Totally old school.
At LAT, "Dodgers win after head-banger brawl."
Read it at the link.
Also, "Dodgers-Diamondbacks brawl is not some simple head game."
Plus, a video from MLB, and on Twitter.
Commentary and analysis on American politics, culture, and national identity, U.S. foreign policy and international relations, and the state of education - from a neoconservative perspective! - Keeping an eye on the communist-left so you don't have to!
Re "'Night Stalker' lived violently, dies in his hospital bed," June 8.I tweeted so much when I first heard the news.
The fact that serial killer Richard Ramirez was able to die of natural causes while on California's death row shows the injustice of our justice system. His victims suffered. Many died.
Ramirez's living all these years while those he killed laid in graves was wrong. His being able to live off a system because of rights and laws is a slap in the face to everyone he hurt. After all, his victims were not protected like he was.
Ramirez was guilty, and nothing changed that over time. He should have been executed.
George Vreeland Hill
Beverly Hills
The glamorous dancer girlfriend of NSA whistle-blower Edward Snowden has revealed her devastation at his decision to go on the run without her."She specializes in pole dancing."
Lindsay Mills, 28, who described her boyfriend as "E" and her "man of mystery", said: "My world has opened and closed all at once. Leaving me lost at sea without a compass."
Writing on her blog, she said: "As I type this on my tear-streaked keyboard I’m reflecting on all the faces that have graced my path. The ones I laughed with. The ones I’ve held. The one I’ve grown to love the most. And the ones I never got to bid adieu. But sometimes life doesn’t afford proper goodbyes."
On her Facebook page Miss Mills posted a picture of the sun setting over the ocean but did not reveal her whereabouts. There was no sign of her at the rented three bedroom home in Waipahu, Hawaii that the couple had shared for several months, and moved out of on May 1.
In the extensive blog called "L's Journey," Miss Mills, a graduate of the Maryland Institute College of Art, reveals that the couple once lived in Japan.
They also holidayed in Hong Kong where Mr Snowden fled when he revealed the top secret government documents. Mr Snowden has said he told his girlfriend he was going away for a few weeks on a work trip.
Over the past few years Miss Mills has also posted many scantily clad photographs of herself and videos of her performing. The blog is titled "Adventures of a world-traveling, pole-dancing super hero."
She specialises in pole dancing, partner acrobatics, and aerial dance and worked regularly over the last year with the Waikiki Acrobatic Troupe, a collection of around 30 dancers.
Apple (AAPL) on Monday responded to criticism that it isn't innovating enough by unveiling a revamped mobile operating system with a plethora of new features, a radically redesigned desktop computer, and an Internet radio service.More at that top link
But the largely anticipated news failed to wow investors as shares dipped 0.7%.
At Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco, executives shared their latest products with 6,000 software developers in attendance.
The cylindrical Mac Pro desktop for creative professionals is the Apple's boldest design since the short-lived Power Mac G4 Cube more than a decade ago. The black, 9.9-inch tall PC looks like oversized 35-mm film canister. It is one-eighth the volume of the current Mac Pro. It also boasts much faster computing and graphics processing. Assembled in the U.S., the new Mac Pro will be available later this year.
"This is the future of the Pro desktop," marketing chief Phil Schiller said. "This is a machine unlike anything we've ever made both inside and out."
How you view Edward Snowden probably has a lot to do with how much you care about the threat of terrorism and how much you care about online privacy.
Hero? Traitor? Or someone in between?Well, I can relate to principle, although Snowden's a tool of the left --- and those people have been harming U.S. security since long before the war on terror. Screw 'em.
How you view Edward Snowden, who exposed two sweeping U.S. online surveillance programs, probably has a lot to do with which you fear more — terrorist bombers or government snoopers.
Snowden's admission that he was the one who'd released evidence of the top-secret programs — one of the most sensational leaks of classified material in U.S. history — expanded an already blistering debate over the clash between national security and online privacy.
With Snowden's assistance, The Guardian and The Washington Post have recently published a series of top-secret documents detailing the government surveillance programs. One gathers hundreds of millions of U.S. phone records while searching for possible links to suspected terrorists abroad; the second allows the government to tap into U.S. Internet companies' data to detect suspicious behavior that begins overseas.
Who is Ed Snowden? That depends on who's asking.
From Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg, whom Henry Kissinger called "the most dangerous man in America," to Wikileaks dumper Bradley Manning, on trial accused of high crimes, Americans' views of their whistle-blowers always have depended on their own personal politics.
"We've seen this again and again," said Stephen Kohn, director of the National Whistleblowers Center and a lawyer who has defended whistle-blowers.
He said public support for a whistle-blower usually is tied more to a political issue — the Vietnam War, in Ellsberg's case — than to the rights of whistle-blowers or the issue of whistle-blowing.
Kohn said some people who might support Snowden's actions in principle are so concerned about terrorism "they'll say, at the end of the day, you can't have civil servants or contractors acting in this way." Those primarily worried about online privacy are more sympathetic.
Al Gore hardest hit.
Rebecca S. Hertsgaard of Palm Springs took personal offense at the letter:More angry idiots at the link.
"I am deeply offended at this fallacious argument regarding gay parenting and the fact that someone would believe that a child needs both a mother and a father, something gay parenting is unable to provide.
"A woman's 'role' in a marriage? A man's 'role'? Besides apparently ignoring the fact that many children are born without benefit of their parents being either married or together, Graham also apparently still believes the arcane notion that fathers can't provide 'softness' and mothers can't provide 'protection.' I raised my children alone for many years, and they thrived.
"I'm just outraged. And I'm not even gay."
When Americans expressed outrage last week over the seizure and surveillance of Verizon's client data by the National Security Agency, President Obama responded: "In the abstract, you can complain about Big Brother . . . but when you actually look at the details, I think we've struck the right balance."Continue reading.
How many records did the NSA seize from Verizon? Hundreds of millions. We are now learning about more potential mass data collections by the government from other communications and online companies. These are the "details," and few Americans consider this approach "balanced," though many rightly consider it Orwellian.
These activities violate the Fourth Amendment, which says warrants must be specific—"particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." And what is the government doing with these records? The president assures us that the government is simply monitoring the origin and length of phone calls, not eavesdropping on their contents. Is this administration seriously asking us to trust the same government that admittedly targets political dissidents through the Internal Revenue Service and journalists through the Justice Department?
No one objects to balancing security against liberty. No one objects to seeking warrants for targeted monitoring based on probable cause. We've always done this.
What is objectionable is a system in which government has unlimited and privileged access to the details of our private affairs, and citizens are simply supposed to trust that there won't be any abuse of power. This is an absurd expectation. Americans should trust the National Security Agency as much as they do the IRS and Justice Department.
Monitoring the records of as many as a billion phone calls, as some news reports have suggested, is no modest invasion of privacy. It is an extraordinary invasion of privacy. We fought a revolution over issues like generalized warrants, where soldiers would go from house to house, searching anything they liked. Our lives are now so digitized that the government going from computer to computer or phone to phone is the modern equivalent of the same type of tyranny that our Founders rebelled against...
Barack Obama was facing a mounting domestic and international backlash against US surveillance operations on Monday as the administration struggled to contain one of the most explosive national security leaks in US history.Yeah, and the idiot Ellsberg compares the U.S. to East Germany's "Stasi" regime. A nice touch from a traitor.
Political opinion in the US was split with some members of Congress calling for the immediate extradition from Hong Kong of the whistleblower, Edward Snowden. But other senior politicians in both main parties questioned whether US surveillance practices had gone too far.
Dianne Feinstein, chairman of the national intelligence committee, has ordered the NSA to review how it limits the exposure of Americans to government surveillance. But she made clear her disapproval of Snowden. "What he did was an act of treason," she said.
Officials in European capitals demanded immediate answers from their US counterparts and denounced the practice of secretly gathering digital information on Europeans as unacceptable, illegal and a serious violation of basic rights. The NSA, meanwhile, has referred Snowden to the Justice Department, and said that it was assessing the damage caused by the disclosures.
Daniel Ellsberg, the former military analyst who revealed secrets of the Vietnam war through the Pentagon Papers in 1971, described Snowden's leak as even more important and perhaps the most significant leak in American history.
64% of Dems now say NSA surveillance program acceptable; 36% said that when Bush was president pewrsr.ch/19ikCJS twitter.com/pewresearch/st…
— Pew Research Center (@pewresearch) June 10, 2013
Hypocrisy! MT @pewresearch 64% of Dems now say NSA surveillance program acceptable; 36% said that when Bush was pres. pewrsr.ch/19ikCJS
— Donald Douglas (@AmPowerBlog) June 10, 2013
"Stand by Me. "
Ed Driscoll, at Instapundit "AND THE ROLE OF EMMANUEL GOLDSTEIN WILL BE PLAYED BY…: Liberals’ Knives Come Out for Nate Silver After His Model Points to a Trump Victory..."
R.S. McCain, "'Jews Are Dead, Hamas Is Happy, and Podhoretz Has Got His Rage On ..."
Ace, "Georgia Shooter's Father Berated Him as a "Sissy" and Bought Him an AR-15 to 'Toughen Him Up'..."Free Beacon..., "Kamala Harris, the ‘Candidate of Change,’ Copies Sections of Her Policy Page Directly From Biden's Platform..."