Blindsight
(Hat tip to Dan Noland for the link.)
Posted by
Lippard
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12/24/2008 01:05:00 PM
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comments
Labels: mind and brain, science
Posted by
Lippard
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12/24/2008 09:54:00 AM
1 comments
Labels: climate change, science
Posted by
Lippard
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12/23/2008 03:04:00 PM
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Labels: Arizona, Goldwater Institute, law
Posted by
Lippard
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12/23/2008 10:36:00 AM
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Labels: dogs, ethics, law, police abuse and corruption, politics
Posted by
Lippard
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12/21/2008 08:31:00 PM
3
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Labels: law, politics, technology
Posted by
Lippard
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12/21/2008 11:34:00 AM
7
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Labels: kooks, law, religion, Scientology
A double standard clearly was in effect during the Board of Supervisors meeting Wednesday. At one point, public-transit advocate Blue Crowley used part of his public-comment time allotment to sing a birthday song to [MCBoS chairman Andy] Kunasek. Kunasek blushed and several people applauded, but none was ordered to leave or threatened with arrest.The criminal clappers were charged with "suspicion of disorderly conduct and trespassing."
However, Kunasek, deputies and security officers refused to tolerate applause after the anti-Arpaio speech minutes later.
Posted by
Lippard
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12/21/2008 10:12:00 AM
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Labels: Arizona, police abuse and corruption, politics
Posted by
Lippard
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12/19/2008 12:20:00 PM
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Labels: civil liberties, law, politics, security
Posted by
Lippard
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12/19/2008 09:30:00 AM
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About three minutes into Stray Cat Theatre's newest production, I found myself thinking: This can't be really happening. When you go to see it — and you must, if you do nothing else this holiday season, go see this astonishing stage production — you will almost certainly experience the same sense of delighted confusion. ... I rarely stopped laughing during this barely-hour-long show, and my single complaint about A Very Merry Unauthorized Children's Scientology Pageant is that it ended too soon.The play was a special treat for those of us who already know something about Scientology and the life of L. Ron Hubbard.
Posted by
Lippard
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12/19/2008 08:12:00 AM
0
comments
Labels: Arizona, arts, religion, Scientology
Posted by
Lippard
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12/18/2008 09:41:00 PM
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Posted by
Lippard
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12/18/2008 06:22:00 PM
2
comments
Labels: ethics, politics, propaganda
Posted by
Lippard
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12/17/2008 08:27:00 AM
1 comments
Labels: education, history, religion, Scientology, technology
Posted by
Lippard
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12/16/2008 08:10:00 PM
1 comments
Labels: kooks, rationality, skepticism
Posted by
Lippard
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12/16/2008 06:13:00 PM
3
comments
Labels: Center for Public Integrity, climate change, Heartland Institute, history, law, medicine, politics
There are thought to be between 4m and 5m feral hogs at large in America, spread across 38 states. The biggest population is in Texas, but states from Florida to Oregon are infested and worried. Feral hogs destroy the habitats of plants and animals, spread diseases, damage crops, kill and eat the eggs and young of wildlife and sometimes menace people with their aggressive behaviour.Via The Economist.
The problem originated with the Spanish conquistadors, who took herds of pigs with them as they marched across the American continent. Stragglers reverted to their wild state. Much later “sportsmen” began releasing hogs into reserves for commercial hunting. More recently still declining pork prices have induced farmers to turn some of their stock loose rather than continue feeding them. Pigs produce so many piglets that a feral herd can double or even triple within as little as a year.
Posted by
Lippard
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12/16/2008 05:43:00 PM
2
comments
Labels: animals, science fiction
Repeal the "Military Commissions Act of 2006" and thereby restore the ancient right of habeas corpus and end legally sanctioned torture by U.S. government agentsEd suggests, and I agree, that writing or calling your elected representatives and asking them to support this bill is a good way to do something to preserve and protect the Bill of Rights.Restore the "Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act" (FISA) and thereby outlaw warrantless spying on American citizens by the President of the United States
Give Congress standing in court to challenge the President's use of "signing statements" as a means to avoid executing the nation's laws
Make it illegal for government agents to kidnap people and send them abroad to be tortured by foreign governments
Provide legal protection to journalists who expose wrong-doing by the Federal government
Prohibit the use of secret evidence to label groups or individuals as terrorists for the purpose of criminal or civil sanctions
Posted by
Lippard
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12/15/2008 08:58:00 PM
2
comments
Labels: 9/11 conspiracy, Arizona, civil liberties, gun control, history, Institute for Justice, kooks, law, religion, Ron Paul
Posted by
Lippard
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12/15/2008 02:15:00 PM
2
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Posted by
Lippard
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12/15/2008 06:27:00 AM
0
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Labels: politics, religion, War on Christmas
Posted by
Lippard
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12/14/2008 07:58:00 PM
1 comments
Labels: crime, law, police abuse and corruption
Nor do they try to encourage a big pool of trainees and select the most successful. Almost the opposite. Singapore screens candidates with a fine mesh before teacher training and accepts only the number for which there are places. Once in, candidates are employed by the education ministry and more or less guaranteed a job. Finland also limits the supply of teacher-training places to demand. In both countries, teaching is a high-status profession (because it is fiercely competitive) and there are generous funds for each trainee teacher (because there are few of them).
South Korea shows how the two systems produce different results. Its primary-school teachers have to pass a four-year undergraduate degree from one of only a dozen universities. Getting in requires top grades; places are rationed to match vacancies. In contrast, secondary-school teachers can get a diploma from any one of 350 colleges, with laxer selection criteria. This has produced an enormous glut of newly qualified secondary-school teachers—11 for each job at last count. As a result, secondary-school teaching is the lower status job in South Korea; everyone wants to be a primary-school teacher. The lesson seems to be that teacher training needs to be hard to get into, not easy.
Gladwell's suggestion of apprenticeship, however, fits with the McKinsey & Co. study suggestion of improving teacher training and encouraging good teachers to share information and lesson plans with each other, as well as having top teachers provide oversight to teacher training.
Posted by
Lippard
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12/13/2008 06:14:00 PM
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Posted by
Lippard
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12/03/2008 06:36:00 PM
3
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Labels: Arizona, arts, religion, Scientology
This film is cheerfully ignorant, manipulative, slanted, cherry-picks quotations, draws unwarranted conclusions, makes outrageous juxtapositions (Soviet marching troops representing opponents of ID), pussy-foots around religion (not a single identified believer among the ID people), segues between quotes that are not about the same thing, tells bald-faced lies, and makes a completely baseless association between freedom of speech and freedom to teach religion in a university class that is not about religion.
And there is worse, much worse. Toward the end of the film, we find that Stein actually did want to title it "From Darwin to Hitler." He finds a Creationist who informs him, "Darwinism inspired and advanced Nazism." He refers to advocates of eugenics as liberal. I would not call Hitler liberal. Arbitrary forced sterilization in our country has been promoted mostly by racists, who curiously found many times more blacks than whites suitable for such treatment.
Ben Stein is only getting warmed up. He takes a field trip to visit one "result" of Darwinism: Nazi concentration camps. "As a Jew," he says, "I wanted to see for myself." We see footage of gaunt, skeletal prisoners. Pathetic children. A mound of naked Jewish corpses. "It's difficult to describe how it felt to walk through such a haunting place," he says. Oh, go ahead, Ben Stein. Describe. It filled you with hatred for Charles Darwin and his followers, who represent the overwhelming majority of educated people in every nation on earth. It is not difficult for me to describe how you made me feel by exploiting the deaths of millions of Jews in support of your argument for a peripheral Christian belief. It fills me with contempt.
Posted by
Lippard
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12/03/2008 06:34:00 PM
2
comments
Labels: Ben Stein, creationism, Expelled, intelligent design, religion
"I didn't know that the Pledge of Allegiance was, and he recited it, 'one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all,'" he recalled in an interview with The Associated Press in 2004. "I came from Scotland, where we said 'God save our gracious queen,' 'God save our gracious king.' Here was the Pledge of Allegiance, and God wasn't in it at all."He delivered his sermon calling for "under God" to be added to the pledge first in 1952 with little effect, but delivered it again on February 7, 1954, while Eisenhower was in attendance at the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church in Washington D.C., near the White House. Eisenhower immediately let Congress know he wanted it to happen, and Rep. Charles G. Oakman (R-MI) introduced a bill the very next day to make that addition, which Eisenhower signed into law on Flag Day.
Posted by
Lippard
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11/30/2008 08:21:00 AM
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Labels: atheism, civil liberties, law, politics, religion
Posted by
Lippard
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11/30/2008 08:01:00 AM
2
comments
Labels: Arizona, economics, finance, housing bubble
Posted by
Lippard
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11/25/2008 08:20:00 PM
1 comments
Posted by
Lippard
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11/25/2008 09:46:00 AM
2
comments
Labels: Ben Stein, economics, finance, housing bubble
Posted by
Lippard
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11/22/2008 03:18:00 PM
1 comments
Labels: Barack Obama, copyright, kooks, law, politics
Last Thursday, Redevelopment Director Linda Daniels said a member of her staff had informed the sign company about the 90 complaints the city received regarding the billboard.
"We contacted the sign company and asked if there was a way to get it removed," Daniels told the Daily Bulletin.
On Friday, Daniels denied making the comment.
Posted by
Lippard
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11/22/2008 02:40:00 PM
3
comments
Labels: atheism, civil liberties, FFRF, law, politics, religion
Episode 011 Atheism and Feces-Free Thought in Phoenix! Go to meetup.com/phoenix-atheists for group events! Shyness, Group News,Election Post-Mortem, Email from Shawn of Tough Questions Podcasts, Winter Solstice, Musings on Rhetorical Debate Styles, Ridiculous Marriage Amendment.My comments: Duane Gish was vice president of the Institute for Creation Research.
Posted by
Lippard
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11/19/2008 01:37:00 PM
0
comments
Labels: ApostAZ podcast, Arizona, atheism, Barack Obama, gay marriage, Institute for Creation Research, politics, religion
Posted by
Lippard
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11/19/2008 03:50:00 AM
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comments
Labels: Arizona, economics, finance, housing bubble
Posted by
Lippard
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11/14/2008 02:33:00 PM
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comments
Labels: politics, security, technology
Shawn Nguyen bragged that he could sneak anything past airport security using his top-secret clearance as a federal air marshal. And for months, he smuggled cocaine and drug money onto flights across the country, boasting to an FBI informant that he was "the man with the golden badge."Michael McGowan used his position as an air marshal to lure a young boy to his hotel room, where he showed him child porn, took pictures of him naked and sexually abused him.And when Brian "Cooter" Phelps wanted his ex-wife to disappear, he called a fellow air marshal and tried to hire a hit man nicknamed "the Crucifixer."Since 9/11, more than three dozen federal air marshals have been charged with crimes, and hundreds more have been accused of misconduct, an investigation by ProPublica, a non-profit journalism organization, has found. Cases range from drunken driving and domestic violence to aiding a human-trafficking ring and trying to smuggle explosives from Afghanistan.
What began as an internal investigation into allegations of harassment and threats stemming from a spat between ex-lovers has expanded into a criminal inquiry focused on the Federal Air Marshal Service’s dispatch hub in Herndon, Virginia. More than 60 federal employees are under scrutiny as investigators look into whether flights considered at risk of hijacking or a terrorist attack were left without marshals on board, sources with knowledge of the investigation told Reveal.
Posted by
Lippard
at
11/14/2008 02:23:00 PM
1 comments
Labels: police abuse and corruption, security, travel, TSA incompetence
Obama thinks he is a good talker, but he is often undisciplined when he speaks. He needs to understand that as President, his words will be scrutinized and will have impact whether he intends it or not. In this regard, President Bush is an excellent model; Obama should take a lesson from his example. Bush never gets sloppy when he is speaking publicly. He chooses his words with care and precision, which is why his style sometimes seems halting. In the eight years he has been President, it is remarkable how few gaffes or verbal blunders he has committed. If Obama doesn’t raise his standards, he will exceed Bush’s total before he is inaugurated.I find it difficult to imagine the amount of delusion and cognitive dissonance that can produce such a paragraph. George W. Bush is the man whose spoken words have produced multiple books of "Bushisms," and multiple years of "Bushism" calendars with a quotation for every day of the year.
Posted by
Lippard
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11/12/2008 03:52:00 PM
3
comments
Labels: Barack Obama, politics, rationality
Posted by
Lippard
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11/08/2008 08:07:00 PM
3
comments
Labels: abortion, Barack Obama, civil liberties, politics, wiretapping
Posted by
Lippard
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11/06/2008 09:21:00 AM
0
comments
Labels: Barack Obama, ethics, John McCain, politics, Sarah Palin, security
In California, exit polls showed that those who attended church regularly voted against marriage equality 83-17%. Those who attended church only occasionally voted for marriage equality 60-40%. Those who do not attend church at all voted for marriage equality 86-14%.The same was true in Arizona, where exit polling found that:
Protestants generally supported the measure but that Catholics were fairly evenly divided. Nonreligious voters were solidly against it. ... Proposition 102 had slight leads among Whites and among Hispanics.Prop. 102 will ultimately be overturned as the older generation dies off.
...
The youngest voters were split for and against, with support for Proposition 102 increasing among voters in older age groups. Voters age 65 or over were solidly for the amendment.
Posted by
Lippard
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11/05/2008 07:32:00 AM
2
comments
Labels: abortion, Arizona, atheism, gay marriage, politics, religion
Posted by
Lippard
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11/04/2008 09:05:00 PM
5
comments
Labels: Arizona, gay marriage, John McCain, politics
Episode 010 Atheism and Dogma-Free Thought in Phoenix! Go to meetup.com/phoenix-atheists for group events! Quiverfull, Innocence, Over-population, Which Came First, Religion or Ignorance? (Some of David's artwork: http://www.flickr.com/photos/davidbessent/), Fear and Dogma, Ignosticism, Priming the Gish Gallop.There's some discussion of what the legal standards should be for government prevention of abuses by separatist religious groups like Warren Jeffs' FLDS group. It's a tough problem, especially when various child protective agencies themselves have a poor reputation and cause harm themselves. In the FLDS case in Texas, the state raided the FLDS compound on the basis of a hoaxed complaint, adult women were taken and held as minors, and the Texas CPS repeatedly misrepresented the facts to try to justify its actions (links are to several of numerous blog posts by economist David Friedman, who blogged the FLDS situation in detail).
Posted by
Lippard
at
11/03/2008 07:03:00 PM
1 comments
Labels: ApostAZ podcast, Arizona, arts, atheism, politics, religion
Audience members escorted out of Sen. John McCain’s, R-Ariz., campaign event in Cedar Falls questioned why they were asked to leave Sunday’s rally even though they were not protesting.
David Zarifis, director of public safety for the University of Northern Iowa, said McCain staffers requested UNI police assist in escorting out “about four or five” people from the rally prior to McCain’s speech.
Zarifis said while the people who were taken out weren’t protesting or causing problems, McCain’s staff were worried they would during the speech.
“Apparently, they had been identified by those staffers as potential protesters within the event,” Zarifis said.
...
Lara Elborno, a student at the University of Iowa, said she was approached by a police officer and a McCain staffer and was told she had to leave or she would be arrested for trespassing.
...
Elborno said even McCain supporters were among those being asked to leave.
“I saw a couple that had been escorted out and they were confused as well, and the girl was crying, so I said ‘Why are you crying? and she said ‘I already voted for McCain, I’m a Republican, and they said we had to leave because we didn’t look right,’” Elborno said. “They were handpicking these people and they had nothing to go off of, besides the way the people looked.”
Posted by
Lippard
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10/30/2008 09:39:00 PM
0
comments
Labels: civil liberties, John McCain, politics
Most vet special-interest groups decline to officially take sides (even VoteVets hasn't made a presidential endorsement).
But VoteVets is among many veterans groups to note the discrepancy between John McCain's talk and his actions.
In both 2006 and 2007-08, the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America gave McCain a D for his record on key congressional votes.
The Disabled American Veterans scored him at 20 percent in 2006; 25 percent in 2005; and 50 percent in 2004.
And the Retired Enlisted Association gave him a 0 in 2006 and a rating of 18 percent in 2004. These are the most recent rankings released by the groups.
Another organization, Veterans for Common Sense, posted this comment on its website earlier this year: "John McCain is yet another Republican...military veteran who likes to talk a big game when it comes to having the support of the military. Yet, time and time again, he has gone out of his way to vote against the needs of those who are serving in our military. If he can't even see his way to actually do what the troops want, or what the veterans need, and he doesn't have the support of veterans, then how can he be a credible commander in chief?"
The article notes that while polls tend to show military support for McCain over Obama, Obama has raised $74,000 from active military personnel, to McCain's $16,000.
Posted by
Lippard
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10/30/2008 03:33:00 PM
0
comments
Labels: Arizona, John McCain, politics
Last night Otto was barking at something while inside the house. This isn't unusual, but what was unusual was that he didn't run out into the backyard to bark. I was trying to get to sleep early in order to deal with 4 a.m. irrigation, and he came upstairs and continued to bark. Kat went outside to see if there was an animal outside (such as a cat that spends a lot of time in our front yard), and heard a dog barking nearby that was too close to be one of the neighbor dogs.
She got a flashlight and went out to find a dog trapped in the Highline Canal, struggling to get out, but the sides were too steep. The dog's front paws were bloody from the effort. She managed to get a leash around its neck to try to pull him out, but he resisted. She called the Arizona Humane Society to get someone to come take him (and help get him out if we were unable to manage it)--since he's an injured dog, this was a case they are permitted to deal with. (If a stray dog is over 6 months old and uninjured, Maricopa County Animal Care & Control is the only entity legally permitted to take them.)
I went and got a ladder and put it into the water to see if he could use it to pull himself up, but he just used it to hold himself in place.
When the Arizona Humane Society arrived, they had a dog snare which, combined with the leash, we were able to use to pull the dog to safety. He was dried off and willingly jumped into the kennel on the truck.
The dog had a collar, but no tags. Kat will be putting his photo up on Pets911 this morning.
Thanks to Otto's barking, this dog avoided the fate of another whose skeleton was pulled out of the canal by our house, in the same location, earlier this year.
Posted by
Lippard
at
10/30/2008 08:30:00 AM
1 comments
Labels: animal rescue, animals, Arizona, dogs, Otto
Posted by
Lippard
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10/28/2008 03:37:00 PM
1 comments
Labels: rationality, skepticism, television
Posted by
Lippard
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10/26/2008 02:19:00 PM
0
comments
"She is a diva. She takes no advice from anyone," said this McCain adviser. "She does not have any relationships of trust with any of us, her family or anyone else.This is not the kind of person who should be in a position of political leadership in a representative democracy--perhaps in a banana republic, but not a first-world nation.
"Also, she is playing for her own future and sees herself as the next leader of the party. Remember: Divas trust only unto themselves, as they see themselves as the beginning and end of all wisdom."
Posted by
Lippard
at
10/26/2008 09:05:00 AM
0
comments
Labels: John McCain, politics, Sarah Palin
I agree with her that Bill Ayers' actions constituted domestic terrorism. But so do those of abortion clinic bombers, which is why they are considered an appropriate target for the FBI's counterterrorism efforts. The RAND Corporation's terrorism incident database is no longer available via the web, but when I last looked at it, bombing incidents by abortion opponents was one of the largest categories of U.S. domestic terrorism, along with actions by animal rights activists and environmental activists.WILLIAMS: Are we changing -- it's been said that to give it a vaguely post-9/11 hint, using that word that we don't normally associate with domestic crimes. Are we changing the definition? Are the people who set fire to American cities during the '60s terrorists in -- under this definition? Is an abortion clinic bomber a terrorist under this definition, Governor?
PALIN: There's no question that Bill Ayers, via his own admittance, was one who sought to destroy our U.S. Capitol and our Pentagon. That is a domestic terrorist. There's no question there. Now, others who would want to engage in harming innocent Americans or facilities that it would be unacceptable to -- I don't know if you're going to use the word terrorist there, but it's unacceptable, and it would not be condoned, of course, on our watch. But I don't know -- if what you're asking is if I regret referring to Bill Ayers as an unrepentant domestic terrorist, I don't regret characterizing him as that.
WILLIAMS: No, I'm just asking what other categories you would put in there, abortion clinic bombers, protesters in cities where fires were started, Molotov cocktails were thrown, people died?
PALIN: I would put in that category of Bill Ayers anyone else who would seek to campaign, to destroy our United States Capitol and our Pentagon and would seek to destroy innocent Americans.
Posted by
Lippard
at
10/26/2008 08:54:00 AM
2
comments
Labels: abortion, law, politics, Sarah Palin
Posted by
Lippard
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10/26/2008 08:29:00 AM
29
comments
Labels: Arizona, civil liberties, drug laws, immigration, law, politics
Posted by
Lippard
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10/24/2008 07:15:00 PM
0
comments
Labels: Islam, John McCain, politics, religion
"From the very beginning I have said I am going to support the candidate that has the best chance for changing the way Washington works and getting things done and I will be voting for Barack Obama and clapping," McClellan told new CNN Host D.L. Hughley.
Posted by
Lippard
at
10/23/2008 09:45:00 PM
0
comments
Labels: Barack Obama, politics