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  • 05:42 - 18.06.2009 News >> Latest

     Hunger strike for mom and immigration reform   About 150 U.S.-born children of undocumented migrants are not giving up on their dream of getting their deported parents back.       

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  • 07:55 - 21.12.2008 News >> Latest

    Debra Winger: a star is re-born After a string of hit movies, the actress disappeared from public view for 10 years – but she hasn’t been idle.   By John Hiscock
    Last Updated: 12:43PM GMT 19 Dec 2008
    'We need to talk about real things again' Photo: Armando Gallo/ retna Debra Winger with Richard Gere in An Officer and a Gentleman Photo: Kobal Collection Debra Winger in her new film Rachel Getting Married She won three Oscar nominations, starred in some of the most memorable films of the Eighties and was acclaimed as one of America’s finest actresses. But word spread around the Hollywood studios that she was “difficult”. Certain directors and actors labelled her troublesome – and some 10 years ago Debra Winger faded from public view. Her disappearance was so complete that she was the subject of a documentary, Searching for Debra Winger, which fuelled more speculation about her abrupt abdication from stardom. Now, however, the 53-year-old actress is back, facing the cameras again, although she insists she never went away, she just did other things. She is still acerbically outspoken, sexily attractive and highly intelligent, and has every intention of making her opinions known; although, looking back, she realises that she could have been more flexible in her dealings with the directors and actors she did not get along with. “When I was younger I probably didn’t understand something basic about tact, but I think it kept faint-hearted people at arm’s distance and that’s not such a bad thing, because life is short and I know the kind of people I want to work with,” she says. She chose the high-profile, celebrity-filled Toronto Film Festival for her reappearance in the public eye, and seemed slightly bemused at the attention being paid to celebrities as opposed to the films in which they appear. “I find it sort of hair-raising,” she says. “At this convention – and to me it seems like a convention – you see that the celebrities are pulling the films along with them to hold them up. It used to be that the film was the thing – the film opened and we showed up to support it. Now it’s all about the red carpet and celebrity. This stupidity about celebrity is just crazy, don’t you think? “We just need to stop feeding it so much and start to talk about real things again.” The actress was in Toronto to support Rachel Getting Married, an angst-ridden comedy-drama directed by Jonathan Demme about long-simmering family tensions surfacing when friends and family gather for a wedding. Anne Hathaway plays a recovering drug addict who returns home for her sister Rachel’s wedding. Winger plays Abbey, the girls’ mother. “Jonathan asked me if I would be willing to show up as the character and just be at the wedding and let him shoot me, without rehearsing scenes. I thought that sounded intriguing and I was willing to do it in the…

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  • 10:29 - 07.01.2010 News >> Latest

      All 'major' Taliban leaders are former Gitmo prisoners  
    BY \n This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it Political Reporter

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  • 15:11 - 12.05.2010 News >> Latest

       by Barbie Latza Nadeau Read Article

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  • 12:31 - 09.06.2010 News >> Latest

     Nancy Pelosi, the liberal House speaker, is heckled by liberals
    By Dana Milbank
    Wednesday, June 9, 2010
     For 17 months, anger at President Obama and congressional Democrats has been pooling on the left. On Tuesday morning, it spilled onto the floor of an Omni Shoreham ballroom and splashed all over House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. The celebrated San Francisco liberal took the stage to greet what should have been a friendly audience: the annual gathering of progressive activists organized by the Campaign for America's Future. Instead, Pelosi was eaten by her own. Just three minutes into her speech -- right after she gave the triumphant news that "Change is here!" -- two men stood up and spread out a large pink banner in front of the podium demanding "Stop Funding Israel Terror." At that moment, a wheelchair-bound woman named Carrie James began to scream from her table about 30 feet away: "I am not going to a nursing home!" At that cue, about 15 people in the crowd -- who, like James, wore orange T-shirts demanding "Community Choice Act Now" -- unfurled bedsheet banners and struck up a chant: "Our homes, not nursing homes!" Bodyguards rushed forward and formed a six-person ring around Pelosi and the lectern. Leaders of the conference tried to take the speaker backstage until the disturbance could be quelled, but she brushed them off: "I'm not leaving. I'm not leaving," she said. "You have made your point. I'm going to give my speech over your voices." And she did, for an excruciating half-hour. The hecklers screamed themselves hoarse, dominating Pelosi's speech through her concluding lines: "I want to say thank you to Campaign for America's Future for your relentlessness, for your dissatisfaction, for your impatience. That's what I see every day in my district." Political movements tend to unravel gradually, but on Tuesday this one seemed to be imploding in real time. As the "tea party" right has gained strength, Obama's hope-and-change left has faded. The frustration has crystallized at the gathering this week of demoralized activists. At Monday's opening session, attendance was sparse: 10 empty tables and about 200 empty chairs. "Progressives have grown ever more dissatisfied, and for good reason," Robert Borosage, the conference organizer, said at the start. "Our hopes or illusions were shattered: escalation in Afghanistan, retreat on Guantanamo, no movement on worker rights or comprehensive immigration reform, dithering on 'don't ask, don't tell,' reverses on choice, delay on climate change and new energy." After a musical break that included the Rolling Stones' "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," Borosage's co-director, Roger Hickey, took up the complaint. "Larry Summers and Tim Geithner and Rahm Emanuel don't see themselves as part of a movement, and we often see them as part of a problem," he said. Up next, Darcy Burner of ProgressCongress.org accused Obama of "split the baby" politics and complained that some liberal leaders had sold out for invitations to "White House cocktail parties." Tuesday brought a denunciation of the Democrats from former…

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Geo. Will saves SCOTUS the trouble of the 2nd Amendment. Print E-mail

 

How the Constitution, filtered by the high court, affects guns

By George F. Will
Sunday, March 7, 2010

It is said, more frequently than precisely, that the reasons the Supreme Court gives for doing whatever it does are as important as what it does. Actually, the court's reasons are what it does. Hence, the interest in the case the Supreme Court considered last week.

It probably will result in a routine ruling that extends a 2008 decision and renders dubious many state and local gun-control laws. What could -- but, judging from the justices' remarks during oral argument, probably will not -- make the ruling momentous would be the court deciding that the two ordinances at issue violate the 14th Amendment's "privileges or immunities" clause. Liberals and conservatives submitted briefs arguing, correctly, that this clause was intended to be a scythe for slicing through thickets of state and local laws abridging fundamental liberties.

The Second Amendment says: "A well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed." Until 2008, the court had never clarified whether the prefatory clause makes this right conditional: Does the amendment protect an individual's right to own firearms, or does it protect that right only in connection with a state's right to organize a militia?

In 2008, the court struck down a D.C. law that effectively banned possession of handguns even in an owner's home -- it banned all guns not kept at businesses, or disassembled or disabled by trigger locks. The court held, 5 to 4, that the Second Amendment protects individuals' rights.

But the court answered only the question then posed, which concerned the federal enclave of the District of Columbia. Left unanswered was whether the amendment protects that right against severe restrictions by state and local laws.

The oral argument concerned ordinances in Chicago and suburban Oak Park that are indistinguishable from the D.C. law. The court probably will overturn those ordinances by holding that another part of the 14th Amendment -- the guarantee that no state shall deny liberty "without due process of law" -- "incorporates" the Second Amendment. The justices evinced scant interest Tuesday in resurrecting the "privileges or immunities" clause by revisiting an incoherent decision rendered in 1873.

To the drafters of the 14th Amendment, the phrase "privileges or immunities" was synonymous with "basic civil rights." But in 1873, the court held that only some of the rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights restrict states by being "incorporated" into the 14th Amendment's "due process" clause.

Since 1897, the court has held, with no discernible principle, that some rights enumerated in the Bill of Rights are sufficiently fundamental to be "incorporated" but others are not. This doctrine bears the oxymoronic name "substantive due process." Substance is what process questions are not about.

If the court now "incorporates" the Second Amendment right via the "due process" guarantee, that will be progress because it will enlarge the sphere of protected liberty. And even Justice Antonin Scalia, who recognizes that "substantive due process" is intellectual applesauce, thinks it is too late to repudiate 137 years of the stuff. Still, three points argue for using the "privileges or immunities" scythe against the two gun ordinances.

First, protecting the individual's right to keep and bear arms for self-defense was frequently mentioned by those who drafted and ratified the 14th Amendment, the purpose of which was to protect former slaves and their advocates from being disarmed by state and local governments determined to assault their security and limit their autonomy.

Second, the central tenet of American political philosophy is that government is instituted not to bestow rights but to protect preexisting rights, aka natural rights -- those essential to the flourishing of our natures. In its 2008 decision, the court affirmed that the Second Amendment did not grant a right to keep and bear arms, it "codified a pre-existing right."

Third, "privileges or immunities" are all those rights that, at the time the 14th Amendment was ratified, were understood to be central to Americans' enjoyment of the blessings of liberty.

Liberals might hope and conservatives might fear that a revivified "privileges or immunities" clause wielded by liberal justices would breed many new "positive rights" -- to welfare, health care, etc. But conservatives know that "substantive due process" already has such a pernicious potential. And they believe that if -- a huge caveat -- it remained tethered to the intent of its 19th-century authors, the "privileges or immunities" clause would be useful protection against the statism of the states.

 

 

 

 
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