epublican
Presidential candidates descended on Iowa over the weekend, giving
Iowans a rare opportunity to evaluate all thirty thousand hopefuls in
one place.
The candidates were a big hit with their G.O.P.
audience, who attempted to determine which of the thirty thousand would
do the best job of eviscerating Obamacare and deporting college
students.
Attendees gave an especially warm welcome to the
businessman Donald Trump, whose potential entry into the 2016 race would
instantly raise the credibility of everyone else.
In a speech laden with red meat for the Republican
faithful, Trump explained how his experience of hosting a reality TV
show would prove invaluable in defeating the Islamic State in Iraq and
al-Sham (ISIS).
But Iowans reserved their most enthusiastic response
for Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, who laid out an ambitious vision
for depriving future generations of a living wage.
Asked how he hopes history will remember him, Walker said, “If I have my way, there will be no one teaching history.”
Gov . Cuomo is “freaked-out and furious” over the bombshell
criminal charges dropped on Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver last week —
and “obsessed with fear’’ because of the ongoing federal corruption
probe.
One source described Cuomo as “doubly enraged’’ by hard-driving
Manhattan US Attorney Preet Bharara’s decision to bring the five
criminal corruption charges against Silver just hours after the governor
delivered his State of the State address — and then, less than 24 hours
after that, to indict Albany’s “three men in a room’’ culture in which
Cuomo is the lead player.
“Cuomo feels Preet just walked all over him,’’ said the source.
Knowledgeable insiders, including law-enforcement experts, said it
wasn’t accidental that Bharara brought the charges against Silver just
hours after Cuomo’s State of the State.
“Prosecutors have a lot of discretion, and when they time a
high-profile arrest in a way that steps all over Cuomo’s speech, that’s
the use of discretion for a purpose,’’ a former federal prosecutor told
The Post.
And several sources described Cuomo — who along with his aides is
being investigated by Bharara over the abrupt disbanding of the
governor’s Moreland Act commission on public corruption — as “on edge’’
over Bharara’s ominous statement Friday that the public should “stay
tuned’’ for more criminal charges to come.
“Andrew’s been working the phones day and night, staying up into the
early morning hours, making hundreds of calls in one day trying to find
out what the hell is going on,’’ a source close to the governor said.
Cuomo, who has retained a private lawyer, has enlisted several former
federal and state-level prosecutors with ties to Bharara’s office
including Steve Cohen, his former chief-of-staff, in an effort to find
out Bharara’s next move, the sources said.
“He’s freaked-out, furious, and obsessed with fear, it’s like a
nightmare for him. The whole narrative he laid out for his second term
has been derailed by Bharara,’’ said a source in regular contact with
the governor.
“The narrative has been taken over by Bharara and it’s all about
Albany’s corruption, not Cuomo and his program for the state,’’ the
source said.
State political circles are abuzz with speculation that Bharara is
seeking to determine if Cuomo had any knowledge of Silver’s allegedly
illegal outside income last spring when he agreed with Silver and Senate
Republican Leader Dean Skelos to fold the commission.
The hair-pulling turmoil that has engulfed Assembly Democrats over
the possible (and many believe likely) need to replace Silver as speaker
hasn’t been seen since Syracuse-area Assembly Majority Leader Michael
Bragman unsuccessfully sought to oust Silver in 2000.
A half-dozen names of possible replacements are on lawmakers’ lips
and here, direct from a usually authoritative Assembly member, is a late
bulletin on the maneuvering: “The Queens County organization is making
calls for [Queens Assemblywoman] Cathy Nolan.
“A Queens/Bronx coalition would counterbalance a Brooklyn/Manhattan
coalition under [Assemblymen] Joe Lentol [Brooklyn] and Keith Wright
[the Manhattan Democratic chairman], with 30 votes each.
“Bronx County Chairman [Carl Heastie] is looking like the kingmaker here.’’
That said, a lot of smart money is on well-regarded Assembly Ways and
Means Committee Chairman Herman “Denny” Farrell Jr. of Manhattan, a
former state Democratic chairman, as a non-controversial successor to
Silver, at least on a short-term “interim’’ basis.
The decision by the speaker of the New York State
Assembly, who is accused of abusing his office to obtain $4 million in
payoffs, comes amid mounting pressure from his fellow Democrats.
resident
Obama’s proposal to give workers six weeks of paid leave is meeting
strong opposition from a group of people who annually receive
thirty-three weeks of paid leave.
Members of the group heard the President’s proposal on
Tuesday night, one of the few nights of the year when they are required
to report to their workplace.
The opponents of paid leave, who show up for work a
hundred and thirty-seven days per year and receive paid leave for the
other two hundred and twenty-eight, were baffled by other moments in the
President’s speech.
For example, they were confused by Obama’s challenge
to try to survive on a full-time job that pays fifteen thousand dollars,
since they all currently hold a part-time job that pays a hundred and
seventy-four thousand dollars.
Preet Bharara is a bit of a prig. The trait is highly familiar
in big-time New York prosecutors: Rudy Giuliani and Eliot Spitzer
possessed it in spades. And it’s an indispensable quality in
white-collar cops — the political and financial systems need upright
enforcers of the rules to keep the most roguish operators from straying
too far outside the lines, and to protect the citizenry that can’t
afford to buy insider connections.
Yet moral rectitude isn’t always pretty, and the current U.S.
Attorney’s righteous attitude was on full display yesterday during the
press conference where he explained the charges leading to the arrest of
State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver.
Bharara is ferociously,
inspiringly smart. And he has a sense of humor. But it tends toward the
condescending. Asked to explain what it meant that nearly $4 million of
Silver’s money had been frozen, Bharara answered with practiced sarcasm:
“It’s … frozen.” Asked to explain the distinction between a complaint
(which had been issued against Silver) and an indictment (which hasn’t),
Bharara responded as if he were addressing a roomful of particularly
dense children (okay, he was addressing a roomful of reporters, so maybe
he wasn’t too far off).
More
telling, however, was Bharara’s mini-lecture when asked about the
culture of crooked deal-making in Albany. “It’s very rare that you have a
written agreement where someone says, ‘I’ll pay you this bribe and then
you do this favor for me.’ There are a lot of people who are not so
bright in office, but there are few who are that silly and stupid.”
Silver may well be a thief and a sleaze. If he pocketed millions of
dollars in undisclosed payments in exchange for tailoring state laws to
the needs of specific benefactors, then throw the book at him. Bharara,
though, seems motivated by more than his duty to uphold the laws as they
exist. He also seems driven by a desire to reshape the game of politics
into how he thinks it ought to be played.
One of the accusations against Silver is that he, in Bharara’s term,
“monetized” his public office for private gain by steering clients to
Weitz & Luxenberg, the law firm that has long paid Silver a salary
to be mysteriously “of counsel.” Part of the arrangement, according to
the charges, was that Silver funneled $500,000 in state grant money to a
doctor who then directed patients to Weitz & Luxenberg.
But at the risk of sounding hopelessly naïve, maybe that grant was
one of many Silver dispensed, on the merits, for worthwhile medical
research. And the other part of the equation, Silver’s employment as a
“rainmaker,” is a function that can be grubby, is definitely common, and
is not necessarily illegal.
When
I asked Bharara yesterday how he will counter an argument that Silver’s
lawyers are likely to make — that referring clients counts as “work” in
a law firm — he answered, “Show up in court and you’ll find out.” It’s
understandable he doesn’t want to show his cards this far in advance of
any trial. But it was a surprisingly dodgy answer for someone who claims
to have such a strong case.
The line between influence peddling and constituent service is
uncomfortably fuzzy. And that line needs to be clearer and more strictly
patrolled, especially since the story of greed in Albany went from
William Kennedy–colorful to Pedro Espada Jr.–outrageous a long time ago.
But the practice of politics is never going to be as black and white as
the good-government types would like it to be.
Back in May, 2014, after Governor Andrew Cuomo unplugged the Moreland
Commission and Bharara reacted with indignation and subpoenas, I wrote that
the two men were engaged in a long-distance argument about what’s fair
in politics. That’s still true. Though with yesterday’s arrest of
Silver, the confrontation between Cuomo and Bharara, between a master of
the sausage-making factory and a true believer in the humane treatment
of swine, is getting a whole lot closer.
enator
Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) shared more folksy stories of her childhood on
Wednesday, telling reporters that she used to wear a bucket on her head
for no apparent reason.
“I’d be walking outside our house and see a bucket
lying there, and I’d say to myself, ‘That’s a perfectly good bucket, I
think I’ll put it on my head,’ ” she said. “It wasn’t because I needed a
hat or anything. I must have had, oh gosh, a half-dozen hats or so. I
just wanted to wear a bucket.”
Ernst said that during her youth, she was known for
poking a hole in a large piece of corrugated cardboard and wearing it as
a poncho.
“I can’t for the life of me tell you why I did that,”
she said. “I just liked the look of it, I guess. Nobody paid much
attention to it. People sure don’t notice your cardboard poncho when
you’re wearing a bucket on your head.”
When asked why she was sharing these stories, Sen.
Ernst considered her answer carefully. “I think people like to get to
know their representatives in Washington as people,” she said. “And it
helps to know that one of them used to wear buckets on her head,
corrugated cardboard ponchos, and scuba flippers instead of gloves. Did I
tell you I used to wear scuba flippers instead of gloves? To this day
I’ll be darned if I know why I did that.”
2014 was an epochal year for social justice. 2015 could be even more dramatic.
The shattering events of 2014, beginning with Michael Brown’s
death in Ferguson, Missouri, in August, did more than touch off a
national debate about police behavior, criminal justice and widening
inequality in America. They also gave a new birth of passion and energy
to a civil rights movement that had almost faded into history, and which
had been in the throes of a slow comeback since the killing of Trayvon
Martin in 2012. That the nation became riveted to the meta-story of
Ferguson—and later the videotaped killing of Eric Garner in New York—was
due in large part to the work of a loose but increasingly coordinated
network of millennial activists who had been beating the drum for the
past few years. In 2014, the new social justice movement became a force
that the political mainstream had to reckon with.
This re-energized millennial movement, which will make itself
felt all the more in 2015, differs from its half-century-old civil
rights-era forebear in a number of important ways. One, it is driven far
more by social media and hashtags than marches and open-air rallies.
Indeed, if you wanted a megaphone for a movement spearheaded by young
people of color, you’d be hard-pressed to find a better one than
Twitter, whose users skew younger and browner than the general public,
which often has the effect of magnifying that group’s broad priorities
and fascinations. It’s not a coincidence that the Twitterverse helped
surface and magnify the stories of Trayvon Martin and Eric Garner and
Michael Brown.
Two, the new social-justice grass roots reflects a
broader agenda that includes LGBTQ
(lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender-questioning) issues and immigration
reform. The young grass-roots activists I’ve spoken to have a broad
suite of concerns: the school-to-prison pipeline,
educational inequality, the over-policing of black and Latino
communities. In essence, they’re trying to take on deeply entrenched
discrimination that is fueled less by showy bigotry than systemic, implicit biases.
Three, the movement’s renewal has exposed a serious generational
rift. It is largely a bottom-up movement being led by young unknowns
who have rejected, in some cases angrily, the presumption of leadership
thrust on them by veteran celebrities like Al Sharpton. While both the
younger and older activists both trace their lineage to the civil rights
movement, they seem to align themselves with different parts of that
family tree. And in several ways, these contemporary tensions are
updates of the disagreements that marked the earlier movement.
Sarah
Jackson, a professor at Northeastern University whose research focuses
on social movements, said the civil rights establishment embraces the
“Martin Luther King-Al Sharpton model”—which emphasizes mobilizing
people for rallies and speeches and tends to be centered around a
charismatic male leader. But the younger activists are instead inclined
to what Jackson called the “Fannie Lou Hamer-Ella Baker model”—an
approach that embraces a grass roots and in which agency is widely
diffused. Indeed, many of the activists name-checked Baker, a
lesser-known but enormously influential strategist of the civil rights
era. She helped found Martin Luther King’s Southern Christian Leadership
Conference but became deeply skeptical of the cult of personality that
she felt had formed around him. And she vocally disagreed with the
notion that power in the movement should be concentrated among a few
leaders, who tended to be men with bases of power that lay in the
church. “My theory is, strong people don’t need strong leaders,” she said.
Baker’s
theories on participatory democracy were adopted by later social
movements, like Occupy Wall Street, which notably resisted naming
leaders or spokespeople. But James Hayes, an organizer with the Ohio Student Association,
said that he didn’t think of this new social justice movement as
“leaderless” in the Occupy style. “I think of it as leader-ful,” he
said.
By December, some of these same uncelebrated community
organizers who spent the year leading “die-ins,” voting drives and the
thousands-deep rallies around the country would meet privately with
President Barack Obama in the Oval Office. (“We got a chance to really
lay it out—we kept it real,” Hayes told me about the meeting. “We were
respectful, but we didn’t pull any punches.”) A few days after that
White House meeting, Hillary Clinton, widely assumed to be eyeing
another bid for the presidency in 2016, nodded to them when she dropped
one of the mantras of the demonstrators—“black lives matter”—into a speech at a posh awards ceremony in New York City.
***
All this new energy comes,
ironically, as the country’s appetite for fighting racial
inequality—never all that robust in the best of times—appears to be
ebbing. The tent-pole policy victories of the civil rights movement are
even now in retrenchment: 60 years after Brown v. Board of Education, American schools—especially in the South—are rapidly resegregating; the Voting Rights Act, which turns 50 in 2015, has been effectively gutted; and, despite the passage of the Fair Housing Act, our neighborhoods are as segregated as ever. Once-narrowing racial gaps in life outcomes have again become gaping chasms.
At
the same time, the new movement’s emergence has caused friction with
the traditional civil rights establishment that identifies with those
earlier, historic victories. At a recent march put together by
Sharpton’s National Action Network in Washington, D.C.—meant to protest
the recent decisions not to indict the officers in several high-profile
police-involved killings and push for changes in the protocol from
prosecutors—younger activists from St. Louis County were upset at what
they saw as a lineup of older speakers on the podium who were not on the
ground marching in Ferguson. So they climbed onto the stage and took
the mic. “It should be nothing but young people up here!” a woman named
Johnetta Elzie yelled into the microphone. “We started this!” Some
people cheered them. Others called for them to get off the stage. After a
few minutes, the organizers cut off their mics. (In the crowd, someone
held up a neon-green sign making their discontent with the march’s
organizers plain: “WE, THE YOUTH, DID NOT ELECT AL SHARPTON OUR
SPOKESPERSON. HAVE A SEAT.”)
A few days later, Elzie downplayed
the incident and told me that the disagreement was simply about “someone
who doesn’t want to give up the reins and who has a huge platform.”
The protests over the killings of unarmed black men by police have been called the start of a new civil rights movement.
But a half-century after activists broke the back of Jim Crow,
problems beyond police brutality persist for African-Americans: the wealth gap widens, higher education is less attainable, white supremacists remain influential.
Is a new movement for black equality needed and, if so, what shape would it take?
When a moment comes to celebrate both a historical giant and
a pure creative achievement, it merits significant and broad
recognition, David Carr writes.
“Gateway
to Freedom,” a book about the Underground Railroad by Eric Foner, began
with the notebook of an abolitionist editor, Sydney Howard Gay.
There
have been studies of the Underground Railroad in Washington, southern
Pennsylvania and New Bedford, Mass., among other locations, as well as
biographies of black abolitionists like David Ruggles, a member of New York City’s biracial Committee of Vigilance for the Protection of People of Color, founded in 1835.
In
“Gateway to Freedom,” Mr. Foner ties much of that work together, while
uncovering the history of the eastern corridor’s key gateway, New York
City.
NEW YORK -- The Republican National Committee announced Friday which
networks landed 2016 presidential debates -- and Univision, the
most-watched Spanish-language network, didn't make the cut.
How
Republicans engage with Univision this election cycle is being closely
watched given that the network reaches 96 percent of Hispanic
households, a key demographic for either party hoping to win the White
House. On Wednesday, BuzzFeed’s Adrian Carrasquillo described
Univision, which has aggressively covered immigration reform, as “one
of the Republican Party’s biggest, most complex, most painful
challenges.”
In a statement to The Huffington Post, Univision
spokesman Jose Zamora didn't specifically address the Republican Party's
decision, but spoke broadly of the need for both parties to engage the
network's large audience.
"There is a very simple political reality -- Hispanics will decide
the 2016 presidential election," Zamora said. "No one can match
Univision’s reach and ability to inform, provide access and empower
Hispanic America. Anyone who wants to reach and engage Hispanics will
have to do it through Univision. The Hispanic community deserves to hear
the policies and views of all political parties and Univision is
committed to providing access to all points of view. We have an open
invitation to all political parties to address our community on issues
of importance and relevance. Candidates should not miss the opportunity
to inform and engage with the fastest growing segment of the
electorate."
Jorge Ramos, the top anchor on Univision and Fusion,
an English-language network launched through a partnership with ABC,
said in a statement that both Republicans and Democrats "have to make
sure that their debates don’t look like the 2015 Oscar nominations,” a
reference to the lack of diversity among Academy Award nominees.
“The
new rule in American politics is that no one can make it to the White
House without the Hispanic vote,” Ramos continued. “So we still expect
all candidates from both parties to talk to us on Univision and Fusion. I
believe that Latinos and Millennials will decide the 2016 presidential
election. The sooner Republicans and Democrats realize this, the better
their chances to win the White House. It’s always a strategic mistake
not to include in your plans the fastest growing segments of the
electorate.”
NBC and Telemundo (the second-biggest
Spanish-language network, owned by NBCUniversal) will partner on a
Republican debate in Florida in February. The other networks selected
were Fox News, Fox Business, CNBC, ABC and CBS.
An RNC spokesman declined to comment on the decision.
But
clearly some in the party don't feel the network has treated them well.
RNC chairman Reince Preibus told BuzzFeed earlier this week “it’s
highly questionable whether we’re treated fairly on Univision.”
Still, Preibus and others do engage with Ramos, an immigration reform advocate. The two sparred
earlier this week over the Republican Party’s position on the issue.
And Priebus will also appear Sunday on Univison’s “Al Punto,” a public
affairs show hosted by Ramos.
While immigration may be the
biggest hurdle for Republicans in engaging with Univision this cycle,
there also appear to be concerns about the network given that part-owner
Haim Saban is a prominent Hillary Clinton supporter.
Univision
wasn't the only network shut out of the Republicans debate schedule,
with liberal cable network MSNBC and Bloomberg TV also not getting
selected. The difference, however, is that Republicans aren't looking to
reach MSNBC's viewership, and the two business networks selected, CNBC
and Fox Business, reach larger audiences than Bloomberg.
Charlie Hebdo revealed their cover image for this week's
issue, printed just days after two gunmen opened fire on the newspaper's
Paris office, killing 12 people. Four of the Charlie's cartoonists were
killed in the attack.
The cover shows the Prophet Muhammad holding a "Je Suis Charlie" sign with the caption, "All is forgiven."
The newspaper said that it will print over 1 million copies this week, with financial help from Google, Le Monde and other organizations. They may even print an extra 2 million depending on the demand. It usually prints around 60,000.
Amid a rift among officers and Mayor Bill de Blasio, Patrick J. Lynch is
beating back dissent within his Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association as
he seeks a fifth term as president.
By MICHAEL M. GRYNBAUM, J. DAVID GOODMAN and AL BAKER
After a tumultuous first year in office, Mayor Bill de Blasio, a
liberal who had staked his mayoralty on re-educating New York’s police
force, is struggling to secure its basic trust.
Angel
Alcazar was cooking pork chops inside his apartment on Gouverneur Ave.
in Riverdale on Friday when a grease fire broke out, neighbors said. One
of his cats caught fire and then ran around the home, setting
everything it touched ablaze. Eleven residents were hospitalized and
about a dozen were displaced.
Two people were clinging to life Friday after a cat caught fire and ran
around in a tragic panic, unwittingly helping to ignite a Bronx
apartment house, officials and neighbors said.
Angel Alcazar -- the owner of six cats -- was cooking pork chops inside
his apartment on Gouverneur Ave. in Riverdale at about 5 p.m. when a
grease fire broke out, neighbors said.
As Alcazar tried to put out the blaze, at least one of his felines got
too close and caught fire, they said. The torched tabby then ran around
the home, setting everything it touched on fire.
"I looked outside my window ... I saw nothing but flames," said resident Theodore Oakes.
The fire quickly began consuming both the third and fourth floors of the building, which has 67 apartments, officials said.
Disabled tenant Suzanne Guthridge, 52, was sitting in her home down the
hall when she smelled the smoke -- and the cry of a kitty.
"I opened the door for the cat," Guthridge said. "He came through and I
shut it because the smoke was overwhelming. It was really scary.
"That whole area was full of smoke," she said. "It was unbelievable. You could feel the heat."
Five of the cats, including the one that was burned, are believed to have died.
Eleven residents were hospitalized and about a dozen were displaced, according to authorities.
Two victims were in critical condition at Jacobi Hospital, authorities said.
One woman -- who tenants said has an autistic child -- was unconscious
and had extensive burns as she was pulled out of the building near
Sedgwick Ave.
"She looked like she was burnt from her breasts down to her groin,"
said tenant Whitney Martin, 54. "EMTs had her stretched out. She was
nonresponsive."
A mewling black cat -- the one Guthridge saved -- is believed to be the
only one of Alcazar's cats that survived. It was found crouched in the
corner of the third-floor hallway hours after the fire was put out,
witnesses said.
"(Alcazar) didn't treat his animals very well," Guthridge said. "The
house always smelled like cat urine and cat poop. I did call PETA (on
him). They said they were gonna send somebody out, but nothing was ever
done."
Alcazar, who may have been injured in the blaze, was taken away for
questioning as FDNY marshals investigated the cause of the blaze,
witnesses and a department spokesman said.
His neighbors' homes were damaged beyond repair, tenants said.
"The water was ankle-high (in my apartment)," Martin said. "(Firemen)
punched holes through my wall. You could see right through."
"I have no idea (where I'm going to go)," she said. "I have a son who
lives in the city and my grandson who lives with me. Right now, we don't
know."
"(Water) flooded everywhere, my living room, my bedroom, my bathroom,"
added Oakes. "It was coming down my wall like a fire hydrant."
Oakes' wife, Shirley, said she tried to salvage some of her valuables.
"We grabbed what we could and ran out the house," she said. "I didn't want the ceiling to come down on me."
More than 100 firefighters spent an hour and a half putting the fire out.
The Red Cross was helping to relocate displaced residents Friday night.
Maher
called the cops 'New York's Whiniest' for turning their backs on the
mayor and participating in a slowdown. Maher, who claims he supports the
police, lambasted the NYPD for what he called a 'virtual work stoppage
to teach Bill de Blasio a lesson for not saying he loves them enough.'
Acerbic-tongued comedian and HBO talk show host Bill Maher blasted the
NYPD and the city’s police unions Friday, calling cops “New York’s
Whiniest” for participating in a work slowdown and turning their backs
on Mayor de Blasio at funerals for two fallen officers.
“When did the NYPD start suffering from PMS?” Maher asked as he wrapped up his show “Real Time With Bill Maher.”
“Seriously, if our deal with the police is that we have to constantly
reassure them how much we love them unless they throw a tantrum, we're
not supporting them," he said. "We're dating them,"
Maher, who claims he supports the police, lambasted the NYPD for what
he called a “virtual work stoppage to teach Bill de Blasio a lesson for
not saying he loves them enough.”
“The cops were already furious with the mayor for not endorsing their
novel crime-prevention tactic of choking random citizens to death. But
purposely not doing your job? Turning your back to him at funerals? What
did de Blasio do — get caught in a video with Ice Cube singing f--- the
police?”
Maher admitted that the cops have a dirty job — but, hey, they volunteered for it, he said.
“It’s like a proctologist coming home every night, saying, ‘I can’t
believe I have to look at a------- all day,” Maher said. “I do support
the police and I understand their job is to look at a------- all day,
but something outrageous has been going on in the Big Apple in the last
couple of weeks.”
Mahrer referred to recent police actions that have outraged the public and led to protests across the nation.
Thousands of demonstrators have taken to the streets in the weeks since
a grand jury decided not to indict NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo in the
chokehold death of Staten Island resident Eric Garner. The medical
examiner ruled Garner's death a homicide.
The decision not to indict came on the heels of a St. Louis County
grand jury declining to indict Ferguson, Mo., cop Darren Wilson, who
fatally shot the unarmed 18-year-old Michael Brown on Aug. 9.
In both cases, the officers were white and the men who died were black,
fueling long-simmering feelings of extreme bias toward and unequal
treatment of blacks.
The public outcry over police violence was bolstered again by the death
of Akai Gurley, 28, who was shot in an East New York stairwell by a
jumpy rookie cop on Nov. 20.
Just two days later, little Tamir Rice, 12, was killed while playing
with an airsoft gun in a Cleveland park. Video footage shows first-year
cop Timothy Loehmann pull up to the boy in a squad car and fire two
shots within two seconds, killing the boy.
“When did the police become infallible?” he asked. “No matter what they
do, they always say it was by the book. Put six slugs into an unarmed
man from the seat of their car? By the book. Strangle a handcuffed guy
to death? By the book. Kill a 12-year-old who had a toy gun? By the
book. Maybe they need to get a new book.”
“Who wrote this book, anyway, George Zimmerman?” he said.
Zimmerman was found not guilty of second-degree murder in the death of
17-year-old Trayvon Martin in 2012. Zimmerman, then 28, stalked Martin
after he deemed the teen suspicious-looking while he walking through a
Florida gated community where Zimmerman was a neighborhood watch
volunteer and Martin's father was a resident. A confrontation ultimately
erupted and Zimmerman shot the unarmed teen dead.
Maher then blamed the NYPD police unions for the work slowdown, adding, “This is why Americans hate unions now.”
“We should pay only as much attention to him as we would a comic
strip,” Sergeants Benevolent Association President Ed Mullins said
Saturday. “I’m not going to waste my time on him. There are many more
important things to do in this world.”
On Friday, Police Commissioner Bill Bratton admitted that the massive
drop in summons activity and the 66% falloff in arrests in the last two
weeks of 2014 constituted a work slowdown. But he said that's over.
Arrests and police activity were already picking up, he said.
Maher did note the NYPD’s drop in summonses produced a few benefits.
“It's a great time to visit new York, get drunk, stoned and urinate out the window of your double-parked car,” he said.
The controversial commentator has been criticized for his rants in the past.
On Wednesday, he drew attention for claiming that “hundreds of
millions” of Muslims supported the terror attack at a Paris newspaper
where 12 people were assassinated.
In October, actor Ben Affleck took the comedian to task during a taping
of “Real Time With Bill Maher” for his anti-Islam comments, which he
called “gross,” “racist” and “disgusting.” ON A MOBILE DEVICE? CLICK HERE TO WATCH THE VIDEO
The
article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New
York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column,
"The Borowitz Report."
ixty-four
unskilled workers will report to new jobs in Washington, D.C. on
Tuesday as part of a federal jobs program that provides employment for
people unable to find productive work elsewhere.
The new hires, who have no talents or abilities that
would make them employable in most workplaces, will be earning a
first-year salary of $174,000.
For that sum, the new employees will be expected to
work a hundred and thirty-seven days a year, leaving them with two
hundred and twenty-eight days of vacation.
Some critics have blasted the federal jobs program as
too expensive, noting that the workers were chosen last November in a
bloated and wasteful selection process that cost the nation nearly four
billion dollars.
But Davis Logsdon, a University of Minnesota economics
professor who specializes in labor issues, said that the program is
necessary to provide work “for people who honestly cannot find
employment anywhere else.”
“Expensive as this program is, it is much better to have these people in jobs than out on the street,” he said.
Sunday, January 4, 2015
A New York Police Department officer wore a black band across his badge on Sunday for the funeral of Officer Wenjian Liu.
Credit
Sam Hodgson for The New York Times
As thousands of police officers gathered in
Brooklyn to lay to rest Officer Wenjian Liu, who was killed last month,
scores of officers turned their backs on Mayor Bill de Blasio.
In a politically prudent move, Jeb Bush resigns as George W. Bush's brother. (photo: Jason Reed/Reuters)
By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker
2 January 15
The
article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New
York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column,
"The Borowitz Report."
n
the strongest sign to date that he intends to seek the 2016 Republican
Presidential nomination, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush has officially
resigned his position as George W. Bush’s brother.
“No longer being related to his brother is a key step
to clearing Jeb’s path to the nomination,” an aide said on New Year’s
Day. “We expect his poll numbers to soar on this.”
According to the aide, the former Florida governor
resigned his post as brother in a ten-minute phone call with George W.
Bush, after which he blocked the former President’s phone number and
e-mail address.
In an official statement, George W. Bush said that he “understands and supports” his former brother’s decision.
“If I were him, I would no longer be related to me either,” he said.
Representative Steve Scalise. (photo: Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call/Getty Images)
By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker
01 January 15
The
article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New
York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column,
"The Borowitz Report."
ouse
Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) said on Tuesday that he would
introduce a new bill requiring clearer labelling of white supremacists.
The White Supremacist Labelling Act of 2015 would
require white supremacists to wear 4-inch-by-6-inch name tags clearly
designating them as members of an official hate group.
“Right now, it’s impossible to tell the difference between neo-Nazis and collectors of WWII memorabilia,” Scalise said.
The Louisiana congressman said that proper labelling
for white supremacists should make it easier for lawmakers to know what
kind of organizations they are addressing in the future. “Sometimes it’s
hard to see through all that smoke from the burning crosses,” he
acknowledged.
Mario M. Cuomo, a gifted orator who flirted with
running for president, saw his son Andrew follow in his footsteps as
governor of New York. He was 82. Continue reading the main storySlide Show
Mr. Cuomo, who died Thursday, was an unassuming lawyer who
emerged as the Great Compromiser after the columnist Jimmy Breslin
lionized him as a local hero.