Today, the United States Supreme Court hears oral arguments in a case whose outcome will either uphold or nullify the rights of victims of foreign torture, including U.S. soldiers, to sue under American law.
The Court should take this opportunity to reaffirm America's commitment to human rights and its opposition to torture.
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March 3, 2010
March 2, 2010
Kobe Bryant Uses Testicle Punch Defense (VIDEO)
The Lakers hosted the 76ers on Friday, and the home team unsurprisingly won by a nine-point margin. Perhaps a particularly aggressive brand of defense had something to do with the outcome.
The Hoop Doctors posted a clip of Lakers star Kobe Bryant appearing to punch Sixers guard Andre Iguodala in the testicles. Iguodala howls upon landing, and understandably misses the shot given the circumstances. Scroll down for video and a screenshot of the defensive maneuver. Did Kobe go too far?
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The Hoop Doctors posted a clip of Lakers star Kobe Bryant appearing to punch Sixers guard Andre Iguodala in the testicles. Iguodala howls upon landing, and understandably misses the shot given the circumstances. Scroll down for video and a screenshot of the defensive maneuver. Did Kobe go too far?
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February 18, 2010
Poisonous Resentment
Colombia is a country with frequent kidnappings, often with tragic results.
Such was the case of a father who reported his 11-month-old son kidnapped, then joined in the frantic search for his missing child. The outcome was terrible: the child was found to have been killed by his own father.
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Such was the case of a father who reported his 11-month-old son kidnapped, then joined in the frantic search for his missing child. The outcome was terrible: the child was found to have been killed by his own father.
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Tiger Woods’ Dumb Advisers
Tiger Woods is getting more stupid advice. Instead of easing the scrutiny he has been enduring, the athletic superstar is about to increase public antipathy for his situation. Sympathy and forgiveness are not likely to be the outcome of his Friday "news conference."
Tiger's advisers have him convinced that he is different from other fallen public figures. Maybe they know he doesn't want to answer questions and because he pays them so well they aren't going to force the issue. Who wants to lose a gig working with Tiger Woods? Tiger has done things greater than most mortals and even other astounding athletes and his counselors appear to be testing a notion that he can play by different rules. He can't. Just because he took golf away from the plaid pants and martini crowd and turned it into a disciplined endeavor doesn't mean he's going to get a pass on his behavior.
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Tiger's advisers have him convinced that he is different from other fallen public figures. Maybe they know he doesn't want to answer questions and because he pays them so well they aren't going to force the issue. Who wants to lose a gig working with Tiger Woods? Tiger has done things greater than most mortals and even other astounding athletes and his counselors appear to be testing a notion that he can play by different rules. He can't. Just because he took golf away from the plaid pants and martini crowd and turned it into a disciplined endeavor doesn't mean he's going to get a pass on his behavior.
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February 4, 2010
Illinois Primary Postmortem
It's perhaps fitting that the 2010 Illinois primary was held on Groundhog's Day given that the outcome in both parties' gubernatorial races remained uncertain through this morning with the prospects of mutual "do-overs." Acknowledging that neither the Democratic nor Republican Party produced clear winners, and that a number of absentee and provisional ballots have yet to be counted, not the mention the prospect of a "discovery" recount, the balance of this piece will work with the assumption that incumbent Governor Pat Quinn will represent the Democrats this fall against Republican State Senator Bill Brady.
Quinn is currently a little more than 8,000 votes ahead of Comptroller Dan Hynes, who conceded and pledged his support to the incumbent this morning. The incumbent emerges scarred from a brutal two-way brawl marred by negative advertising that arguably had the effect of turning potential voters off entirely. Two weeks ago, Quinn staggered as Hynes brought Harold Washington back from the dead to question his executive competence, but Quinn counterpunched by accusing Dan Hynes of malfeasance in the Burr Oaks Cemetery scandal. The comptroller may have employed with the uppercut one week too soon as the governor appeared to regain his swagger in the final hours of the campaign, enough to cling to power for at least another nine months, as he struck the continual chord of "jobs" alongside a continued barrage of jabs at his opponent.
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Quinn is currently a little more than 8,000 votes ahead of Comptroller Dan Hynes, who conceded and pledged his support to the incumbent this morning. The incumbent emerges scarred from a brutal two-way brawl marred by negative advertising that arguably had the effect of turning potential voters off entirely. Two weeks ago, Quinn staggered as Hynes brought Harold Washington back from the dead to question his executive competence, but Quinn counterpunched by accusing Dan Hynes of malfeasance in the Burr Oaks Cemetery scandal. The comptroller may have employed with the uppercut one week too soon as the governor appeared to regain his swagger in the final hours of the campaign, enough to cling to power for at least another nine months, as he struck the continual chord of "jobs" alongside a continued barrage of jabs at his opponent.
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February 1, 2010
January 28, 2010
When The “Fellow Behind The Tree” Does Not Pay His Fair Share
On Tuesday, voters in Oregon overwhelmingly passed ballot initiatives approving modest tax increases on high-income earning individuals and businesses. Despite hyperbolic claims made by anti-tax activists that Americans would find such increases unpalatable, such an outcome in a historically anti-tax state, may signal that some Americans are open to increasing taxes in order to rescue cash-strapped governments from serious financial calamity.
Predictably, anti-tax groups reacted bitterly to the election results. The Washington, D.C.-based Tax Foundation, for example, responded by referencing the late Senator Russell Long, an ardently pro-business Democrat known for championing taxpayer-funded loopholes for oil and gas interests, who famously characterized tax reform as meaning, "Don't tax you. Don't tax me. Tax the fellow behind the tree."
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Predictably, anti-tax groups reacted bitterly to the election results. The Washington, D.C.-based Tax Foundation, for example, responded by referencing the late Senator Russell Long, an ardently pro-business Democrat known for championing taxpayer-funded loopholes for oil and gas interests, who famously characterized tax reform as meaning, "Don't tax you. Don't tax me. Tax the fellow behind the tree."
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January 22, 2010
Enough Hand Wringing. Get the Job Done!
As Washington grapples with the outcome of the election in Massachusetts this week, it's important to remember one key thing: Congress can still pass historic legislation that will make health care a right, not a privilege, in the United States. While the procedural route may be different, Congress still can do what it intended to do before Tuesday. It can enact a comprehensive bill that will make good health care affordable to tens of millions of people who are uninsured or underinsured and end the practice of denying people coverage or charging people more for pre-existing conditions. It can end the specter of medical bankruptcy, provide free access to preventive care, and more. None of these historic achievements can be done through "incremental" reform, and failing to accomplish these goals would put the Democratic Party in profound political peril.
While it may seem appealing to carve up the many facets of reform into smaller bites, that won't get the job done. Take, for example, the promise that has most resonated with the public: stopping insurance companies from denying coverage for pre-existing conditions. You can't do that without requiring everyone be covered because many people would wait to get covered until they needed treatment and that would drive premiums too high. But you can't require people to get coverage without providing income-based subsidies to make coverage affordable. And you can't raise the money for subsidies without finding savings in the system, like the proposed changes in Medicare, or raising new revenue. All that adds up to comprehensive reform.
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While it may seem appealing to carve up the many facets of reform into smaller bites, that won't get the job done. Take, for example, the promise that has most resonated with the public: stopping insurance companies from denying coverage for pre-existing conditions. You can't do that without requiring everyone be covered because many people would wait to get covered until they needed treatment and that would drive premiums too high. But you can't require people to get coverage without providing income-based subsidies to make coverage affordable. And you can't raise the money for subsidies without finding savings in the system, like the proposed changes in Medicare, or raising new revenue. All that adds up to comprehensive reform.
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January 20, 2010
What Massachusetts Got Right
The president got creamed in Massachusetts. No amount of blaming this disastrous outcome on the weaknesses of the local Democratic candidate or her Republican opponent's strengths can gainsay that fact. Obama's opportunistic search for win-win solutions to our health care concerns and our larger economic problems is leading to a lose-lose outcome for the president and the country.
The two issues that mattered on Election Day were the economy, which Obama has sold out to Wall Street--as quite a few disgruntled voters pointed out--and his plea to save health care reform, which the voters who had backed him for the presidency with a huge majority now spurned. It is significant that it was the voters of Massachusetts who have now derailed the Democrats' efforts to revamp the country's health care system by denying them the necessary 60th vote in the Senate, for these voters know the subject well.
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The two issues that mattered on Election Day were the economy, which Obama has sold out to Wall Street--as quite a few disgruntled voters pointed out--and his plea to save health care reform, which the voters who had backed him for the presidency with a huge majority now spurned. It is significant that it was the voters of Massachusetts who have now derailed the Democrats' efforts to revamp the country's health care system by denying them the necessary 60th vote in the Senate, for these voters know the subject well.
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January 19, 2010
Will The Banks Win Again? Bailout Watchdog Rallies Support For Consumer Protection Agency
The battle in the Senate over a proposed consumer financial protection agency is the final show-down between banks and American families, bailout watchdog Elizabeth Warren wrote to supporters Monday night.
The outcome "will show whether we are going to let the industry continue to write the rules -- to keep the cops off the beat -- or whether the financial crisis actually changed something."
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The outcome "will show whether we are going to let the industry continue to write the rules -- to keep the cops off the beat -- or whether the financial crisis actually changed something."
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