Roberto Abraham Scaruffi

Monday, 27 April 2015


 Daily Headlines
How Are You Feeling About Obama After He's Called Progressives And E. Warren Liars?
By Rob Kall
I'm curious how you're feeling about our president, Barack Obama, lately.
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Rise of the New Black Radicals
By Chris Hedges
The emerging revolt, although it comes in many colors, speaks many languages and has many belief systems, is united around a common enemy. Bonds of solidarity and consciousness are swiftly uniting the wretched of the earth against our corporate masters.
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 Mirena Interuterine Devices can cause Depression, Mood swings, Acne, Back Pain, Uterine Cysts, and Uterine Perforations
By Stephen Fox
A shocking quick look at the documented medical effects of this ghastly dangerous device, which should be enough to get millions of women to demand that their IUD be removed, and that the FDA rescind its approval for this horror story!
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Insanity Grips The Western World
By Paul Craig Roberts
Putin's response to Obama's claim of American superiority was: "God created us equal." Putin added: "It is extremely dangerous to encourage people to see themselves as exceptional, whatever the motivation."
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The IRS Is Investigating The Koch Brothers' Illegal Tax-Deductions Denying Climate Change
There are myriad reasons why someone has intense hostility towards, and aversion to, a person or thing that typically derives from fear, anger, or a sense of personal injury. The particular "thing" that conservatives, particularly the Republican-libertarian conservatives, loathe more than America's most dangerous enemies is the government and its various agencies; especially those tasked with enforcing laws and regulations. The two men who wield ultimate control over the conservative movement and own the Republican Congress, Charles and David Koch, certainly hate the government, but they have particular antipathy for two agencies they believe are "despotic" and illegal simply because they exist and are not under Koch brother control.
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 Christian Appy: From the Fall of Saigon to Our Fallen Empire
By Tom Engelhardt
If our wars in the Greater Middle East ever end, it's a pretty safe bet that they will end badly -- and it won't be the first time. The "fall of Saigon" in 1975 was the quintessential bitter end to a war. Oddly enough, however, we've since found ways to reimagine that denouement which miraculously transformed a failed and brutal war of American aggression into a tragic humanitarian rescue mission.
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Rubio, Rubio, Wherefore Art Thou Rubio? The Non-Romance Of LGBT Equality In The Last Week
By Rev. Dan Vojir
Marco Rubio. Salvatore Cordileone. Rick Perry. Rand Paul. Ted Cruz. All were in the news showing that they can no more lean to the left on gay rights than they have in the past.
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Why So Many Americans Feel So Powerless
By Robert Reich
Our economy and society depend on most people feeling the system is working for them. But a growing sense of powerlessness in all aspects of our lives -- as workers, consumers, and voters -- is convincing most people the system is working only for those at the top.
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Carter Going to Gaza for Fatah-Hamas Talks
By James Wall
The fact that Benjamin Netanyahu refuses to meet with an ex-U.S. president, and prevents any of Israel's leaders with even a courtesy visit with Carter, is but one more sign of Israeli disdain of any and all, who do not embrace Netanyahu's vision of Israel's exceptionalism. Beginning with his meetings in Gaza Thursday, Carter plows ahead, ignoring Netanyahu's insults.
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Radio Station WIBC Admits The 'Real' Reason They Are Dumping GOP Extremist Rush Limbaugh
By Daily Kos
This is sweet.
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An Electronic Silent Spring April, 2015 Newsletter from Katie Singer
By Katie Singer
An Electronic Silent Spring
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Postcard from the End of America: Silicon Valley
By Linh Dinh
In spite of mud slides, wild fires and many blase places like Bakersfield and Fresno, California still captures the imagination of not just Americans, but foreigners. Much of California, though, is no tropical paradise but a desert that's running out of water, and its fresh water crisis has become so severe, it has made salient a hushed up concept, namely the fact that there are limits to growth, and that all resources can bec
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 Humans ARE social beings! Real humans need to speak more and speak louder.
The shift in tone also comes as McDonald's sales falter at its U.S. stores. Same-store sales slipped 1.5 percent during the most recent fiscal quarter, and the company is having a tough time appealing to millennials. Since 2011, the number of 19- to 21-year-olds who visited a McDonald's each month has dropped by 12.9 percentage points, as the demographic flocks to fast-casual chains like Chipotle and Five Guys, according to data the restaurant consulting group Technomic gathered for The Wall Street Journal. [...]
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"Clinton Cash" Author Defends Upcoming Book
The author of a forthcoming book on Hillary Clinton and foreign donations made to her family's foundation defended the accuracy of his research, saying in an interview on ABC's "This Week" today that while he found "no direct evidence" she took official action at the State Department to benefit donors to her family's foundation, the "smoking gun is in the pattern of behavior," he said, later adding, "You either have to come to the conclusion that these are all coincidences or something else is afoot."
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 Does It Make Any Difference How New Testament Texts Are Translated into English? (REVIEW ESSAY)
By Thomas Farrell
Progressives and liberals are aware of the influence of the Christian right. Christians of all stripes are interested in the Christian scriptures. But Willis Barnstone claims that the Christian scriptures are guilty of identity theft by robbing Rabbi Yeshua of his Aramaic name and Jewish cultural context. So Barnstone has published a new poetic translation, THE RESTORED NEW TESTAMENT, with an accessible commentary.
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Obama's drone warfare: Assassination made routine
By Patrick Martin
There is no challenge to the basic premise of the drone missile program: that the CIA and Pentagon have the right to kill any individual, in any country, on the mere say-so of the president. Drone murder by the US government has become routine and is accepted as normal and legitimate by the official shapers of public opinion.
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2015 Women's Walk For Peace In Korea
By Press Release
The unresolved Korean conflict gives all governments in the region justification to further militarize and prepare for war, depriving funds for schools, hospitals, and the welfare of the people and the environment. That's why women are walking for peace, to reunite families, and end the state of war in Korea.
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Expediency over Science: Oklahoma's Lethal Injection Protocol Reflects a Step Backwards
By C. Hwang
Why States' Rationale for Lethal Injection as 'Humane' Form of Death is Illogical
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 Another Nail in the Coffin -- "Clinton Cash"
By Scot Srodes
Reforming the political economy
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Marco Rubio's politics mark a man of yesterday
By Quiana Fulton
Sen. Marco Rubio has made his aspirations clear, he wants to be the next President of The United States. In his speech he claimed Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton policies and politics are of yesterday and yesterday is over. But the facts show that in-fact Sen. Rubio politics are from yesterday no Hillary's.
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Exclusive: Uncommon costs; by Claude Solnik, LIBN
How the company behind Common Core took over a nation's testing and cashed in. Diane Ravitch writes that this This is one of the best articles you will read about Common Core and testing. It appears in the Long Island Business News. It shows the big business of testing, with a focus on Pearson.
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Greek-Russia ties bloom as default looms
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller agreed last week on a "roadmap" for a multi-billion dollar pipeline project to transport gas from Russia to Greece. The long-term plan is a further sign of warming geopolitical ties between Athens and Moscow, at a moment when the Greek economic crisis appears to be worsening. In effect, Greece is now engaged in a very high stakes game of poker. It has issued a legislative decree to tap pockets of cash reserves across the public sector and has reportedly made plans to potentially nationalize the banking sector and introduce a parallel currency to pay bills in the event its cash reserves are exhausted.
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George W. Bush Bashes Obama on Middle East
In a closed-door meeting with Jewish donors on Saturday night, former President George W. Bush delivered his harshest public criticisms to date against his successor on foreign policy, saying that President Barack Obama is being naïve about Iran and the pending nuclear deal and losing the war against the Islamic State. "In order to be an effective president ... when you say something you have to mean it," he said. "You gotta kill em." For George W. Bush, the remarks in Vegas showed he has little respect for how the current president is running the world. He also revealed that he takes little responsibility for the policies that he put in place that contributed to the current state of affairs.
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Quake-Aid Need Acute In Nepal Capital; More So In Villages
Shelter, fuel, food, medicine, power, news, workers - Nepal's earthquake-hit capital was short on everything Monday as its people searched for lost loved ones, sorted through rubble for their belongings and struggled to provide for their families' needs. In much of the countryside, it was worse, though how much worse was only beginning to become apparent. The death toll soared past 3,700, even without a full accounting from vulnerable mountain villages that rescue workers were still struggling to reach two days after the disaster.
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5 years after BP spill, drillers push into riskier depths
Five years after the nation's worst offshore oil spill, the industry is working on drilling even further into the risky depths beneath the Gulf of Mexico to tap massive deposits once thought unreachable. Opening this new frontier, miles below the bottom of the Gulf, requires engineering feats far beyond those used at BP's much shallower Macondo well.
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Nepal Earthquake Death Toll Tops 3,000
The death toll from Nepal's earthquake rose to 3,218 on Monday, two days after the massive quake ripped across this Himalayan nation, leaving tens of thousands shell-shocked and sleeping in streets. Aid groups received the first word from remote mountain villages -- reports that suggested many communities perched on mountainsides were devastated or struggling to cope. The earthquake was the worst to hit the South Asian nation in more than 80 years. It destroyed swaths of the oldest neighborhoods of Kathmandu and was strong enough to be felt all across parts of India, Bangladesh, China's region of Tibet and Pakistan.
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 Your Wallet Speaks Louder than Words--and why we all should use it!
Here's where the IBJ piece was a little different. Emmis' local market manager, Charlie Morgan, alluded the mega company's decision to drop Limbaugh was much more than a simple change - and they have been contemplating this move for 18 months.
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Flood of Money in U.S. Election Is a Scandal Waiting to Happen
The role of money and politics in the 2016 presidential election is a conundrum. There will be humongous sums spent; the effect on the outcome could be minimal, but in time the flood of cash may produce Watergate-level money scandals. All of the top contenders have the backing of billionaires who seem willing to spend unprecedented sums on their campaigns, principally via the super PACs, which have no contribution limits; these entities are supposed to be independent of the campaign, a fiction that no one believes. There will be vast amounts of independent expenditures on both sides; the network of Charles and David Koch, the right-wing multi-billionaires, is planning to spend almost $900 million.
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Madam Secretary: We Have Some Questions
Clinton's comments in support of middle class America represent a decidedly populist tenor, and those noises she's making sound awfully good to battle-weary political junkies desperate to oppose the presidential spokesmen of the wealthy elites in the Republican Party. On the other hand, both Clintons appear to be captives of the same economic class Liberals seek to contain, and the sourcing of funds for the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation while she was Secretary of State becomes more scandalous by the minute. In addition, Hillary Clinton voted for the war in Iraq and is on record as being more "hawkish" in pursuing foreign policy than President Obama.
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 Latest Articles
 His initiation
New poem by Thiscantbehappening resident poet
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 Best News Links from the Web
Report: Big education firms spend millions lobbying for pro-testing policies; by By Valerie Strauss, The Washington Post
Lobbying has helped fuel a nearly 2 billion testing industry.The four corporations that dominate the U.S. standardized testing market spend millions of dollars lobbying state and federal officials -- as well as sometimes hiring them -- to persuade them to favor policies that include mandated student assessments, helping to fuel a nearly $2 billion annual testing business, a new analysis shows. The analysis, done by the Center for Media and Democracy, a nonprofit liberal watchdog and advocacy agency based in Wisconsin that tracks corporate influence on public policy, says that four companies -- Pearson Education, ETS (Educational Testing Service), Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, and McGraw-Hill-- collectively spent more than $20 million lobbying in states and on Capitol Hill from 2009 to 2014....
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US Secretary of State Kerry to meet with Iran foreign minister Monday
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry will meet with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on Monday in New York, a senior State Department official said on Sunday. The meeting on the sidelines of the five-year review conference on the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty that begins on Monday will come as the United States and five other global powers try to secure a final nuclear deal with Iran by a June 30 deadline. Kerry will also meet on Monday with Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh and Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry, the State Department official said.
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If Greece falls, no one wants their prints on the murder weapon
"We're going bust." "No, you're not." "You're strangling us." "No we're not." "You owe us for World War Two." "We gave already." The game of chicken between Greece and its international creditors is turning into a vicious blame game as Athens lurches closer to bankruptcy with no cash-for-reform agreement in sight. Europe's political leaders and central bankers and Greek politicians agree on only one thing: if Greece goes down, they don't want their fingerprints on the murder weapon. If Athens runs out of cash and defaults in the coming weeks, as seems increasingly possible, no one wants to be accused of having pushed it over the edge or failed to try to save it.
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