I'm invited.

Moderators: $iljanus, LawBeefaroni
Is Vitter announcing he's running again from a brothel?Rip wrote:Almost forgot, an anonymous source has let me know that Congressman Charles Boustany will be seeking Vitter's Senate seat. It will be announced at his mother's home on Dec. 14th.
I'm invited.
He's really gonna want to wipe down that seat.Rip wrote:Almost forgot, an anonymous source has let me know that Congressman Charles Boustany will be seeking Vitter's Senate seat.
Despite generally sucking—the Rams won two NFL titles back in the old days and just one Super Bowl, in 1999—St. Louis and the entire state of Missouri is so desperate to keep the team that they are ponying up at least 40 percent of the $1 billion-plus cost of a new stadium.
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Lost in all these tense negotiations and greenmail schemes is a variety of basic truths: having professional sports teams lowers an area's per capita income; the stadiums and infrastructure never pay for themselves; cities are far smarter to focus on roads, police, school, and education if they want to increase quality of life.
Rear Adm. David Baucom was removed from his job as the director of Strategy, Policy, Capabilities, and Logistics at U.S. Transportation Command in October after an investigation into his misbehavior in April while attending the National Defense Transportation Association's Transportation Advisory Board in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.
On the night of April 7, Baucom attended a dinner with about 70 conference attendees and imbibed all or part of at least eight drinks, according to an investigation released by the Navy after inquiries from Navy Times.
Baucom, 56, became so intoxicated that he was unable to stand and had to be brought by a hotel employee back to his room. Later, he was discovered wandering naked through public areas of the hotel, seeking a towel to cover himself, the investigation found.
Baucom, 56, blames his mistake of mixing alcohol and prescription medications for his lewd behavior and asked that his 34-year career not be judged on a single incident.
"After extensive medical testing and diagnoses, four doctors have stated in writing that I most probably experienced an atrial fibrillation event the evening of April 8th which caused lightheadedness, disorientation, dizziness and confusion," Baucom said in a statement provided to Navy Times. "These symptoms may last up to 24 hours. I am now being treated for those symptoms and other medical conditions.
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After reading the investigation, TRANSCOM decided to remove Baucom from his joint billet. Baucom was transferred to Fleet Forces Command in October. Adm. Phil Davidson, the FFC boss, found Baucom guilty of conduct unbecoming an officer and disorderly conduct at a Nov. 20 admiral's mast.
DOT investigationAWS260 wrote:Well, you've got to admire Alabama's chutzpah.
Step 1: Enact state voter ID law.
Step 2: Close DMV offices in predominantly black counties.
At this rate, I expect to see Step 3: In the face of public criticism, begrudgingly re-open the DMV offices, then announce that in order to keep them operating, the state will implement a poll tax.
The U.S. Department of Transportation has just launched an investigation into whether Alabama is discriminating against African-American residents after announcing plans to shut down or reduce service at 34 state drivers license offices.
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Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx says his agency is specifically looking into whether the closures violate the Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color or national origin on programs and activities receiving federal assistance.
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The agency will be requesting all documents and information that explains why these specific 34 DMV locations were picked for closure or reduced service "and why not others," Foxx said.
DOT says it has not reached any conclusions but if it finds these closures are discriminatory, the agency will first allow the state to come into compliance by making those services available once again. If Alabama does not comply, the Department of Transportation says it could strip the state of millions of dollars in federal funding that's used towards DMV programs.
Questioned whether stripping the state of federal funding would only further negatively impact the communities DOT is trying to protect Foxx said the agency is still gathering information "I don't want to presuppose the outcome at this point, we need to go and get the facts but I think that the recourse we have is fairly effective we've seen it work in previous cases. Hopefully we won't get there but if we do we will be very aggressive."
In October, Rep. Terri Sewell, the only African-American in the state's congressional delegation, asked the Department of Justice to launch an investigation.
The state of Alabama declined to comment on the investigation.
It's unclear when the DOT will complete its investigation or whether it will be done before the November 2016 election, though Foxx said the agency is working to get it done as soon as possible.
I have a political crush, but one I couldn’t vote for today – because she ran for office in France.
Marion Maréchal-Le Pen is the new deserved “It Girl” of French politics and a clear voice of courage and common sense in a country and continent in need of both.
In 2012, she earned the distinction of being France’s youngest elected Member of Parliament. Last week she handily won the first round of a race for the leadership of a large important region in southeastern France that’s home to the beautiful port city of Marseilles. Unfortunately, she lost the run-off election today because the two establishment Parties joined forces to defeat her.
But despite today’s tough losses, Marion and her aunt Marine Le Pen, the leader of the National Front (FN) Party, have established themselves and their supporters as a force to be reckoned with in France’s 2017 presidential race, in which Marine is sure to be a contender with her talented niece right behind her.
For some time now, I’ve admired the bold style of Marine Le Pen, who wrestled control of the leadership of her populist party in order to purge it of any trace of anti-Semitism, which it had unfortunately been tainted with in the past. But I’m especially impressed with the courage of her young niece who is a devout Catholic and unapologetically pro-life – not an easy thing for a politician to be in a country that’s aggressively secular.
More importantly, young Marion Maréchal-Le Pen is unashamed to champion France’s Judeo-Christian identity and heritage as something worth preserving and fighting for. She publicly proclaims it, setting an example for even American politicians to be so bold. With France (and indeed all of Europe) caught up in an existential crisis against radical Islam, these are the sentiments they need in their leadership.
This is a world-class sentence in terms of obfuscation, given that it makes it sound like the party had a few enthusiastic members who took things a bit too far, as opposed to being founded by a holocaust denier.in order to purge it of any trace of anti-Semitism, which it had unfortunately been tainted with in the past.
Los Angeles schools have been closed as an unspecified "electronic" threat is investigated, police have said. A spokeswoman for the Los Angeles police department confirmed that the Los Angeles Unified School District received a threat. Police could not confirm the validity or specificity of the threat, which sent school buses back from their routes to the depots. A schools spokesman said they were exercising "an abundance of caution". "Earlier this morning we did receive an electronic threat that mentions the safety of our schools," said Steven Zipperman, chief of the Los Angeles school police department. We have chosen to close our schools today until we can be absolutely sure that our campuses are safe." The district is the second largest in the US and has 640,000 students and more than 900 schools.
That sounds scary. Plus, children. I'm thinking the time is right for a national gene registry.Police could not confirm the validity or specificity of the threat
How will Canadians react to a San Bernardino-style attack on our home soil when the time comes?
This isn't a very Christmas-y thought, but somewhere in this country, somebody who couldn't care less about Christmas is probably daydreaming about, or even planning, an act of politically inspired mass murder. That is reportedly the assessment of Canada's Integrated Terrorism Assessment Centre, which last summer set the likelihood of an attack in several Canadian cities at medium — meaning there are people with the capability and intent, and that those people could act. And why not? Why should Canada be any different from the United States, Great Britain, France or Spain, all of which are allies in the half-baked war against ISIS, all of which have suffered pitiless attacks on their civilian populations?
The question is, how will Canadians handle it when it comes? Will we take the rational view, which would be to absorb the blow and put it in perspective? Canada has, after all, had all sorts of mass murders in schools, multiple police slayings, serial rapist/murderers and drive-by gang killings, and we've dealt with the perpetrators. Most of them are dead or in prison, and we've moved on without disruption to our civil society. Or would we take the raw fear view, which is that terrorism threatens all of us every single day, and that we are at war with an entire ethno-religious group, and it's just too much for our justice system to handle, so we must give up more freedoms and give our police even more powers and shut our doors to immigrants and intensify racial profiling? Would our television programs feature crawls across the bottom of the screens screaming "Terror"? Would our mainstream media lose its critical faculties, the way the American media did after 9/11? Would such an attack disrupt our society on just about every level? Probably more the latter than the former, given our behaviour in the year we are about to put behind us. It was a year of fear for the Western world, more so than any year since 9/11. And, fear being what it is, it was not rational. The very fact that Donald Trump is riding to the top of the polls in America is evidence.
And despite what a lot of Canadians might like to think, we aren't much different. Canada has suffered far less extremist violence than several other Western countries, and yet many of us, led by our former government, dove down a tunnel of fear for most of 2015. We let an unhinged character who shot one soldier in Ottawa at the end of 2014, and an extremist who ran down and killed another in Quebec a few days earlier, push us into passing a sprawling new "anti-terror" bill. Well, it was more than that, really. Fear poured in from outside, too — from the massacre at Charlie Hebdo and the kosher supermarket in Paris, the videos of beheadings and immolations and ISIS gunmen exalting death and their god, and the second wave of attacks in Paris last month. On the periphery of our vision, because our media places far more value on Western life, fear also flowed from the bombings in Beirut, the attacks in Mali, and the endless explosions and carnage in Baghdad.
Fear also wafted up from America, which just a few weeks ago went through the deadliest extremist attack since 9/11. The normally stoic, non-alarmist New York Times, which polled roughly 5,000 of its readers after the San Bernardino shooting, recently ran this headline: "Fear in the Air, Americans Look Over Their Shoulders." "The killings are happening too often," began the story. "Bunched too close together. At places you would never imagine." The story went on to conclude that Americans are "engulfed in a collective fear … The fear of the ordinary. Going to work. Eating a meal in a restaurant. Sending children to school. Watching a movie." Of course, the events in San Bernardino took on the significance they did only because the attackers were radicalized Muslims. So many mass shootings occur in America that they aren't big news anymore, unless they involve murders of worshippers in a church, or students, or patients at a Planned Parenthood clinic (all of which happened in 2015). Like all the other attackers, the San Bernardino shooters loaded up on the guns and ammo that are so easily available in America. In that sense, the United States is an extremist's candy store, but Americans don't tend to look at it that way. In any event, their gun lobby is determined that nothing will change; Americans have many admirable traits, but a sense of irony isn't one of them.
Back to Canada, though. The man who championed our fear, Stephen Harper, is now gone, along with his niqab ban, and his "barbaric cultural practices" hotline, and his warnings that militants operating out of a "terrorist war zone" stalk all of us all the time. But a lot of us bought into it. And the underlying fear of a human wave, mostly Muslim, emanating out of the Middle East into the West, remains. We Canadians congratulate ourselves for welcoming refugees, even as a slew of American governors declare their states closed to them, period, and nativist voters there cheer the idea of a Muslim registry. But if the people among us in Canada who incubate dreams of mass attacks actually carry one out, how differently will we act? Remember 1970: martial law nationwide because of one body in the trunk of a car in Quebec and the kidnapping of a British diplomat. Perhaps fear is the normal human condition. It certainly was for most of the centuries leading into the second millennium.
Merry Christmas, in any event. May the common sense, compassion and rational humanism we claim to embrace as a nation endure, come what may.
Rip wrote:So says the people dripping in fear of climate change and guns.
Or so you fear............ImLawBoy wrote:Don't engage Rip on his dodge and weave tactics. He'll just take you further and further away from what is actually being discussed.
And that's how you hit a local economy with a single email. Now you have tens of thousands of parents that suddenly have to leave work early or call in sick, because they have no one to watch the kids at home on such short notice. Hundreds of thousands school breakfasts and lunches that won't get sold today, hundreds of gallons of diesel won't get sold to school bus depots. Teachers may be salaried but support personnel isn't...they either have to burn a day off or not get paid today.Max Peck wrote:Hrm, just in time for December midterms?
LA schools shut over 'threat'Los Angeles schools have been closed as an unspecified "electronic" threat is investigated, police have said. A spokeswoman for the Los Angeles police department confirmed that the Los Angeles Unified School District received a threat. Police could not confirm the validity or specificity of the threat, which sent school buses back from their routes to the depots. A schools spokesman said they were exercising "an abundance of caution". "Earlier this morning we did receive an electronic threat that mentions the safety of our schools," said Steven Zipperman, chief of the Los Angeles school police department. We have chosen to close our schools today until we can be absolutely sure that our campuses are safe." The district is the second largest in the US and has 640,000 students and more than 900 schools.
Warrant issued:Alefroth wrote:I think the term was coined for a book written at the beginning of the century. As a defense, it's laughable.Kraken wrote:Unless my search-fu is lacking, as it often is, we never discussed the kid who got drunk and killed four people, then claimed that he wasn't responsible because he was a spoiled rich kid who had never been held responsible for anything before. Somebody coined the word "affluenza" for this lad's condition, and that's the term that eluded my site search.
Apparently a judge agreed. No jail time for this misguided lad; instead, 10 years probation plus a year of mandatory rehab at a cost of $450,000...which his parents can pay.
An arrest warrant has been issued for the Texas teen who avoided jail time in the drunken-driving deaths of four people two years ago because he has failed to check in with his probation officer, according to Tarrant County Juvenile Services and the teenager's lawyers.
There is an arrest warrant or "directive to apprehend" Ethan Couch, who was sentenced to probation, but his case is still in juvenile court, Randy Turner, the chief juvenile probation officer for the county, told ABC News today.
Tarrant District Attorney's office spokeswoman Samantha Jordan said the office is "looking into the whereabouts of Ethan and [his mother] Tonya Couch at this time."
Couch's lawyers said the teen had been living with his mother and has not been in contact with his probation officer.
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Couch is already under investigation after a video posted on social media appears to show him next to a drinking game, possibly in violation of this probation, Jordan told ABC News earlier this month. The six-second video, posted on Twitter Dec. 2, purportedly shows Couch clapping and laughing after another man jumps on a beer pong table in a room. That investigation is still ongoing, Jordan said.
Can't blame the kid for taking the out that his parent's money and their lawyers gave him. What is he going to do, volunteer for jail time? But I can blame the judge for allowing it.Isgrimnur wrote:Warrant issued:Alefroth wrote:I think the term was coined for a book written at the beginning of the century. As a defense, it's laughable.Kraken wrote:Unless my search-fu is lacking, as it often is, we never discussed the kid who got drunk and killed four people, then claimed that he wasn't responsible because he was a spoiled rich kid who had never been held responsible for anything before. Somebody coined the word "affluenza" for this lad's condition, and that's the term that eluded my site search.
Apparently a judge agreed. No jail time for this misguided lad; instead, 10 years probation plus a year of mandatory rehab at a cost of $450,000...which his parents can pay.
An arrest warrant has been issued for the Texas teen who avoided jail time in the drunken-driving deaths of four people two years ago because he has failed to check in with his probation officer, according to Tarrant County Juvenile Services and the teenager's lawyers.
There is an arrest warrant or "directive to apprehend" Ethan Couch, who was sentenced to probation, but his case is still in juvenile court, Randy Turner, the chief juvenile probation officer for the county, told ABC News today.
Tarrant District Attorney's office spokeswoman Samantha Jordan said the office is "looking into the whereabouts of Ethan and [his mother] Tonya Couch at this time."
Couch's lawyers said the teen had been living with his mother and has not been in contact with his probation officer.
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Couch is already under investigation after a video posted on social media appears to show him next to a drinking game, possibly in violation of this probation, Jordan told ABC News earlier this month. The six-second video, posted on Twitter Dec. 2, purportedly shows Couch clapping and laughing after another man jumps on a beer pong table in a room. That investigation is still ongoing, Jordan said.
While a double sounds like a lot, it was just 0.25%. The signal that raising the rate sends, that the Fed thinks there is strength enough in the economy to support it, is what markets like. Not the rate hike itself.LordMortis wrote:The Fed just doubled short term loan basis interest.
DOUBLED!!! It's the end of free money!!!!
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edit
And the stock market loves it. Things I'll never get.
...When I bought FGP before right it lost 20% more of its value, I almost bought CVS instead. Ah well... Long term... long term... long term... I won't hemorrhage like this long term, right?
See Sweden.GreenGoo wrote:Skimming news article headlines earlier this week I noticed one that was talking about the possibility of a negative prime lending rate in Canada. I didn't get a chance to read it. have no idea what it was based on or how serious it was, but now I feel like I missed out.
The idea is that if the Bank of Canada charges banks to store their money, then the banks will be motivated to put that money into circulation (i.e. loan it out) rather than sitting on it.GreenGoo wrote:Skimming news article headlines earlier this week I noticed one that was talking about the possibility of a negative prime lending rate in Canada. I didn't get a chance to read it. have no idea what it was based on or how serious it was, but now I feel like I missed out.
You sound surprised. Youtube is full of man on the street interviews showing people don't know basic facts on just about any topic.
Since most of the questions seem serious, how did that first spoiler slip in? Are you telling me the pollsters don't know what that is?
The pollsters obviously know. The question tells us something about low-information voters.Jaymann wrote:Since most of the questions seem serious, how did that first spoiler slip in? Are you telling me the pollsters don't know what that is?
Q43 Do you believe that there are non-MuslimQ30 Would you support or oppose a bill barring
people on the terrorist watch list from
purchasing a firearm?
80%
Support a bill barring people on the terrorist
watch list from purchasing a firearm
13%
Oppose a bill barring people on the terrorist
watch list from purchasing a firearm
7%
Not sure
And they deserve a bunch (edit: of fists) in the face.
Yeah, but those are usually done by editing out those people who do know basic facts.Moliere wrote: Youtube is full of man on the street interviews showing people don't know basic facts on just about any topic.