Cartoon from January, 2000.
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Monday, June 22, 2015
Republicans Plan To Take Pennsylvania, Other Swing States
By Susie Madrak
PHILADELPHIA — Republican leaders, candidates and campaign strategists are assembling in the City of Brotherly Love to give conservatives from its collar counties a glimpse of the party's rising stars and make the case for winning Pennsylvania in the 2016 presidential election.
A GOP win in the state would be the first in 28 years.
“We're making a commitment to Pennsylvania and other crucial swing states across the country,” said Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus. “By investing in Pennsylvania early and engaging in every community across the state, we can make the inroads needed to win in 2016.
The 2015 Northeast Republican Leadership Conference is similar to a southern GOP conference, 20 years running and held in Oklahoma City last month.
Pennsylvania Republican Party Chairman Ron Gleason said he chose Philadelphia to host the group because it is “where the lion's share of the vote is in Pennsylvania.” About 45 percent of the state's 8.2 million registered voters live in Philly's five surrounding counties, he said.
About 3 million Pennsylvanians are registered Republican, state records show.
“We are here to make our case on how we win this state, finally,” Gleason said. “... We have an opportunity here. We have put the right people in place; we have devoted money, people, and have a good message to win over skeptical voters.”
Sunday, June 21, 2015
The Dylann Roof's of America are the real threats, not ISIS
Most Americans will never know harm from ISIS or any Middle East
terrorist. The terrorists we must fear most come from within. They come
in many forms. Yet because they do not meet the definition of what many
would like to define as the stereotypical terrorist, it goes ignored.
What will it take?
What do you think. Let’s talk about it.
Politics Done Right is a liberal radio show that encourages dialog between all ideologies with respect for all. Please visit and LIKE us on Facebook and subscribe to our YouTube channel.
What do you think. Let’s talk about it.
Politics Done Right is a liberal radio show that encourages dialog between all ideologies with respect for all. Please visit and LIKE us on Facebook and subscribe to our YouTube channel.
Saturday, June 20, 2015
Trump's announcement - reduced to its essence
The entertainment value of a President Trump, especially as seen through the truth-enhancing eye of Vic Berger, would greatly mitigate the unassailable fact
that his policies would turn our planet into a smoldering, gutted husk.
By Mark Frauenfelder
By Mark Frauenfelder
Thursday, June 18, 2015
Shooters of color are called ‘terrorists’ and ‘thugs.’ Why are white shooters called ‘mentally ill’?
This racist media narrative around mass violence falls apart with the Charleston church shooting.
By Anthea ButlerPolice are investigating the shooting of nine African Americans at Emmanuel AME church in Charleston as a hate crime committed by a white man. Unfortunately, it’s not a unique event in American history. Black churches have long been a target of white supremacists who burned and bombed them in an effort to terrorize the black communities that those churches anchored. One of the most egregious terrorist acts in U.S. history was committed against a black church in Birmingham, Ala., in 1963. Four girls were killed when members of the KKK bombed the 16th Street Baptist Church, a tragedy that ignited the Civil Rights Movement.
But listen to major media outlets and you won’t hear the word “terrorism” used in coverage of Tuesday’s shooting. You won’t hear the white male shooter, identified as 21 year old Dylann Roof, described as “a possible terrorist.” And if coverage of recent shootings by white suspects is any indication, he never will be.
Instead, the go-to explanation for his actions will be mental illness. He will be humanized and called sick, a victim of mistreatment or inadequate mental health resources.
Activist Deray McKesson noted this morning that, while discussing Roof’s motivations, an MSNBC anchor said “we don’t know his mental condition.” That is the power of whiteness in America.
U.S. media practice a different policy when covering crimes involving African Americans and Muslims. As suspects, they are quickly characterized as terrorists and thugs, motivated by evil intent instead of external injustices. While white suspects are lone wolfs — Mayor Joseph Riley of Charleston already emphasized this shooting was an act of just “one hateful person” — violence by black and Muslim people is systemic, demanding response and action from all who share their race or religion. Even black victims are vilified. Their lives are combed for any infraction or hint of justification for the murders or attacks that befall them: Trayvon Martin was wearing a hoodie. Michael Brown stole cigars. Eric Garner sold loosie cigarettes. When a black teenager who committed no crime was tackled and held down by a police officer at a pool party in McKinney, Tex., Fox News host Megyn Kelly described her as “No saint either.”
Early news reports on the Charleston church shooting followed a similar pattern. Cable news coverage of State Sen. and Rev. Clementa Pinckney, pastor of Emmanuel AME who we now know is among the victims, characterized his advocacy work as something that could ruffle feathers. The habit of characterizing black victims as somehow complicit in their own murders continues.
It will be difficult to hold to this corrosive, racist media narrative when reporting on the shooting at Emmanuel AME church. All those who were killed were simply participating in a Wednesday night Bible study. And the shooter’s choice of Emmanuel AME was most likely deliberate, given its storied history. It was the first African Methodist Episcopal church in the South, founded in 1818 by a group of men including Morris Brown, a prominent pastor, and Denmark Vesey, the leader of a large, yet failed, slave revolt in Charleston. The church itself was targeted early on by fearful whites because it was built with funds from anti-slavery societies in the North. In 1822, church members were investigated for involvement in planning Vesey’s slave revolt, and the church was burned to the ground in retribution.
With that context, it’s clear that killing the pastor and members of this church was a deliberate act of hate. Mayor Riley noted that “The only reason that someone could walk into a church and shoot people praying is out of hate.” But we need to take it a step further. There was a message of intimidation behind this shooting, an act that mirrors a history of terrorism against black institutions involved in promoting civil and human rights. The hesitation on the part of some of the media to label the white male killer a terrorist is telling.
In the rapidly forming news narrative, the fact that black churches and mosques historically have been the targets of racial violence in America should not be overlooked. While the 1963 Birmingham church is the most historic, there also was a series of church burnings during the 1990's. Recognition of the terror those and similar acts impose on communities seems to have been forgotten post-Sept. 11. The subsequent Islamophobia that has gripped sectors of media and politics suggests that “terrorism” only applies in cases where the suspects are darker skinned.
This time, I hope that reporters and newscasters will ask the questions that get to the root of acts of racially motivated violence in America. Where did this man, who killed parishioners in their church during Bible study, learn to hate black people so much? Did he have an allegiance to the Confederate flag that continues to fly over the state house of South Carolina? Was he influenced by right-wing media’s endless portrayals of black Americans as lazy and violent?
I hope the media coverage won’t fall back on the typical narrative ascribed to white male shooters: a lone, disturbed or mentally ill young man failed by society. This is not an act of just “one hateful person.” It is a manifestation of the racial hatred and white supremacy that continues to pervade our society, 50 years after the Birmingham church bombing galvanized the Civil Rights Movement. It should be covered as such. And now that authorities have found their suspect, we should be calling him what he is: a terrorist.
Anthea Butler is an associate professor of religion and Africana studies at the University of Pennsylvania.
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Head of hacked U.S. agency says problems 'decades in the making'
Related Stories
- Fed agency blames giant hack on 'neglected' security system Associated Press
- Data compromised by US federal agency hack reportedly spans three decades The Verge
- Data hacked from U.S. government dates back to 1985: official Reuters
- China under suspicion as US admits huge data hack AFP
- China suspected in massive breach of federal personnel data Associated Press
Katherine Archuleta, director of the Office of Personnel Management, said problems exposed by the cyber attacks discovered in April and linked by U.S. officials to China were "decades in the making."
Although she said her agency thwarts hackers 10 million times per month, members of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Affairs insisted that the successful hacks showed data security could not have been a priority for the OPM.
Some suggested that top officials resign.
"You failed. You failed utterly and totally," said Republican Representative Jason Chaffetz, the committee's chairman.
U.S. officials have said they suspect China, but the administration has not yet publicly accused Beijing.
China denies any involvement in hacking U.S. databases.
Tuesday's congressional hearing was the first since U.S. officials announced early this month that hackers had broken into OPM computers and the data of 4 million current and former federal employees had been compromised.
Since then, they revealed another security breach that put at risk the personal information and intimate details of many millions more Americans - and their relatives and friends - who had applied for security clearances.
NEW DEFENSES BREACHED
Archuleta said the two breaches were discovered and contained because of new security measures taken in the last year. The attacks occurred before the measures were fully implemented.
"I want to emphasize that cyber security issues that the Government is facing is a problem that has been decades in the making, due to a lack of investment in federal IT systems and a lack of efforts in both the public and private sectors to secure our internet infrastructure," she said.
Archuleta, who was appointed to head the agency two years ago, said 4.2 million employees were affected by the first OPM hack. Even more had been affected in the other attack, she said, but would not provide an estimate.
She also declined, despite repeated questions, to say how many years' records had been compromised.
The committee's top Democrat, Elijah Cummings, said he was concerned about how many people were affected, what the government was doing to help them and what foreign governments could do with their information.
Archuleta, OPM Chief Information Officer Donna Seymour, Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson and other administration officials held a classified briefing on the cyber attacks for lawmakers later on Tuesday.
Suggestions
of Chinese involvement could further strain ties between Washington and
Beijing, which are holding an annual "Strategic and Economic Dialogue"
in Washington next week involving senior government officials.
Lawmakers
expressed frustration at the refusal of Archuleta and other
administration officials at the hearing to answer many questions,
frequently justifying their silence by saying they could not discuss
classified information.
"I
am gonna know less coming out of this hearing than I knew coming in,"
said Democratic Representative Stephen Lynch. "You're doing a great job
stonewalling us, but hackers, not so much."
(Editing by David Storey, Lisa Shumaker and Grant McCool)
Tuesday, June 16, 2015
After 25 Years Of Losing To Wall Street, Left-Wing Democrats Are Winning
By William Greider
The rebellion of House Democrats that blocked the president’s trade deal with Asia is more than political humiliation for Barack Obama. It is the start of something far bigger—the revival of the Democratic Party as a born-again advocate for working people and economic justice.
The congressional defeat shocked Washington, where the cynical rule is “to get along, you go along.” Even though the Obama-Boehner-McConnell forces are attempting to resuscitate the “fast track” gimmick, the TPP fiasco will be remembered as a fundamental turn in the road.
After 25 years of losing out to Wall Street and corporate interests, the party’s faithful constituency base managed to take down their Democratic president and his sweetheart deal with the big money. The left-liberal policy groups and grassroots activists agitating for change stood their ground against the power elites and, for once, they triumphed.
This may be premature, but I suggest the fast-changing dynamics may be springtime for the New New Democrats on the party’s left. Led by organized labor and AFL-CIO president Rich Trumka, this informal coalition includes environmentalists, social-justice advocates, people of color, defenders of civil liberties, small businesses, and others who are also regularly ignored or injured by the party’s dominant power brokers.
Disregard for the party faithful began with Bill Clinton back in 1992. Labor was edged aside. Wall Street replaced it as the senior managing partner of the Democratic coalition. Clinton ran on “Putting People First,” but he governed according to the needs of big business and finance. His permissive policies on so-called “free-trade” globalization were especially damaging to American workers and middle-class prosperity.
Barack Obama comfortably embraced that relationship with Wall Street and relied on its best thinkers for investor-friendly economic policy. He did nothing much to reverse the damage caused by the sector, but instead has proposed more concessions to the needs of finance capital.
Lots of people in the party warned Obama that he was heading into a buzz saw with his Trans-Pacific Partnership. He ignored them. Even worse, he got a little nasty with those resisting his proposal—leading voices like Senator Elizabeth Warren. Surrounded by advisers from Citigroup and Goldman Sachs, he scolded labor leaders for fighting the last war.
Whether in ignorance or arrogance, the president didn’t seem to realize that his smooth reassurances were actually inflaming grassroots anger. People knew what happened to them when their factories were closed and the jobs moved to low-wage workers abroad. And people have not forgotten the role of the Democratic party in messing up their lives. TPP looked to some like an opportunity for payback.
When members of Congress tried to explain this to him, Obama responded by personalizing the political question. I am your president. A vote for TPP is a vote for me. Stick to the regular order of things, he told them. The dismissive put-down simply deepened the anger. Forced to choose between him and their angry constituents, they chose not him.
A different sort of political leader might swallow pride and start a serious conversation with his opponents. Is there a deal to be made that would cut out some of the more odious corporate plums in the TPP in order to get something that labor-liberal critics might accept? Labor officials are ready to talk, but rather doubt Obama will pursue the chance.
In that event, the same choice will fall to Hillary Clinton. She is, of course, grounded in the Clinton wing of the party and aligned with the same powerful interests as her husband. But her prospects as Democratic candidate for president are now directly threatened by the party’s growing divide. The monied interests remain in charge of the party, and Clinton has tried not to choose sides. That doesn’t sound like a strategy that can survive until November 2016.
Something even more profound may now be unfolding in politics. As the Democratic rebellion makes clear, both parties are driven by severe intramural divisions. On both left and right, the rank and file are fed up with establishment leaders and eager to challenge them, even bring them down.
On the Democratic left, the spirit of reform is resurgent. Both politicians and freelance advocates are advancing strong new ideas for confronting inequality and repairing the damage done to ordinary Americans—and not only by the Republicans. The media usually portray these ruptures as symptoms of dysfunctional politics. But these intramural fights may actually be leading toward something far more positive for the country.
What we may be witnessing are the initial stages in the gradual breakdown of the imperial presidency. Since World War II, the presidency steadily assumed greater powers in both war and peace, while Congress generally surrendered its prerogatives and powers. The executive branch is no longer held accountable for unconstitutional sins and egregious policy disasters.
For two generations, both parties and both houses of Congress mostly went along with this debasement of the governing order. Letting the White House made the big decisions and take the blame if things go wrong became the standard default.
However, the country has now reached a difficult passage where the imperial decision-making no longer works for common good but pulls the country into deeper quagmires. The nation goes to war on false premises and can’t get out of fighting more wars. Government embraces narrow-minded economic doctrines that make things worse for most people, year after year, and yet deferential politicians seem afraid to challenge the domination of smug elites.
We are in deeper trouble than either political party will acknowledge (it would sound unpatriotic).
If I am right about this, the country is facing a long and difficult struggle as events compel the nation to retreat from some its most arrogant and dangerous illusions. The politics will be chaotic, for sure.
Established powers will feel threatened and try to derail these popular rebellions.
Yet I can imagine this turmoil might be positive in the long run—encouraging reforms that liberate the democratic order from backward influences and persuade angry, anxious people to seek political power and act again like citizens.
Take Action: Keep Up the Pressure to Defeat Fast Track
The rebellion of House Democrats that blocked the president’s trade deal with Asia is more than political humiliation for Barack Obama. It is the start of something far bigger—the revival of the Democratic Party as a born-again advocate for working people and economic justice.
The congressional defeat shocked Washington, where the cynical rule is “to get along, you go along.” Even though the Obama-Boehner-McConnell forces are attempting to resuscitate the “fast track” gimmick, the TPP fiasco will be remembered as a fundamental turn in the road.
After 25 years of losing out to Wall Street and corporate interests, the party’s faithful constituency base managed to take down their Democratic president and his sweetheart deal with the big money. The left-liberal policy groups and grassroots activists agitating for change stood their ground against the power elites and, for once, they triumphed.
This may be premature, but I suggest the fast-changing dynamics may be springtime for the New New Democrats on the party’s left. Led by organized labor and AFL-CIO president Rich Trumka, this informal coalition includes environmentalists, social-justice advocates, people of color, defenders of civil liberties, small businesses, and others who are also regularly ignored or injured by the party’s dominant power brokers.
Disregard for the party faithful began with Bill Clinton back in 1992. Labor was edged aside. Wall Street replaced it as the senior managing partner of the Democratic coalition. Clinton ran on “Putting People First,” but he governed according to the needs of big business and finance. His permissive policies on so-called “free-trade” globalization were especially damaging to American workers and middle-class prosperity.
Barack Obama comfortably embraced that relationship with Wall Street and relied on its best thinkers for investor-friendly economic policy. He did nothing much to reverse the damage caused by the sector, but instead has proposed more concessions to the needs of finance capital.
Lots of people in the party warned Obama that he was heading into a buzz saw with his Trans-Pacific Partnership. He ignored them. Even worse, he got a little nasty with those resisting his proposal—leading voices like Senator Elizabeth Warren. Surrounded by advisers from Citigroup and Goldman Sachs, he scolded labor leaders for fighting the last war.
Whether in ignorance or arrogance, the president didn’t seem to realize that his smooth reassurances were actually inflaming grassroots anger. People knew what happened to them when their factories were closed and the jobs moved to low-wage workers abroad. And people have not forgotten the role of the Democratic party in messing up their lives. TPP looked to some like an opportunity for payback.
When members of Congress tried to explain this to him, Obama responded by personalizing the political question. I am your president. A vote for TPP is a vote for me. Stick to the regular order of things, he told them. The dismissive put-down simply deepened the anger. Forced to choose between him and their angry constituents, they chose not him.
A different sort of political leader might swallow pride and start a serious conversation with his opponents. Is there a deal to be made that would cut out some of the more odious corporate plums in the TPP in order to get something that labor-liberal critics might accept? Labor officials are ready to talk, but rather doubt Obama will pursue the chance.
In that event, the same choice will fall to Hillary Clinton. She is, of course, grounded in the Clinton wing of the party and aligned with the same powerful interests as her husband. But her prospects as Democratic candidate for president are now directly threatened by the party’s growing divide. The monied interests remain in charge of the party, and Clinton has tried not to choose sides. That doesn’t sound like a strategy that can survive until November 2016.
Something even more profound may now be unfolding in politics. As the Democratic rebellion makes clear, both parties are driven by severe intramural divisions. On both left and right, the rank and file are fed up with establishment leaders and eager to challenge them, even bring them down.
On the Democratic left, the spirit of reform is resurgent. Both politicians and freelance advocates are advancing strong new ideas for confronting inequality and repairing the damage done to ordinary Americans—and not only by the Republicans. The media usually portray these ruptures as symptoms of dysfunctional politics. But these intramural fights may actually be leading toward something far more positive for the country.
What we may be witnessing are the initial stages in the gradual breakdown of the imperial presidency. Since World War II, the presidency steadily assumed greater powers in both war and peace, while Congress generally surrendered its prerogatives and powers. The executive branch is no longer held accountable for unconstitutional sins and egregious policy disasters.
For two generations, both parties and both houses of Congress mostly went along with this debasement of the governing order. Letting the White House made the big decisions and take the blame if things go wrong became the standard default.
However, the country has now reached a difficult passage where the imperial decision-making no longer works for common good but pulls the country into deeper quagmires. The nation goes to war on false premises and can’t get out of fighting more wars. Government embraces narrow-minded economic doctrines that make things worse for most people, year after year, and yet deferential politicians seem afraid to challenge the domination of smug elites.
We are in deeper trouble than either political party will acknowledge (it would sound unpatriotic).
If I am right about this, the country is facing a long and difficult struggle as events compel the nation to retreat from some its most arrogant and dangerous illusions. The politics will be chaotic, for sure.
Established powers will feel threatened and try to derail these popular rebellions.
Yet I can imagine this turmoil might be positive in the long run—encouraging reforms that liberate the democratic order from backward influences and persuade angry, anxious people to seek political power and act again like citizens.
Take Action: Keep Up the Pressure to Defeat Fast Track
Monday, June 15, 2015
Chris Hayes Beats Down Ex-Senator's ACA Lies With Facts
By Karoli
I've handed Chris Hayes a lot of grief on this site for interviews where he gets filibustered by right-wing screechers, but he did it exactly right on his show tonight.
Former Senator and Governor Judd Gregg was the guest. The topic was the Affordable Care Act, and Judd Gregg was serving up the usual nonsensical talking points in a particularly vitriolic way. From his claim that the ACA was a mess that helped no one, to his mockery of Hayes' claim that the ACA has gotten health coverage to millions, Gregg was mean, nasty, and rude.
Hayes was having none of it, and he used that good old fashioned fallback to debunk Gregg: Facts, with a touch of math for good measure.
Gregg scoffed at Hayes' use of the word "plummeted" to describe the uninsured rate in this country. But in fact, it has plummeted.
Watch it, because a transcript won't do it justice.
Aside to Chris Hayes: This is one that your colleagues (particularly Chuck Todd), should study to understand how to use facts to stop these talking points dead in their tracks. It's what we expect from our so-called liberal media, and you delivered.
The other thing you'll notice is that Gregg never answered the question.
I've handed Chris Hayes a lot of grief on this site for interviews where he gets filibustered by right-wing screechers, but he did it exactly right on his show tonight.
Former Senator and Governor Judd Gregg was the guest. The topic was the Affordable Care Act, and Judd Gregg was serving up the usual nonsensical talking points in a particularly vitriolic way. From his claim that the ACA was a mess that helped no one, to his mockery of Hayes' claim that the ACA has gotten health coverage to millions, Gregg was mean, nasty, and rude.
Hayes was having none of it, and he used that good old fashioned fallback to debunk Gregg: Facts, with a touch of math for good measure.
Gregg scoffed at Hayes' use of the word "plummeted" to describe the uninsured rate in this country. But in fact, it has plummeted.
Chris Hayes uses math to rebut incorrect statements of former Senator Judd Gregg on #inners http://t.co/xJ5EqwwYf7
— All In w/Chris Hayes (@allinwithchris) June 16, 2015
I was taken aback by the nastiness and disrespect Gregg showed Chris
Hayes, but Hayes persisted in simply using facts and math to contradict
his claims. Watch it, because a transcript won't do it justice.
Aside to Chris Hayes: This is one that your colleagues (particularly Chuck Todd), should study to understand how to use facts to stop these talking points dead in their tracks. It's what we expect from our so-called liberal media, and you delivered.
The other thing you'll notice is that Gregg never answered the question.
15 Surprising Benefits Of Playing Video Games
Image credit: istock
Complex, challenging, and ambitious, video games have come a long way since the simple arcade titles of the 1970's—and evidence is mounting that the benefits of play go well beyond entertainment and improved hand-eye coordination. Here are 15 ways games are programming better people.
1. They’re Producing Better Surgeons.
While you may think you want your surgeon reading up on the latest medical research instead of playing games, you might want to reconsider: a study of laparoscopic (small incision) specialists found that those who played for more than three hours per week made 32 percent fewer errors during practice procedures compared to their non-gaming counterparts.2. They May Help People Overcome Dyslexia.
Some research points to attention difficulties as being a key component of dyslexia. One study has shown dyslexics improved their reading comprehension following sessions of games heavy on action. The reason, researchers believe, is that the games have constantly changing environments that require intense focus.3. They Could Improve Your Vision.
“Don’t sit too close to the television” used to be a common parental refrain without a lot of science to back it up. Instead, scientists are discovering games in moderation may actually improve—not strain—your vision. In one study, 10 weeks of play was associated with a greater ability to discern between different shades of grey. Another had participants try to play games using only their “lazy” eye, with the “good” one obscured. Those players showed significant, sometimes normalized improvement in the affected eye.4. You Might Get a Career Boost.
Because certain genres of games reward and encourage leadership traits—providing for “communities,” securing their safety, etc.—researchers have noted that players can display a correlating motivation in their real-world career goals. Improvising in a game can also translate into being faster on your feet when an office crisis crops up.5. Players Can Become Fascinated with History.
Many games use actual historical events to drive their stories. Those characters and places can then spark a child’s interest in discovering more about the culture they’re immersed in, according to researchers. Parents who have obtained books, maps, and other resources connected to games have reported their children are more engaged with learning, which can lead to a lifetime appreciation for history.6. They Make Kids Physical.
While some games promote a whole-body level of interaction, even those requiring a simple handheld controller can lead to physical activity. Sports games that involve basketball, tennis, or even skateboarding can lead to children practicing those same skills outdoors.7. They May Slow the Aging Process.
So-called “brain games” involving problem-solving, memory, and puzzle components have been shown to have a positive benefit on older players. In one study, just 10 hours of play led to increased cognitive functioning in participants 50 and older—improvement that lasted for several years.8. They Help Ease Pain.
It’s common to try to distract ourselves from pain by paying attention to something else or focusing on other body mechanisms, but that’s not the only reason why games are a good post-injury prescription. Playing can actually produce an analgesic (pain-killing) response in our higher cortical systems. The more immersive, the better—which is why pending virtual reality systems may one day be as prevalent in hospitals as hand sanitizer.9. You’ll Make New Social Connections.
Gamers are sometimes stigmatized as being too insulated, but the opposite is actually true. The rise of multi-player experiences online has given way to a new form of socializing in which players work together to solve problems. But studies have shown games can also be the catalyst for friends to gather in person: roughly 70 percent of all players play with friends at least some of the time.10. They May Improve Balance in MS Sufferers.
Since it is a disorder affecting multiple nerves, multiple sclerosis patients often have problems with their balance—and no medications have been conclusively proven to help. However, one study showed that MS patients who played games requiring physical interaction while standing on a balance board displayed improvement afterward.11. You’ll Make Faster Decisions.
We all know someone who seems to have a faster CPU than the rest of us, able to retrieve information or react in a split second. For some, that ability might be strengthened through gaming. Because new information is constantly being displayed during play, players are forced to adapt quickly. In one study, players who were immersed in fast-paced games were 25 percent faster in reacting to questions about an image they had just seen compared to non-players.12. They Might Curb Cravings.
Players preoccupied with indulging in overeating, smoking, or drinking might be best served by reaching for a controller instead. A university study revealed a 24 percent reduction in desire for their vice of choice after playing a puzzle game.13. They’ll Reduce Stress.
While some games are thought to induce stress—especially when you see your character struck down for the umpteenth time—the opposite can be true. A major study that tracked players over six months and measured heart rate found that certain titles reduced the adrenaline response by over 50 percent.14. Gamers Might Be Less Likely to Bully.
Though the stance is controversial, some researchers have asserted that action games may reduce a bully’s motivation to—well, bully. One study that had players assume the role of both the hero and villain showed that those controlling the bad guy’s behaviors displayed a greater sense of remorse over their actions.15. They Can Help Address Autism.
Gamers using systems that incorporate the entire body to control onscreen movement have been shown to be more engaged in celebrating victories with their peers, which runs counter to the lack of communication people with autism sometimes present. A study also showed that sharing space with multiple players can also lead to increased social interaction for those with the disorder.Sunday, June 14, 2015
Dallas Shooter Was A Paranoid, Angry Conspiracy Theorist
By Karoli
Never underestimate the power of right-wing eliminationist
talk, especially when the hearer is already angry at government
authorities and has lost custody of his only child.
James Boulware was an extremely angry man, as evidenced by postings on social media. Not only was he angry about his child custody problems, he was what we might term a "hater" on social media.
We've all seen them. They're the ones who show up in the comments calling President Obama a commie, or just making generally paranoid arguments about government, with Ron Paul's flavor of paranoia tossed in for good measure.
Here's a posting he left on Facebook for the judge who decided his custody case.
He also had a Disqus account which was created in early May as well, which appears to have been created to attack one other commenter, for the most part.
In those comments, he claims he was a weapons engineer for the Army. The account appears to focus on one other person, who is no left wing type himself, sound mostly like this one:
It sounds more to me like the product of a never-ending drumbeat of right-wing brainwashing combined with an angry man who didn't know how to keep his hands off of people.
James Boulware is exactly the kind of man we all worry about when we think about that one wing nut triggered by the violent rhetoric of NRA trolls, Rush Limbaugh or Glenn Beck.
He's the one we want to catch before he has assault weapons, bomb-making materials, body armor and an armored vehicle, perhaps by something as simple as a background check at a gun show, or before he buys weapons on the Internet.
I have some more questions about him that I hope we can get answers to. Where did he get the money to buy all of this gear? Why didn't anyone find it odd that he was considering living in an armored vehicle, when combined with his paranoia and anger at the courts? Why, with all of the interaction he had with the court system, wasn't he identified as someone in need of mental health intervention?
Was he really in the Army at all, or was that just an invention?
We'll probably never know the answers to these questions, but I'm sure we can expect Fox News to tell us that those police cars he shot at "were no angels either," right?
James Boulware was an extremely angry man, as evidenced by postings on social media. Not only was he angry about his child custody problems, he was what we might term a "hater" on social media.
We've all seen them. They're the ones who show up in the comments calling President Obama a commie, or just making generally paranoid arguments about government, with Ron Paul's flavor of paranoia tossed in for good measure.
Here's a posting he left on Facebook for the judge who decided his custody case.
He also had a Disqus account which was created in early May as well, which appears to have been created to attack one other commenter, for the most part.
In those comments, he claims he was a weapons engineer for the Army. The account appears to focus on one other person, who is no left wing type himself, sound mostly like this one:
Sraysr, I see that you have no life and sit at your computer jacking off all day. Do you enjoy receiving your socialist welfare check and living out of your trailer house. YOUR BLOOD SUCKING LEACH!!!And the themes of "government control" play in here too:
Texas is a horrible place to live!!! Too much government control!!! The C.P.S.S. (Also known as the Hitler youth Program) steals peoples kids with impunity. Jobs are scarce!!! The police and the F.B.I. are all part of the mafia!!! So if you want my advise, STAY AWAY!!!His mother claims mental illness as the cause of his problems and ultimate demise, but I'm less than convinced, given that court documents indicate no medication or treatment of those, and he was able to complete the Court's requirements to have the charges dropped for his terrorist threats against churches and schools.
It sounds more to me like the product of a never-ending drumbeat of right-wing brainwashing combined with an angry man who didn't know how to keep his hands off of people.
James Boulware is exactly the kind of man we all worry about when we think about that one wing nut triggered by the violent rhetoric of NRA trolls, Rush Limbaugh or Glenn Beck.
He's the one we want to catch before he has assault weapons, bomb-making materials, body armor and an armored vehicle, perhaps by something as simple as a background check at a gun show, or before he buys weapons on the Internet.
I have some more questions about him that I hope we can get answers to. Where did he get the money to buy all of this gear? Why didn't anyone find it odd that he was considering living in an armored vehicle, when combined with his paranoia and anger at the courts? Why, with all of the interaction he had with the court system, wasn't he identified as someone in need of mental health intervention?
Was he really in the Army at all, or was that just an invention?
We'll probably never know the answers to these questions, but I'm sure we can expect Fox News to tell us that those police cars he shot at "were no angels either," right?
The Hacking of Federal Data Is Much Worse Than It First Seemed
By Adam Chandler
To truly understand just how rigorous and intrusive the process to get security clearance for the federal government is, take a look a Standard Form 86.
Formally known as the Questionnaire for National Security Positions, the document requires that an applicant disclose everything from mental illnesses, financial interests, and bankruptcy issues to any brush with the law and major or minor drug and alcohol use. The application also requires a thorough listing of an applicant’s family members, associates, or former roommates. At the bottom of each page, a potential employee must submit his or her social security number. Given the questionnaire’s length, that means if you’re filling out this document, you will write your social security number over 115 times.
On Friday, it was revealed that all of the data on Standard Form 86— filled out by millions of current and former military and intelligence workers— is now believed to be in the hands of Chinese hackers.
This not only means that the hackers may have troves of personal data about Americans with highly sensitive jobs, but also that contacts or family members of American intelligence employees living abroad could potentially be targeted for coercion. At its worst, this cyber breach also provides a basic roster of every American with a security clearance.
"That makes it very hard for any of those people to function as an intelligence officer,” Joel Brenner, a former top U.S. counterintelligence official, told the AP. “The database also tells the Chinese an enormous amount of information about almost everyone with a security clearance. That's a gold mine. It helps you approach and recruit spies."
What’s particularly stunning about this development is how quickly it grew into something so severe. Last week, officials estimated that the personal data of 4 million current and former federal employees had been compromised. Then that figure ballooned to as many as 14 million.
Speaking to The Washington Post, one official ominously likened this new revelation to cancer, “Once you start operating on the cancer, you find it has spread to other areas of the body.” The subtext here is that we may not have even hit the apex of this scandal yet.
In the meantime, China continues to deny that it stole the information and the U.S. Office of Personnel Management isn’t saying much either. “Once we have conclusive information about the breach, we will announce a notification plan for individuals whose information is determined to have been compromised,” said OPM spokesman Samuel Schumach.
Given the reach of the data thought to be stolen, it might be easier for the OPM to contact those whose information hasn’t been compromised.
Cyber-attacks
linked to China appear to have resulted in the theft of
security-clearance records with sensitive data about millions of
American military and intelligence personnel.
To truly understand just how rigorous and intrusive the process to get security clearance for the federal government is, take a look a Standard Form 86.
Formally known as the Questionnaire for National Security Positions, the document requires that an applicant disclose everything from mental illnesses, financial interests, and bankruptcy issues to any brush with the law and major or minor drug and alcohol use. The application also requires a thorough listing of an applicant’s family members, associates, or former roommates. At the bottom of each page, a potential employee must submit his or her social security number. Given the questionnaire’s length, that means if you’re filling out this document, you will write your social security number over 115 times.
On Friday, it was revealed that all of the data on Standard Form 86— filled out by millions of current and former military and intelligence workers— is now believed to be in the hands of Chinese hackers.
This not only means that the hackers may have troves of personal data about Americans with highly sensitive jobs, but also that contacts or family members of American intelligence employees living abroad could potentially be targeted for coercion. At its worst, this cyber breach also provides a basic roster of every American with a security clearance.
"That makes it very hard for any of those people to function as an intelligence officer,” Joel Brenner, a former top U.S. counterintelligence official, told the AP. “The database also tells the Chinese an enormous amount of information about almost everyone with a security clearance. That's a gold mine. It helps you approach and recruit spies."
What’s particularly stunning about this development is how quickly it grew into something so severe. Last week, officials estimated that the personal data of 4 million current and former federal employees had been compromised. Then that figure ballooned to as many as 14 million.
Speaking to The Washington Post, one official ominously likened this new revelation to cancer, “Once you start operating on the cancer, you find it has spread to other areas of the body.” The subtext here is that we may not have even hit the apex of this scandal yet.
In the meantime, China continues to deny that it stole the information and the U.S. Office of Personnel Management isn’t saying much either. “Once we have conclusive information about the breach, we will announce a notification plan for individuals whose information is determined to have been compromised,” said OPM spokesman Samuel Schumach.
Given the reach of the data thought to be stolen, it might be easier for the OPM to contact those whose information hasn’t been compromised.
Saturday, June 13, 2015
S.E. Cupp: Ben Carson Fails To Sound Believable As A President Or A Doctor
By Josh Feldman
CNN’s S.E. Cupp is getting really tired of conservatives taking Dr. Ben Carson seriously, saying he fails to sound believable both as a president and as a doctor.
The straw that broke the camel’s back for Cupp was Carson’s proposal this week to create a covert division of government workers to spy on other government workers. Because, as Cupp said, conservatives obviously love nothing more than spying and increasing the size of government.
And between that and other comments Carson’s made, Cupp wants to know what outside of calling out the president to his face that one time actually appeals to conservatives so much that they would want him to run for president.
She told Brooke Baldwin Carson’s “embarrassing” and she’s “annoyed at the oxygen he’s taking in” when more time could be devoted to actually serious candidates.
Cupp said back in March conservatives need to get serious and ignore Carson already. A few polls have Carson ahead of candidates like Chris Christie and Rick Santorum.
CNN’s S.E. Cupp is getting really tired of conservatives taking Dr. Ben Carson seriously, saying he fails to sound believable both as a president and as a doctor.
The straw that broke the camel’s back for Cupp was Carson’s proposal this week to create a covert division of government workers to spy on other government workers. Because, as Cupp said, conservatives obviously love nothing more than spying and increasing the size of government.
And between that and other comments Carson’s made, Cupp wants to know what outside of calling out the president to his face that one time actually appeals to conservatives so much that they would want him to run for president.
She told Brooke Baldwin Carson’s “embarrassing” and she’s “annoyed at the oxygen he’s taking in” when more time could be devoted to actually serious candidates.
Cupp said back in March conservatives need to get serious and ignore Carson already. A few polls have Carson ahead of candidates like Chris Christie and Rick Santorum.
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
Only One Voter Shows Up at Rick Santorum Campaign Event
By Michael Arria
/ AlterNet
Santorum stopped at a Hamlin, Iowa restaurant at 2 PM where he was met by Peggy Toft, an insurance agent and chair of the area's Republican Party. Eventually four people ended up at Santorum's table.
Despite the numbers, the candidate declared the day a success, "People don’t understand. One guy in there said, ‘I’ll speak for you at the caucus,’” Santorum said. “That’s maybe eight votes that you wouldn’t otherwise get. Eight votes can make a big difference, as I know.”
Santorum won the 2012 Caucus, beating the eventual nominee Mitt Romney by just 34 votes. He visited all 99 Iowa counties in 2011, which many identify as the reason behind his success. "It's not glamorous, and you're not out there raising money, but you're doing what the money is ultimately supposed to do — getting votes," said Santorum, "This is a lot more fun than being on the phone raising money."
Earlier in the day, he drew ten people at a nearby stop in Panora, Iowa.
Tuesday, June 9, 2015
Bernie Sanders Tells Jeb Bush To Go And Pound Sand
By Tool
Today Senator and Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders told Jeb Bush to go pound sand on social security. In no uncertain terms Sanders reiterated his stance that "NO we will not cut Social Security." This has been Sanders stance that payments from Social Security should be increased by raising the FICA cap.
What that means is that if you are making 118,000 dollars a year, you are paying into the system at the same rate as a guy making 10,000,000 a year. It bears repeating that Social Security is not in crisis and that merely raising the FICA cap for individuals making 1,000,000 or even 250,000 a year then the program that has lifted generations out of poverty in their old age will be solvent for future generations.
Sun Jun 07, 2015 at 7:34 PM PT: Forgot to include: Bernie said...
“I have introduced legislation to do just that,” he concluded.
(raise SS payments)
Today Senator and Presidential candidate Bernie Sanders told Jeb Bush to go pound sand on social security. In no uncertain terms Sanders reiterated his stance that "NO we will not cut Social Security." This has been Sanders stance that payments from Social Security should be increased by raising the FICA cap.
What that means is that if you are making 118,000 dollars a year, you are paying into the system at the same rate as a guy making 10,000,000 a year. It bears repeating that Social Security is not in crisis and that merely raising the FICA cap for individuals making 1,000,000 or even 250,000 a year then the program that has lifted generations out of poverty in their old age will be solvent for future generations.
I have a hard time understanding what world Gov. Bush and his billionaire backers live in,” Bernie said after Jeb Bush told an interviewer that he thought the Social Security retirement age should be raised.
“We need to look over the horizon and begin to phase in (an increase in the retirement age over an extended period of time),” said Bush, “going from 65 to 68 or 70.” With those words, Bush seemed to suggest that the current retirement age is 65. It is currently 66, and is scheduled to rise to 67 for people born in 1959 and afterwards.
“It is unacceptable to ask construction workers, truck drivers, nurses and other working-class Americans to work until they are 68 to 70 years old before qualifying for full Social Security benefits,” Bernie said in response this week, adding:
“At a time when more than half of the American people have less than $10,000 in savings, it would be a disaster to cut Social Security benefits by raising the retirement age.”
“Jeb Bush’s plan to raise the retirement age is just a continuation of the war that is being waged by the Republicans against working-class Americans in order to reward billionaires on Wall Street,” Bernie said, noting:
“When the average Social Security benefit is just $1,328 a month, and more than one-third of our senior citizens rely on Social Security for virtually all of their income, our job must be to expand benefits, not cut them.”So who else wants to deliver a House and Senate that will allow Senator Bernie Sanders to raise social security payouts to seniors who live on starvation wages? I do. Jeb Bush can go pound sand.
Sun Jun 07, 2015 at 7:34 PM PT: Forgot to include: Bernie said...
“I have introduced legislation to do just that,” he concluded.
(raise SS payments)
Monday, June 8, 2015
This Week Pundit Matthew Dowd Says Hillary Clinton Unelectable. Is He Correct?
By Egberto Willies
There was a very good discussion on ThisWeek that really should be heeded. Supporters of Hillary Clinton are likely to be upset but instead must be warned that she is definitely not a shoo-in.
"To me this is not a campaign problem," said Matthew Dowd. "This is a candidate problem. If you take a look at the data on her over time, the place where she drops is when she enters the national scene as a candidate. Every time she enters the national scene as a candidate she falls in the polls.
That's just what happened this year. If you just take a look at this. Ignore tactics. Ignore all these things. Take a look at her numbers. And you look at her numbers and you look at the dynamics of the country, where the country thinks we are off on the wrong track, where the country wants a change in policy from Obama, and the President's job approval is in the forties. All of those dynamics say she is unelectable. Can she win? Yes. But she can only win if the Republicans nominate an equally unelectable candidate or she disqualifies herself."
Matthew Dowd omitted causality. Her polls likely drop whenever she gets on the national scene because that is when she is attacked from an effective GOP misinformation machine. It is not hard to forget that in the early years of the Obama administration when her poll numbers were high, she was being praised by Republicans as a method to diss the President. Now that she is running there attacks are directly against her. The polls reflect that.
Pundit on ThisWeek explains why Hillary Clinton... by ewillies
That said, in the last several years the Clintons did very little to inoculate themselves from the fire they knew would come if she ran for president. While it is likely that everything they did is legal, their methods may have left the door open for the false narrative being waged against Hillary Clinton now. If the Republicans nominate a good candidate and Hillary Clinton is the Democratic nominee, Matthew Dowd is absolutely correct.
There was a very good discussion on ThisWeek that really should be heeded. Supporters of Hillary Clinton are likely to be upset but instead must be warned that she is definitely not a shoo-in.
"To me this is not a campaign problem," said Matthew Dowd. "This is a candidate problem. If you take a look at the data on her over time, the place where she drops is when she enters the national scene as a candidate. Every time she enters the national scene as a candidate she falls in the polls.
That's just what happened this year. If you just take a look at this. Ignore tactics. Ignore all these things. Take a look at her numbers. And you look at her numbers and you look at the dynamics of the country, where the country thinks we are off on the wrong track, where the country wants a change in policy from Obama, and the President's job approval is in the forties. All of those dynamics say she is unelectable. Can she win? Yes. But she can only win if the Republicans nominate an equally unelectable candidate or she disqualifies herself."
Matthew Dowd omitted causality. Her polls likely drop whenever she gets on the national scene because that is when she is attacked from an effective GOP misinformation machine. It is not hard to forget that in the early years of the Obama administration when her poll numbers were high, she was being praised by Republicans as a method to diss the President. Now that she is running there attacks are directly against her. The polls reflect that.
Pundit on ThisWeek explains why Hillary Clinton... by ewillies
That said, in the last several years the Clintons did very little to inoculate themselves from the fire they knew would come if she ran for president. While it is likely that everything they did is legal, their methods may have left the door open for the false narrative being waged against Hillary Clinton now. If the Republicans nominate a good candidate and Hillary Clinton is the Democratic nominee, Matthew Dowd is absolutely correct.
Sunday, June 7, 2015
Inside The Chinese Boot Camps Designed To Break Video Game Addiction
Photos from a "tough love" treatment center where anxious parents send their screen-obsessed kids.
Photos by Fernando Moleres; Text by James West
The camo and calisthenics
in these photos may call to mind a military academy, but they actually
document a rehab center for internet addicts. China has more online
gamers—368 million—than the United States has people. Perhaps it's no
surprise then that Chinese parents, psychiatrists, and media often
describe wangyin, or internet addiction, as a clinical
disorder. Sometimes called "digital heroin," it is said to afflict 24
million young people.
This center in a Beijing suburb houses 70 such patients, mostly boys, and is led by Tao Ran, a "tough love" former army colonel. While controversial treatments have been blamed for deaths at similar facilities, Tao claims his team's methods—which can include brain scans and medication—have a 75 percent success rate. That's welcome news for panicked mothers and fathers who, raised before China's tech revolution, struggle to recognize the online lives of their children, and for a government that fears gaming is yet another way for the internet to corrupt young minds.
This center in a Beijing suburb houses 70 such patients, mostly boys, and is led by Tao Ran, a "tough love" former army colonel. While controversial treatments have been blamed for deaths at similar facilities, Tao claims his team's methods—which can include brain scans and medication—have a 75 percent success rate. That's welcome news for panicked mothers and fathers who, raised before China's tech revolution, struggle to recognize the online lives of their children, and for a government that fears gaming is yet another way for the internet to corrupt young minds.
10 Pluses And Minuses Of Being An Aging Baby Boomer
By Will Durst
Population scientists describe the Baby Boom generation as anybody born between the years 1946 and 1964. Which means the youngest of the Baby Boomers turned 50 last year, and the oldest will turn 70 next year, which is just so wrong. We Boomers are the architects of the youth culture. We invented young people for crum’s sakes. We’re the Pepsi Generation... that had a minor fling with Coke.
But fear not. As we evidenced throughout the entirety of our flower-powered history, this autumn of our lives will be charged into with unwavering optimism, a firm commitment to affect positive change and pockets full of drugs.
The first item of business that needs to be put in order is the nomenclature. Is it really necessary to refer to us as elderly seniors winding down our golden years? We’re vintage. Classic. Enduring. Seasoned. Steadfast. Resilient. Ripe. And accumulating ripagosity every day.
But all you kids out there shouldn’t think that growing old is all gloom and doom. No. No. No.
There’s an equal amount of marvelous traveling hand in hand with the gruesome. Compare for yourself, the 10 major advantages and disadvantages of being an aging baby boomer.
The 10 Major Disadvantages to Being an Aging Baby Boomer:
1. Exorbitant cost of replacement parts.
2. Sex and drugs and rock and roll and now naps.
3. When acid flashbacks meet dementia. On Prozac.
4. Turns out that old adage was right: the good DO die young. Which explains why we’re still here.
5. Your children are no longer reliable sources when it comes to tech support and all the grandchildren have lost the ability to pick up a phone.
6. Grandma’s field of butterflies tattoo is now a flock of pterodactyls.
7. Looking at Harold & Maude from Ruth Gordon’s point of view- not Bud Cort’s.
8. Rumors abound that despite the name, sexagenarians, alas, don’t really engage in a lot of sex.
9. If the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over expecting a different outcome, getting old means doing the same things you always did, with constantly varying results.
10. No jet packs.
The 10 Major Advantages to Being an Aging Baby Boomer:
1. Fewer peers means less peer pressure and it diminishes every day.
2. The phrase: “lifetime supply” becomes a much more imaginable concept.
3. Always one ear hair so long and thick you can cut cheese with it.
4. No longer have to worry about being the fresh young thing in prison. Sweet.
5. Knees are better at predicting the weather than that guy on TV.
6. Just saying “irritable bowel syndrome” creeps young people out so much they go away.
7. Can always tell people the battery in your hearing aid is shorting out, even when you’re not wearing a hearing aid.
8. Totally lack the energy and often forget to keep lifelong grudges active.
9. The Rolling Stones can be heard in elevators.
10. Going to the bathroom 3 times a night turns out to be a highly effective means of home security.
Will Durst is an award-winning, nationally acclaimed political comic. Go to willdurst.com to find about more about his new CD, “Elect to Laugh,” as well as his one-man show “BoomerAging: From LSD to OMG."
Saturday, June 6, 2015
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