
Exploring magical worlds with ayahuasca drinkers
Well, this is new
I’ll believe it when I see it, but this is encouraging:
US officials continue to maintain that American policy towards Israel will undergo changes in the wake of pre-election comments made by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, in which he stated that no Palestinian state would be established on his watch.
Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territories has lasted for nearly five decades and “must end,” White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough said in a Monday address to the left-leaning Jewish American lobby group J Street.
“Israel cannot maintain military control of another people indefinitely,” he said. “An occupation that has lasted for almost 50 years must end, and the Palestinian people must have the right to live in and govern themselves in their own sovereign state.”
McDonough reiterated America’s long-standing support for a two-state solution to the impasse between Israelis and Palestinians – an agreement that would be based on 1967 lines and include mutually agreed land swaps. However, he said Netanyahu’s comments have cast doubt upon Israel’s commitment to such an agreement, despite the prime minister’s attempts to backtrack in the wake of his re-election on March 17.
“We cannot simply pretend that those comments were never made, or that they don’t raise questions about the prime minister’s commitment to achieving peace through direct negotiations,” McDonough told the crowd, as quoted by the Guardian.
Monica Lewinsky on public shaming
First of all, I highly recommend you watch this. Our online lives have become toxic, and it feels awful. I can zing with the best of them — but I don’t usually want to. After all, as I’ve always told my kids, “I’ve yet to see someone on their deathbed say, ‘I really wish I’d been meaner to people.'”
I try to keep this site boring that way. I like the thoughtful people who come here, and I’m not interested in building traffic by viciously trashing people. (Well, occasionally. But then I have that guilt hangover.)
Chris Cillizza writes about his response to her TED talk:
Here’s the critical piece of Lewinsky’s talk:
For nearly two decades now, we have slowly been sowing the seeds of shame and public humiliation in our cultural soil. Gossip Web sites, paparazzi, reality programming, politics, news outlets and sometimes hackers traffic in shame.
Public humiliation as a blood sport has to stop. We need to return to a long-held value of compassion and empathy.
Her words echo the moving eulogy that former Sen. John Danforth (R-Mo.) delivered recently for Missouri state auditor Tom Schweich, who apparently committed suicide amid a whisper campaign about his Jewish heritage. Here’s a part of what Danforth said:
We read stories about cyberbullying, and hear of young girls who killed themselves because of it. But what should we expect from children when grownups are their examples of how bullies behave? Since Thursday, some good people have said, ‘Well, that’s just politics.’ And Tom should have been less sensitive; he should have been tougher, and he should have been able to take it. Well, that is accepting politics in its present state, and that we cannot do. It amounts to blaming the victim, and it creates a new normal, where politics is only for the tough and the crude and the calloused. Indeed, if this is what politics has become, what decent person would want to get into it? We should encourage normal people — yes, sensitive people — to seek public office, not drive them away.
I find myself at something of a crossroads on all of this. On the one hand, I have long subscribed to the “politics ain’t beanbag” school of campaigns — meaning that the most important thing in politics is winning actualvictories, not moral ones.
On the other hand, as a victim of bullying in ninth and 10th grade that left me miserable, as well as the dad of two little boys, I am acutely aware of and concerned about the damage bullying can and does do — especially now, as Lewinsky notes, in the Internet age.
I haven’t totally resolved whether my two competing realities are incompatible or not. But, what I do believe is that there is a line — societally — that shouldn’t be crossed when it comes to how we treat each other. Sure, the anonymity of the Internet makes it incredibly easy to say whatever you want about virtually anyone. That cloak of anonymity frees you from the responsibility of owning your allegation, providing proof or doing something as simple as coming face-to-face — even electronically — with the person you are sliming.
When it comes to politics, winning can’t be the rationale to excuse this sort of behavior. It’s important to remember that using people as tackling dummies to score political points is ultimately detrimental to what our society should value. It turns people into caricatures, two-dimensional cardboard cutouts rather than fully realized individuals. Again, Lewinsky says it well: “I was branded as a tramp, tart, slut, whore, bimbo and, of course, ‘that woman.’ I was known by many, but actually known by few. I get it. It was easy to forget ‘that woman’ was dimensional and had a soul.”
Continue reading “Monica Lewinsky on public shaming”
A prosecutor tells the truth
I honestly think this is why so many prosecutors drink heavily. After all, it goes against human nature to frame innocent people:
On Dec. 5, 1984, a black man from Louisiana named Glenn Ford was convicted of murder by an all-white jury in the shooting death of a jeweler, and sentenced to death.
About a year ago, Ford was exonerated after a district attorney in Caddo Parish discovered “credible evidence” that Ford was neither “present at, nor a participant in, the robbery and murder” of the jeweler. By that point he had served 30 years in prison. Now, the state of Louisiana is trying to deny Ford $330,000 in compensation for the freedom that was wrongfully taken away from him, on the basis that Ford can’t prove he was “factually innocent” of the crime. The state’s position has moved the lead prosecutor in Ford’s original case, Marty Stroud, to speak out about his role in sending an innocent man into “the hell hole” he endured until his name was cleared.
Stroud’s comments, which were published in the Shreveport Times, are extraordinary for their candor and gravity, and are worth reading in full. But the central takeaway is this extraordinary admission: “I was not as interested in justice as I was in winning.”
In his letter, which was written in response to a Shreveport Times editorial and was published by the paper Friday, Stroud says that at the time of the trial, he believed he had the right man—and as a result, ignored leads he now believes he should have followed:
At the time this case was tried there was evidence that would have cleared Glenn Ford. The easy and convenient argument is that the prosecutors did not know of such evidence, thus they were absolved of any responsibility for the wrongful conviction. I can take no comfort in such an argument. As a prosecutor and officer of the court, I had the duty to prosecute fairly. While I could properly strike hard blows, ethically I could not strike foul ones.
He continues: “Had I been more inquisitive, perhaps the evidence would have come to light years ago. But I wasn’t, and my inaction contributed to the miscarriage of justice in this matter.”
Stroud, who was 33 at the time of Ford’s trial, also says he regrets “placing before the jury dubious testimony from a forensic pathologist,” whose testimony he now sees as “pure junk science at its evil worst,” and says he is sickened by the fact that he and his team went out to celebrate their win after the verdict.
Jerry Brown: Cruz ‘unfit for office’
Jerry Brown, who’s actually done the hard work of governing, knows what a jagoff Ted Cruz is:
California Governor Jerry Brown did not mince words. Discussing climate change he summarily dismissed the ignorance of Ted Cruz as seen in the above snippet.
Chuck Todd and Governor Jerry Brown were discussing the dire straits that California has found itself in with its record drought. In the discussion Todd asked Jerry Brown if his state’s condition could be attributed to climate change. Brown’s answer was deliberately measured. He acknowledged that in fact climate change is real. However, he noted that one event is not enough to blame on climate change. His answer had the necessary caution to ensure it could not be used as a political gotcha.
While the governor did not want to single out California in the aggregate of climactic events, one has to draw that conclusion given the peer reviewed studies supported by over 90 percent of scientists. Chuck Todd then played a clip of Ted Cruz’s willful ignorance displayed on Seth Myers show where he lied about the scientific data on climate change. Governor Jerry Brown’s response was epic.
“What he said is absolutely false,” Brown said. “Over 90% of the scientists who deal with climate are absolutely convinced that the human activity, industrial activity, generation of CO2, methane, oxides, nitrogen, and all the rest of those greenhouse gases are building up in the atmosphere. They are heat trapping. And they are causing not just warm, drought in California, but severe storms and cold in the East Coast. So it’s climate disruption of many different kinds. And that man betokens such a level of ignorance and a direct falsification of existing scientific data. It’s shocking and I think that man has rendered himself absolutely unfit to be running for office.”
Hah hah
Explain to me how this crook is going to win the Republican nomination:
Telephone
Lady Gaga:
It hurt so bad
Susan Tedeschi:
Counting mercies
Jann Arden:
