Dr. C: The Unpleasant Exclusivity in Our Educational System
Wolraich: The Grim Possibility Of War With Iran
Heat Win Game Six, Disappointing Nation of Heat-Haters
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Dr. C: The Unpleasant Exclusivity in Our Educational System Wolraich: The Grim Possibility Of War With Iran Heat Win Game Six, Disappointing Nation of Heat-Haters |
Shuts & |
Steve Nash scores for New York Marriage Equality.
Tornado: Scores dead after tornado strikes Missouri.
Un-Raptured: Nope, no Rapture to see here. You'll have to wait until next year. No way the Mayans were wrong.
Newsweek Noise: Seems not all is happiness and light thus far at the New & Improved Newsweek.
Iraq: Death.
Crooks & Liars: I'm assembling Mike's Blog Round Up at Crooks & Liars this week if you care to see my selections there.
Back2Stonewall: Time to boycott Tennessee.
The Stir: Westboro Baptist Church raises $50K for Gay Rights thanks to comic Lisa Lampanelli.
Eclectablog: 6,000+ people rally at the Michigan Capitol, media focuses on the Rapture
Miami Heats Up: Chris Bosh reminds everyone that he's part of Miami's Big Three, as well.
Good Old Bernard: Bernard Hopkins becomes the oldest boxing champion at age 46, and he's showing no signs of slowing down.
Little Arnolds: Seems there may be more children coming forward who call Arnold Schwarzenegger "dad."
I got more moves than Ex-Lax.
--WKW
Crossposted at William K. Wolfrum Chronicles
Reuters, June 19, 2013
CAIRO - Egypt's tourism minister tendered his resignation on Tuesday over President Mohamed Mursi's decision to appoint as governor of Luxor a member of a hardline Islamist group blamed for slaughtering 58 tourists there in 1997.
Prime Minister Hisham Kandil did not accept the resignation of Tourism Minister Hisham Zaazou, who remains in the post for now. However, the move pointed to a split in government over an appointment that one critic called "the last nail in the coffin" of the tourism industry.
Mursi appointed Adel Mohamed al-Khayat, a member of al-Gamaa al-Islamiya, as Luxor governor this week, a move seen as a sign of a deepening political alliance between the once-armed group and the...
By Robert Mackey, The Lede @ nytimes.com, June 18, 2013
Includes lots of images and videos.
Last Updated, 6:57 p.m. As my colleague Simon Romero reports from São Paulo, more than 200,000 Brazilians filled the streets in cities across the country on Monday to protest the high cost of living and lavish spending on soccer stadiums ahead of next year’s World Cup, in demonstrations that have intensified as images of police brutality against peaceful protesters spread on...
How Obama's pick to lead the FBI tried to put the brakes on the NSA's surveillance dragnet.
By Marc Ambinder, Foreign Policy, June 18, 2013
[....] Comey, who is said to be President Obama's choice to be the next director of the FBI, has never publicly disclosed exactly what he refused to sanction when he was briefly acting attorney general during Ashcroft's hospital stay, but people briefed on the program who have spoken to Comey say it was the legal rationale giving the NSA quick access to un-sifted telecom and service provider-collected metadata that "drove him bonkers," not the Bush administration's warrantless wiretapping program. There was just no way, Comey thought, to justify an effort that simply...
'Peace and reconciliation' milestone comes after US drops request for formal rejection of al-Qaida as precondition to talks
By Dan Roberts in Washington and Emma Graham-Harrison in Kabul, guardian.co.uk, 18 June 2013
[....] White House officials say they believe the Taliban delegation at the talks represents the movement's leadership, and includes more radical groups such as the Haqqani network. Officials said the US would have a direct role in the talks starting starting this week in Doha, but the substantive negotiations over the future of Afghanistan would then be led by the Afghan government.
"The core of this process is not going to be US-Taliban talks – we can help the process – but the core is going...
Regarding Sports, Tyler Hamilton went on 60 Minutes to say that he, George Hincapie, Lance Armstrong and probably all the elite cyclists in the world have been systematically doping with EPO and anything else they thought would slip by the testing. He said it was "part of the culture of the sport."
Armstrong still denies it, but it looks bad for the sport in general.
I've long been very open about my belief that, OF COURSE Lance Armstrong took PEDs.