Thursday, April 28, 2011

obama birth certificate

obama birth certificate

Many Americans were shocked yesterday when President Obama finally released his long form birth certificate from the State of Hawaii. The real surprise however is that for the past three years our democratic institutions did not address the matter.

The press refused to tackle this issue with the same investigative drive with which they did investigated Watergate, President Clinton’s alleged indiscretions and the Bush administration’s missteps in Iraq – the courts declined to hear a single case on the issue, and the Congress failed to hold any hearings on the matter. Perhaps the saddest part of this story is its ending.

President Obama did not release the birth certificate because the media pressured him or because the courts actually listened to one of the many cases that were filed. He released it because an obsessed billionaire threatened his electability in 2012, which forces us to ask the question – what good are our democratic institutions if they don’t stand up for the people?

Journalists did not address the fact that the president was refusing to resolve an issue about his constitutional eligibility. Instead, they covered the “birther” movement in an effort to discredit any American who had a legitimate question. Mainstream press organizations did not want to get grouped in with “birthers” since they had been effectively compared to the 9/11 “truther” movements, and anyone who raised birth certificate questions was labeled paranoid, crazy and even racist. However, there’s a big difference between people who just wanted to see Obama’s birth certificate and those who believe that our own government caused the worst terrorist attack in American history, especially when there is already a mountain of evidence pointing to al-Qaeda as the perpetrators.

With the Obama birth certificate issue, the archive of evidence was slim, and his refusal to release the more extensive version of his birth certificate rightfully created more suspicion. In fact, the Obama birth certificate issue is more similar to what happened when President Clinton refused to give a straight answer about his indiscretions in the White House.

The more the president evaded the issue, the more curious and upset people became. Americans want to know who their president is, plain and simple – and they have a right to know. Citizens who have wanted the issue resolved were frustrated because they felt powerless. The courts declined to hear cases filed and the Fourth Estate refused to pursue the story to get it resolved. Congress did nothing.

The more our institutions remained inactive on the issue, the more powerless we felt and the angrier we became, prompting us to question what good it was to have democratic institutions if they didn’t exercise their power. The courts repeatedly used the excuse that Americans filing suit in federal court lacked standing to get access to the birth certificate. Although the document may have been a vital health record protected under federal and state law, there was a higher constitutional issue of the president’s eligibility at stake.

If the people didn’t have standing on that issue, who did? Our government and our Fourth Estate failed America in this case. We the people of the United States had a right to resolution on this crucial issue, but no one did anything about it. In the end, the White House only relented because they knew it could cost them votes and a much more expensive 2012 presidential run for Obama. Money, not democracy was the currency that brought this issue to a final resolution.

david wilkerson

david wilkerson

David Wilkerson, founding pastor of Times Square Church in New York City and author of the best-selling book, "The Cross and the Switchblade," has died. He was 79.

Wilkerson died Wednesday afternoon in a car accident in East Texas, Texas Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Tela Mange said. Wilkerson's car smashed head-on into a tractor-trailer rig after veering into oncoming traffic on U.S. 175 west of Cuney, about 95 miles southeast of Dallas, Mange said.

Wilkerson founded the non-denominational Protestant Times Square Church in 1987 in an area of Manhattan that was then riddled with X-rated movie houses, strip clubs, prostitution and drugs. He also founded Teen Challenge, which uses a biblically based recovery program for drug addicts.

In "The Cross and the Switchblade" Wilkerson wrote about his early years in New York City administering to drug addicts and gang members. The 1963 book became a best-seller and was made into a movie starring Pat Boone.

His family confirmed his death in a statement posted on the website for Wilkerson's World Challenge Inc. ministries, saying he "went to be with Jesus."

"We appreciate your prayers and our hearts are sorrowful, yet we rejoice at the joy of knowing David Wilkerson spent his life well," the statement said.

Wilkerson was not wearing a seat-belt at the time of the crash, according to the Texas Department of Public Safety. His wife, Gwendolyn, was also in the car and was wearing a seat-belt, Mange said. She was taken to a hospital, where she was in stable condition with cuts and bruises, Mange said.

Along with his wife, David Wilkerson is survived by four children.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

kara dioguardi

kara dioguardi

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Former "American Idol" judge Kara DioGuardi says she was once date-raped by a "fairly known producer" who jumped on top of her and started speaking incomprehensibly in Spanish.

In her new memoir "A Helluva High Note," the songerwiter says the son of a family friend started molesting her when she was 11.

"On one particular day, he took me into the back shed of his house and put his hands all over my breasts and vagina," she writes in the book, to be published April 26. "I remember freezing and not knowing what to do."

Years later, she experienced more pain when she was date-raped in 2000 by a "fairly known producer."

After sharing what she thought was a friendly dinner, she writes: "...He was on top of me, pumping, sweating and speaking to me in Spanish, not a word of which I could understand."

She said she was afraid to fight him off, fearing he would hurt her.

In the book, DioGuardi (whose new Bravo show "Platinum Hit" debuts May 30) also opens up about workplace harassment, revealing that she was once sent on a three-day "songwriting trip" with a "hugely successful artist."

DioGuardi said "the trip's activities consisted of watching Russian porn, scavenging around the kitchen for food (and) leering at two strippers ... as they performed sex acts in the living room."

She ignored the inappropriate conduct ... until the artist made the moves on her and forced her hand to his crotch. That's when she said she walked out.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

andrew lloyd webber


andrew lloyd webber


Each edition of ITV1’s When Piers Met… strand offers entertaining insights into one of our leading celebrities. That leading celebrity is, of course, Piers Morgan, its host. In Saturday’s edition, When Piers Met Andrew Lloyd Webber, the stuff about the writer of musicals was diverting enough, but really it was Morgan I’d tuned in to admire.

Perhaps he strikes you as a bumptious boob. Don’t be fooled. That’s his cover. Ahead of the tough questions (in Lloyd Webber’s case, about his two failed marriages, his prostate cancer and the size of his penis), Morgan cunningly softens up his interviewees, first by guffawing at their jokes as noisily as if he were enjoying an after-dinner speech at the rugby club, and second by paying them compliments that only the interviewees themselves could take seriously. Lloyd Webber (or “the good Lord”, as Morgan twice referred to him) is “someone who’s at the cutting edge of musical technology in so many ways”, a “legendary composer” who “writes the most awe-inspiring, romantic, luscious music that anyone has ever written”.

This last line made me sorry that we can never know how Morgan would introduce When Piers Met Mozart. “Second only in musical genius to the creator of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat…”

Sunday, April 3, 2011

ice cream

ice cream


Happy 119th anniversary to the ice cream sundae! Yes, 119 years ago, in Ithaca, New York, two men invented the first ice cream sundae. To celebrate the day and bring awareness to this event, Google has a special ice cream sundae logo.

The two men, John M. Scott and Chester Platt, first called the dish the “Cherry Sunday” and tried to trademark the term “Sunday.” That never happened and later on it became known as the “Sundae.”

Anyway, I hope you all enjoy a refreshing and delicious ice cream sundae today!

If not, you can at least enjoy the Google logo.


For more Information: http://searchengineland.com/googles-ice-cream-sundae-logo-71261