Showing posts with label Anniversary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anniversary. Show all posts

Friday, February 21, 2014

Sean Hannity Top Speaker at Tea Party"s Fifth Anniversary Bash


Fox News host Sean Hannity will be the keynote speaker at a major tea party event in Washington next week to celebrate the conservative movement’s fifth anniversary.

Hannity, who has been a fierce supporter of the movement since its inception in 2009, will give a capstone speech at the event being staged by the Tea Party Patriots, according to Breibart.


Other guests at the Capitol Hill Hyatt Regency function on Feb. 27 will include Republican Sens. Mike Lee of Utah, Rand Paul of Kentucky, and Ted Cruz of Texas, as well as conservative radio host Mark Levin.


Reps. Michele Bachmann, Louie Gohmert, Jim Jordan, Steve King, Jim Bridenstine, Mark Meadows, and Matt Salmon have also confirmed they will be attending, according to Politico.


“Sean Hannity, who joined us in Atlanta in 2009 for the first round of Tax Day Tea Parties, has been a proud and outspoken supporter of the tea party movement and championed the cause of constitutionally limited government, fiscal responsibility, and individual liberty,” said Jenny Beth Martin, co-founder of Tea Party Patriots.


“His refusal to abandon principle in favor of party subservience has been welcome respite from pundits and policymakers who cave easily in the face of adversity.”


The birth of tea party movement is credited to a statement by CNBC’s Rick Santelli on the floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange in 2009.


Santelli was ranting, as he is known to do, about the homeowner bailout that was being proposed by the Obama administration.


“We’re thinking of having a Chicago tea party in July,” Santelli said. “All you capitalists that want to show up to Lake Michigan, I’m going to start organizing.”


On Thursday, the Huffington Post revealed that Hannity had solicited donations for the Tea Party Patriots in a fundraising email sent Wednesday morning by the conservative organization.


Hannity’s political fund drive contradicts Fox News’ previous attempts to prevent the host from raising money for the group, Politico reported.


But a Fox spokesperson told TV Newser that Hannity’s involvement with the tea party organization for his radio show, and has nothing to do with his Fox TV show or his role with the network.



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Sean Hannity Top Speaker at Tea Party"s Fifth Anniversary Bash

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Violence mars third anniversary of Egypt uprising












This aerial image made from an Egyptian army helicopter shows a general view of a pro-military rally in Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the 2011 uprising, in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. Egyptian riot police have fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi protesting as the country marks the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising, as supporters of the military gathered in rival rallies in other parts of the capital, many of them urging military chief el-Sissi, the man who removed Morsi, to run for president.(AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)






CAIRO (AP) — The anniversary of Egypt’s 2011 uprising brought a violent display of the country’s furious divisions Saturday, as giant crowds danced at government-backed rallies and security forces crushed demonstrations by rival Islamists and some secular activists.


Clashes nationwide killed at least 29 protesters, health officials said. The starkly contrasting scenes reflect the three years of turmoil Egypt has faced since the Jan. 25, 2011 revolution began and ultimately toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak, replacing him with a transitional military council.


Last summer’s millions-strong demonstrations against Mubarak’s elected successor, Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, led to a military coup removing him. And as Egypt looks forward to presidential elections later this year, many celebrating Saturday in the famed Tahrir Square demanded army chief Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi run for president.


“El-Sissi saved the nation. It was up in the air like this helicopter and he carried it to safety,” said Mervat Khalifa, 62, sitting on the sidewalk and waving to a helicopter overhead.


Military helicopters showered crowds in Tahrir with small flags and gift coupons to buy refrigerators, heaters, blankets and home appliances. State-backed rallies also showcased prancing horses and traditional music for ecstatic crowds.


Morsi’s supporters used Saturday’s anniversary to build new momentum in their defiance of the military and its political transition plan, despite being hit by a crippling police crackdown and rising public resentment against his Muslim Brotherhood group.


“Anger is bigger than all. Repression sparks revolutions. The burning of Egypt won’t last,” a statement issued by a Brotherhood-led coalition said.


The fiercest clashes raged in an eastern Cairo suburb, where Islamist supporters fought with security forces for hours in pitched street battles. Troops fired over the crowd to disperse protesters who threw gasoline bombs. Protesters set up a field hospital to aid the wounded.


Violence also was strong in the provinces. A car bomb exploded outside a security camp in the city of Suez, where gunmen clashed with police, witnesses said. Nine civilians were wounded in the bombing, authorities said.


In neighboring Ismailiya, protesters chanting “down with military rule” also battled security forces. In Alexandria, a female protester was shot and killed during clashes, officials said.


Two protesters were killed in the southern city of Minya, security officials said.


The clashes in the eastern Cairo suburb of Alf Maskan were fiercest.


Protesters Mustafa Mohammed and Sami, who only gave his first name for fear of reprisals, said security personnel and rooftop snipers used live rounds against demonstrators. The gunfire struck a natural gas pipeline three times, Mohammed said.


Sami said protesters threw gasoline bombs in the clashes, which wounded hundreds. Two security officials in the area described the situation as tense and said at least six people were killed. The protesters put the figures at 24. It was not immediately possible to reconcile the figures.


The clashes contrasted with scenes of celebration in Tahrir Square and other major squares in provincial capitals, where long queues of demonstrators lined up to enter the tightly secured areas through metal detectors.


Some celebrating wore paper masks with el-Sissi’s picture and their rallies showed a ferociously anti-Islamist tone.


Soldiers guarding Tahrir Square joined them in chanting: “The people want the execution of the Brotherhood.” A crowd beat a woman in a conservative headscarf and drove her away, believing she was a Brotherhood sympathizer.


Crowds also turned on journalists. More than a dozen journalists were beaten by the demonstrators, or detained by police for protection from angry crowds. Demonstrators chased one Egyptian female journalist, mistakenly believing she worked for satellite news broadcaster Al-Jazeera — seen as pro-Brotherhood. They pulled her hair and tried to strangle her with a scarf until police took her into a building for protection.


Security forces also dispersed rallies by secular youth activists who led the 2011 anti-Mubarak uprising and who are critical of both the Islamists and the military. A number of their most prominent figures have been detained for months or sentenced to prison amid a campaign to silence even secular voices of dissent.


One prominent activist, Nazly Hussein, was detained by police on the subway as she headed to join one rally downtown, her mother Ghada Shahbendar said. Hussein’s lawyer, Amr Imam, said that when he went to see her at the police station, a policeman shoved him, pointed his rifle at him and warned him he had 10 seconds to leave or he’d shoot.


Police used tear gas to disperse one small gathering by secular activists in the Cairo neighborhood of Mohandessin, beating and kicking at least one of them, several participants said. The groups later issued an appeal to their supporters to withdraw from street protests because of “excessive violence” by security forces.


“The only thing allowed is el-Sissi revolutionaries,” one of the activists, blogger Wael Khalil, said with a laugh. “Do they think that there will be working democracy this way?”


In its statement, the Brotherhood appealed to secular youth groups to unite with it in protests.


Secular youth groups, however, have shunned the Islamists, whom they equally accuse of undermining the 2011 uprising’s goals while in power.


The rallies took place in an atmosphere of fear, a day after four bombs targeting police killed six people around Cairo. Another 15 people were killed around the country Friday when Morsi’s supporters clashed with security forces. The Interior Ministry said that 237 people were arrested during those protests.


The al-Qaida-inspired group Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, or the Champions of Jerusalem, claimed responsibility for Friday’s bombings, warning of coming attacks and telling citizens to stay away from police stations.


“We tell our dear nation that these attacks were only the first drops of rain, so wait for what is coming,” read the statement, posted on militant websites.


The group, based in the lawless Sinai Peninsula, has claimed responsibility for the failed assassination attempt on the interior minister in September and a suicide bombing in a Nile Delta city that killed 16. The group calls its attacks revenge for the killings of pro-Morsi supporters and the military offensive in Sinai.


The government has accused the Brotherhood of ultimately being behind the militant violence and declared the group a terrorist organization. It has produced no proof publicly and the group says the accusation is baseless.


But pro-government media — which means most Egyptian television stations and newspapers — tout the link and a broad segment of the public are convinced. They note the Brotherhood’s alliances with radicals while Morsi was in office, street violence by his supporters during and after his rule and the militants’ own pronouncements that they are retaliating for his ouster.


Early Saturday, a bomb exploded next to a police training institute in eastern Cairo, only damaging the facility’s walls.


Ahmed Mahmoud, an engineering student living nearby, said angry residents quickly blamed the Brotherhood.


“People were saying they will carry arms and kill all Muslim Brothers who dare to pass by,” he said.


___


Associated Press writers Laura Dean and Maamoun Youssef contributed to this report.


Associated Press



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Top Headlines

Violence mars third anniversary of Egypt uprising

Violence mars third anniversary of Egypt uprising








A protester wounded in clashes with security forces is evacuated from the site in the Mohandiseen district of Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. In large, state-backed rallies complete with dancing horses and traditional music, military supporters celebrated the anniversary of Egypt’s 2011 uprising Saturday, calling for the army chief to run for president. At the same time, security forces cracked down on rival demonstrations by Islamist supporters of the ousted president — and by secular activists critical of both camps.(AP Photo/Eman Helal)





A protester wounded in clashes with security forces is evacuated from the site in the Mohandiseen district of Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. In large, state-backed rallies complete with dancing horses and traditional music, military supporters celebrated the anniversary of Egypt’s 2011 uprising Saturday, calling for the army chief to run for president. At the same time, security forces cracked down on rival demonstrations by Islamist supporters of the ousted president — and by secular activists critical of both camps.(AP Photo/Eman Helal)





An Egyptian waves a national flag for a military helicopter flying over a pro-military rally marking the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. Egyptian riot police have fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi protesting as the country marks the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising, as supporters of the military gathered in rival rallies in other parts of the capital, many of them urging military chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the man who removed Morsi, to run for president. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)





This aerial image made from an Egyptian army helicopter shows a general view of a pro-military rally in Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the 2011 uprising, in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. Egyptian riot police have fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi protesting as the country marks the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising, as supporters of the military gathered in rival rallies in other parts of the capital, many of them urging military chief el-Sissi, the man who removed Morsi, to run for president.(AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)





Egyptians hold national flags during a rally in Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. Egyptian riot police have fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi protesting as the country marks the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising, as supporters of the military gathered in rival rallies in other parts of the capital, many of them urging military chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the man who removed Morsi, to run for president. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)





A mortally wounded supporter of Egypt’s ousted Islamist president is evacuated as another wounded protester lies in the street during clashes with security forces in the Mohandiseen district of Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. In large, state-backed rallies complete with dancing horses and traditional music, military supporters celebrated the anniversary of Egypt’s 2011 uprising Saturday, calling for the army chief to run for president. At the same time, security forces cracked down on rival demonstrations by Islamist supporters of the ousted president — and by secular activists critical of both camps.(AP Photo/Eman Helal)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — The anniversary of Egypt’s 2011 uprising brought a violent display of the country’s furious divisions Saturday, as giant crowds danced at government-backed rallies and security forces crushed demonstrations by rival Islamists and some secular activists.


Clashes nationwide killed at least 29 protesters, health officials said. The starkly contrasting scenes reflect the three years of turmoil Egypt has faced since the Jan. 25, 2011, revolution began and ultimately toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak, replacing him with a transitional military council.


Last summer’s millions-strong demonstrations against Mubarak’s elected successor, Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, led to a military coup removing him. And as Egypt looks forward to presidential elections later this year, many celebrating Saturday in the famed Tahrir Square demanded army chief Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi run for president.


“El-Sissi saved the nation. It was up in the air like this helicopter and he carried it to safety,” said Mervat Khalifa, 62, sitting on the sidewalk and waving to a helicopter overhead.


Military helicopters showered crowds in Tahrir with small flags and gift coupons to buy refrigerators, heaters, blankets and home appliances. State-backed rallies also showcased prancing horses and traditional music for ecstatic crowds.


Morsi’s supporters used Saturday’s anniversary to build new momentum in their defiance of the military and its political transition plan, despite being hit by a crippling police crackdown and rising public resentment against his Muslim Brotherhood group.


“Anger is bigger than all. Repression sparks revolutions. The burning of Egypt won’t last,” a statement issued by a Brotherhood-led coalition said.


The fiercest clashes raged in an eastern Cairo suburb, where Islamist supporters clashed with security forces for hours in pitched street battles. Security forces fired over the crowd to disperse protesters who threw gasoline bombs. Protesters set up a field hospital to aid the wounded.


Violence also was strong in the provinces. A car bomb exploded outside a security camp in the city of Suez, where gunmen clashed with police, witnesses said. Nine civilians were wounded in the bombing, authorities said.


In neighboring Ismailiya, protesters chanting “down with military rule” also battled security forces. In Alexandria, a female protester was shot and killed during clashes, officials said.


Two protesters were killed in the southern city of Minya, security officials said.


The clashes in the eastern Cairo suburb of Alf Maskan were fiercest.


Both Mustafa Mohammed and Sami, protesters there who only gave his first names for fear of reprisals, said security personnel and rooftop snipers used live rounds against demonstrators. The gunfire struck a natural gas pipeline three times, Mohammed said.


Sami said protesters threw gasoline bombs in the clashes, which wounded hundreds. Two security officials in the area described the situation as tense and said at least six people were killed. The protesters put the figures at 24. It was not immediately possible to reconcile the figures.


The clashes contrasted with scenes of celebration in Tahrir Square and other major squares in provincial capitals. Long queues of demonstrators lined up to enter the tightly secured squares through metal detectors.


Some celebrating wore paper masks with el-Sissi’s picture and their rallies showed a ferociously anti-Islamist tone.


Soldiers guarding Tahrir Square joined them in chanting: “The people want the execution of the Brotherhood.” A crowd beat a woman in a conservative headscarf and drove her away, believing she was a Brotherhood sympathizer.


Crowds also turned on journalists. More than a dozen journalists were beaten by the demonstrators, or detained by police for protection from angry crowds. Demonstrators chased one Egyptian female journalist, mistakenly believing she worked for satellite news broadcaster Al-Jazeera — seen as pro-Brotherhood. They pulled her hair and tried to strangle her with a scarf until police took her into a building for protection.


Security forces also dispersed rallies by secular youth activists who led the 2011 anti-Mubarak uprising and who are critical of both the Islamists and the military. A number of their most prominent figures have been detained for months or sentenced to prison amid a campaign to silence even secular voices of dissent.


One prominent activist, Nazly Hussein, was detained by police on the subway as she headed to join one rally downtown, her mother Ghada Shahbendar said. Hussein’s lawyer, Amr Imam, said that when he went to see her at the police station, a police shoved him, pointed his rifle at him and warned him he had 10 seconds to leave or he’d shoot.


Police used tear gas to disperse one small gathering by secular activists in the Cairo neighborhood of Mohandessin, beating and kicking at least one of them, several participants said. The groups later issued an appeal to their supporters to withdraw from street protests because of “excessive violence” by security forces.


“The only thing allowed is el-Sissi revolutionaries,” one of the activists, blogger Wael Khalil, said with a laugh. “Do they think that there will be working democracy this way?”


In its statement, the Brotherhood appealed to secular youth groups to unite with it in protests.


Secular youth groups, however, have shunned the Islamists, whom they equally accuse of undermining the 2011 uprising’s goals while in power.


The rallies took place in an atmosphere of fear, a day after four bombs targeting police killed six people around Cairo. Another 15 people were killed around the country Friday when Morsi’s supporters clashed with security forces. The Interior Ministry said that 237 people were arrested during those protests.


The al-Qaida-inspired group Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, or the Champions of Jerusalem, claimed responsibility for Friday’s bombings, warning of coming attacks and telling citizens to stay away from police stations.


“We tell our dear nation that these attacks were only the first drops of rain, so wait for what is coming,” read the statement, posted on militant websites.


The group, based in the lawless Sinai Peninsula, has claimed responsibility for the failed assassination attempt on the interior minister in September and a suicide bombing in a Nile Delta city that killed 16. The group calls its attacks revenge for the killings of pro-Morsi supporters and the military offensive in Sinai.


The government has accused the Brotherhood of ultimately being behind the militant violence and declared the group a terrorist organization. It has produced no proof publicly and the group says the accusation is baseless.


But pro-government media — which means most Egyptian television stations and newspapers — tout the link and a broad segment of the public are convinced. They note the Brotherhood’s alliances with radicals while Morsi was in office, street violence by his supporters during and after his rule and the militants’ own pronouncements that they are retaliating for his ouster.


Early Saturday, a bomb exploded next to a police training institute in eastern Cairo, only damaging the facility’s walls.


Ahmed Mahmoud, an engineering student living nearby, said angry residents quickly blamed the Brotherhood.


“People were saying they will carry arms and kill all Muslim Brothers who dare to pass by,” he said.


___


Associated Press writers Laura Dean and Maamoun Youssef contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Violence mars third anniversary of Egypt uprising

Violence mars third anniversary of Egypt uprising








A protester wounded in clashes with security forces is evacuated from the site in the Mohandiseen district of Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. In large, state-backed rallies complete with dancing horses and traditional music, military supporters celebrated the anniversary of Egypt’s 2011 uprising Saturday, calling for the army chief to run for president. At the same time, security forces cracked down on rival demonstrations by Islamist supporters of the ousted president — and by secular activists critical of both camps.(AP Photo/Eman Helal)





A protester wounded in clashes with security forces is evacuated from the site in the Mohandiseen district of Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. In large, state-backed rallies complete with dancing horses and traditional music, military supporters celebrated the anniversary of Egypt’s 2011 uprising Saturday, calling for the army chief to run for president. At the same time, security forces cracked down on rival demonstrations by Islamist supporters of the ousted president — and by secular activists critical of both camps.(AP Photo/Eman Helal)





An Egyptian waves a national flag for a military helicopter flying over a pro-military rally marking the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. Egyptian riot police have fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi protesting as the country marks the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising, as supporters of the military gathered in rival rallies in other parts of the capital, many of them urging military chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the man who removed Morsi, to run for president. (AP Photo/Amr Nabil)





This aerial image made from an Egyptian army helicopter shows a general view of a pro-military rally in Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the 2011 uprising, in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. Egyptian riot police have fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi protesting as the country marks the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising, as supporters of the military gathered in rival rallies in other parts of the capital, many of them urging military chief el-Sissi, the man who removed Morsi, to run for president.(AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)





Egyptians hold national flags during a rally in Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. Egyptian riot police have fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of supporters of ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi protesting as the country marks the third anniversary of the 2011 uprising, as supporters of the military gathered in rival rallies in other parts of the capital, many of them urging military chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the man who removed Morsi, to run for president. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)





A mortally wounded supporter of Egypt’s ousted Islamist president is evacuated as another wounded protester lies in the street during clashes with security forces in the Mohandiseen district of Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 25, 2014. In large, state-backed rallies complete with dancing horses and traditional music, military supporters celebrated the anniversary of Egypt’s 2011 uprising Saturday, calling for the army chief to run for president. At the same time, security forces cracked down on rival demonstrations by Islamist supporters of the ousted president — and by secular activists critical of both camps.(AP Photo/Eman Helal)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







(AP) — The anniversary of Egypt’s 2011 uprising brought a violent display of the country’s furious divisions Saturday, as giant crowds danced at government-backed rallies and security forces crushed demonstrations by rival Islamists and some secular activists.


Clashes nationwide killed at least 29 protesters, health officials said. The starkly contrasting scenes reflect the three years of turmoil Egypt has faced since the Jan. 25, 2011, revolution began and ultimately toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak, replacing him with a transitional military council.


Last summer’s millions-strong demonstrations against Mubarak’s elected successor, Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, led to a military coup removing him. And as Egypt looks forward to presidential elections later this year, many celebrating Saturday in the famed Tahrir Square demanded army chief Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi run for president.


“El-Sissi saved the nation. It was up in the air like this helicopter and he carried it to safety,” said Mervat Khalifa, 62, sitting on the sidewalk and waving to a helicopter overhead.


Military helicopters showered crowds in Tahrir with small flags and gift coupons to buy refrigerators, heaters, blankets and home appliances. State-backed rallies also showcased prancing horses and traditional music for ecstatic crowds.


Morsi’s supporters used Saturday’s anniversary to build new momentum in their defiance of the military and its political transition plan, despite being hit by a crippling police crackdown and rising public resentment against his Muslim Brotherhood group.


“Anger is bigger than all. Repression sparks revolutions. The burning of Egypt won’t last,” a statement issued by a Brotherhood-led coalition said.


The fiercest clashes raged in an eastern Cairo suburb, where Islamist supporters clashed with security forces for hours in pitched street battles. Security forces fired over the crowd to disperse protesters who threw gasoline bombs. Protesters set up a field hospital to aid the wounded.


Violence also was strong in the provinces. A car bomb exploded outside a security camp in the city of Suez, where gunmen clashed with police, witnesses said. Nine civilians were wounded in the bombing, authorities said.


In neighboring Ismailiya, protesters chanting “down with military rule” also battled security forces. In Alexandria, a female protester was shot and killed during clashes, officials said.


Two protesters were killed in the southern city of Minya, security officials said.


The clashes in the eastern Cairo suburb of Alf Maskan were fiercest.


Both Mustafa Mohammed and Sami, protesters there who only gave his first names for fear of reprisals, said security personnel and rooftop snipers used live rounds against demonstrators. The gunfire struck a natural gas pipeline three times, Mohammed said.


Sami said protesters threw gasoline bombs in the clashes, which wounded hundreds. Two security officials in the area described the situation as tense and said at least six people were killed. The protesters put the figures at 24. It was not immediately possible to reconcile the figures.


The clashes contrasted with scenes of celebration in Tahrir Square and other major squares in provincial capitals. Long queues of demonstrators lined up to enter the tightly secured squares through metal detectors.


Some celebrating wore paper masks with el-Sissi’s picture and their rallies showed a ferociously anti-Islamist tone.


Soldiers guarding Tahrir Square joined them in chanting: “The people want the execution of the Brotherhood.” A crowd beat a woman in a conservative headscarf and drove her away, believing she was a Brotherhood sympathizer.


Crowds also turned on journalists. More than a dozen journalists were beaten by the demonstrators, or detained by police for protection from angry crowds. Demonstrators chased one Egyptian female journalist, mistakenly believing she worked for satellite news broadcaster Al-Jazeera — seen as pro-Brotherhood. They pulled her hair and tried to strangle her with a scarf until police took her into a building for protection.


Security forces also dispersed rallies by secular youth activists who led the 2011 anti-Mubarak uprising and who are critical of both the Islamists and the military. A number of their most prominent figures have been detained for months or sentenced to prison amid a campaign to silence even secular voices of dissent.


One prominent activist, Nazly Hussein, was detained by police on the subway as she headed to join one rally downtown, her mother Ghada Shahbendar said. Hussein’s lawyer, Amr Imam, said that when he went to see her at the police station, a police shoved him, pointed his rifle at him and warned him he had 10 seconds to leave or he’d shoot.


Police used tear gas to disperse one small gathering by secular activists in the Cairo neighborhood of Mohandessin, beating and kicking at least one of them, several participants said. The groups later issued an appeal to their supporters to withdraw from street protests because of “excessive violence” by security forces.


“The only thing allowed is el-Sissi revolutionaries,” one of the activists, blogger Wael Khalil, said with a laugh. “Do they think that there will be working democracy this way?”


In its statement, the Brotherhood appealed to secular youth groups to unite with it in protests.


Secular youth groups, however, have shunned the Islamists, whom they equally accuse of undermining the 2011 uprising’s goals while in power.


The rallies took place in an atmosphere of fear, a day after four bombs targeting police killed six people around Cairo. Another 15 people were killed around the country Friday when Morsi’s supporters clashed with security forces. The Interior Ministry said that 237 people were arrested during those protests.


The al-Qaida-inspired group Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, or the Champions of Jerusalem, claimed responsibility for Friday’s bombings, warning of coming attacks and telling citizens to stay away from police stations.


“We tell our dear nation that these attacks were only the first drops of rain, so wait for what is coming,” read the statement, posted on militant websites.


The group, based in the lawless Sinai Peninsula, has claimed responsibility for the failed assassination attempt on the interior minister in September and a suicide bombing in a Nile Delta city that killed 16. The group calls its attacks revenge for the killings of pro-Morsi supporters and the military offensive in Sinai.


The government has accused the Brotherhood of ultimately being behind the militant violence and declared the group a terrorist organization. It has produced no proof publicly and the group says the accusation is baseless.


But pro-government media — which means most Egyptian television stations and newspapers — tout the link and a broad segment of the public are convinced. They note the Brotherhood’s alliances with radicals while Morsi was in office, street violence by his supporters during and after his rule and the militants’ own pronouncements that they are retaliating for his ouster.


Early Saturday, a bomb exploded next to a police training institute in eastern Cairo, only damaging the facility’s walls.


Ahmed Mahmoud, an engineering student living nearby, said angry residents quickly blamed the Brotherhood.


“People were saying they will carry arms and kill all Muslim Brothers who dare to pass by,” he said.


___


Associated Press writers Laura Dean and Maamoun Youssef contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Violence mars third anniversary of Egypt uprising

Friday, December 20, 2013

Lockerbie 25th anniversary marked










Memorial services are to be held in the UK and the US to mark the 25th anniversary of the Lockerbie bombing in which 270 people were killed.


A wreath-laying and church service will be held in the south of Scotland town which was devastated when Pan Am flight 103 was blown from the skies in 1988.


A remembrance service is also being staged at Westminster Abbey in London.


In the US, a ceremony will take place at the memorial cairn in Arlington National Cemetery, near Washington DC.


The Lockerbie bombing remains the deadliest act of terrorism ever committed in the UK and until the attacks of 9/11 it was also responsible for the biggest single loss of American lives in such an attack.


The Boeing 747 was just over half an hour into its flight from London to New York when it exploded, seconds before 19:03 UK time, on 21 December 1988.



Memorial cairn

All 243 passengers and 16 crew died, and a further 11 people were killed in their homes when wreckage hit the ground in Lockerbie.


The majority of the passengers and crew on board the aircraft were US citizens.


In the United States, a service of “hope and remembrance” is planned at the Hendricks Chapel of Syracuse University in New York state, which lost 35 students who had been studying at its London campus. The service will be followed by a procession to its Wall of Remembrance.


A further service will also take place at the university’s Lubin House in New York.


Events at the Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia will centre on its Pan Am 103 Memorial Cairn.


It is made of 270 blocks of Scottish sandstone – one for each of the victims of the bombing.


Events in Lockerbie will see a wreath-laying at the Dryfesdale Cemetery in the afternoon with a service at the Dryfesdale Church in the evening which will have the theme of “looking forward”.


One man, Libyan Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, was convicted of the bombing at a special Scottish court sitting in the Netherlands in 2001.


He was released from jail on compassionate grounds in 2009 after he was diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer.


He died in his home in Tripoli last year.



‘Fortitude and resilience’

UK Prime Minister David Cameron paid tribute to the “fortitude and resilience” of those affected by the Lockerbie bombing.


He said: “Over the last quarter of a century much attention has been focused on the perpetrators of the atrocity. Today our thoughts turn to its victims and to those whose lives have been touched and changed by what happened at Lockerbie that night.


“To families, friends, neighbours, loved ones, and all those caught up in the painful process of recovery, let us say to them: our admiration for you is unconditional.


“For the fortitude and resilience you have shown. For your determination never to give up. You have shown that terrorist acts cannot crush the human spirit. That is why terrorism will never prevail.”


Scotland’s First Minister Alex Salmond, who will be attending the wreath-laying in Lockerbie, said: “On this 25-year anniversary, and as the country prepares once more to relive the harrowing events of that terrible night, it is important that we remember that the pain and suffering of the families and friends of those who died has endured since that winter night in 1988.”


Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon will be attending the Westminster Abbey ceremony, as will Secretary of State for Scotland Alistair Carmichael.


Scotland Office Minister David Mundell will attend the service at the Arlington National Cemetery.




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Lockerbie 25th anniversary marked

Monday, November 25, 2013

President Kennedy Assassination Anniversary: Obama and Clinton lay wreath on JFK grave

A featured video on the subject of assassinations:



US President Barack Obama paid tribute on Wednesday to former President John F. Kennedy, joining former President Bill Clinton to lay a wreath at Kennedy’s g…
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President Kennedy Assassination Anniversary: Obama and Clinton lay wreath on JFK grave

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech


City of Dallas attempts to crush First Amendment


Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
November 20, 2013


Authorities in Dallas, Texas are attempting to mark the 50th anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy by censoring the First Amendment, cordoning off huge areas of the city and prohibiting anyone who disagrees with the official narrative from entering Dealy Plaza.


Image: ‘Tank Man’.



The city banned filming and the display of signs in the Dealy Plaza area, but under threat of lawsuits by groups such as COPA, authorities have caved to numerous concessions like allowing the handing out of leaflets and t-shirts, and hanging banners, although only in designated areas.


JFK was silenced 50 years ago but Infowars will not allow the truth to be silenced. In response to this egregious assault on constitutional rights, Alex Jones will lead three days of protest at different locations in Dallas.


Citizens in foreign countries are celebrated for standing up for their free speech rights but America is increasingly becoming a place where the right to peaceably assemble and demonstrate requires government permission. If the First Amendment is to be preserved, this authoritarian trend has to be completely reversed.


The first demonstration will take place on Wednesday at 8pm at the Federal Reserve building at the corner of Pearl and Woodall Rodgers Freeway, a location at which Jones has previously protested three separate times with other Americans.


First Amendment marches in downtown Dallas will then take place on Thursday and Friday, with locations and times to be announced here shortly.


“The system would have been wise not to try to assassinate the First Amendment like they did JFK,” declares Alex Jones. “But because they did this, their efforts will backfire and be used instead to further awaken the sleeping giant that is the American people and people of the world.”


Despite a gargantuan effort on behalf of the establishment media to reinforce the official conspiracy theory that a lone gunman and a “magic bullet” were responsible for the death of JFK, polls still show that a clear majority of Americans disbelieve the government narrative.


We are calling on everyone in the Dallas area to join us for three days of demonstrations to reclaim their First Amendment rights in the face of official oppression.


This article was posted: Wednesday, November 20, 2013 at 12:19 pm










Infowars



JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech

JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech

JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/7e99e__nsa_spying__201113tank.jpg


City of Dallas attempts to crush First Amendment


Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
November 20, 2013


Authorities in Dallas, Texas are attempting to mark the 50th anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy by censoring the First Amendment, cordoning off huge areas of the city and prohibiting anyone who disagrees with the official narrative from entering Dealy Plaza.


JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech 201113tank

Image: ‘Tank Man’.



The city banned filming and the display of signs in the Dealy Plaza area, but under threat of lawsuits by groups such as COPA, authorities have caved to numerous concessions like allowing the handing out of leaflets and t-shirts, and hanging banners, although only in designated areas.


JFK was silenced 50 years ago but Infowars will not allow the truth to be silenced. In response to this egregious assault on constitutional rights, Alex Jones will lead three days of protest at different locations in Dallas.


Citizens in foreign countries are celebrated for standing up for their free speech rights but America is increasingly becoming a place where the right to peaceably assemble and demonstrate requires government permission. If the First Amendment is to be preserved, this authoritarian trend has to be completely reversed.


The first demonstration will take place on Wednesday at 8pm at the Federal Reserve building at the corner of Pearl and Woodall Rodgers Freeway, a location at which Jones has previously protested three separate times with other Americans.


First Amendment marches in downtown Dallas will then take place on Thursday and Friday, with locations and times to be announced here shortly.


“The system would have been wise not to try to assassinate the First Amendment like they did JFK,” declares Alex Jones. “But because they did this, their efforts will backfire and be used instead to further awaken the sleeping giant that is the American people and people of the world.”


Despite a gargantuan effort on behalf of the establishment media to reinforce the official conspiracy theory that a lone gunman and a “magic bullet” were responsible for the death of JFK, polls still show that a clear majority of Americans disbelieve the government narrative.


We are calling on everyone in the Dallas area to join us for three days of demonstrations to reclaim their First Amendment rights in the face of official oppression.


This article was posted: Wednesday, November 20, 2013 at 1:50 pm









Prison Planet.com




Read more about JFK 50th Anniversary: Fight For Free Speech and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

On Fifth Anniversary Of Fiscal Crisis, The Economy Grows Worse


Honey I Shrunk The Economy SC On fifth anniversary of fiscal crisis, the economy grows worse


Black unemployment spike to 13 percent.


Labor force participation rate plunges to 35-year low.


Hispanic unemployment higher now than in April.


WASHINGTON – On the fifth anniversary of the current fiscal crisis, the nation’s economy is getting worse under Barack Obama, according to an objective mathematical measurement of the nation’s economic indicators released Monday by Congressman Steve Stockman (R-Texas 36.)


The economy continues to fail to recover under Obama as Obama’s Failometer Score grew to a punishing 1,222 last month. This is the third straight month Obama’s Failometer score has grown, and his 1,222 for August is the second-highest score this year.


Obama can set the Failometer to zero simply by outperforming George W. Bush on the economy and fulfilling his 2008 and 2012 campaign promises to help blacks and Hispanics gain economically.


“For the third consecutive month Obama’s economic failures are getting worse,” said Stockman “The percentage of working-age American with jobs has plunged to Jimmy Carter-era depths, we aren’t creating enough jobs to restore the economy and black unemployment is growing again.”


“Hispanic unemployment is higher now than it was in April.  Black unemployment is growing again. He has yet to grow enough monthly jobs to even get back to a pre-recession economy. An objective mathematical measure of Obama’s economic policies shows he’s blazing a new path of failure.”


The Obama Failometer uses a fixed mathematical score to calculate four economic indicators from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.  The figures from the monthly reports are weighted to provide a balanced total score, which ranges from zero to 1,000. A score of 0 represent economic stability and racial equality. The higher the score, the deeper the economic failure.


So far, Obama is worse than Bush.


Since its creation, Obama has failed to generate a Failometer score that can be contained within the chart’s range of zero to 1000.


The Obama Failometer Score was originally displayed on a ten-foot-long billboard displayed in the hallways of the Capitol’s Cannon House Office building.  House officials ordered it torn down in January after Democrats complained.


Here is how the Obama Failometer Score is calculated:


FACTORS MEASURED AGAINST BUSH


Monthly jobs created: The Hamilton Project, a liberal economic policy group, stated last year the economy must create 321,000 jobs a month in order to return the economy to pre-recession employment levels by December 2016, the end of Obama’s term.


As the economy continues to flounder under Obama, that number has grown; but the Obama Failometer will continue to use it, which gives him some statistical relief.


Obama promised to not only restore the economy to where it was under Bush, but grow it.  So far, Obama has failed to even perform as well as Bush.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by subtracting the number of jobs created in the previous month from the 321,000 jobs claimed necessary by the liberal Hamilton Project and dividing by 1,000 to balance it against other factors.


The BLS reports the economy created 169,000 jobs last month, 152,000 fewer than needed to restore the economy.  This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 152.


Civilian labor force participation rate:  The civilian labor force participation rate, the ratio between those 16 and over in the labor force against the national population of those 16 and over, is an important measure of economic health.  After puttering along during the Bush administration, including through the “Bush years” of the recession, under Obama, it has plunged sharply.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by subtracting the monthly civilian labor force participation rate from the average Bush administration rate and multiplying by 100 to balance it against other factors. According to data from the BLS, under Bush, the average monthly civilian labor force participation rate was around 66.2 percent.


The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the monthly civilian labor force participation rate last month fell to 63.2 percent, the worst rate since August 1978 and 3.0 percent worse than Bush’s average of 66.2 percent.  This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 300.


FACTORS MEASURED AGAINST OBAMA’S OWN RHETORIC


Black unemployment:  No one has suffered more economically under Obama than black Americans. Obama’s election and re-election has meant crippling poverty for the black community.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by taking the monthly unemployment rate for blacks and subtracting the monthly unemployment rate for all Americans, and multiplying it by 100 to balance it against other factors.


The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the black unemployment rate last month ballooned to 13.0 percent, while the national overall rate was 7.3 percent.  That is a gap of 5.7 percent. This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 570.


Compare Obama’s performance to Bush’s.  The highest monthly unemployment rate ever for blacks under Bush was 12.1 percent.  Obama’s lowest rate is now 12.6 percent in July.  He has never performed as well as Bush’s worst black unemployment rate.


Bush’s average black unemployment rate was 9.7 percent and an overall national average of 5.2 percent, a 4.5 percent gap that gives Bush a score of 450.


Hispanic unemployment:  Despite winning the Hispanic vote, Obama’s liberal policies have caused widespread damage to the Hispanic community.  Thanks to Obama, they continue to lag behind the national average in many economic factors.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by taking the monthly unemployment rate for Hispanics and subtracting the monthly unemployment rate for all Americans, and multiplying it by 100 to balance it against other factors.


The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the Hispanic unemployment rate last month grew to a stunning 9.3 percent, while the national overall rate was 7.3 percent.  That is a gap of two percent.  This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 200.


The Hispanic unemployment rate hit its all-time historic low of 4.7 percent during Bush’s last term.  It is almost twice that rate under Obama.


THEREFORE, THIS MONTH’S OBAMA FAILOMETER SCORE IS 1,222.


Photo credit: terrellaftermath


Please share this post with your friends and comment below. If you haven’t already, take a moment to sign up for our free newsletter above and friend us on Twitter and Facebook to get real time updates.



Western Journalism



On Fifth Anniversary Of Fiscal Crisis, The Economy Grows Worse

On Fifth Anniversary Of Fiscal Crisis, The Economy Grows Worse


Honey I Shrunk The Economy SC On fifth anniversary of fiscal crisis, the economy grows worse


Black unemployment spike to 13 percent.


Labor force participation rate plunges to 35-year low.


Hispanic unemployment higher now than in April.


WASHINGTON – On the fifth anniversary of the current fiscal crisis, the nation’s economy is getting worse under Barack Obama, according to an objective mathematical measurement of the nation’s economic indicators released Monday by Congressman Steve Stockman (R-Texas 36.)


The economy continues to fail to recover under Obama as Obama’s Failometer Score grew to a punishing 1,222 last month. This is the third straight month Obama’s Failometer score has grown, and his 1,222 for August is the second-highest score this year.


Obama can set the Failometer to zero simply by outperforming George W. Bush on the economy and fulfilling his 2008 and 2012 campaign promises to help blacks and Hispanics gain economically.


“For the third consecutive month Obama’s economic failures are getting worse,” said Stockman “The percentage of working-age American with jobs has plunged to Jimmy Carter-era depths, we aren’t creating enough jobs to restore the economy and black unemployment is growing again.”


“Hispanic unemployment is higher now than it was in April.  Black unemployment is growing again. He has yet to grow enough monthly jobs to even get back to a pre-recession economy. An objective mathematical measure of Obama’s economic policies shows he’s blazing a new path of failure.”


The Obama Failometer uses a fixed mathematical score to calculate four economic indicators from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.  The figures from the monthly reports are weighted to provide a balanced total score, which ranges from zero to 1,000. A score of 0 represent economic stability and racial equality. The higher the score, the deeper the economic failure.


So far, Obama is worse than Bush.


Since its creation, Obama has failed to generate a Failometer score that can be contained within the chart’s range of zero to 1000.


The Obama Failometer Score was originally displayed on a ten-foot-long billboard displayed in the hallways of the Capitol’s Cannon House Office building.  House officials ordered it torn down in January after Democrats complained.


Here is how the Obama Failometer Score is calculated:


FACTORS MEASURED AGAINST BUSH


Monthly jobs created: The Hamilton Project, a liberal economic policy group, stated last year the economy must create 321,000 jobs a month in order to return the economy to pre-recession employment levels by December 2016, the end of Obama’s term.


As the economy continues to flounder under Obama, that number has grown; but the Obama Failometer will continue to use it, which gives him some statistical relief.


Obama promised to not only restore the economy to where it was under Bush, but grow it.  So far, Obama has failed to even perform as well as Bush.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by subtracting the number of jobs created in the previous month from the 321,000 jobs claimed necessary by the liberal Hamilton Project and dividing by 1,000 to balance it against other factors.


The BLS reports the economy created 169,000 jobs last month, 152,000 fewer than needed to restore the economy.  This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 152.


Civilian labor force participation rate:  The civilian labor force participation rate, the ratio between those 16 and over in the labor force against the national population of those 16 and over, is an important measure of economic health.  After puttering along during the Bush administration, including through the “Bush years” of the recession, under Obama, it has plunged sharply.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by subtracting the monthly civilian labor force participation rate from the average Bush administration rate and multiplying by 100 to balance it against other factors. According to data from the BLS, under Bush, the average monthly civilian labor force participation rate was around 66.2 percent.


The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the monthly civilian labor force participation rate last month fell to 63.2 percent, the worst rate since August 1978 and 3.0 percent worse than Bush’s average of 66.2 percent.  This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 300.


FACTORS MEASURED AGAINST OBAMA’S OWN RHETORIC


Black unemployment:  No one has suffered more economically under Obama than black Americans. Obama’s election and re-election has meant crippling poverty for the black community.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by taking the monthly unemployment rate for blacks and subtracting the monthly unemployment rate for all Americans, and multiplying it by 100 to balance it against other factors.


The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the black unemployment rate last month ballooned to 13.0 percent, while the national overall rate was 7.3 percent.  That is a gap of 5.7 percent. This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 570.


Compare Obama’s performance to Bush’s.  The highest monthly unemployment rate ever for blacks under Bush was 12.1 percent.  Obama’s lowest rate is now 12.6 percent in July.  He has never performed as well as Bush’s worst black unemployment rate.


Bush’s average black unemployment rate was 9.7 percent and an overall national average of 5.2 percent, a 4.5 percent gap that gives Bush a score of 450.


Hispanic unemployment:  Despite winning the Hispanic vote, Obama’s liberal policies have caused widespread damage to the Hispanic community.  Thanks to Obama, they continue to lag behind the national average in many economic factors.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by taking the monthly unemployment rate for Hispanics and subtracting the monthly unemployment rate for all Americans, and multiplying it by 100 to balance it against other factors.


The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the Hispanic unemployment rate last month grew to a stunning 9.3 percent, while the national overall rate was 7.3 percent.  That is a gap of two percent.  This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 200.


The Hispanic unemployment rate hit its all-time historic low of 4.7 percent during Bush’s last term.  It is almost twice that rate under Obama.


THEREFORE, THIS MONTH’S OBAMA FAILOMETER SCORE IS 1,222.


Photo credit: terrellaftermath


Please share this post with your friends and comment below. If you haven’t already, take a moment to sign up for our free newsletter above and friend us on Twitter and Facebook to get real time updates.



Western Journalism



On Fifth Anniversary Of Fiscal Crisis, The Economy Grows Worse

On Fifth Anniversary Of Fiscal Crisis, The Economy Grows Worse


Honey I Shrunk The Economy SC On fifth anniversary of fiscal crisis, the economy grows worse


Black unemployment spike to 13 percent.


Labor force participation rate plunges to 35-year low.


Hispanic unemployment higher now than in April.


WASHINGTON – On the fifth anniversary of the current fiscal crisis, the nation’s economy is getting worse under Barack Obama, according to an objective mathematical measurement of the nation’s economic indicators released Monday by Congressman Steve Stockman (R-Texas 36.)


The economy continues to fail to recover under Obama as Obama’s Failometer Score grew to a punishing 1,222 last month. This is the third straight month Obama’s Failometer score has grown, and his 1,222 for August is the second-highest score this year.


Obama can set the Failometer to zero simply by outperforming George W. Bush on the economy and fulfilling his 2008 and 2012 campaign promises to help blacks and Hispanics gain economically.


“For the third consecutive month Obama’s economic failures are getting worse,” said Stockman “The percentage of working-age American with jobs has plunged to Jimmy Carter-era depths, we aren’t creating enough jobs to restore the economy and black unemployment is growing again.”


“Hispanic unemployment is higher now than it was in April.  Black unemployment is growing again. He has yet to grow enough monthly jobs to even get back to a pre-recession economy. An objective mathematical measure of Obama’s economic policies shows he’s blazing a new path of failure.”


The Obama Failometer uses a fixed mathematical score to calculate four economic indicators from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.  The figures from the monthly reports are weighted to provide a balanced total score, which ranges from zero to 1,000. A score of 0 represent economic stability and racial equality. The higher the score, the deeper the economic failure.


So far, Obama is worse than Bush.


Since its creation, Obama has failed to generate a Failometer score that can be contained within the chart’s range of zero to 1000.


The Obama Failometer Score was originally displayed on a ten-foot-long billboard displayed in the hallways of the Capitol’s Cannon House Office building.  House officials ordered it torn down in January after Democrats complained.


Here is how the Obama Failometer Score is calculated:


FACTORS MEASURED AGAINST BUSH


Monthly jobs created: The Hamilton Project, a liberal economic policy group, stated last year the economy must create 321,000 jobs a month in order to return the economy to pre-recession employment levels by December 2016, the end of Obama’s term.


As the economy continues to flounder under Obama, that number has grown; but the Obama Failometer will continue to use it, which gives him some statistical relief.


Obama promised to not only restore the economy to where it was under Bush, but grow it.  So far, Obama has failed to even perform as well as Bush.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by subtracting the number of jobs created in the previous month from the 321,000 jobs claimed necessary by the liberal Hamilton Project and dividing by 1,000 to balance it against other factors.


The BLS reports the economy created 169,000 jobs last month, 152,000 fewer than needed to restore the economy.  This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 152.


Civilian labor force participation rate:  The civilian labor force participation rate, the ratio between those 16 and over in the labor force against the national population of those 16 and over, is an important measure of economic health.  After puttering along during the Bush administration, including through the “Bush years” of the recession, under Obama, it has plunged sharply.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by subtracting the monthly civilian labor force participation rate from the average Bush administration rate and multiplying by 100 to balance it against other factors. According to data from the BLS, under Bush, the average monthly civilian labor force participation rate was around 66.2 percent.


The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the monthly civilian labor force participation rate last month fell to 63.2 percent, the worst rate since August 1978 and 3.0 percent worse than Bush’s average of 66.2 percent.  This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 300.


FACTORS MEASURED AGAINST OBAMA’S OWN RHETORIC


Black unemployment:  No one has suffered more economically under Obama than black Americans. Obama’s election and re-election has meant crippling poverty for the black community.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by taking the monthly unemployment rate for blacks and subtracting the monthly unemployment rate for all Americans, and multiplying it by 100 to balance it against other factors.


The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the black unemployment rate last month ballooned to 13.0 percent, while the national overall rate was 7.3 percent.  That is a gap of 5.7 percent. This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 570.


Compare Obama’s performance to Bush’s.  The highest monthly unemployment rate ever for blacks under Bush was 12.1 percent.  Obama’s lowest rate is now 12.6 percent in July.  He has never performed as well as Bush’s worst black unemployment rate.


Bush’s average black unemployment rate was 9.7 percent and an overall national average of 5.2 percent, a 4.5 percent gap that gives Bush a score of 450.


Hispanic unemployment:  Despite winning the Hispanic vote, Obama’s liberal policies have caused widespread damage to the Hispanic community.  Thanks to Obama, they continue to lag behind the national average in many economic factors.


This Obama Failometer score portion is calculated by taking the monthly unemployment rate for Hispanics and subtracting the monthly unemployment rate for all Americans, and multiplying it by 100 to balance it against other factors.


The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the Hispanic unemployment rate last month grew to a stunning 9.3 percent, while the national overall rate was 7.3 percent.  That is a gap of two percent.  This portion of the Obama Failometer Score is 200.


The Hispanic unemployment rate hit its all-time historic low of 4.7 percent during Bush’s last term.  It is almost twice that rate under Obama.


THEREFORE, THIS MONTH’S OBAMA FAILOMETER SCORE IS 1,222.


Photo credit: terrellaftermath


Please share this post with your friends and comment below. If you haven’t already, take a moment to sign up for our free newsletter above and friend us on Twitter and Facebook to get real time updates.



Western Journalism



On Fifth Anniversary Of Fiscal Crisis, The Economy Grows Worse

Monday, August 26, 2013

Youth see march anniversary as chance to lead







Civil rights leader Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., speaks at a rally to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on Saturday, Aug. 24, 2013, in Washington. Lewis marched in the from line with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. on Aug. 24, 2013, the day King gave his famous “I Have a Dream” speech. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)





Civil rights leader Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., speaks at a rally to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on Saturday, Aug. 24, 2013, in Washington. Lewis marched in the from line with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. on Aug. 24, 2013, the day King gave his famous “I Have a Dream” speech. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)





Peja West, 6, waves a pair of American flags above her head while dancing at the foot of the steps on the north side of the Capitol. West, from Spencer, came to the rally with her grandmother, mother and her baby sister. A diverse crowd of about 300 people rallied on the north side of the State Capitol Saturday Aug. 24, 2013, to commemorate the upcoming 50th anniversary of the 1963 Civil Rights March on Washington. Most of the crowd marched more than a mile from Stiles Park, walking up Lincoln Blvd., to the statehouse. Many in the crowd carried signs or banners, and some wore shirts bearing images of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., who delivered his impassioned oratory to a crowd of nearly 250,000 on the Washington Mall on Aug. 28, 1963. At the time, it was the largest demonstration ever seen in the nation’s capital. King’s remarks to the crowd, now known as the “I Have A Dream” speech, brought a national focus to the civil rights struggle in America and is credited with being a large influence to secure enough votes in Congress for the passage of the Civil Rights Act the following year. (AP Photo/The Oklahoman, Jim Beckel)





Dejuan Monroe, 7, waves an American flag in the air while a speaker addresses the crowd. Dejuan and his older brother Darian, 9, moved to the front of the crowd and found a good view of the rally on the north steps of the Capitol. A diverse crowd of about 300 people rallied on the north side of the State Capitol Saturday Aug. 24, 2013, to commemorate the upcoming 50th anniversary of the 1963 Civil Rights March on Washington. Most of the crowd marched more than a mile from Stiles Park, walking up Lincoln Blvd., to the statehouse. Many in the crowd carried signs or banners, and some wore shirts bearing images of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., who delivered his impassioned oratory to a crowd of nearly 250,000 on the Washington Mall on Aug. 28, 1963. At the time, it was the largest demonstration ever seen in the nation’s capital. King’s remarks to the crowd, now known as the “I Have A Dream” speech, brought a national focus to the civil rights struggle in America and is credited with being a large influence to secure enough votes in Congress for the passage of the Civil Rights Act the following year. (AP Photo / Jim Beckel, The Oklahoman)













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WASHINGTON (AP) — Mary-Pat Hector of Atlanta was operating much like a 1960s civil rights activist as she laid plans for the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington. She was constantly on the phone as she confirmed event details, tweaked the draft of the speech she gave at Saturday’s rally at the Lincoln Memorial and prepared for a presentation.


Mary-Pat is 15 years old.


Just as the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. led the Montgomery Bus Boycott at age 26, and Rep. John Lewis helped to lead freedom rides at 23, young Americans like Mary-Pat are not letting age get in the way as they seek more than a contributing role in the push for social reform.


Young people are eager to influence this year’s March on Washington, says Jessica Brown, national coordinator for the Black Youth Vote coalition, which organized several youth events around Saturday’s march to the Lincoln Memorial.


“Of course you have the seasoned people who are there, and they are always rightfully going to have their position,” Brown said. “But you’re starting to see the pickup of the youth saying, ‘This is our time, this is our moment, this is the opportunity we have to show the world and the nation, that we’re here and we’re ready to work and organize to get things done.’”


In 1963, those “seasoned people” were A. Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin, who birthed the idea of a Washington march to appeal for jobs and justice, and ultimately attracted 250,000 people. Today, the Rev. Al Sharpton and Martin Luther King III, who were 8 and 5 years old, respectively, in 1963, are the veterans who brought thousands to the Lincoln Memorial on Saturday. The King Center also has organized a ceremony on Wednesday, the actual march anniversary, when President Barack Obama will speak.


Friday night, students and young adults gathered at Howard University in Washington for a mass meeting and rally ahead of Saturday’s march — activity patterned after the student rallies that were held before major demonstrations during the civil rights movement.


Anthony Miller, president of the Howard University Student Association, said students recognize the historical significance, and some are using this moment to express their continuing anger over the shooting death of black Florida teen Trayvon Martin.


“They want to be able to do something positive and something that will uplift this situation and really bring it to light,” Miller says. Students want “to effect a positive change and push this country in the right direction,” he said, “And I think this is an excellent opportunity.”


Janaye Ingram, who runs the Washington office of Sharpton’s National Action Network, spent hours on the phone recruiting students. “This is their moment to make a change. It’s reminiscent of what happened in the ’60s, when the movement was led by them,” she said.


Students and other young people made significant contributions to the civil rights movement. In 1957 a group of black students, later called the Little Rock Nine, helped integrate all-white Central High School in Arkansas. The Freedom Riders challenged segregation by riding buses through the South in integrated pairs. There were numerous others who held sit-ins at restaurant counters, skipped school to participate in marches and were attacked by police dogs and water cannons during public demonstrations.


“When you have been sitting on a lunch counter stool and someone walk up and spit on you or pour hot water or hot coffee on you and you say you’re committed to non-violence, you have to grow up,” Lewis said Sunday on ABC’s “This Week.” ”To go on the Freedom Rides in 1961, the same year that President Barack Obama was born? And to be beaten. You had to grow up. So by the time of the March on Washington, I was 23, but I was an older person.”


Saturday’s march included several youth speakers — the youngest, Asean Johnson of Chicago, just 9 years old.


Lewis, who was chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and the youngest of the “Big Six” leaders from the 1963 march, represented the movement’s already battle-tested young foot soldiers. His elders asked him to tone down the more fiery passages of his speech after seeing a draft; Lewis told MSNBC that he agreed to make the changes, not wanting to disappoint King and the other leaders.


Now 73 and a Democratic congressman from Georgia, Lewis was under no pressure to mince his words Saturday. He reminded the crowd of the vicious beating he endured in the 1965 voting rights march in Selma, Ala., and encouraged today’s youth to resist efforts to erode his generation’s hard-fought victories.


“Back in 1963, we hadn’t heard of the Internet. We didn’t have a cellular telephone, iPad, iPod,” Lewis said. “But we used what we had to bring about a nonviolent revolution. I say to all of the young people: You must get out there and push and pull and make America what it should be for all of us.”


Unlike the narrow focus on jobs and freedom in 1963, this year’s march seeks to address an array of issues. Sharpton expanded the march’s original goals, combatting high black and youth unemployment, to include a call for action after the Supreme Court invalidated parts of the Voting Rights Act, and to protest “stand your ground” laws and stop-and-frisk police tactics.


“We’re looking at the issue that went on in Florida, we’re looking at what’s going on with the Voting Rights Act, so youth are really upset, and they’re deciding maybe this is a good point to collectively come together, continuously build on our network, and take it back to our community to continue working,” Brown says.


Sasha Costanza-Chock, an assistant professor of civic media at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, says young people’s willingness to simultaneously address “multiple dynamics of oppression” shows how youth activism has matured.


“You have a lot more young people now talking about … the ways that different structures of race, class, gender and sexuality cannot be fought only one at a time. They have to be looked at together and struggled for together,” Costanza-Chock said.


Today’s young activists are equipped with a tool that older generations didn’t have: social media. It empowers them to rally large numbers of people to a cause in a very short span of time. Using these methods are Florida’s “Dream Defenders,” the student group that held a sit-in outside of Gov. Rick Scott’s office for 31 days, demanding a special session to repeal the “stand your ground” law.


The group traveled to Washington for the march anniversary, and encouraged supporters to follow their journey on USTREAM, an online live video service.


“It’s been easier than ever to mobilize people, to hold people accountable, and to get attention for whatever issue you care about. So I think it’s just changed the game,” said Ryane Ridenour from Generational Alliance, an umbrella group of 22 youth organizations.


Mary-Pat, who serves as national youth director for Sharpton’s organization, said working on multiple issues and leveraging social media in this way “can be overwhelming,” but she understands that this is the nature of working on intertwined causes.


Ultimately, she wants this march to serve as a moment in which history will say her generation showed “we just don’t march and make a lot of noise, but we actually make an impact.”


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Youth see march anniversary as chance to lead