Sunday, March 13, 2016

RSN: Meet the GOP Mega-Donors of the 2016 Election, Israeli Airstrikes Kill 10-Year-Old Boy in Gaza





The land handed over to foreign mining concerns through underhanded backroom deals by Arizona representatives in the U.S. Congress eliminates these protections.
In December 2014, Gosar, Kirkpatrick, and U.S. Sens. John McCain and Jeff Flake added a last-minute amendment to a must-pass National Defense Authorization Act, giving away Oak Flat to Resolution Copper.


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Matt Taibbi | Why Trump's Endorsements Should Scare Your Pants Off 
Donald Trump and Sarah Palin. (photo: Andrew Burton/Getty Images) 
Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone 
Taibbi writes: "Earlier this week, an African-American protester was sucker-punched by a 78-year-old man in a cowboy hat at a Trump rally in North Carolina. The video went viral, and reporters later tracked down John McGraw, the red-faced Trumpthusiast who'd thrown the punch." 
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Donald Trump Rally in Chicago Canceled Amid Widespread Protests 
Jessica Taylor, NPR 
Taylor writes: "Donald Trump's campaign canceled a planned Chicago rally on Friday night after chaos and clashes between protesters and attendees overtook the event." 
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Meet the GOP Mega-Donors of the 2016 Election 
Tim Dickinson, Rolling Stone 
Dickinson writes: "The big money coursing through American politics in the current primary contest is shattering all records. Through March 10, more than $245 million in Super PAC money had been spent on the 2016 presidential race, compared to less than $80 million at the same point in 2012." 
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Unlimited Super PAC donations are sustaining Marco Rubio in the 2016 race; in other elections, he'd have been knocked out by the Trump campaign. (photo: Joe Raedle/Getty)
Unlimited Super PAC donations are sustaining Marco Rubio in the 2016 race; 
in other elections, he'd have been knocked out by the Trump campaign. 
(photo: Joe Raedle/Getty)
Republican money machine is keeping Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio in the race

he big money coursing through American politics in the current primary contest is shattering all records. Through March 10, more than $245 million in Super PAC money had been spent on the 2016 presidential race, compared to less than $80 million at the same point in 2012.
"What's going on in the 2016 election is completely unprecedented," says Fred Wertheimer, president of Democracy 21, a top campaign-finance watchdog. "Citizens United has turned our political system into a sandbox for the wealthiest people in the country to play in — and that's what they're doing."
The influx of cash warped the Republican race from the beginning. Super PACs stocked with mega-donor millionaires put a stamp of credibility on GOP candidates as they jockeyed for early momentum. "A smaller and smaller slice of the population has a major say in who runs, who they listen to," says Noah Bookbinder, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. "It's very alarming."  
Unlimited Super PAC donations are now sustaining a pair of contenders in the race, Sens. Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio — who in other elections would have been knocked out by the supernova Trump campaign, fueled by can't-turn-away media coverage and massive personal wealth. (Acting as his own mega-donor, Trump has steered more than $17 million into his campaign.)
Who are the millionaires and billionaires pouring cash into Super PAC coffers? Below, we examine the nine individuals and families who have spent at least $2 million to support Cruz or Rubio, according to Federal Election Commission data crunched by the Center for Responsive Politics. (The fourth Republican still standing, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, is also supported by a Super PAC, but its top donation maxes out at $1 million.)
Looking at the mega-donors aligned behind the candidates, clear themes emerge: Rubio is backed by staunch supporters of the nation of Israel, as well as hedge-fund titans who would gain from his plan to end taxation of investment income. Cruz depends on a smaller, more ideological cadre of donors. But their pet causes — eliminating the IRS, accelerating fracking, opposing gay rights — find loud expression in the candidate's stump speeches and policy proposals.
Despite the record sums being spent, big names are surprisingly absent from the donor rolls. Casino billionaire Sheldon Adelson — who spent at least $98 million on the 2012 presidential race — has not donated to a Super PAC in 2016. Cash from the Koch brothers is also MIA this primary season. And representatives of both Adelson and the Kochs tell Rolling Stone they are not behind a top "dark-money" group spending millions to elect Rubio.
Money alone can't buy the GOP nomination, of course. Jeb Bush's Super PAC Right to Rise USA raised nearly $120 million for a campaign that netted Bush just four convention delegates. But the flood of cash from the super-rich, says Wertheimer, "creates the opportunity to corrupt government decisions for those who happen to invest in the winner" — decisions, he cautions, that "invariably come at the expense of the American people."
Meet the mega-donors trying to buy their guy into the White House.

The Most Extreme Abortion Bill Yet 
Samantha Allen, The Daily Beast 
Allen writes: "It's an abortion bill so extreme that staunch abortion opponents are worried Indiana Gov. Mike Pence will sign it." 
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Apache Protesters Battle GOP Congressman for Sacred Land in Arizona 
Maria Ines Taracena, Tucson Weekly 
Taracena: "Republican Congressman Paul Gosar is going nuclear at news that Oak Flat will remain listed in the National Register of Historic Places, despite attempts by himself and U.S. Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick, a Democrat who alleges to stand by Native Americans, to withdraw the site from historic consideration." 
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Israeli Airstrikes Kill 10-Year-Old Boy in Gaza 
teleSUR 
Excerpt: "Fragments from a missile fired by an Israeli aircraft killed a 10-year old Palestinian boy in Gaza, medical officials said Saturday." 
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Money Doesn't Matter: White People Breathe Cleaner Air 
Aura Bogado, Grist 
Bogado writes: "Not everybody gets to breathe clean air. So how do we decide who winds up wheezing through the smog and who winds up inhaling fresh air? Too often it depends on your skin color." 
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