
He said Sony would work closely with his National Action Network, the National Urban League, the NAACP and the Black Women’s Round Table to “see if we can come up with an immediate plan to deal with it.”
The meeting, held behind closed doors at the Greenwich Hotel, also included National Urban League president Marc Morial.
“Our interest is seeing to it that Sony is on the right side of changing Hollywood,” Morial said."
"Coming to a theater near you: Al Sharpton.
Hollywood came to the Rev. Al Thursday as embattled Sony exec Amy Pascal met privately with the black leader for 90 minutes in a bid to fix the fallout from the cyberhacking leak of embarrassing, racially charged emails.
Pascal agreed to let Sharpton have a say in how Sony makes motion pictures, in an effort to combat what he called “inflexible and immovable racial exclusion in Hollywood.”
“We have agreed to having a working group deal with the racial bias and lack of diversity in Hollywood,” said Sharpton.
He said Sony would work closely with his National Action Network, the National Urban League, the NAACP and the Black Women’s Round Table to “see if we can come up with an immediate plan to deal with it.”
The meeting, held behind closed doors at the Greenwich Hotel, also included National Urban League president Marc Morial.
“Our interest is seeing to it that Sony is on the right side of changing Hollywood,” Morial said."
In Victory Speech, Dictator Raul Castro Demands Obama Issue Another ‘Executive Action’ to Lift Embargo
In Victory Speech, Dictator Raul Castro Demands Obama Issue Another ‘Executive Action’ to Lift Embargo:
"It seems that dictators are inclined to think alike as Raul Castro, the despotic leader of Cuba who rules via executive edict, has demanded that President Obama continue down the same road of tyranny and issue an executive order to lift the embargo on Cuba that has stood for decades."
"It seems that dictators are inclined to think alike as Raul Castro, the despotic leader of Cuba who rules via executive edict, has demanded that President Obama continue down the same road of tyranny and issue an executive order to lift the embargo on Cuba that has stood for decades."
Welcome to TotCare: Obama’s Preschool Takeover | National Review Online
Welcome to TotCare: Obama’s Preschool Takeover | National Review Online:
"Then there’s the alarming encroachment of data miners into the lives of parents and their young children. As I’ve reported previously, Common Core–aligned assessment systems such as Teaching Strategies Gold in Colorado and California’s Desired Results Developmental Profile are stockpiling massive amounts of information on preschoolers’ social, emotional, physical, language, and cognitive development. The collection of data and accompanying assessment inevitably dictate the content in the classroom.
TS Gold, which integrates its results into the vast network of statewide longitudinal data systems, raked in $30 million in federal Race to the Top subsidies in 2012. The latest round of Obama’s Preschool Development Grants and Early Head Start–Child Care Partnership Awards require applicants to plug into this insatiable data machine, as well as “linking” and “partnering” with a plethora of other government programs."
"Then there’s the alarming encroachment of data miners into the lives of parents and their young children. As I’ve reported previously, Common Core–aligned assessment systems such as Teaching Strategies Gold in Colorado and California’s Desired Results Developmental Profile are stockpiling massive amounts of information on preschoolers’ social, emotional, physical, language, and cognitive development. The collection of data and accompanying assessment inevitably dictate the content in the classroom.
TS Gold, which integrates its results into the vast network of statewide longitudinal data systems, raked in $30 million in federal Race to the Top subsidies in 2012. The latest round of Obama’s Preschool Development Grants and Early Head Start–Child Care Partnership Awards require applicants to plug into this insatiable data machine, as well as “linking” and “partnering” with a plethora of other government programs."
Important! And VERY scary!----------Wisconsin won’t admit it, but its new egalitarian policy leads to grading quotas
Wisconsin won’t admit it, but its new egalitarian policy leads to grading quotas | The John William Pope Center for Higher Education Policy:
"...UW-Madison’s new diversity plan, “A Framework for Diversity and Inclusive Excellence,” calls for the elimination of the grade gap, but in a veiled way that never uses the word "quota."
Unfortunately, the result will hardly be any different than if it did.
A bit of history will set the stage.
UW-Madison has been moving toward egalitarian grading since 2008 when the university began reporting to departments and instructors the rates of D, F, and drop grades by gender, first-generation college status, and targeted minority status.
That sent a message to the faculty that they’d better pay close attention to low grades for students in certain groups.
The 2009 UW System’s “Inclusive Excellence Framework” insisted upon "proportional participation of historically underrepresented racial-ethnic groups at all levels of an institution . . . and in the distribution of grades."
In plain English, this meant that the university was determined to have equal grades for all groups.
In fall 2009, the College of Letters and Science pushed further with a study of grading practices in five introductory courses.
Its title was revealing: “Grade Gap/Future Gap: Addressing Racial Disparities in L&S [Letters & Science] Introductory Courses.”
Departments were instructed to implement strategic action plans to “eliminate racial grade gaps by 2014.”
This targeted five introductory courses: Chemistry 103, Communication Arts 100, English 100, Mathematics 112, and Psychology 202.
Putting an even sharper point on the administration’s desires, the report explained, ". . . these courses have something in common, sharp disparities in grade outcomes by race.
In all courses targeted minority students achieve lower grades than non-targeted students at similar preparation levels.
In each course, targeted minority students receive more of the low grades and fewer of the high grades."
No, that doesn’t explicitly demand grade quotas, but the unsubtle point can’t be missed.
Furthermore, to ensure “steady annual improvements,” the dean would create incentives and an accountability system.
The people who teach those introductory courses, mostly teaching assistants and instructional academic staff, are quite vulnerable to administrative pressure because they are on limited-term contracts.
They are apt to decide that giving each individual the grade he or she earned is less important than assigning grades so that there is little or no gap between groups.
Rather than adjusting grades, however, the university suggests that faculty members who teach those courses should “discover pedagogical strategies that reach targeted and non-targeted students with equal effectiveness" to reduce the achievement gap.
Resorting to faddish education-speak, the university suggests that the faculty use “proactive multicultural competence” to make their teaching more effective for the targeted students.
....The “achievement gap” is simply another name for the inability of targeted minority students to earn good enough grades in their introductory courses that they will be able to enroll in “high demand majors” such as STEM majors and computer science.
Those ideas about “pedagogical strategies” may sound nice, but they’re utopian.
Professors teaching those introductory courses (or any others) can’t wave a magic wand to come up with a teaching method that enables the “targeted” students in, say, chemistry, to learn the subject just as well as the non-targeted students.
There simply isn’t some different, more effective way of teaching chemistry to minority students than teaching it to white and Asian students.
Faculty members might attempt or at least say they’ve attempted to discover and use methods that make all student groups learn the material equally well.
In the end, however, they will do the safe thing and adjust grades so that the gap disappears.
That, after all, is the one thing the university can measure.
So, while UW doesn’t have a de facto grade quota policy, its directives to faculty members will lead to results hardly different from that.
What, exactly, is the problem the university sees in grade gaps?
UW asserts that they “suppress the horizons of students” and diminish the school’s reputation.
No evidence is advanced in support of those claims, however.
I would argue to the contrary that many students will suffer academically if they receive the artificial boost of higher grades than they actually earned just because they happen to be in a “targeted group.” Students need accurate feedback on how they’re doing, not inflated grades that boost their egos.
I would also argue that the university’s reputation will be diminished by these efforts at equalizing grades between groups.
Pressures to eliminate grading gaps will lead to the “dumbing down” of courses and, even more likely, grade inflation for targeted minority students.
This pretend solution won’t make the university better for anyone.
UW-Madison is going through all these contortions because the administration can’t or won’t acknowledge a simple fact: some groups of admitted students are significantly less well prepared for college work...
"...UW-Madison’s new diversity plan, “A Framework for Diversity and Inclusive Excellence,” calls for the elimination of the grade gap, but in a veiled way that never uses the word "quota."
Unfortunately, the result will hardly be any different than if it did.
A bit of history will set the stage.
UW-Madison has been moving toward egalitarian grading since 2008 when the university began reporting to departments and instructors the rates of D, F, and drop grades by gender, first-generation college status, and targeted minority status.
That sent a message to the faculty that they’d better pay close attention to low grades for students in certain groups.
The 2009 UW System’s “Inclusive Excellence Framework” insisted upon "proportional participation of historically underrepresented racial-ethnic groups at all levels of an institution . . . and in the distribution of grades."
In plain English, this meant that the university was determined to have equal grades for all groups.
In fall 2009, the College of Letters and Science pushed further with a study of grading practices in five introductory courses.
Its title was revealing: “Grade Gap/Future Gap: Addressing Racial Disparities in L&S [Letters & Science] Introductory Courses.”
Departments were instructed to implement strategic action plans to “eliminate racial grade gaps by 2014.”
This targeted five introductory courses: Chemistry 103, Communication Arts 100, English 100, Mathematics 112, and Psychology 202.
Putting an even sharper point on the administration’s desires, the report explained, ". . . these courses have something in common, sharp disparities in grade outcomes by race.
In all courses targeted minority students achieve lower grades than non-targeted students at similar preparation levels.
In each course, targeted minority students receive more of the low grades and fewer of the high grades."
No, that doesn’t explicitly demand grade quotas, but the unsubtle point can’t be missed.
Furthermore, to ensure “steady annual improvements,” the dean would create incentives and an accountability system.
The people who teach those introductory courses, mostly teaching assistants and instructional academic staff, are quite vulnerable to administrative pressure because they are on limited-term contracts.
They are apt to decide that giving each individual the grade he or she earned is less important than assigning grades so that there is little or no gap between groups.
Rather than adjusting grades, however, the university suggests that faculty members who teach those courses should “discover pedagogical strategies that reach targeted and non-targeted students with equal effectiveness" to reduce the achievement gap.
Resorting to faddish education-speak, the university suggests that the faculty use “proactive multicultural competence” to make their teaching more effective for the targeted students.
....The “achievement gap” is simply another name for the inability of targeted minority students to earn good enough grades in their introductory courses that they will be able to enroll in “high demand majors” such as STEM majors and computer science.
Those ideas about “pedagogical strategies” may sound nice, but they’re utopian.
Professors teaching those introductory courses (or any others) can’t wave a magic wand to come up with a teaching method that enables the “targeted” students in, say, chemistry, to learn the subject just as well as the non-targeted students.
There simply isn’t some different, more effective way of teaching chemistry to minority students than teaching it to white and Asian students.
Faculty members might attempt or at least say they’ve attempted to discover and use methods that make all student groups learn the material equally well.
In the end, however, they will do the safe thing and adjust grades so that the gap disappears.
That, after all, is the one thing the university can measure.
So, while UW doesn’t have a de facto grade quota policy, its directives to faculty members will lead to results hardly different from that.
What, exactly, is the problem the university sees in grade gaps?
UW asserts that they “suppress the horizons of students” and diminish the school’s reputation.
No evidence is advanced in support of those claims, however.
I would argue to the contrary that many students will suffer academically if they receive the artificial boost of higher grades than they actually earned just because they happen to be in a “targeted group.” Students need accurate feedback on how they’re doing, not inflated grades that boost their egos.
I would also argue that the university’s reputation will be diminished by these efforts at equalizing grades between groups.
Pressures to eliminate grading gaps will lead to the “dumbing down” of courses and, even more likely, grade inflation for targeted minority students.
This pretend solution won’t make the university better for anyone.
UW-Madison is going through all these contortions because the administration can’t or won’t acknowledge a simple fact: some groups of admitted students are significantly less well prepared for college work...
Which High-Ranking Government Official Admitted to Forgetting the Pledge of Allegiance? | Video | TheBlaze.com
Which High-Ranking Government Official Admitted to Forgetting the Pledge of Allegiance? | Video | TheBlaze.com:
"Department of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said Thursday that, as a trial lawyer, he is not often at a loss for words. But when he was asked to lead the Pledge of Allegiance at an elementary school in Queens, New York, he simply couldn’t remember it.
According to the Washington Free Beacon, Johnson was speaking before the Profession Services Council in Arlington, Va. when he admitted to forgetting the pledge."
"Department of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said Thursday that, as a trial lawyer, he is not often at a loss for words. But when he was asked to lead the Pledge of Allegiance at an elementary school in Queens, New York, he simply couldn’t remember it.
According to the Washington Free Beacon, Johnson was speaking before the Profession Services Council in Arlington, Va. when he admitted to forgetting the pledge."
Generous L.A. city policy rewards workers who take long injury leaves
Generous L.A. city policy rewards workers who take long injury leaves - LA Times
Los Angeles Police Department clerk Demeturius Matthews took a full year off for an on-the-job injury after she banged her elbow into a metal filing cabinet.
She didn't break any bones, city records show, but a chiropractor declared her temporarily disabled.
She took a second year off after smacking her knee into her desk.
A third yearlong leave began after she said she felt pain between her shoulder blades while reaching for her phone.
Matthews collected $170,000 in salary while on those leaves, and increased her take-home pay by thousands of dollars during the time off under an unusually generous Los Angeles city leave policy for civilian workers.
Under that program, the average injured worker is paid nearly 90% of base pay, and at least one employee received 100%, a recent city audit shows.
Los Angeles Police Department clerk Demeturius Matthews took a full year off for an on-the-job injury after she banged her elbow into a metal filing cabinet.
She didn't break any bones, city records show, but a chiropractor declared her temporarily disabled.
She took a second year off after smacking her knee into her desk.
A third yearlong leave began after she said she felt pain between her shoulder blades while reaching for her phone.
Matthews collected $170,000 in salary while on those leaves, and increased her take-home pay by thousands of dollars during the time off under an unusually generous Los Angeles city leave policy for civilian workers.
Under that program, the average injured worker is paid nearly 90% of base pay, and at least one employee received 100%, a recent city audit shows.
Satanic display approved for Michigan Capitol lawn
Satanic display approved for Michigan Capitol lawn
State senators will ensure a nativity scene is erected near the state Capitol after learning the Detroit branch of a secularist group that includes Satanists has permission for a display on the Capitol's lawn before Christmas.
Sen. Rick Jones, R-Grand Ledge, made the announcement Tuesday after Sen. Tupac Hunter, D-Detroit, criticized the Satanic Temple exhibit and quoted Jesus Christ as denouncing Satan as "a liar and the father of lies."
"This is an effort to mock the concept of religious freedom" and "an attempt to scorn Christianity," Hunter said.
Hunter's speech elicited a chorus of "amens" as Republicans in the GOP-dominated Senate went on record in support of the minority floor leader's comments.
The Satanic Temple display organizer Tuesday welcomed the nativity scene.
"In fact, our display works much better in dialogue with representations of other faiths," said Jex Blackmore, director of the Satanic Temple's Detroit chapter.
"We believe that a diversity of beliefs should be represented so long as religious iconography is permitted on state property."
The group will display a "Snaketivity Scene" each day from Dec. 21-23, featuring a snake, a book symbolizing knowledge and a message that "the greatest gift is knowledge," Blackmore said.
The group says it doesn't worship Satan and describes itself as a collective of Satanists, secularists and advocates for individual liberty.
State senators will ensure a nativity scene is erected near the state Capitol after learning the Detroit branch of a secularist group that includes Satanists has permission for a display on the Capitol's lawn before Christmas.
Sen. Rick Jones, R-Grand Ledge, made the announcement Tuesday after Sen. Tupac Hunter, D-Detroit, criticized the Satanic Temple exhibit and quoted Jesus Christ as denouncing Satan as "a liar and the father of lies."
"This is an effort to mock the concept of religious freedom" and "an attempt to scorn Christianity," Hunter said.
Hunter's speech elicited a chorus of "amens" as Republicans in the GOP-dominated Senate went on record in support of the minority floor leader's comments.
The Satanic Temple display organizer Tuesday welcomed the nativity scene.
"In fact, our display works much better in dialogue with representations of other faiths," said Jex Blackmore, director of the Satanic Temple's Detroit chapter.
"We believe that a diversity of beliefs should be represented so long as religious iconography is permitted on state property."
The group will display a "Snaketivity Scene" each day from Dec. 21-23, featuring a snake, a book symbolizing knowledge and a message that "the greatest gift is knowledge," Blackmore said.
The group says it doesn't worship Satan and describes itself as a collective of Satanists, secularists and advocates for individual liberty.
Lawmakers gutless on fixing Michigan roads
Beckmann: Lawmakers gutless on fixing Michigan roads:
"Once again, our elected officials took the safe way out, relying on big money ad campaigns and the voters to come up with a solution that they could have crafted after talking about this problem for more than two years.
Over 24 months of discussions and it took a lame duck legislative session to conclude that voters should decide whether to tax themselves?
How brave! How noble! How spineless!
It never should have come down to a last-minute decision on the last day of this Legislature to come up with this idea of having the voters approve a 17 percent increase in the sales tax on just about everything they buy.
Instead of looking for ways to cut spending — they could have started with the continuing wasteful film subsidies — these legislators decided to play Santa Claus exactly one week before Christmas.
Our gallant men and women in Lansing figured out a way to give a slice of the pie to all the deep pocketed, big spending groups with an interest in the road plan.
Gov. Rick Snyder talked about checking off boxes during his press conference Thursday. In that spirit, let’s check some ourselves.
■$1.2 billion for road construction and repairs — check — which means road builders will join the Michigan Chamber of Commerce in financing an expensive advertising campaign to urge a yes vote on raising the state sales tax in May.
■$100 million for rail and public transportation projects will similarly draw advertising revenue support from those with a stake in the projects — check.
■An additional $300 million for schools gets the backing of the Michigan Education Association because about 85 percent of that money goes into employee payroll — check.
All of these observations are not intended to judge the merits of the spending to fix our roads.
‘There Is No One Right Way to Live’: Atheists Unveil a Radically Different Set of Ten Commandments | TheBlaze.com
‘There Is No One Right Way to Live’: Atheists Unveil a Radically Different Set of Ten Commandments | TheBlaze.com:
"The public submitted their ideas in recent weeks for alternative secular commandments, with a panel of 13 prominent atheists and secularists weighing in to pick their favorites.
“The entries brimmed with compassion, empathy and caring for humanity, while endorsing science, reason and critical thinking,” Blumner proclaimed in a press release touting the results. “It goes to show how closely linked these values are.”
The "New" set of rules are listed in the article.
"The public submitted their ideas in recent weeks for alternative secular commandments, with a panel of 13 prominent atheists and secularists weighing in to pick their favorites.
“The entries brimmed with compassion, empathy and caring for humanity, while endorsing science, reason and critical thinking,” Blumner proclaimed in a press release touting the results. “It goes to show how closely linked these values are.”
The "New" set of rules are listed in the article.
China's New Map And South China Sea
China's New Map And South China Sea - Business Insider:
"BEIJING (Reuters) - China has unveiled a new official map of the country giving greater play to its claims on the South China Sea, state media said on Wednesday, making the disputed waters and its numerous islets and reefs more clearly seem like national territory.
Previous maps published by the government already include China's claims to most of the South China Sea, but in a little box normally in a bottom corner to enable the rest of the country to fit on the map.
The new, longer map dispenses with the box, and shows continental China along with its self-declared sea boundary in the South China Sea - stretching right down to the coasts of Malaysia, Vietnam and the Philippines - on one complete map."
"BEIJING (Reuters) - China has unveiled a new official map of the country giving greater play to its claims on the South China Sea, state media said on Wednesday, making the disputed waters and its numerous islets and reefs more clearly seem like national territory.
Previous maps published by the government already include China's claims to most of the South China Sea, but in a little box normally in a bottom corner to enable the rest of the country to fit on the map.
The new, longer map dispenses with the box, and shows continental China along with its self-declared sea boundary in the South China Sea - stretching right down to the coasts of Malaysia, Vietnam and the Philippines - on one complete map."
History for December 20
History for December 20 - On-This-Day.com
Samuel Mudd 1833 - Physician that set John Wilkes Booth's leg after the assissination of President Lincoln, Harvey Firestone 1868 - Founder Firestone Tire and Rubber Company, Irene Dunn 1901
John Hillerman 1932 - Actor ("Magnum, p.i."), Uri Geller 1946, Jenny Agutter 1952 - Actress ("The Snow Goose," "Logan's Run")
1606 - The "Susan Constant," "Godspeed" and "Discovery" set sail from London. Their landing at Jamestown, VA, was the start of the first permanent English settlement inAmerica.
1699 - Peter the Great ordered that the Russian New Year be changed from September 1 to January 1.
1820 - The state of Missouri enacted legislation to tax bachelors between the ages of 21-50 for being unmarried. The tax was $1 a year.
1880 - New York's Broadway became known as the "Great White Way" when it was lighted by electricity.
1946 - The Frank Capra film "It's A Wonderful Life" had a preview showing for charity at New York City's Globe Theatre, a day before its "official" world premiere. James Stewart and Donna Reed star in the film.
1946 - In Indochina (Vietnam), full-scale guerrilla warfare between Vietnam partisans and French troops began.
1989 - General Noriega, Panama's former dictator, was overthrown by a United States invasion force invited by the new civilian government. The project was known as Operation Just Cause.
1995 - An American Airlines Boeing 757 en route to Cali, Colombia, crashed into a mountain, killing all but four of the 163 people aboard.
Samuel Mudd 1833 - Physician that set John Wilkes Booth's leg after the assissination of President Lincoln, Harvey Firestone 1868 - Founder Firestone Tire and Rubber Company, Irene Dunn 1901
John Hillerman 1932 - Actor ("Magnum, p.i."), Uri Geller 1946, Jenny Agutter 1952 - Actress ("The Snow Goose," "Logan's Run")
1606 - The "Susan Constant," "Godspeed" and "Discovery" set sail from London. Their landing at Jamestown, VA, was the start of the first permanent English settlement inAmerica.
1699 - Peter the Great ordered that the Russian New Year be changed from September 1 to January 1.
1820 - The state of Missouri enacted legislation to tax bachelors between the ages of 21-50 for being unmarried. The tax was $1 a year.
1880 - New York's Broadway became known as the "Great White Way" when it was lighted by electricity.
1946 - The Frank Capra film "It's A Wonderful Life" had a preview showing for charity at New York City's Globe Theatre, a day before its "official" world premiere. James Stewart and Donna Reed star in the film.
1946 - In Indochina (Vietnam), full-scale guerrilla warfare between Vietnam partisans and French troops began.
1989 - General Noriega, Panama's former dictator, was overthrown by a United States invasion force invited by the new civilian government. The project was known as Operation Just Cause.
1995 - An American Airlines Boeing 757 en route to Cali, Colombia, crashed into a mountain, killing all but four of the 163 people aboard.
Friday, December 19, 2014
Krauthammer: Obama ‘Oversteps Everywhere,’ Is ‘Destroying’ Balance Of Power [VIDEO] | The Daily Caller
Krauthammer: Obama ‘Oversteps Everywhere,’ Is ‘Destroying’ Balance Of Power [VIDEO] | The Daily Caller:
"Krauthammer said that while the checks and balances are doing exactly what they are there to do, Obama is “destroying that balance” with his use of executive action.
The conservative commentator made the remarks on “Special Report” Thursday night."
"Krauthammer said that while the checks and balances are doing exactly what they are there to do, Obama is “destroying that balance” with his use of executive action.
The conservative commentator made the remarks on “Special Report” Thursday night."
VIDEO: Deport One American Citizen for Each Illegal Alien Let In? Find Out What These College Students Say
VIDEO: Deport One American Citizen for Each Illegal Alien Let In? Find Out What These College Students Say:
"In their latest video, Campus Reform visited George Washington University in Washington, DC and asked students to sign a petition. The petition in question was to express support for the idea of deporting one American citizen for every illegal alien allowed to stay in the United States. The petition read,"
Very unsettling.
These kids don't have a clue.
"In their latest video, Campus Reform visited George Washington University in Washington, DC and asked students to sign a petition. The petition in question was to express support for the idea of deporting one American citizen for every illegal alien allowed to stay in the United States. The petition read,"
Very unsettling.
These kids don't have a clue.
Snyder - Gov. Rick Snyder creates new department, agency to focus on top priority
Snyder - Gov. Rick Snyder creates new department, agency to focus on top priority: Michigan talent
"Through an executive order, Michigan is leveraging its ability to build talent with in-demand skills while helping state businesses grow and thrive by putting job creation and economic development efforts under one new department.
Snyder on Thursday announced an executive order creating the Department of Talent and Economic Development and the Michigan Talent Investment Agency, as well as a restructuring that includes several state departments."
"Through an executive order, Michigan is leveraging its ability to build talent with in-demand skills while helping state businesses grow and thrive by putting job creation and economic development efforts under one new department.
Snyder on Thursday announced an executive order creating the Department of Talent and Economic Development and the Michigan Talent Investment Agency, as well as a restructuring that includes several state departments."
One Islamic State Fighter Allegedly Killed 150 Girls and Women for a Horrific Reason | TheBlaze.com
One Islamic State Fighter Allegedly Killed 150 Girls and Women for a Horrific Reason | TheBlaze.com:
"A single Islamic State fighter killed 150 girls and women because they refused to enter into “temporary marriages” with jihadists, according to the the Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights.
Temporary marriages are a way for jihadists to effectively use women as sex slaves, while still abiding by Koranic law, in their eyes.
“Abu Anas Al-Libi killed more than 150 women and girls, some of whom were pregnant, after refusing to accept Jihad marriage,” the Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights said in a statement."
A religion of peace?
"A single Islamic State fighter killed 150 girls and women because they refused to enter into “temporary marriages” with jihadists, according to the the Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights.
Temporary marriages are a way for jihadists to effectively use women as sex slaves, while still abiding by Koranic law, in their eyes.
“Abu Anas Al-Libi killed more than 150 women and girls, some of whom were pregnant, after refusing to accept Jihad marriage,” the Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights said in a statement."
A religion of peace?
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