June 16, 2007
Essentially, Assembly Bill 1634 “would prohibit any person from owning or possessing any [mixed-breed] cat or dog over the age of 4 months that has not been spayed or neutered… The bill would make a violation of these provisions punishable by a prescribed civil penalty.”
Yes, you read that correctly: only pure-bred cats and dogs would be allowed to reproduce. Which brings up the next question: Who decides which breeds are able to escape castration and which donÂ’t? Oh, they took care of that too!
A pure-bred cat or dog “is a valid breed when it is recognized by an approved registry or association, and complies with at least one of the following:
(A) His or her cat or dog is used to show or competeÂ…
(B) The cat or dog has earned, or is in the process of earning, a…title from an approved purebred registry or association.”
So if you're little Fido or Fifi is a mutt, you're both screwed! IÂ’ll stop here because thatÂ’s the crux of the bill right there. So now in America we have a caste system for animals and forced sterilization, regardless of the ownerÂ’s wish and ability to assume financial and social responsibility. Hmmm, I wonder what these legislators will try legislating next?
Posted by: Michele at
09:56 PM
| Comments (2)
| Add Comment
Post contains 325 words, total size 2 kb.
June 07, 2007
Hat tip to Barcepundit
Posted by: Michele at
09:11 PM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
Post contains 42 words, total size 1 kb.
April 17, 2007
"As Jews worldwide honored on Monday the memory of those who were murdered in the Holocaust, a 76-year-old survivor sacrificed his life to save his students in Monday's shooting at Virginia Tech College that left 33 dead and over two dozen wounded...
Several of Librescu's students sent e-mails to his wife, Marlena, telling of how he had blocked the gunman's way and saved their lives, said Librescu's son, Joe.
"My father blocked the doorway with his body and asked the students to flee," Joe Librescu said in a telephone interview from his home outside of Tel Aviv. "Students started opening windows and jumping out."
Posted by: Michele at
01:05 PM
| Comments (5)
| Add Comment
Post contains 129 words, total size 1 kb.
March 30, 2007
Also in the news, is Rudy's recent testimony to a grand jury, investigating charges of mob corruption and bribery of the former mayor's Police Commissioner, Bernard Kerik.
I've been saying for over a month that Rudy has too many skeletons in his closet to be a viable Presidential candidate. Ironically, most of the Press corp and city hall insiders know of these skeletons, but I believe they have remained under wraps because Rudy truly is a powerful fearless man (after all, he went after the mob) and he did accomplish a great many positive things for our city.
So, we'll see how much dirt comes out this weekend and how the Giulianis handle it. Polls so far, without the news of his political indiscressions, shows that he leads McCain by almost 15 pts in the polls. We'll see if Jon's political assesments are right in the end, and that America doesn't care about a candidate's marriage or family.
Posted by: Michele at
11:58 AM
| Comments (2)
| Add Comment
Post contains 219 words, total size 2 kb.
March 05, 2007
In this crime, evil was disguised as a prominent lawyer, coach of several youth teams & as an ACLU Chapter President. The Crime, it's just too horific for me to even write about it.
It is the reason I am glad that Bitterroot is bravely speaking out against these types of crimes and giving parents the knowledge they need to spot, identify and root out these individuals wherever they may be.
Posted by: Michele at
12:04 PM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
Post contains 116 words, total size 1 kb.
January 08, 2007
By late this afternoon there was still no final word on the source of the odor but the investigation continued. In addition to transit disruptions earlier in the day, students were briefly evacuated this morning from several schools in midtown, where the odor in Manhattan was strongest.
Per a meteorologist at the National Weather Service’s: "a warm front pushed over the city between 7 and 8 a.m., making it “very possible” that a temperature inversion pushed pollutants – and the odor -– closer to the ground."
So I guess the mystery is now over and we can all return to previously scheduled lives.
Posted by: Michele at
02:39 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
Post contains 177 words, total size 1 kb.
July 21, 2006
"The blackouts were at their worst on Wednesday, when 10 of the 22 feeder cables that supply the area with power were down simultaneously. The temperature had hit 100 degrees in the neighborhood the last few days.
Consolidated Edison spokesman Chris Olert said the power company didn't know why things went wrong.
"Chances are fair, but not firm, that it was heat related, but right now that is just a hypothesis," he said.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg demanded that the utility investigate and deliver a report on the cause within two weeks.
That is little consolation for residents who have lost all their food, must continue to sleep in hot apartments, and still have no guarantees as to when power will be back."
This video clip features what's going on, the cover-up and the comments of one of my neighbors (baby in arms) who lives down the street from me commenting on the situation.
Posted by: Michele at
10:04 AM
| Comments (2)
| Add Comment
Post contains 176 words, total size 1 kb.
July 17, 2006
The expanded entry will have details as to whom, said what, when, and where, so that you can be factually informed as to where they believe this new war is headed. I'm sure some of the statements will be eye opening to some of you. You will definitely not see any of these statements in the MSM.
more...
Posted by: Michele at
10:56 PM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
Post contains 1394 words, total size 9 kb.
June 19, 2006
One choice quote:
"...from the moment of conception on, men are less likely to survive than women."
Read on and lets discuss. I'm feeling particularly feisty tonight!
Posted by: Michele at
05:06 PM
| Comments (3)
| Add Comment
Post contains 45 words, total size 1 kb.
June 03, 2006
Posted by: Michele at
11:46 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
Post contains 49 words, total size 1 kb.
May 25, 2006
SIDNEY, Neb. (AP) - A judge said a 5-foot-1 man convicted of sexually assaulting a child was too small to survive in prison, and gave him 10 years of probation instead. His crimes deserved a long sentence, District Judge Kristine Cecava said, but she worried that Richard W. Thompson, 50, would be especially imperiled by prison dangers.
Posted by: Michele at
08:43 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
Post contains 85 words, total size 1 kb.
January 22, 2006
Posted by: Michele at
02:00 PM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
Post contains 8 words, total size 1 kb.
January 06, 2006
Published by Financial Times at FT.com on January 6 2006 10:53am | Last updated: January 6 2006 18:39
A third child from the same family in Turkey died on Friday of bird flu after tests confirmed that two of the victims had been infected with the H5N1 strain of the virus.
Eleven-year-old Hulya Kocyigit died a day after her 15-year-old sister, Fatma. Their 14-year-old brother Mehmet Ali, died on Sunday. Ali Hasan, their six-year-old brother, appears to be recovering. The children had all eaten infected chicken that had lived partly in their home.
By late Friday, hospitals in the east of the country near the Iranian and Armenian borders had reported that at least 34 people had been admitted with bird flu-like symptoms.
more...
Posted by: Michele at
02:12 PM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
Post contains 498 words, total size 3 kb.
December 13, 2005
Please note that reprinting does not mean approval or endoresement of this action.
Newspaper Article Title: Bloody St. Nick By MARLENE NAANES and ANDY GELLER - EXCLUSIVE TO THE NY POST
Ho, ho . . . no!!!!!
Slay bells are ringing outside a $3 million brownstone on East 18th Street in Manhattan, where, rather than yourtypical jolly St. Nick, a skinny, bloody-bearded Santa holds a knife in his left hand and the severed head of a doll - blood gushing from its eye sockets - in the other.
This 'tis-the-season-to be-creepy display - which has drawn no small amount of community ire - can be found in thefront yard of Joel Krupnik, 58, and his wife, Mildred Castellanos, 43, who said they are protesting the commercialization of the Yule season.
more...
Posted by: Michele at
01:12 PM
| Comments (7)
| Add Comment
Post contains 461 words, total size 3 kb.
August 09, 2005
On Monday, Paul Volker released a full report on Part 1 of his investigation on the Oil for Food programÂ’s bribery and corruption scandal, which is believed to involve a number of senior officials. One official, Alexander Yakovlev, has already pleaded guilty in Federal court to charges of bribery, after being stripped of diplomatic immunity. Benon Sevan, the former head of the Oil for Food program, continues to be in hiding somewhere in Cyprus, he is expected to receive indictments this week.
As the investigation continues, the focus will now move to the Security Council staff and members. The committee has already requested AnnanÂ’s notes, as well as Security Council meeting minutes related to sanctions against Iraq in the years before the 2003 Iraq invasion, for possible conflict of interest.
HereÂ’s what angers me the most, the failure of the UN to live up to its responsibilities and charter time and again, especially in the face of dire human crisis. We began to see their disregard for human life in Uganda. We continued to see their ineffectualness in Somalia. We are now seeing the UN's analysis/paralysis in Nigeria, where thousands have already died, and where it is expected that hundreds of thousands more will starve to death over the next few weeks. This is in spite of the self-delusional attempt to end poverty and famine through the world-wide Live8 concerts, which featured Kofi Annan as one of its speakers.
The true crime here, and the crime no one will be prosecuted for, is the continual victimization of the youngest victims through greed, corruption, abuse of power, and in-action. In doing so, the UN secured an Aushwitz-like death for thousands of the worldÂ’s poorest and most vulnerable children.
Posted by: Michele at
06:17 PM
| Comments (3)
| Add Comment
Post contains 382 words, total size 3 kb.
August 03, 2005
1. Relax. Nobody likes a whiner, particularly one who doesnÂ’t know how lucky he is. YouÂ’ve been around for centuries, and youÂ’re more powerful now than ever before.
2. Enjoy yourselves. Â…traditional news outlets have become joyless things. Most American [broadcasts and] newspapers are dull, fearful creatures. In contrast, blogs and other online news sources often possess an attractive, intelligent vibrancyÂ… because it connects us to the great throng of humanity.
3. Be natural. Enough already with your pretensions to objectivity and neutrality. Everyone has leanings, passions, and, yes, biases. By claiming to be superhuman—bias free—you come off as weirdly subhuman. In all honesty, sometimes you have the public personality of an android. Striving for perfect fairness is a fine goal. Just don’t act as though you achieve it on a regular basis.
4. DonÂ’t patronize. One reason young people say they avoid newspapers and other traditional news media is that whatÂ’s offered by those outlets has no apparent connection to the world they live in. To them, the news doesnÂ’t look or sound like life but rather like some false approximation of it. Swear off demographics. Hire journalists of all ages, and deploy them in unexpected ways. In journalism, thereÂ’s no such thing as generationally correct work. Have an octogenarian cover blogs. When David Broder retires from The Washington Post, give his column to the sharpest 27-year-old you know. The results could be strange and wonderful.
5. Make trouble. ItÂ’s a fact: Nobody respects a suck-up. Why did it take the surprise attack of 9/11, and a war launched partly on the basis of bad intelligence, for you to wake up to the problems in the U.S. intelligence agencies? That story was an investigative journalistÂ’s dream, and you missed it. You were probably in a strategy meeting about how to regain all those eyeballs no longer trained on you.
more...
Posted by: Michele at
03:17 PM
| Comments (3)
| Add Comment
Post contains 923 words, total size 6 kb.
May 17, 2005
Where do we go from here? For me it's clear, we go back to the pre-watergate era when reporters were questioned thoroughly by their editors; when claims by anonymous sources were investigated by reporters and corroborated with existing factual information and not just from a source's lone witness account; when editors personally met big news sources to gage their credibility and truthfulness, double-checked that against the data and story their reporters had presented.
News Editors need to dig deep into their values and go back to a place before news was a commodity; before news became earnings, ratings and subscriptions competition, to a place where a News Editor's role is once again that of a vanguard and protector of the truth. For that is what the American people want, and that is what our system of democracy demands.
If we are to have any credibility, as a leader in democratic principles and the lone nation that will singlehandedly stand up in the global war on terror, it is imperative that truth be valued more highly than anything else. For it is only then that we will have the most powerful weapon in our arsenal, one that is undeniably powerful in opening the hearts and minds of our critics, and potential enemies. Truth is the most accurate and powerful weapon we have in the battle against propaganda and holy jihad. For what we are fighting in essence is an ideology and a belief system.
The only way our nation will ever be effective in combatting the darkness of terror, is by holding up the powerful light of truth for all to see.
The blogosphere has similar opinions but from diverging viewpoints. Several former journalists and prominent bloggers bring up excelent points. I'm linking to Laughing Wolf, Indiepundit, and Buzzmachine, are all good reading on this subject.
Posted by: Michele at
12:39 AM
| Comments (2)
| Add Comment
Post contains 406 words, total size 3 kb.
May 15, 2005
The riots and deaths that have recently occurred in Afghanistan are one of the most egregious examples of bad journalism I've ever seen. That it came out of a Newsweek Magazine story (worldwide circulation of 4.9 million) is all the more shocking.
The media has of course, white-washed or muted the truth of their culpability in this situation. The facts are that unverified inflammatory and defamatory information found it's way to print. This caused a destabilization in a politically charged environment which fragmenting relations with a population that were still tenuous at best, creating chaos and causing many injuries and death (to both Afghani's and Americans), from the rioting which result from these stories.
These injuries and deaths are a result of unbridled arrogance by yet another news organization, whose hubris led them to neglect their duty as vanguards of the truth.
Is it any wonder why viewership of tv news and readership of newspapers is at an all time low? No one can trust or believe in what they report anymore as they have proven, especially in the last 9 months, to be extremely fallible. I'm sure Marshall McLuhan has been turning over in his grave.
Update: This is what National Review has to say after contacting Newsweek editors and reporters responsible for this story:
Equally disturbing is the fact that Newsweek reporters seemed to have little idea how explosive such a story would be. While noting that, to Muslims, desecrating the Koran “is especially heinous,” Thomas looks for explanations, including “extremist agitators,” of why protest and rioting spread throughout the world, and maintains that it was at Imram Khan’s press conference that “the spark was apparently lit.” He confesses that after “so many gruesome reports of torture and abuse at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere, the vehemence of feeling around this case came as something of a surprise.”
What planet do these people live on that they are surprised by something so entirely predictable? Anybody with a little knowledge could have told them it was likely that people would die as a result of the article. Remember Salman Rushdie?
Dudes, the damage has been done! I say each family of a deceased and injured person should teach Newsweek a valuable and costly lesson!
Posted by: Michele at
08:12 PM
| Comments (2)
| Add Comment
Post contains 413 words, total size 3 kb.
May 11, 2005
A U.S. political commentator has admitted he failed to check his facts when he erroneously reported on the MSNBC cable news network last month that Schwarzenegger had jokingly advocated doing away with the moon.
In one of the stranger mea culpas from a major U.S. news outlet in recent years, the commentator, Joe Scarborough, a former congressman, acknowledged on Friday that the governor's purported lunar outburst on the nationally syndicated radio show of Howard Stern was actually a spoof, something he was unaware of.
Citing a British newspaper, Scarborough had quoted Schwarzenegger on the air as saying: "If we get rid of the moon, women, whose menstrual cycles are governed by the moon, will not get (pre-menstrual syndrome). They will stop bit%$ing and whining."
Posted by: Michele at
09:32 AM
| Comments (2)
| Add Comment
Post contains 353 words, total size 2 kb.
May 05, 2005
The blasts occurred at 3:50 a.m. and originated inside a cement flower box outside the consulate in midtown Manhattan, said police department spokesman Noel Waters.
In Britain, voters were voting in national elections, a heated race in which Prime Minister Tony Blair's fight for a third term could be hampered by public anger over the Iraq war. It was not known whether the explosions were related to the elections.
After piecing together the shrapnel, police determined the devices were toy grenades that had been filled with gunpowder. Officers estimated that one was the size of a pineapple; the other the size of a lemon.
The blasts shattered a panel of glass in the building's front door and ripped a one-foot chunk from the planter. The department's bomb squad was at the scene and streets were closed in the area.
The building has retail shops on the lower level
Posted by: Michele at
07:56 AM
| Comments (1)
| Add Comment
Post contains 187 words, total size 1 kb.
104 queries taking 0.0808 seconds, 249 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.