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Showing posts with label Eric Holder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eric Holder. Show all posts

Thursday, December 12, 2019

Eric Holder | William Barr Is Unfit to Be Attorney General




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12 December 19

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12 December 19
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Eric Holder | William Barr Is Unfit to Be Attorney General
Attorney General William P. Barr speaks at the Wall Street Journal CEO Council in Washington on Tuesday. (photo: Alexander Drago/Reuters)
Eric Holder, The Washington Post
Holder writes: "As a former U.S. attorney general, I am reluctant to publicly criticize my successors. I respect the office and understand just how tough the job can be. But recently, Attorney General William P. Barr has made a series of public statements and taken actions that are so plainly ideological, so nakedly partisan and so deeply inappropriate for America's chief law enforcement official that they demand a response from someone who held the same office."
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US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump presents check from Trump foundation to Puppy Jake Foundation. (photo: Rick Wilking/Reuters)
US Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump presents check from Trump foundation to Puppy Jake Foundation. (photo: Rick Wilking/Reuters)
Trump Pays Million in Damages Ordered by Judge Over Misuse of Charity Funds, According to NY Attorney General
David A. Fahrenthold, The Washington Post
Fahrenthold writes: "President Trump has paid million in court-ordered damages for misusing funds in a tax-exempt charity he controlled, the New York attorney general said Tuesday."

EXCERPTS:
The money was split among eight charities, according to a statement from New York Attorney General Letitia James (D). The charities were the Army Emergency Relief, the Children’s Aid Society, Citymeals-on-Wheels, Give an Hour, Martha’s Table, the United Negro College Fund, the United Way of National Capital Area, and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, according to the statement. 
In addition, Trump agreed to distribute the remaining $1.8 million left in the Donald J. Trump Foundation to the same eight charities. In all, each charity received $476,140.41. 
“Funds have finally gone where they deserve — to eight credible charities,” James said in the statement. “My office will continue to fight for accountability because no one is above the law — not a businessman, not a candidate for office, and not even the president of the United States.” 

In a statement, attorneys for Trump said: “The legacy of the Trump Foundation — which gave away many millions to those in need at virtually no cost — is secure.” They did not answer a reporter’s query about whether Trump intended to count the court-ordered $2 million payment on his taxes as a charitable deduction. 
In the 2000s, Trump began to use the charity in ways that benefited himself or his businesses, according to the attorney general’s lawsuit. He used the charity’s cash to buy paintings of himself and sports memorabilia and to pay $258,000 in legal settlements for his for-profit clubs. 
Charity leaders are barred from using their nonprofits’ money for personal benefit. 
Trump also used the charity to boost political campaigns — first, Pamela Bondi’s Florida attorney general campaign, and then his own 2016 campaign. Trump gave away Trump Foundation checks onstage at rallies, despite strict rules barring nonprofit charities from participating in political campaigns. 

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Donald Trump Jr. rides a horse in the Mongolian countryside during his hunting trip this summer. (photo: Instagram)
Donald Trump Jr. rides a horse in the Mongolian countryside during his hunting trip this summer. (photo: Instagram)
Donald Trump Jr Went to Mongolia, Got Special Treatment From the Government and Killed an Endangered Sheep
Jake Pearson and Anand Tumurtogoo, ProPublica
Excerpt: "His adventure was supported by government resources from both the U.S. and Mongolia, which each sent security services to accompany the president's eldest son and grandson on the multiday trip. It also thrust Trump Jr. directly into the controversial world of Mongolian trophy hunting - a polarizing practice in a country that views the big-horned rams as a national treasure."
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Rep. Ocasio-Cortez. (photo: Senate Democrats)
Rep. Ocasio-Cortez. (photo: Senate Democrats)
AOC: I Don't Go on Fox News Because of 'White Supremacist Sympathizer' Tucker Carlson
Justin Baragona, The Daily Beast
Baragona writes: "Progressive lawmaker Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) on Wednesday blasted Fox News host Tucker Carlson as a 'white supremacist sympathizer,' pointing to his 'unmitigated racism' as the main reason she does not appear on the conservative network."
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Kentucky Democratic governor Andy Beshear. (photo: Bryan Woolston/AP)
Kentucky Democratic governor Andy Beshear. (photo: Bryan Woolston/AP)
Kentucky's New Democratic Governor to Restore Voting Rights to Over 100,000 Former Felons
Dareh Gregorian, NBC News
Gregorian writes: "Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear announced in his inaugural address Tuesday that he'll sign an executive order this week restoring voting rights to more than 100,000 people who've been convicted of felonies."
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Saudi women’s rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul. (photo: Marieke Wijintjes)
Saudi women’s rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul. (photo: Marieke Wijintjes)
White House Veterans Helped UAE Hack Emails of Saudi Women's Rights Activist. Then She Was Arrested, Returned to Her Country and Tortured.
Joel Schectman and Christoper Bing, Reuters
Excerpt: "In the years after 9/11, former U.S. counterterrorism czar Richard Clarke warned Congress that the country needed more expansive spying powers to prevent another catastrophe."

EXCERPT:
In an interview in Washington, Clarke said that after recommending that the UAE create a cyber surveillance agency, his company, Good Harbor Consulting, was hired to help the country build it. The idea, Clarke said, was to create a unit capable of tracking terrorists. He said the plan was approved by the U.S. State Department and the National Security Agency, and that Good Harbor followed U.S. law. 

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Yupik men prepare a boat to fish for salmon on the Bering Sea. (photo: Andrew Burton/Getty)
Yupik men prepare a boat to fish for salmon on the Bering Sea. (photo: Andrew Burton/Getty)

Arctic Report Card 2019: Extreme Ice Loss, Dying Species as Global Warming Worsens
Sabrina Shankman, Inside Climate News
Shankman writes: "When dead salmon wash ashore along the coast of the Bering Sea, the problem is much bigger than dead fish. It's a sign of deeper trouble cascading through the Arctic's ecosystems."



For indigenous communities on the Bering Sea, a way of life is at risk as climate change hits fish populations and ricochets through ecosystems.



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Wednesday, July 13, 2016

RSN: Republican Platform Declares Coal Is Clean, Co-founder of Minuteman Vigilante Border Patrol Gets 19 Years in Arizona Prison for Sex Abuse, As Bernie Prepares to Endorse Hillary, We Should Remember How Far He Pushed the Democrats




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12 July 16 PM
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Robert Reich | As Bernie Prepares to Endorse Hillary, We Should Remember How Far He Pushed the Democrats
Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich. (photo: Steve Russell/Toronto Star)
Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Facebook Page
Reich writes: "I was among those who argued Bernie should hold off endorsing Hillary until the convention nominates her (assuming it would nominate her) - because the moment he endorses he loses whatever leverage he might have to push her campaign and the Democratic Party in a progressive (that is, not the Democratic corporate and Wall Street) direction."
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Eric Holder's Longtime Excuse for Not Prosecuting Banks Just Crashed and Burned
David Dayen, The Intercept
Dayen writes: "Eric Holder has long insisted that he tried really hard when he was attorney general to make criminal cases against big banks in the wake of the 2007 financial crisis. His excuse, which he made again just last month, was that Justice Department prosecutors didn't have enough evidence to bring charges."
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Seth Meyers: People Blaming Black Lives Matter for Dallas Need to 'Shut the F*ck Up'
Matt Wilstein, The Daily Beast
Wilstein writes: "John Oliver is on hiatus. Samantha Bee has the night off. Trevor Noah and Larry Wilmore are taking a break before next week's GOP convention. So on the Monday night after last week's sniper attack on Dallas police officers, it was left to Seth Meyers to tackle the story for all of late-night television."
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Chelsea Manning Reassures Supporters After Failed Suicide Attempt
Middle East Eye
Excerpt: "US whistleblower Chelsea Manning has reassured supporters that she is 'glad to be alive' despite being hospitalized after a failed suicide attempt last week."
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Co-founder of Minuteman Vigilante Border Patrol Gets 19 Years in Arizona Prison for Sex Abuse
David Schwartz, Reuters
Schwartz writes: "The co-founder of the vigilante border patrol group known as the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps was sentenced on Monday to 19 1/2 years in an Arizona prison for molesting a five-year-old girl who was the friend of his daughter, prosecutors said."
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Bahamas Tells Young Men to Exercise Caution With US Police
Merrit Kennedy, NPR
Kennedy writes: "The Bahamas is advising its young male citizens traveling to the U.S. to 'exercise extreme caution' in their interactions with police, following two recent high-profile police shootings of black men."
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Republican Platform Declares Coal Is Clean
Rebecca Leber, Grist
Leber writes: "The Republican platform committee met in Cleveland the week before the Republican National Convention to hammer out the party's policies in a Trump era. Not to be outdone by Democrats, who approved the party's strongest platform language yet on climate change this weekend, Republicans have gone as far as possible in the other direction - by endorsing coal as clean."
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Tuesday, May 31, 2016

RSN: Forgetting the Crimes of War, The New York Times's (and Clinton Campaign's) Abject Cowardice on Israel,




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Glenn Greenwald | The New York Times's (and Clinton Campaign's) Abject Cowardice on Israel 
Hillary Clinton and Benjamin Netanyahu. (photo: Alex Brandon/AP)
Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept 
Greenwald writes: "The refusal to use the word occupation without scare quotes is one of the most cowardly editorial decisions the New York Times has made since refusing to use the word 'torture' because the Bush administration denied its validity." 
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Eric Holder: Snowden Performed a 'Public Service' 
Rebecca Savransky, The Hill 
Savransky writes: "Eric Holder's thaw on NSA leaker Edward Snowden continued this week, with the former attorney general now saying the former government contractor performed a valuable 'public service.'" 
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Forgetting the Crimes of War 
Gary G. Kohls and S. Brian Willson, Consortium News 
Excerpt: "In the U.S. political culture, Memorial Day has become one more chance to glorify American wars and to exploit U.S. soldiers' deaths to generate sentiment for more wars." 
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The bodies of Vietnamese men, women and children piled along a road in My Lai after a U.S. Army massacre on March 16, 1968. (photo: Ronald L. Haeberle)
The bodies of Vietnamese men, women and children piled along a road in My Lai after a U.S. 
Army massacre on March 16, 1968. (photo: Ronald L. Haeberle)
In the U.S. political culture, Memorial Day has become one more chance to glorify American wars and to exploit U.S. soldiers’ deaths to generate sentiment for more wars, a troubling tactic addressed by Gary G. Kohls and S. Brian Willson.

ne of the many heroes of the peace movement who came out of the Vietnam War was Vietnam veteran S. Brian Willson. Just like millions of other draft-age Americans, law student Willson had been drafted into that illegal and genocidal war – against his will – and came back disturbed and angry.
For reasons discussed below, he joined the anti-war movement after witnessing the Reagan/Bush Central American war after he traveled to Nicaragua and saw peasants being murdered by US-backed Contras (aka “freedom fighters”). Willson joined the antiwar movement in 1986 and has protested vigorously against America’s aggressive war policies ever since.
But his real life change came on Sept. 1, 1987, in Concord, California, where Willson was part of a gathering of antiwar protestors that were symbolically trying to stop the transport of weapons from a U.S. Navy munitions base. The weapons were destined for Nicaragua and El Salvador as part of the U.S.-backed war in Central America.
As a Vietnam veteran, Willson understood well the satanic nature of America’s perpetual wars against peasants, campesinos and other poor people in Third World countries who were unjustly accused of being “communists” as they were seeking relief from the tyranny of their ruling classes. He also knew about the poisonous realities of military toxins that are used in war that regularly poison innocent civilians, children, babies, villages, farm fields, water supplies and all the future inhabitants of the warzone.
Willson felt so strongly about the criminality of his country’s foreign policy against militarily inferior countries, that he put himself directly in harm’s way that day by lying down in front of the weapons supply train, expecting the engineer to stop. Instead of stopping, the engineer actually increased its speed above the speed limit and ran over him, severing both legs. The engineer later testified that he had only been obeying orders on how to deal with antiwar protesters.
Willson survived his near-fatal injuries, and he became a universally celebrated near-martyr for peace. He has vowed to spend the rest of his life speaking out against war. The piece below was written on May 27, 2016, and published in CounterPunch.
The Vietnam War radically changed him from a conservative Republican who had been raised in a Christian fundamentalist household. In Willson’s autobiography, titled Blood on the Tracks: The Life and Times of S. Brian Willson, he wrote about his war experience:
“in April 1969, I witnessed the incredible destruction that had just been inflicted (by aerial bombing and napalm ‘practice’) … on a typically defenseless village about the size of a large baseball stadium. With smoldering ruins throughout, the ground was strewn with bodies of villagers and their farm animals, many of whom were motionless and bloody, murdered from bomb shrapnel and napalm. Several were trying to get up on their feet, and others were moving ever so slightly as they cried and moaned. Most of the victims I witnessed were women and children.
“At one dramatic moment I encountered at close range a young wounded woman lying on the ground clutching three young disfigured children. I stared, aghast, at the woman’s open eyes. Upon closer examination, I discovered that she, and what I presumed were her children, all were dead, but napalm had melted much of the woman’s facial skin, including her eyelids. As the Vietnamese lieutenant and I silently made the one-plus hour return trip to our airbase in my jeep, I knew that my life was never going to be the same again.”
An eyewitness to Willson’s 1987 act of resistance to the US War Machine wrote that Brian questioned “the lessons of ‘patriotism’ with which we so proudly indoctrinate our children, especially our boy children. … Nearly twenty years later, I stood just behind Brian on a California train track in a well-publicized effort to block munitions trains carrying American weapons to kill other poor villagers in El Salvador and Nicaragua, thinking about the words he had spoken that morning, before one of those trains ripped his legs from his body. He said, ‘…each train that gets by us is going to kill people, people like you and me. … And the question that I have to ask on these tracks is: am I any more valuable than those people?’”
Here is the latest, very powerful testimony about what he thinks of Memorial Day from the American antiwar hero, S. Brian Willson:
By S. Brian Willson – May 27, 2016
Celebration of Memorial Day in the US, originally Decoration Day, commenced shortly after the conclusion of the Civil War. This is a national holiday to remember the people who died while serving in the armed forces. The day traditionally includes decorating graves of the fallen with flowers.
As a Viet Nam veteran, I know the kinds of pain and suffering incurred by over three million US soldiers, marines, sailors, and airmen, 58,313 of whom paid the ultimate price whose names are on The Vietnam Wall in Washington, DC. The Oregon Vietnam Memorial Wall alone, located here in Portland, contains 803 names on its walls.
The function of a memorial is to preserve memory. On this US Memorial Day, May 30, 2016, I want to preserve the memory of all aspects of the US war waged against the Southeast Asian people in Viet Nam, Laos, and Cambodia – what we call the Viet Nam War – as well as the tragic impacts it had on our own people and culture. My own healing and recovery requires me to honestly describe the war and understand how it has impacted me psychically, spiritually, and politically.
Likewise, the same remembrance needs to be practiced for both our soldiers and the victims in all the other countries affected by US wars and aggression. For example, the US incurred nearly 7,000 soldier deaths while causing as many as one million in Afghanistan and Iraq alone, a ratio of 1:143.
It is important to identify very concretely the pain and suffering we caused the Vietnamese – a people who only wanted to be independent from foreign occupiers, whether Chinese, France, Japan, or the United States of America. As honorably, and in some cases heroically, our military served and fought in Southeast Asia, we were nonetheless serving as cannon fodder, in effect mercenaries for reasons other than what we were told.
When I came to understand the true nature of the war, I felt betrayed by my government, by my religion, by my cultural conditioning into “American Exceptionalism,” which did a terrible disservice to my own humanity, my own life’s journey. Thus, telling the truth as I uncover it is necessary for recovering my own dignity.
I am staggered by the amount of firepower the US used, and the incredible death and destruction it caused on an innocent people. Here are some statistics:
–Seventy-five percent of South Viet Nam was considered a free-fire zone (i.e., genocidal zones)
–Over 6 million Southeast Asians killed
–Over 64,000 US and Allied soldiers killed
–Over 1,600 US soldiers, and 300,000 Vietnamese soldiers remain missing
–Thousands of amputees, paraplegics, blind, deaf, and other maimings created
–13,000 of 21,000 of Vietnamese villages, or 62 percent, severely damaged or destroyed, mostly by bombing
–Nearly 950 churches and pagodas destroyed by bombing
–350 hospitals and 1,500 maternity wards destroyed by bombing
–Nearly 3,000 high schools and universities destroyed by bombing
–Over 15,000 bridges destroyed by bombing
–10 million cubic meters of dikes destroyed by bombing
–Over 3,700 US fixed-wing aircraft lost
–36,125,000 US helicopter sorties during the war; over 10,000 helicopters were lost or severely damaged
–26 million bomb craters created, the majority from B-52s (a B-52 bomb crater could be 20 feet deep, and 40 feet across)
–39 million acres of land in Indochina (or 91 percent of the land area of South Viet Nam) were littered with fragments of bombs and shells, equivalent to 244,000 (160 acre) farms, or an area the size of all New England except Connecticut
–21 million gallons (80 million liters) of extremely poisonous chemicals (herbicides) were applied in 20,000 chemical spraying missions between 1961 and 1970 in the most intensive use of chemical warfare in human history, with as many as 4.8 million Vietnamese living in nearly 3,200 villages directly sprayed by the chemicals
–24 percent, or 16,100 square miles, of South Viet Nam was sprayed, an area larger than the states of Connecticut, Vermont, and Rhode Island combined, killing tropical forest, food crops, and inland forests
–Over 500,000 Vietnamese have died from chronic conditions related to chemical spraying with an estimated 650,000 still suffering from such conditions; 500,000 children have been born with Agent Orange-induced birth defects, now including third generation offspring
–Nearly 375,000 tons of fire-balling napalm was dropped on villages
–Huge Rome Plows (made in Rome, Georgia), 20-ton earthmoving D7E Caterpillar tractors, fitted with a nearly 2.5-ton curved 11-foot wide attached blade protected by 14 additional tons of armor plate, scraped clean between 700,000 and 750,000 acres (1,200 square miles), an area equivalent to Rhode Island, leaving bare earth, rocks, and smashed trees
–As many as 36,000,000 total tons of ordnance expended from aerial and naval bombing, artillery, and ground combat firepower. On an average day, US artillery expended 10,000 rounds costing $1 million per day; 150,000-300,000 tons of UXO remain scattered around Southeast Asia: 40,000 have been killed in Viet Nam since the end of the war in 1975, and nearly 70,000 injured; 20,000 Laotians have been killed or injured since the end of the war
–7 billion gallons of fuel were consumed by US forces during the war
–If there was space for all 6,000,000 names of Southeast Asian dead on the Vietnam Wall in Washington, DC, it would be over 9 sobering miles long, or nearly 100 times its current 493 foot length
I am not able to memorialize our sacrificed US soldiers without also remembering the death and destroyed civilian infrastructure we caused in our illegal invasion and occupation of Viet Nam, Laos and Cambodia. It has been 47 years since I carried out my duties in Viet Nam. My “service” included being an eyewitness to the aftermath of bombings from the air of undefended fishing villages where virtually all the inhabitants were massacred, the vast majority being small children. In that experience, I felt complicit in a diabolical crime against humanity. This experience led me to deeply grasping that I am not worth more than any other human being, and they are not worth less than me.
Recently I spent more than three weeks in Viet Nam, my first trip back since involuntarily being sent there in 1969. I was struck by the multitudes of children suffering from birth defects, most caused presumably by the US chemical spraying some 50 years ago. I experienced deep angst knowing that the US is directly responsible for this genetic damage now being passed on from one generation to the next. I am ashamed that the US government has never acknowledged responsibility or paid reparations. I found myself apologizing to the people for the crimes of my country.
When we only memorialize US soldiers while ignoring the victims of our aggression, we in effect are memorializing war. I cannot do that. War is insane, and our country continues to perpetuate its insanity on others, having been constantly at war since at least 1991. We fail our duties as citizens if we remain silent rather than calling our US wars for what they are – criminal and deceitful aggressions violating international and US law to assure control of geostrategic resources, deemed necessary to further our insatiable American Way Of Life (AWOL).
Memorial Day for me requires remembering all of the deaths and devastation of our wars, and it should remind all of us of the need to end the madness. If we want to end war, we must begin to directly address our out-of-control capitalist political economy that knows no limits to profits for a few at the expense of the many, including our soldiers.


Gary G. Kohls is a retired physician from Duluth, Minnesota. He writes a weekly column for the Reader, Duluth’s alternative newsweekly magazine. His columns often deal with the dangers of American fascism, corporatism and militarism. Many of his columns are archived athttp://duluthreader.com/articles/categories/200_Duty_to_Warn and at http://www.globalresearch.ca/author/gary-g-kohls.


Thousands of Sexual Assault Victims in the Military Have Been Denied Veteran Health Care 
Alex Zielinski, Think Progress 
Zielinski writes: "A report released this month by Human Rights Watch highlights the thousands of military members like Liz Luras who lost their careers and health care after reporting a sexual assault." 
READ MORE
How Big of a Difference Does an All-White Jury Make? A Leading Expert Explains. 
Janell Ross, The Washington Post 
Excerpt: "The results of a new study indicate that the racial composition of a jury has a large effect on conviction rates." 
READ MORE
Revolutionary Kurdish Feminist Takes on Islamic State Group 
teleSUR 
Excerpt: "A female Kurdish commander, who says that she is inspired by women who have given their lives in the fight against the Islamic State group, is leading the Syrian Democratic Forces." 
READ MORE
Glyphosate Found in Urine of 93 Percent of Americans Tested 
Organic Consumers Association 
Excerpt: "Glyphosate, the most used herbicide in the world, has been found in the urine of 93 percent of the American public during a unique testing project that started in 2015." 
READ MORE



Friday, July 10, 2015

RSN: With Thousands Already Killed by Extreme Weather in 2015, a Strong El Nino Could Bring More Chaos, Police Officers Shot and Killed More People So Far in July Than During Any Other Week This Year, Eric Holder, Wall Street Double Agent, Comes in From the Cold




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Matt Taibbi | Eric Holder, Wall Street Double Agent, Comes in From the Cold 
Eric Holder is back at Covington & Burling after serving as U.S. attorney general for six years. (photo: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty) 
Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone 
Taibbi writes: "Holder will reassume his lucrative partnership (he made $2.5 million the last year he worked there) and take his seat in an office that reportedly - this is no joke - was kept empty for him in his absence." 
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21.5 Million Social Security Numbers Stolen From Government Computers 
Brian Naylor, NPR 
Naylor writes: "The Office of Personnel Management says that number includes 19.7 million individuals who applied for a background investigation and 1.8 million nonapplicants, who it says are primarily spouses and cohabitants of the applicants." 
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Police Officers Shot and Killed More People So Far in July Than During Any Other Week This Year 
Mark Berman, The Washington Post 
Berman writes: "This stretch ended Tuesday with officers across the country shooting and killing eight people, the most police shootings that have occurred on any single day in 2015 - ending the deadliest week so far with the deadliest day." 
READ MORE
Jeb Bush and Allied Super PAC Raise an Unprecedented $114 Million War Chest 
Ed O'Keefe and Matea Gold, The Washington Post 
Excerpt: "The bulk of the money was raised by his allied super PAC, Right to Rise USA, which announced Thursday that it brought in more than $103 million between January and June. Separately, the Bush campaign said it raised $11.4 million in the second quarter." 
READ MORE
NSA Tapped German Chancellery for Decades, WikiLeaks Claims 
Reuters 
Excerpt: "A report released by the group on Wednesday suggested NSA spying on Merkel and her staff had gone on far longer and more widely than previously realised. WikiLeaks said the NSA targeted 125 phone numbers of top German officials for long-term surveillance." 
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Greece Debt Crisis: Athens Accepts Harsh Austerity as Bailout Deal Nears 
Phillip Inman, Graeme Wearden and Helena Smith, Guardian UK 
Excerpt: "The Greek government capitulated on Thursday to demands from its creditors for severe austerity measures in return for a modest debt write-off, raising hopes that a rescue deal could be signed at an emergency meeting of EU leaders on Sunday." 
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With Thousands Already Killed by Extreme Weather in 2015, a Strong El Nino Could Bring More Chaos 
Lizzie Dearden, The Independent 
Dearden writes: "Thousands of people have been killed by extreme weather so far this year and now scientists fear a weather event will cause droughts, wildfires, flooding, landslides and food shortages." 
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Wednesday, February 18, 2015

RSN: James Risen Slams Holder, 'Administration Is Greatest Enemy of Press Freedom'





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FOCUS | James Risen Slams Holder, 'Administration Is Greatest Enemy of Press Freedom'
James Risen, a reporter for The New York Times. (photo: Alex Menendez/AP)
Hadas Gold, Politico
Gold writes: "'Eric Holder has been the nation's top censorship officer, not the top law enforcement officer,' Risen tweeted. 'Eric Holder has done the bidding of the intelligence community and the White House to damage press freedom in the United States.'"
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Sunday, November 9, 2014

RSN: Scotland Produced Enough Wind Energy in October to Power Every Home, 'Eric Holder the Corporate Defender Let the Banks Off the Hook',



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Matt Taibbi: 'Eric Holder the Corporate Defender Let the Banks Off the Hook'
Investigative Journalist Matt Taibbi. (photo: Rolling Stone)
Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez, Democracy Now!
Excerpt: "How did the bank avoid prosecution for committing fraud that helped cause the 2008 financial crisis? Today we speak to JPMorgan Chase whistleblower Alayne Fleischmann in her first televised interview discussing how she witnessed 'massive criminal securities fraud' in the bank's mortgage operations."
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Ralph Nader | Democrats Not Knowing What They Stand For - Lose
Ralph Nader, The Nader Page
Nader writes: "Did the Republicans win these mid-term elections? Or did the Democrats lose? The numbers show that in contested Senate races, where the Republicans picked up seven seats and will probably gain two more to take control of the Senate, voters did not support those Democrats who were the most wishy-washy."
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30 Years of Conservative Nonsense, An Explainer
Kurt Eichenwald, Vanity Fair
 
President Ronald Reagan and Vice President George H. W. Bush at the 1984 Republican National Convention in Dallas, Texas. (photo: Wikipedia)
President Ronald Reagan and Vice President George H. W. Bush at the 1984 Republican National Convention in Dallas, Texas. (photo: Wikipedia)

Eichenwald writes: "Are conservatives ever right? The question isn't meant to suggest that liberals are never wrong. But reviewing the last few decades of conservative policy initiatives - or their objections over that timespan to policies they hate - shows a consistent pattern of failure: predictions never pan out, and intended results turn to catastrophic flops."
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Eric Boehlert | Obstruction, and How the Press Helped Punch the GOP's Midterm Ticket
Eric Boehlert, Media Matters for America
 
Fox election night coverage. (photo: Fox News)
Fox election night coverage. (photo: Fox News)

Boehlert writes: "In the days after the midterm elections, the New York Times has been a cornucopia of campaign commentary. Lots of attention is being paid to the issue of gridlock, which has defined Washington, D.C., since President Obama was first inaugurated."
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Going Against Netanyahu, 84 Percent of US Jews Favor Iran Nuclear Deal
Howard LaFranchi, Christian Science Monitor
 
Jewish backing of the administration's efforts to strike a deal suggests that American Jews aren't heeding the alarms being sounded in Israel by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (photo: Reuters)
Jewish backing of the administration's efforts to strike a deal suggests that American Jews aren't heeding the alarms being sounded in Israel by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (photo: Reuters)

LaFranchi writes: "As President Obama presses to reach an accord with Iran on its nuclear program by the end of the month, he can count on strong support from what might seem like an unlikely segment of the population: American Jews."
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Is Kacey Musgraves the New Wendy Davis?
Matt Lewis, The Daily Beast
Lewis writes: "With liberal darlings Wendy Davis and Sandra Fluke hitting the skids on Tuesday, and 'Girls' star Lena Dunham canceling public appearances and threatening to sue conservative outlets, it is perhaps time for another liberal savior to rise. And that's where Kacey Musgraves, who took home Song of the Year for 'Follow Your Arrow' at the CMA's on Wednesday, comes in."
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Scotland Produced Enough Wind Energy in October to Power Every Home
Ari Phillips, ThinkProgress
 
Wind Farms are generating enough power to power countries. (photo: SBC)
Wind Farms are generating enough power to power countries. (photo: SBC)
 

Phillips writes: "According to new numbers published by WWF Scotland this week, wind turbines generated enough electricity in October to power 3,045,000 homes in the U.K. - more than enough for all the homes in Scotland."
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