Connect with us

NEWS: Sodomy For Suicide, Young Voters, Maggie, Dead Penguins, Anonymous’ Pedophiles

Published

on

➤ “More than 500 penguins have been found dead on beaches of Brazil’s southern Rio Grande do Sul state.” Officials say “veterinarians were puzzled by the large quantity of animals found and by the fact that they appeared well fed, not exhausted and without injuries or oil stains.”

➤ “Frank Ocean told a beautiful story about falling in love with a man. Jerry Sandusky was convicted on 45 counts of child molestation,” which is important to remember because “People On Twitter Are Comparing Frank Ocean To Jerry Sandusky.”

➤ Mitt Romney is under attack by the Barack Obama campaign and the media over the fact that he had more to do at Bain Capital after 1999 than he claims, which could be a felony. Romney spent the day giving interviews to five networks during which he demanded the President “take control of these people,” and “sure as heck ought to say that he’s sorry for the kinds of attacks that are coming from his team,” which, are, um, facts.

➤ Maggie Gallagher may not like what Scott Rose writes about her here at The New Civil Rights Movement, but so far it looks like the comments on her National Review blog post attacking Scott Rose are mostly in favor of, well, Scott Rose. Meanwhile, the conservative Instapundit asks, “THINK THERE ARE ANY POLITICS INVOLVED HERE?” Because the conservative media couldn’t possibly accept wanting science and truth to be placed above partisan hatred of homosexuality, and because they all like to use all caps.

➤ “The Advocate, an important US-based national gay and lesbian news magazine, has published a homophobic, racist, sectarian and Islamophobic hoax as if it is actual news,” writes Benjamin Doherty at The Electronic Intifada, which claims it  “is more infuential in ‘digital diplomacy’ than most Israeli leaders, an Agence France Presse survey finds.” The offending paragraph starts with this:

Suicide bombers were allowed to ask fellow militants for anal sex so it would be easier to hide explosives in their rectums — at least according to a researcher at a conservative think tank.

➤ “Fifty-eight percent of U.S. registered voters aged 18 to 29 say they will “definitely vote” this fall, well below the current national average of 78% and far below 18- to 29-year-olds’ voting intentions in the fall of 2004 and 2008.” (Gallup)

➤ “Rudy Giuliani’s authoritarian clients” include “Serbia’s Mayor.” New Civil Rights MovementDeputy Editor Tanya Domi, quoted by Andrew Kirtzman in The Atlantic today:

“These are thugs,” says Tanya Domi, a Columbia University professor who worked in Sarajevo for the Clinton State Department. “What Giuliani is doing is shameful.”

➤ “Last weekend, hacktivist group Anonymous announced Operation PedoChat, a campaign ‘to diminish if not eradicate’ pedophile websites… In the days since, scores of sites have been hacked and hundreds of users’ names, email addresses and Facebook pages have been published.” (Salon)

Photo of Magellanic penguin via Wikimedia

There's a reason 10,000 people subscribe to NCRM. You can get the news before it breaks just by subscribing, plus you can learn something new every day.

Continue Reading
Click to comment
 
 

Enjoy this piece?

… then let us make a small request. The New Civil Rights Movement depends on readers like you to meet our ongoing expenses and continue producing quality progressive journalism. Three Silicon Valley giants consume 70 percent of all online advertising dollars, so we need your help to continue doing what we do.

NCRM is independent. You won’t find mainstream media bias here. From unflinching coverage of religious extremism, to spotlighting efforts to roll back our rights, NCRM continues to speak truth to power. America needs independent voices like NCRM to be sure no one is forgotten.

Every reader contribution, whatever the amount, makes a tremendous difference. Help ensure NCRM remains independent long into the future. Support progressive journalism with a one-time contribution to NCRM, or click here to become a subscriber. Thank you. Click here to donate by check.

News

‘Tone Deaf’: An ‘Exhausted’ Trump Ripped for Iran Speech Focused on Ballroom and Drapes

Published

on

While making his first remarks to the nation from the White House about his military attack on Iran that began on Saturday, President Donald Trump came under fire for taking time to discuss his $400 million ballroom and drapes.

“We have a lot of great service members here with us, too, in this beautiful building, isn’t it? Beautiful?” Trump told the audience. “We’re adding on to the building a little bit. We’re improving the building. See that nice drape?”

“When that comes down, right now, you see a very, very deep hole, but in about a year and a half from now, you’re gonna see a very, very beautiful building. And there’s your entrance to it, right there. In fact, it looks so nice, I don’t think I’ll even, I think I’ll save money on the doors, ’cause it can’t get more beautiful than that.”

“I picked those drapes in my first term. I always liked gold, but I think we can save a lot of money. I just saved… I just saved curtains. But, uh, it will be. It will be spectacular. It’ll be the most beautiful ballroom,” he said.

READ MORE: Why Drivers Should Brace for a Rapid Gas Price Surge This Week: Expert

Critics blasted the president’s remarks.

“American troops are dead and Trump is on TV talking about the drapes…” remarked The Lincoln Project.

“Trump just explained about the attack on Iran that ‘I don’t get bored. There’s nothing boring about this.’ Despite that, he is now talking at some length about gold drapes and ‘the most beautiful ballroom,'” commented columnist Niall Stanage.

In a war that’s already killed four Americans, Trump says it could last beyond 4-5 weeks because he doesn’t get ‘bored,'” observed Scripps News’ Simon Kaufman. “Moments later, he moves on from Iran and talks about ballroom renovations and drapes.”

“Trump demonstrating his mental disfigurement by bragging about his ballroom and chuckling immediately after claiming that ‘we grieve’ for 4 US soldiers killed in the war he just initiated,” wrote journalist John Harwood. “Trump does not possess empathy and does not grieve for any other person’s misfortune.”

Noting that the president sounded “exhausted and not good,” foreign policy journalist Laura Rozen observed “the difference” in Trump’s “demeanor and affect when talking about the war and then the ballroom is so different.” She also said that “it is evident the war is becoming more of a s — — than he expected.”

“It’s worth noting that Trump is putting infinitely more effort into selling his ballroom to the American people than anyone in his administration is on selling the attack on Iran,” wrote conspiracy theories expert Mike Rothschild.

“Trump started an unnecessary war in the Middle East with no real strategy, there’s already American military loss of life and this guy is obsessing over the damn drapes and his $400 million gilded ballroom project,” remarked former political commentator Tara Setmayer. “How is this making America great????”

“Bragging about his ‘beautiful ballroom’ while he’s supposed to be explaining the somber decision to go to war,” wrote The New Yorker’s Susan Glasser. “It’s one of the most politically tone deaf things I’ve ever seen from a POTUS, including this one…”

READ MORE: Trump ‘Throwing Spaghetti at the Wall’ as He Workshops War Goals With Journalists: Report

 

Image via Reuters

Continue Reading

News

Why Drivers Should Brace for a Rapid Gas Price Surge This Week: Expert

Published

on

Gas prices could surge this week as President Donald Trump’s military action in Iran and a seasonal jump in driving combine to push pump prices sharply higher.

According to Patrick De Haan, the head of Petroleum Analysis at GasBuddy, gas prices are expected to start climbing on Monday. Over the coming week, De Haan expects the price of gas at the average station to rise 10–30 cents per gallon, but “potentially 30–85 cents per gallon jumps at individual stations.”

If things go “bad at every turn,” De Haan said, consumers could potentially see prices rising by even more than 50 cents per gallon, MarketWatch reports.

MarketWatch adds that there is “little doubt that the military strikes launched this weekend by the U.S. and Israel on Iran, one of the world’s largest crude producers, will lead to a spike in oil prices” — and that the bigger question is how hard that will hit American drivers at the pump.

READ MORE: ‘Emergency’ Voting Proposal Is ‘Divorced From Legal Reality’ Say Experts

De Haan notes that Trump’s military action in Iran “is adding volatility and risk premium, but it’s landing on top of an already firming market.”

He says that gas prices have been rising for four straight weeks, and 36 states saw average gas prices “rising over the last week “with the national average up to $2.94/gal.”

Citing De Haan, MarketWatch adds that without a doubt, “the Iran attack looks to be the biggest pricing event for gasoline since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022.”

“Americans will be very anxious about what the conflict could mean for oil prices, given how President Donald Trump made low oil prices his ‘signature policy,’ De Haan said.”

READ MORE: Comer Changes Tune After Lutnick Allegedly Lied

 

Image via Shutterstock 

 

Continue Reading

News

Trump ‘Throwing Spaghetti at the Wall’ as He Workshops War Goals With Journalists: Report

Published

on

President Donald Trump has communicated to the American people through multiple channels about the objectives of his “Operation Epic Fury” — the large-scale military campaign now underway against Iran — though critics contend those objectives continue to shift.

According to The Economist’s Middle East correspondent Gregg Carlstrom, “Trump is basically calling up every journalist in his phone to workshop different timelines and goals for his war.”

Overnight, Carlstrom wrote that in the past two days, Trump told several different media outlets about various goals for the war.

He told The Washington Post that the aim is “freedom for the people” of Iran, Carlstrom wrote.

Trump told Axios that maybe we can “end it in two or three days” with a deal.

He told The New York Times that it might be “four to five weeks,” and said that he has “three very good choices” for who might take control in Iran.

But then, Carlstrom wrote, Trump told ABC News, “actually, nevermind, we killed those choices.”

“He doesn’t sound convinced by any of it,” said Carlstrom. “He’s throwing spaghetti at the wall. Ultimately I suspect he just wants to say he ‘solved’ a problem that has vexed every American president since Jimmy Carter.”

“But there’s no clear idea what that looks like and no plan for how to get there. And there are plenty of possible scenarios in which Trump declares victory and leaves the region with an absolute mess,” he warned.

Others appeared to agree.

New York Times conservative columnist David French, an Iraq War veteran, responded to Carlstrom, saying: “This is an absolute mess.”

Historian Timo R. Stewart wrote: “Throwing spaghetti at the wall is an apt summary of the White House’s chaotic messaging related to the war that has just begun.”

Journalist Alan Friedman added, “No one ever accused the Trump administration of having a clear strategy on matters of tariffs, trade wars, invasions, kidnappings, threats against Greenland or his new war of choice against Iran. He is making it up as he goes along, folks. Hard to believe, but this is improv.”

National security expert Marc Polymeropoulos wrote, “I’m sure someone will say this is deliberate deception, part of his brilliance….”

 

Image via Reuters

 

 

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2020 AlterNet Media.