BenQ BL2405PT 24-Inch Full HD Monitor Introduced

BenQ BL2405PT

Here we have a new 24-inch Full HD monitor from BenQ, the BL2405PT. Designed especially for the business environment, this flicker-free 24-inch TN LED-backlight monitor supports a native resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels and provides 1000:1 contrast ratio, 250 cd/m2 brightness and 170/160 degree viewing angles.

Certified by Energy Star 7.0 and TCO 7.0 to facilitate environment-friendly purchasing decisions for business, government and institutional deployment, the BL2405PT comes with a height adjustment stand (HAS) and built-in stereo speakers (2Wx2), and provides 1x D-Sub, 1x HDMI and 1x DisplayPort input ports. Unfortunately, there’s no word on pricing yet. [Product Page]

The post BenQ BL2405PT 24-Inch Full HD Monitor Introduced appeared first on TechFresh, Consumer Electronics Guide.

Third Oakland Police Chief Out In Just Over A Week

By Curtis Skinner

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – The troubled police force in Oakland, California, saw its third police chief resign in just over a week on Friday as investigations into sexual misconduct and racist text messages continued to roil the department.

Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf told a Friday evening news conference that acting police chief Paul Figueroa resigned his duties, a mere two days after he was appointed to replace Ben Fairow as the department’s top cop.

“I want to assure the citizens of Oakland that we are hell-bent on rooting out this disgusting culture,” Schaaf said angrily, calling the environment in the department “toxic” and “macho.”

 Schaaf has declined to provide details about the ongoing investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct against the department, claiming that releasing information could impede the probe and possible charges.

The local East Bay Express newspaper reported last Friday that as many as 21 officers from the Oakland police department and other area law enforcement agencies had sex with a teenage sex worker, including some while she was underage.

The newspaper based its report on interviews with the woman, elected officials, Oakland police sources as well as documents. Other media outlets have since published similar accounts.

Schaaf did acknowledge on Friday that an unrelated investigation was underway into the sharing of racist text messages by some black officers. Local broadcaster NBC Bay Area reported some of the messages contained racial slurs and images of the Ku Klux Klan.

Schaaf said she would not appoint another acting chief and command staff would instead report to City Administrator Sabrina Landreth.

“I feel that this is an appropriate time to place civilian oversight over this police department,” she said.

Former Oakland Police Chief Sean Whent, who had headed the department since May 2013 and was heralded by Schaaf for recent declines in shootings and murders, resigned last Thursday. Schaaf declined to elaborate on the move aside from saying Whent made a “personal choice.”

Schaaf replaced Whent with Ben Fairow, but changed course and removed him on Wednesday, saying only that she received “information” that made her question whether he could lead the department.

The news comes just days after the release of a Stanford University study on the department, which found that African American men were four times more likely to be searched during police traffic stops than whites and were more likely to be handcuffed even if they were not arrested.

(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Richard Pullin)

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'No Man's Sky' developer ends 'legal nonsense' battle over name

There’s no sign that it contributed to the delay, but Hello Games founder Sean Murray said today that after “3 years of secret stupid legal nonsense,” his company’s game can be called No Man’s Sky. They had to settle with trademark owner Sky TV to us…

Tablo's live TV and DVR features now work on the Apple TV

During CES Tablo promised its $200 box that tunes into and records OTA TV would eventually get an Apple TV app, and now it has delivered. It already works with boxes like Roku and Fire TV, and on the Apple TV it’s brought both live TV and DVR viewing…

Pro-Uber Austin politician sues to abolish fingerprint rule

Uber and Lyft have found a friend in Austin City Council Member Donald Zimmerman. The pro-ridesharing politician has filed a lawsuit against the mayor in an effort to overturn the rule requiring drivers to undergo fingerprint background checks. If yo…

Panasonic’s New P75 Android 5.1 Smartphone With Huge 5000mAh Battery

Panasonic P75

Panasonic has launched their newest Android 5.1 smartphone namely the P75. Coming in Sand Black and Champagne Gold color options, this budget-minded smartphone features a 5.0-inch 1280 x 720 HD display, a 1.3GHz quad-core MediaTek MT6580 processor, a Mali 400 MP2 GPU, a 1GB RAM and an 8GB of expandable internal storage (up to 32GB).

Measuring 8.95mm thick and weighing 157 grams, the handset packs a 5MP front-facing camera, an 8MP rear-facing camera with dual LED flash and dual SIM card slots.

Powered by a huge 5000mAh battery, the P75 provides 3G, WiFi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0 and GPS for connectivity, and runs on Android 5.1 Lollipop OS with Sail UI on top. The Panasonic P75 is priced at just Rs. 5,990 (about $89). [FoneArena]

The post Panasonic’s New P75 Android 5.1 Smartphone With Huge 5000mAh Battery appeared first on TechFresh, Consumer Electronics Guide.

A Bedlington Terrier

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For some strange reason, on more than one occasion, people have confused me for someone who is mentally challenged. I say this with the utmost respect for those with mental challenges and apologize for any insult they may experience by being unceremoniously lumped in the same category as me.

I like to think it is because I have managed to retain my childlike wonder at the simple things in life that others take for granted.

When I began dating my first husband, Mike lived in a guest house behind a very old house in Hollywood. Beneath his tiny cottage lived a family of baby skunks and their mother.

If you have never seen a baby skunk, you will not understand the overwhelming urge we had to call for them at night so we could take in their unbelievable cuteness.

It is very important to treat a baby skunk with the gentleness one would a kitten, so its mother doesn’t come out and spray you. Thus, as softly and endearingly as we could, we would call “Here kitty, kitty, kitty,” and more often than not the baby skunks would emerge and visit us.

As time passed we began to say “Here kitty, kitty, kitty,” every time we saw a cute animal no matter what its species or age. And it became part of our personal intimate vocabulary.

One morning, Mike and I were having brunch at an upscale café in Santa Monica that we frequently patronized. The food was delicious and it was bright and airy because of the floor to ceiling windows.

As I gazed out the window, I noticed a dog that looked exactly like a baby lamb, tethered to a tree right outside the café. I was filled with delight and elation, causing my voice to become high and unstable.

“Mike, look at that dog out there! It looks like a baby lamb! It’s soooo cute!”

I began calling toward the window, “Here kitty, kitty, kitty.”

It was then that I noticed the well-dressed, immaculately groomed woman at the table next to ours, watching me with an expression of pity, compassion and eagerness.

“Oh, that’s my dog.” She spoke slowly and deliberately and I thought perhaps she may have had a recent stroke.

“What kind of dog is it?” My voice was still high and unstable from my near hysteria at seeing the cutest dog ever in the history of the world.

The woman leaned in closer to me and looked at me intently. “It’s a Bedlington Terrier,” she said even more slowly and deliberately than before, emphasizing each syllable.

I was now starting to grin at her like an idiot because I was confused and a little disoriented by her strange demeanor.

She looked at me even more closely and said, “Bed-ling-ton. I know. That’s a hard one.”

By this time, Mike had paid the check and we began to leave. As we approached the door, it finally became clear to me what had just transpired.

“Mike! That woman thought I was…”

He replied in a resigned yet sympathetic tone, “I know, Honey. I know.”

Photo courtesy of David Owsiany-Boutchie apres championnat 004.JPG Wikimedia
This story first appeared in “The Coffeelicious” on Medium.com

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Changing the Politics of Guns

We are in the middle of our recurring national nightmare. We would like to wake up and make it go away, but we can’t. Incomprehensible carnage from the barrel of a gun. Impassioned demands for action to be taken by those we elect to protect us. Political intimidation by the gun lobby. The defeat of common sense gun restrictions in Congress. The certainty that we will live this nightmare again and again. Unless we change the politics of guns.

Given the apparent inevitability that Congress will fail to take meaningful action in the wake of the most deadly mass shooting in American history, it may be difficult to rise above the despair. But there are signs that gun control is gaining in political viability. The Democratic Party finally has stopped running from the gun issue. It was not long ago that leading Democratic strategists like James Carville and Paul Begala advised Party leaders that the gun issue is not worth the political risk. It was during the first Obama Administration that Congressional Democrats, when they were in charge, resisted efforts to move gun legislation in a futile effort to protect the “Blue Dogs” in districts perceived to be hostile to gun restrictions. For the Democrats, it all changed after Newtown. The slaughter of six-year-olds quickly made political risk a secondary consideration.

For the first time since the Clinton Presidency, the Democratic Party seems to be “all in” for stronger gun laws. President Obama’s eloquence on the gun issue has been unparalleled. There is no doubt that Hillary Clinton’s passion on the issue is genuine, reflecting the commitment of her husband during his Presidency when his support helped to pass both the Brady Bill and the assault weapons ban. It should not be forgotten that President Clinton ensured that Jim and Sarah Brady would appear in prime time at the Democratic Convention in 1996.

Perhaps nothing illustrates the post-Newtown change in Democratic Party attitudes toward gun control more powerfully than the constant beating Bernie Sanders has taken from Hillary Clinton over his votes against the Brady Bill and in favor of special legal protection for the gun industry. Sanders has been constantly on the defensive on the gun issue. It sends a message to other Democratic candidates and office-holders: regardless of how progressive you are on other issues, if you pander to the NRA, you will suffer political pain. It is the mirror image of the long-time political reality for Republican candidates: you can be conservative on every other issue, but if you cross the NRA, you will pay a price. Whether the Republican reality begins to weaken may depend on the political fortunes of Senator Pat Toomey (R-Pa.), who is running for reelection this year and was a devoted NRA disciple until after Newtown, when he co-sponsored a universal background check bill with Senator Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), himself a previously ardent gun rights supporter. That two previously NRA A-rated Senators sponsored a meaningful gun control measure is another indication that the gun issue is not the political third rail for as many politicians as it used to be.

For all those hopeful signs, though, the U.S. Senate is poised to defeat, yet again, legislation to bar people on the terrorist watch list from buying guns, as well as universal background checks. It’s clear that the politics of guns still must change if the NRA is to be stripped of its veto power over gun legislation. What must happen?

At the core of the problem is the so-called “intensity gap,” that is, the perception by the political class that opponents of gun laws feel more intensely about the issue, and are motivated to engage in various forms of activism and political activity more frequently, than supporters of gun laws. Surveys show that gun control opponents are far more likely than gun control supporters to give money, contact a public official, express an opinion on a social networking site, or sign a petition than gun control supporters. A 2014 Yale University survey showed that among voters who thought gun laws should be less strict, 71 percent said they would never vote for a political candidate who did not share their position on gun control, compared with just 34 percent of those who support stricter gun laws. This gap is ameliorated to some degree by the fact that far more Americans favor making our gun laws more strict than favor weakening them, but nevertheless the perception remains strong that pro-gun partisans will “vote” the issue, whereas gun control partisans will not.

President Obama recognized the problem in expressing his frustration that Congress would not act during his Administration to strengthen gun laws. In January of this year, he declared his intention to become a “single-issue” voter on guns, writing in the New York Times that he would no longer support candidates who do not support “common-sense gun reform.” He challenged other gun law supporters to do the same.

Unless this “intensity gap” can be narrowed, the politics of guns is likely to remain a stalemate. There are reasons for hope. After Newtown, there was an explosion of gun control activism, with existing organizations energized and new organizations forming. From my perspective outside the gun control movement, it appears that, three years after Newtown, the level of activism remains at levels far higher than before Newtown. It is a new and firmer foundation to build on.
Too many politicians, particularly in swing suburban areas, believe that the gun issue carries political risk only if they vote against the NRA. A growing army of passionate, committed gun control voters can convince them otherwise.

How many of us will heed President’s Obama’s call?

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Sue Paterson and 'Bursting Into Life' at Hollywood's Montalban Theatre

Born in New Zealand and now living in Australia, painter and interior designer, Sue Paterson, has made her way to America, with her bright, naturalistic new art series in tow. Although Paterson is an avid traveler, taking inspiration from flora, fauna and architecture from wherever she visits, this is her premiere U.S. exhibition. Her collection, Bursting Into Life hones in on her meditative process, genuine attachment to nature and skills as a maestro of interiors.

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In pieces like Tree of Life and Orientique, Paterson uses her vastly open and colorful imagination to depict her ever-evolving visions while staying true to the belief that art has the potential to elevate and exhilarate one’s life. And that stays true for the viewers of her work as well.

“Luckily I have never experienced ‘artist’s block’,” Paterson explains. “I find inspiration everywhere I go, by watching people, or seeing a new terrain, everything sparks my imagination. The challenge lies in depicting what I see, whether it is in front of me or in my mind. I’ve grown up appreciating my surroundings and the magic that is rain forests, oceans and colors. Use of color and light are very important to me when it comes to composition. I believe colors can have an emotional impact on a viewer. I painted my Spice of Life piece so I could begin a painting with that powerful saffron orange.”

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No stranger to architecture and design, Paterson has a firm understanding of decor. She knows what looks good and where it looks best. As a visual artist and designer by trade, Bursting Into Life displays her visions of nature but the works also are designed not only to hang on walls. Whereas her art can be showcased traditionally, it is also what she describes as “functional art” As one piece in her new series, Paterson took her painting titled Wild Natives and transformed it into fabric on a chair; an everyday piece of furniture made into a work of art. With a prominent following of buyers, Paterson is building on this particular collection of turning her paintings into furniture and home furnishings, such as upholstery and lampstands.

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On June 21 2016, Paterson will be showcasing her series, Bursting Into Life at the legendary Montalban Theatre in Hollywood. The theatre, which has hosted both noteworthy performances and classic films since the 20’s, is holding the exhibition as its very first art show. Paterson is currently working on her own “quirky” depiction of the theatre itself, which she painted in the theatre’s gallery. 10% of sale proceeds will be going to the Gabriella Foundation which teaches dance to underprivileged children.

You can learn more about Sue Paterson by visiting her website and you can RSVP to the event here.

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Friday Talking Points — No Magic Phrases

Before we begin, we should mention that this week’s talking points section consists of a few extended excerpts from President Obama’s recent speech on fighting the Islamic State. What he had to say was important, and it counters several insidious talking points that have been used against him in the past, so we felt it was worth taking over this week’s talking points. Just to warn everyone up front.

Because these excerpts are longish, we’re going to once again have to punt on announcing the winners of our “what playground taunt should we call Donald Trump?” contest once again. Our apologies, and we swear we’ll get to it next week (granted, that’s what we said last week, but this time we really mean it).

We’re also going to have to review the week’s news in lighting fashion for an intro, because this column’s already approaching Brobdingnagian lengths. Well, maybe not, but it sure is fun to run “Brobdingnagian” through the old spell-checker, and we have to find our amusements where we will in this job. Ahem. Enough meandering, let’s just get on with it, shall we?

Of course, the tragic news from Orlando dominated the week’s media, as once again someone with easy access to military-style weaponry takes dozens of lives. According to Donald Trump and John McCain, this is all Barack Obama’s fault (of course). Personally, we think if you want to go back and point fingers, you’d have to include George W. Bush’s inability to get an agreement with the Iraqi government to keep American troops there (Obama was merely following Bush’s signed agreement, something McCain and all other Republicans seem to always conveniently forget), and we would even trace the real blame back to L. Paul Bremer’s infamous first order of his stewardship of Iraq, which disbanded the Iraqi army and led directly to all the Sunni insurgencies since. Put plainly, if de-Ba’athifying the army had never happened, then the Islamic State would never have happened. Which John McCain (at the very least) should well know.

Newt Gingrich had another one of his patented horribly bad ideas, but we already explained why earlier in the week, so we’ll just note it and move on. Thankfully, nobody else has picked up on the idea of resurrecting HUAAC.

The C.I.A. released some chilling documents detailing the torture it performed on prisoners (which included such phrases as “hung by the arms from the ceiling for almost a month” as well as one prisoner’s statement: “Doctors told me that I nearly died four times”). To its credit, the Washington Post ran an article about the new documents using a headline which included the clear and unequivocal phrase “C.I.A. Torture.”

Speaking of the Post, Donald Trump has now banned them from covering his rallies. In normal times, this would be shocking, but it’s pretty much par for the Trump course, these days.

Some Republicans are still dreaming about dethroning Trump at their convention. Aren’t they adorable, when they’re asleep and dreaming such lovely dreams? Awww….

Speaking of adorable, Little Marco Rubio has now apparently decided that he does want to stay in the Senate, after all. Since he was so vocal about how he’d never do such a thing (tweet from last month: “I have only said like 10000 times I will be a private citizen in January”), it won’t be very hard for Democrats to put together a few ads to remind voters of Rubio’s disdain for his current job.

A fanatic in Britain killed a member of Parliament while shouting an extreme right-wing slogan, and now it seems he was inspired by American neo-Nazi groups. This immediately brought a promise from Republicans to root out such domestic support of international terrorism… oh, wait, that didn’t actually happen, did it?

And finally, a nice comparison of two states, and the results of their experiments — on the left and right — as to how budgeting and tax policy really works in the real world (as opposed to “in conservative economists’ fantasies”). In California, taxes were raised on millionaires. In Kansas, taxes were raised on the poor and slashed for the wealthy. How’d all that work out?

California’s economy grew by 4.1 percent in 2015, according to new numbers from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, tying it with Oregon for the fastest state growth of the year. That was up from 3.1 percent growth for the Golden State in 2014, which was near the top of the national pack.

The Kansas economy, on the other hand, grew 0.2 percent in 2015. That’s down from 1.2 percent in 2014, and below neighboring states such as Nebraska (2.1 percent) and Missouri (1.2 percent). Kansas ended the year with two consecutive quarters of negative growth — a shrinking economy. By a common definition of the term, the state entered 2016 in recession.

The article also points out Kansas is on the brink of a big credit downgrade “indicating there is a chance the state cannot pay its bills.” Proof positive that trickle-down does not work (and indeed has never worked), and that raising taxes on the ultra-wealthy does not kill the economy one tiny little bit.

OK, that’s enough of a wrap-up, let’s move right along to the awards portion of our show.

 

Most Impressive Democrat Of The Week

We have two winners for this week’s Most Impressive Democrat Of The Week award, both for impressive feats of political theater.

The first goes to Representative Gwen Moore from Wisconsin. Because of Republican attempts to force welfare recipients to undergo drug testing (to prove their worthiness), Moore successfully flipped this debate on its head with her own proposal: welfare drug testing for rich people. From the story:

Moore’s bill would require a drug test for any tax filer who claims itemized deductions worth more than $150,000. So a wealthy guy who wants to write off massive amounts of mortgage interest would have to prove he’s not on drugs.

If taxpayers with more than $150,000 in deductions didn’t want to submit to a drug test, they could just use the standard deduction instead — meaning they’d pay a whole bunch more in taxes. This would only affect families which had roughly three times the average American family’s income in deductions alone, so it wouldn’t affect many folks out there. And if the sacred principle is that government helping people out financially requires drug testing, then why not?

Moore explained further what led her to make the proposal:

Moore told The Guardian her most direct inspiration for the proposal, which is unlikely to become law, came from House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), who unveiled his poverty policy agenda last week at a drug and alcohol treatment center in southeast Washington.

“When he stood in front of a drug treatment center and rolled out his anti-poverty initiative, pushing this narrative that poor people are drug addicts, that was the last straw,” Moore said.

We’ve always been a big believer that the way to point out Republican hypocrisy is in the most scathingly ironic method possible, because that’s really the only way to get anyone talking about the inherent contradictions in conservative ideology. If drug testing is going to be required for government benefits, why wouldn’t we test those who are receiving the highest dollar amounts of such benefits? Brilliant!

While our first MIDOTW salutes a bill that is likely never going to become law, we also have to salute a senator who pushed as hard as he could to move towards actually passing meaningful legislation. Democrat Chris Murphy of Connecticut led the ninth-longest filibuster in American history this week, to force the Republican-led Senate to allow votes on two gun control bills from Democrats. Newtown is in Connecticut, making this a very personal subject for Murphy.

Murphy lasted until two in the morning, or almost 15 straight hours. In the end, he won — he got Mitch McConnell to agree to bring up the Democratic bills, possibly as early as Monday. That is pretty downright impressive, seeing as how filibusters rarely actually achieve their goals.

Now, this doesn’t mean that either bill is going to pass. The first would ban people on the official watchlist of suspected terrorists from buying guns. Given the existence of such watchlists, it seems a reasonable thing to do — why should someone who is not allowed on a plane be allowed to buy a semi-automatic weapon? We have our doubts about the constitutionality of such lists in the first place (discussed earlier in the week) ourselves, but if we’re going to have such a list it certainly isn’t all that big a step to refusing them permission to buy weaponry.

The second would require background checks for all gun purchases, even those taking place online or at gun shows. This concept is overwhelmingly supported by the American public, but the National Rifle Association has so far been successful at blocking the idea.

As I said, even though Murphy secured a vote for these two measures, neither is likely to pass, making his filibuster an act of political theater. But again, we love a good bit of political theater, especially when it is even partially effective in moving the public debate at large.

Republicans have a crafty way to avoid paying a political price on the first measure — they’ve got their own proposal which seems to ban suspected terrorists from buying guns, but it is in fact so weak that nobody would likely ever be denied as a result (current stats show that people on these watchlists are already successful at buying guns nine times out of ten, it bears mentioning). This way, Republicans can counter Democratic political ads about “voting to allow suspected terrorists to buy guns,” by saying in response: “I voted for the Republican version, which protected innocent Americans’ Second Amendment rights.” As we said, crafty.

But perhaps the tide is very slowly turning. During and immediately after the filibuster, there was actually some talk across the aisle of creating a bipartisan bill on the watchlist problem. These talks quickly broke down, and did not result in any meaningful compromise. But they took place — which is more than has happened in the past. So maybe there’s hope, although likely not before an intervening election.

Gun control may not be as toxic politically as it was in the past for Democrats, with every passing massacre Americans are forced to witness. This week — whether legislatively successful or not — Senator Chris Murphy moved that debate forward in a big way. By (literally) standing his ground for 15 hours, he at least forced a Senate vote on two gun control measures that never would have seen the light of day otherwise. That is incredibly impressive, which is why he also is a winner this week of the coveted MIDOTW award.

[Congratulate Representative Gwen Moore on her House contact page, and Senator Chris Murphy on his Senate contact page, to let them know you appreciate their efforts.]

 

Most Disappointing Democrat Of The Week

Sadly, we have to hand this week’s Most Disappointing Democrat Of The Week to Senator Bernie Sanders.

On Tuesday, the final primary (Washington D.C.) of the 2016 season happened. Bernie lost it, by an overwhelming margin. He met that day with Hillary Clinton, which was reminiscent of her face-to-face meeting with Barack Obama a few days after the final 2008 primary. But Clinton emerged from that meeting eight years ago and started working on her concession speech, which she gave four days after the primary season closed. This was her famous “18 million cracks in the glass ceiling” speech, in case anyone’s forgotten.

Bernie, on the other hand, met with Clinton for 90 minutes and then gave an online speech of his own two days later. He hit all the high points of his agenda during this speech, but fell short in one big respect:

Bernie Sanders profusely thanked his supporters. He said he looked forward to working with Hillary Clinton to advance key issues. And he urged like-minded followers to run for state and local offices so they can continue the “political revolution” he began.

In short, during his 23-minute speech live-streamed across the country, Sanders sounded very much like a candidate prepared to drop out of the Democratic presidential race. But the senator from Vermont pulled up short Thursday night, neither conceding the party’s nomination nor endorsing Clinton in the general election.

“The major political task that together we face in the next five months is to make certain that Donald Trump is defeated and defeated badly,” Sanders said of the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. “And I personally intend to begin my role in that process in a very short period of time.”

But “defeating Trump cannot be our only goal,” Sanders cautioned, speaking from his home town of Burlington, Vt.

We find this disappointing.

Bernie is trying to walk a tightrope here, between not being called a “sellout” by his supporters, and not looking like a spoiler to everyone else. He’s stopped talking about winning over the superdelegates and wresting the nomination from Clinton at the convention. He knows this isn’t going to happen. He is trying to exert as much influence as he can over the party platform and the future of the party as a whole, and we do understand that.

But the choice has now become a binary one. Either vote for Clinton in November, or run the risk Donald Trump will actually be president. Those are the only two choices left. Voting third party or writing in Bernie’s name may make some of his followers feel better, but depending on how close that voter’s state is, it could run the risk of President Trump. There’s no other way to see it now.

This year, especially, we have seen some awfully artful language from Republicans on the subject of the precise definition of the word “endorsement.” They’ve had to dance over these metaphoric hot coals already. So there are examples for Bernie to follow to offer even a half-hearted endorsement of Clinton: “I cannot let Donald Trump become president and thus even though I do not fully endorse her agenda I will be voting for Secretary Clinton in November.”

That’s all Bernie needed to say in his video speech. But, for once, Bernie is the one resorting to lawyerly hair-splitting language: “I personally intend to begin my role in that process in a very short period of time.” What the heck is that supposed to mean? Bernie’s role — whether he likes it or not — in the process of the Democratic nomination is now to fight for inclusion of his ideas in the platform, but also to support the only viable candidate who can defeat Trump in the fall.

Bernie already got an extra week. It was crystal clear after the California and New Jersey primaries that Hillary Clinton had won the Democratic nomination by every measure. D.C. voted a week later, which gave Bernie some time to adjust to this reality. Then he met one-on-one with Clinton for a long discussion. The fact that he still can’t bring himself to offer even a half-hearted endorsement of Clinton now, though, is disappointing. The choice for Bernie now is: work to get Hillary Clinton elected, or run the risk of President Trump. So far, he has not made up his mind, which — even though we agreed with almost everything Bernie had to say in his video speech — is disappointing. So much as it pains us to say it, Bernie was our MDDOTW award-winner this week.

[Contact Senator Bernie Sanders on his Senate contact page, to let him know what you think of his actions.]

 

Friday Talking Points

Volume 396 (6/17/16)

We started today intending to point out one important thing Obama said this week, but when we read the full transcript, we decided to just do away with the talking points altogether to focus on a few excerpts from the speech. If this disappoints you and you still crave some anti-Trump talking points, you could always check out what his fellow Republicans have been saying — just in the past week, mind you — about Trump’s reaction to the Orlando shooting. Some of them are as snarky as anything we could dream up, so that should satisfy anyone looking for our usual fare here.

President Obama actually gave two short speeches this week which merited attention. The first is the one we’re focusing on, where he addressed the press corps right after a previously-scheduled meeting on the Islamic State situation. But later in the week, Obama spoke again after meeting with the victims’ families down in Florida, where he further expressed his frustration at the lack of political will on gun control and the fact that he has had to be “mourner-in-chief” far too many times. This speech was also well worth reading, but we’re concentrating on the earlier one instead.

Obama began by accurately portraying the state of the fight against the Islamic State (which he calls “ISIL”) — something usually missing in media reports on the fighting. The past year has truly been a turning point in the fight, at least against the “Caliphate” they’ve proclaimed for themselves on the ground in Iraq and Syria. In Iraq, the Islamic State has lost roughly half the ground it used to hold, and has lost all its battles. Anbar province is almost completely clear of the Islamic State, as Iraqi forces have retaken city after city. The only area left to clear is a border crossing and a few surrounding towns. That’s a major accomplishment, seeing as how a little over a year ago the Islamic State was essentially on the doorstep of Baghdad and held almost the entire province. Mosul — the biggest battle of the war, most likely — remains to be cleared in the north, but Iraq has so far seen steady progress without a single reversal of fortune.

Syria hasn’t been as much of a success story, but even there some incremental progress is being made by the various groups fighting the Islamic State (while also fighting each other, which certainly doesn’t help). Here is Obama’s overview of all the recent progress, from the official transcript:

At the outset, I want to reiterate our objective in this fight. Our mission is to destroy ISIL. Since I last updated the American people on our campaign two months ago, we’ve seen that this continues to be a difficult fight — but we are making significant progress. Over the past two months, I’ve authorized a series of steps to ratchet up our fight against ISIL: additional U.S. personnel, including Special Forces, in Syria to assist local forces battling ISIL there; additional advisors to work more closely with Iraqi security forces, and additional assets, including attack helicopters; and additional support for local forces in northern Iraq. Our aircraft continue to launch from the USS Harry Truman, now in the Mediterranean. Our B-52 bombers are hitting ISIL with precision strikes. Targets are being identified and hit even more quickly — so far, 13,000 airstrikes. This campaign at this stage is firing on all cylinders.

And as a result, ISIL is under more pressure than ever before. ISIL continues to lose key leaders. This includes Salman Abd Shahib, a senior military leader in Mosul; Abu Sa’ad al-Sudani, who plotted external attacks; Shakir Wahayb, ISIL’s military leader in Iraq’s Anbar province; and Maher al-Bilawi, the top ISIL commander in Fallujah. So far, we’ve taken out more than 120 top ISIL leaders and commanders. And our message is clear: If you target America and our allies, you will not be safe. You will never be safe.

ISIL continues to lose ground in Iraq. In the past two months, local forces in Iraq, with coalition support, have liberated the western town of Rutbah and have also pushed up the Euphrates River Valley, liberating the strategic town of Hit and breaking the ISIL siege of Haditha. Iraqi forces have surrounded Fallujah and begun to move into the city. Meanwhile, in the north, Iraqi forces continue to push up the Tigris River Valley, making gains around Makhmour, and now preparing to tighten the noose around ISIL in Mosul. All told, ISIL has now lost nearly half of the populated territory that it once controlled in Iraq — and it will lose more.

ISIL continues to lose ground in Syria as well. Assisted by our Special Operations Forces, a coalition of local forces is now pressuring the key town of Manbij, which means the noose is tightening around ISIL in Raqqa as well. In short, our coalition continues to be on offense. ISIL is on defense. And it’s now been a full year since ISIL has been able to mount a major successful offensive operation in either Syria or Iraq.

All of these points are almost never brought up during the coverage of the presidential race (or in any other context) in the mainstream media. The fight is slow, but the good guys have been winning for a while now. You’d think that would be news.

Obama then spoke of how the Islamic State’s finances have also been targeted, and made a plea for obstructionist Republicans to put America’s national security over their petty partisanship in the Senate:

In continuing to push on this front, I want to mention that it is critical for our friends in the Senate to confirm Adam Szubin, my nominee for Under Secretary of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence. Adam has served in Democratic and Republican administrations. Everyone agrees he’s eminently qualified. He has been working on these kinds of issues for years. It’s now been more than a year since I nominated him — more than 420 days — and he still has not been given a full vote. There is no good reason for it. It is inexcusable. So it’s time for the Senate to do its job, put our national security first, and have a vote on Adam Szubin that can lead our financial fight against ISIL and help keep our country safe.

Hint to Democrats looking for attack ads against sitting Republican senators: here’s a dandy issue for an ad! Political inactivity has consequences, for us all. Obama seems almost eager to get into the fray of the campaign himself these days, and his approval rating just keeps going up, so we’re looking forward to hearing more of this sort of thing in the weeks ahead.

But the real reason we decided to highlight this speech so heavily was when Obama started talking about a favorite bugaboo of Republicans everywhere, most recently regurgitated by Donald Trump: the “magic phrase” Obama refuses to use. Last year I wrote about this bizarre GOP concept:

There’s an ongoing debate about the phrase “Islamic terrorism” (or “radical Islam” or similar phrasings), where conservatives insist that if politicians (specifically President Obama) would merely use the correct phrase to describe things, it will somehow bestow magical benefits. “Did you hear President Obama today?” the jihadists would incredulously say to each other, “He actually used the term ‘radical Islamists’ to describe us! We must have won the battle of ideas, so there’s just no point in fighting on anymore. Here’s my AK-47, I’m going back to my home village to grow olives.” Although ridiculous, this is precisely what some Republicans seem to believe.

Finally, this week, Obama addressed this argument head-on and destroyed it once and for all. He absolutely knocked it out of the park. We thought it was a shame that when Obama’s remarks were reported on television news, they were always cut to a single short soundbite or two. Because Obama eloquently buried this ridiculousness forever, and he deserves credit for the breathtaking way he did so. So here is what Obama had to say, in full, to finish this week’s talking points section.

And let me make a final point. For a while now, the main contribution of some of my friends on the other side of the aisle have made in the fight against ISIL is to criticize this administration and me for not using the phrase “radical Islam.” That’s the key, they tell us — we can’t beat ISIL unless we call them “radical Islamists.” What exactly would using this label accomplish? What exactly would it change? Would it make ISIL less committed to trying to kill Americans? Would it bring in more allies? Is there a military strategy that is served by this? The answer is none of the above. Calling a threat by a different name does not make it go away. This is a political distraction. Since before I was president, I’ve been clear about how extremist groups have perverted Islam to justify terrorism. As president, I have repeatedly called on our Muslim friends and allies at home and around the world to work with us to reject this twisted interpretation of one of the world’s great religions.

There has not been a moment in my seven-and-a-half years as president where we have not been able to pursue a strategy because we didn’t use the label “radical Islam.” Not once has an advisor of mine said: “Man, if we really use that phrase, we’re going to turn this whole thing around.” Not once. So if someone seriously thinks that we don’t know who we’re fighting, if there’s anyone out there who thinks we’re confused about who our enemies are, that would come as a surprise to the thousands of terrorists who we’ve taken off the battlefield.

If the implication is that those of us up here and the thousands of people around the country and around the world who are working to defeat ISIL aren’t taking the fight seriously, that would come as a surprise to those who have spent these last seven-and-a-half years dismantling al Qaeda in the FATA [the tribal areas of Pakistan], for example — including the men and women in uniform who put their lives at risk and the Special Forces that I ordered to get bin Laden and are now on the ground in Iraq and in Syria. They know full well who the enemy is. So do the intelligence and law enforcement officers who spend countless hours disrupting plots and protecting all Americans, including politicians who tweet and appear on cable news shows. They know who the nature of the enemy is.

So there’s no magic to the phrase “radical Islam.” It’s a political talking point; it’s not a strategy. And the reason I am careful about how I describe this threat has nothing to do with political correctness and everything to do with actually defeating extremism. Groups like ISIL and al Qaeda want to make this war a war between Islam and America, or between Islam and the West. They want to claim that they are the true leaders of over a billion Muslims around the world who reject their crazy notions. They want us to validate them by implying that they speak for those billion-plus people; that they speak for Islam. That’s their propaganda. That’s how they recruit. And if we fall into the trap of painting all Muslims with a broad brush and imply that we are at war with an entire religion — then we’re doing the terrorists’ work for them.

Now, up until this point, this argument about labels has mostly just been partisan rhetoric. And, sadly, we’ve all become accustomed to that kind of partisanship, even when it involves the fight against these extremist groups. And that kind of yapping has not prevented folks across government from doing their jobs, from sacrificing and working really hard to protect the American people.

But we are now seeing how dangerous this kind of mindset and this kind of thinking can be. We’re starting to see where this kind of rhetoric and loose talk and sloppiness about who exactly we’re fighting, where this can lead us. We now have proposals from the presumptive Republican nominee for President of the United States to bar all Muslims from emigrating to America. We hear language that singles out immigrants and suggests that entire religious communities are complicit in violence. Where does this stop? The Orlando killer, one of the San Bernardino killers, the Fort Hood killer — they were all U.S. citizens.

Are we going to start treating all Muslim-Americans differently? Are we going to start subjecting them to special surveillance? Are we going to start discriminating against them because of their faith? We’ve heard these suggestions during the course of this campaign. Do Republican officials actually agree with this? Because that’s not the America we want. It doesn’t reflect our democratic ideals. It won’t make us more safe; it will make us less safe — fueling ISIL’s notion that the West hates Muslims, making young Muslims in this country and around the world feel like no matter what they do, they’re going to be under suspicion and under attack. It makes Muslim-Americans feel like their government is betraying them. It betrays the very values America stands for.

We’ve gone through moments in our history before when we acted out of fear — and we came to regret it. We’ve seen our government mistreat our fellow citizens. And it has been a shameful part of our history.

This is a country founded on basic freedoms, including freedom of religion. We don’t have religious tests here. Our Founders, our Constitution, our Bill of Rights are clear about that. And if we ever abandon those values, we would not only make it a lot easier to radicalize people here and around the world, but we would have betrayed the very things we are trying to protect — the pluralism and the openness, our rule of law, our civil liberties — the very things that make this country great; the very things that make us exceptional. And then the terrorists would have won. And we cannot let that happen. I will not let that happen.

 

Chris Weigant blogs at:

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