Wednesday, June 17, 2015

New York Times Slams Irish Student Visa Program as 'Source of Embarrassment' — #BerkeleyBalconyCollapse

A "drunken" source of embarrassment at that.

Stereotype much?

Maybe they could've waited a few days to push, ahem, a hard-hitting piece about the J-1 visa program? Well, no.

The piece slams the student visa program in general, but the writers are so tone deaf it's sickening.

See, "Deaths of Irish Students in Berkeley Balcony Collapse Cast Pall on Program":
BERKELEY, Calif. — They come by the thousands — Irish students on work visas, many flocking to the West Coast to work in summer jobs by day and to enjoy the often raucous life in a college town at night. It was, for many, a rite of passage, one last summer to enjoy travel abroad before beginning a career.

But the work-visa program that allowed for the exchanges has in recent years become not just a source of aspiration, but also a source of embarrassment for Ireland, marked by a series of high-profile episodes involving drunken partying and the wrecking of apartments in places like San Francisco and Santa Barbara.

Early Tuesday, 13 people, most of them young Irish students here on the visa program, were crowded onto a fourth-floor balcony off Unit 405 for what neighbors described as a loud party when the balcony collapsed, sending people tumbling onto the street below.

Six people were killed; five were Irish and the sixth had dual Irish-American citizenship, according to the Irish Embassy. Three of the dead were men, three were women, and all were in their 20s. At least seven others suffered injuries, some serious...
And see the Guardian UK, "New York Times apologizes to Ireland for ‘insensitive’ ​balcony collapse story":

The New York Times apologized on Wednesday after a story about a balcony collapse in California that left five of Ireland’s citizens dead was denounced by the country’s government officials.

The article said that students traveling to Berkeley, California on J-1 visas, like those that died in the collapse, were “not just a source of aspiration, but also a source of embarrassment for Ireland”.

The tone of the piece inspired widespread condemnation from a country reeling from the deaths of the five young people, all aged 21 or 22. One person with dual US-Irish citizenship also died.

“It was never our intention to blame the victims and we apologize if the piece left that impression,” said New York Times spokesperson Eileen Murphy in an email.

The students in Berkeley were celebrating a 21st birthday when the apartment balcony collapsed. Six people died in the incident and seven others were injured.

The New York Times article was “intended to explain in greater detail why these young Irish students were in the US”, said Murphy. “We understand and agree that some of the language in the piece could be interpreted as insensitive, particularly in such close proximity to this tragedy.”

Anne Anderson, the Irish ambassador to the US, said that language used in the article was “insensitive and inaccurate” in a public letter to the New York Times editor.

“No one yet knows what caused the collapse of the fourth-floor balcony; the matter is under urgent investigation by structural engineers,” Anderson wrote. “The implication of your article – that the behaviour of the students was in some way a factor in the collapse – has caused deep offence.”

She said that it is “quite simply wrong” to portray the visa programme as a “source of embarrassment”.

“Yes, there have been isolated incidents of the type to which your article refers. But they are wholly unrepresentative: bear in mind that 150,000 young Irish people have participated in the J1 program over the past 50 years, and some 7,000 are here for Summer 2015,” she said. “From all the feedback we receive, we know that the overwhelming majority of our J1 participants behave in a way that does Ireland proud.”

Ireland’s junior minister for new communities, culture and equality, Aodhán Ó Ríordáin, said on Twitter that the newspaper’s reporting about the collapse “is a disgrace”.

He also called the newspaper’s apology “pathetic”...''

Treasury Department to Remove Alexander Hamilton from $10 Bill

I like Hamilton, but Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew says he's got to go --- in favor of a woman!

At Pajamas, "Treasury to Go All Aaron Burr on the $10 Bill, Bump Off Hamilton."


Stunning Kate Hudson Bikini Shot on Greek Island of Skiathos

She's so sweet.

On Instagram.

Story at People Magazine, "Kate Hudson Models a Teeny Bikini – and Flaunts Her Insane Abs – While Vacationing in Greece."

The Left, Losing the Debate on Homosexuals and Transgenders, Always Resorts to 'Biological Basis' Fall-Back Position

This is great, from Daniel Payne, at the Federalist, "Left Resorts to ‘Gaslighting’ Tactics In Transgender Debate."

I had to chuckle a couple of times, although the implication of the argument supports the idea that radical homosexual leftists will ratchet ever increasing totalitarian methods to shut down opposition to the left's regressive agenda.


AQAP's Most Dangerous Man Is Still Alive

From Yochi Dreazen, at Foreign Policy, "Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula’s Most Dangerous Man Is Still Alive":
The CIA drone strike that killed the head of al Qaeda’s Yemeni affiliate took out a militant Washington has been hunting for years. An even more elusive and dangerous member of the group remains at large, however: the master bomb-maker who almost blew up an American airliner and poses what U.S. intelligence officials see as a genuine threat to successfully down one in the future.

In a rambling 10-minute video Tuesday, al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula confirmed that its leader, Nasir al-Wuhayshi, died in an American strike last week. A spokesman for the group, Khaled Saeed Batarfi, praised Wuhayshi as a “brave commander” and promised to take revenge. “To the caretaker of disbelief, America, Allah has left for you those who shall blacken your faces, embitter your living, and make you taste the bitterness of the war and taste of defeat,” Miqdad said, according to a translation from the SITE Intelligence Group, which tracks jihadi social media.

Militant groups routinely release defiant statements after a top leader is killed, but the group may have more reason than most for its confidence about one day carrying out a successful strike against the United States. Wuhayshi commanded the group, but he didn’t actually build the sophisticated nonmetallic explosives that keep Western counterterrorism officials awake at night.Wuhayshi commanded the group, but he didn’t actually build the sophisticated nonmetallic explosives that keep Western counterterrorism officials awake at night. Those bombs, carefully designed to evade detection by metal detectors and bomb-sniffing dogs, have instead been assembled by a shadowy former Saudi chemist named Ibrahim al-Asiri. And a U.S. official said Tuesday that Asiri, despite multiple U.S. attempts to kill him, is thought to still be very much alive.

“Asiri and his skills remain a key strength of the group,” said Michael Morell, a former acting director of the CIA. When asked about Asiri’s technical expertise as a bomb-maker, Morell had a blunt answer: “He is the best.”

Bruce Riedel, a former high-level CIA official, said Asiri presented a significant threat to the United States because the longer he remained operational, the more militants he could train in the fine art of building explosive devices capable of evading Western screening technologies.

“Asiri is a danger not just because of his skills, but because he has educated a cadre of bomb-makers to be his legacy,” Riedel said.

The White House has trumpeted Wuhayshi’s death as a significant accomplishment, with National Security Council spokesman Ned Price saying Tuesday that it “strikes a major blow to AQAP” and to al Qaeda more broadly. The CIA strike, Price added, “removes from the battlefield an experienced terrorist leader and brings us closer to degrading and ultimately defeating these groups.”

Both Morell and Riedel question that assertion, arguing that AQAP may actually be more dangerous than ever before because it has been able to take advantage of the violence and political instability wracking its home base of Yemen. The United States yanked most of its intelligence and Special Operations personnel out of Yemen earlier this year after Iranian-backed Houthi rebels captured the capital of Sanaa and broad swaths of the country. Saudi Arabia has mounted a broad air campaign to dislodge the group, but it has so far notched few tangible victories.

“AQAP is stronger today than ever, even without Wuhayshi, because of the chaos in Yemen,” Riedel said.  “It has a very dangerous stronghold now in the far east of the country.”

The threat posed by the group stems, in large part, from Asiri’s continued ability to evade the combined might of the CIA and the secretive Joint Special Operations Command and continue his work...
More.

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Cybersecurity and US-China International Relations

In light of the supposedly catastrophic OPM hack, I went back to the Winter issue of International Security to read Professor Jon Lindsay's lead article, "The Impact of China on Cybersecurity: Fiction and Friction" (in PDF here).

A great piece, non-alarmist, with a fabulous 4x4 typology on the nature of international cyber threat narratives.

Fortunately, Lindsay has a beautiful summary of the article at the Huffington Post, "Inflated Cybersecurity Threat Escalates US-China Mistrust":

The rhetorical spiral of mistrust in the Sino-American relationship threatens to undermine the mutual benefits of the information revolution. Fears about the paralysis of the United States' digital infrastructure or the hemorrhage of its competitive advantage are exaggerated.

Policymakers in the United States often portray China as posing a serious cybersecurity threat. In 2013 U.S. National Security Adviser Tom Donilon stated that Chinese cyber intrusions not only endanger national security but also threaten U.S. firms with the loss of competitive advantage.

One U.S. member of Congress has asserted that China has "laced the U.S. infrastructure with logic bombs." Chinese critics, meanwhile, denounce Western allegations of Chinese espionage and decry National Security Agency (NSA) activities revealed by Edward Snowden.

The People's Daily newspaper has described the United States as "a thief crying 'stop thief.'" Chinese commentators increasingly call for the exclusion of U.S. internet firms from the Chinese market, citing concerns about collusion with the NSA, and argue that the institutions of internet governance give the United States an unfair advantage.

Chinese cyber operators face underappreciated organizational challenges, including information overload and bureaucratic compartmentalization, which hinder the weaponization of cyberspace or absorption of stolen intellectual property.

More important, both the United States and China have strong incentives to moderate the intensity of their cyber exploitation to preserve profitable interconnections and avoid costly punishment. The policy backlash against U.S. firms and liberal internet governance by China and others is ultimately more worrisome for U.S. competitiveness than espionage; ironically, it is also counterproductive for Chinese growth.

The United States is unlikely to experience either a so-called digital Pearl Harbor through cyber warfare or death by a thousand cuts through industrial espionage. There is, however, some danger of crisis miscalculation when states field cyberweapons.

The secrecy of cyberweapons' capabilities and the uncertainties about their effects and collateral damage are as likely to confuse friendly militaries as they are to muddy signals to an adversary.

Unsuccessful preemptive cyberattacks could reveal hostile intent and thereby encourage retaliation with more traditional (and reliable) weapons. Conversely, preemptive escalation spurred by fears of cyberattack could encourage the target to use its cyberweapons before it loses the opportunity to do so. Bilateral dialogue is essential for reducing the risks of misperception between the United States and China in the event of a crisis.
Keep reading.


Just Wow! Rachel Dolezal Denies Larry and Ruthanne Dolezal Are Really Her Biological Parents (VIDEO)

This woman is truly psycho. She's so deep into her ideological cesspool of lies that she threw her (biological) parents under the bus on national TV.

Honestly, I didn't blog Dolezal yesterday, considering her a peak loser, but once again she comes through with an even deeper and elaborate degree of leftist evil.

Sick, sick, sick.

The video is here: "Rachel Dolezal Full New Interview : 'Nothing About Being White Describes Who I Am'."

Also at Politico, "Rachel Dolezal: No 'biological proof' I'm my parents' daughter."

And at the Los Angeles Times, "Rachel Dolezal throws doubt on her biological parents: 'I haven't had a DNA test'":

Rachel Dolezal photo thumbnail_2_7586030b_v2_zpsofil72pj.jpg
Rachel Dolezal's daylong media blitz in which she denied that she is a white woman posing as black culminated Tuesday night with a claim that she's not sure her white parents are her real parents.

"I haven't had a DNA test. There's been no biological proof that Larry and Ruthanne are my biological parents," Dolezal said in an appearance on "NBC Nightly News."

"There's a birth certificate that has your name on it and their names on it," interviewer Savannah Guthrie responded.

"I'm not necessarily saying that I can prove they're not," Dolezal said. "But I don't know that I can actually prove they are. I mean, the birth certificate is issued a month and a half after I'm born. And certainly there were no medical witnesses to my birth."

Earlier Tuesday, Dolezal, a former Spokane, Wash., NAACP leader, said she had viewed herself as black since childhood and knows what it’s like to “live black,” despite critics’ allegations she is a poseur.

In back-to-back interviews with NBC’s “Today” show and MSNBC on Tuesday morning, Dolezal did not offer any apologies and said she was being attacked in a “viciously inhumane way,” even as she remained committed to fighting for human rights.

Dolezal also denied switching racial identities for opportunistic reasons, even though she sued Howard University for allegedly discriminating against her when she was a white graduate student there, and years later described herself as black on job applications.

“I identify as black,” a composed, smiling Dolezal said during a 10-minute interview on “Today,” less than 24 hours after she resigned as president of the NAACP's chapter in Spokane, Wash.

Dolezal, 37, said she hoped the passions aroused by the episode would be channeled into a deeper conversation on ethnicity and race.

“The discussion really is what it is to be human,” she said.

Asked if she would again make the same choices that led to the uproar, Dolezal replied: “I would.”
More.

The woman is insane.

The Same-Sex Marriage Bait-and-Switch

From Jonathan Last, at the Weekly Standard, "You Will Be Assimilated":
You may recall Brendan Eich. The cofounder and CEO of Mozilla was dismissed from his company in 2014 when it was discovered that, six years earlier, he had donated $1,000 to California’s Proposition 8 campaign. That ballot initiative, limiting marriage to one man and one woman, passed with a larger percentage of the vote in California than Barack Obama received nationally in 2012. No one who knew Eich accused him of treating his gay coworkers badly—by all accounts he was kind and generous to his colleagues. Nonetheless, having provided modest financial support to a lawful ballot initiative that passed with a majority vote was deemed horrible enough to deprive Eich of his livelihood. Which is one thing.

What is quite another is the manner in which Eich has been treated since. A year after Eich’s firing, for instance, Hampton Catlin, a Silicon Valley programmer who was one of the first to demand Eich’s resignation, took to Twitter to bait Eich:
Hampton ‏@hcatlin Apr 2

It had been a couple weeks since I’d gotten some sort of @BrendanEich related hate mail. How things going over there on your side, Brendan?

BrendanEich ‏@BrendanEich

@hcatlin You demanded I be “completely removed from any day to day activities at Mozilla” & got your wish. I’m still unemployed. How’re you?

Hampton ‏@hcatlin Apr 2

@BrendanEich married and able to live in the USA! .  .  . and working together on open source stuff! In like, a loving, happy gay married way!
It’s a small thing, to be sure. But telling. Because it shows that the same-sex marriage movement is interested in a great deal more than just the freedom to form marital unions. It is also interested, quite keenly, in punishing dissenters. But the ambitions of the movement go further than that, even. It’s about revisiting legal notions of freedom of speech and association, constitutional protections for religious freedom, and cultural norms concerning the family. And most Americans are only just realizing that these are the societal compacts that have been pried open for negotiation.

Same-sex marriage supporters see this cascade of changes as necessary for safeguarding progress against retrograde elements in society. People less deeply invested in same-sex marriage might see it as a bait-and-switch. And they would be correct. But this is hardly new. Bait-and-switch has been the modus operandi of the gay rights movement not, perhaps, from the start, but for a good long while.

It began at the most elementary factual level: How many Americans are gay? For decades, gay-rights activists pushed the line that 1 out of every 10 people is homosexual. This statistic belied all evidence but was necessary in order to imbue the cause with a sense of ubiquity and urgency. The public fell so hard for this propaganda that in 2012 Gallup did a poll asking people what percentage of the country they thought was gay. The responses were amazing. Women and young adults were the most gullible, saying, on average, that they thought 30 percent of the population was gay. The average American thought that 24 percent of the population—one quarter—was gay. Only 4 percent of respondents said they thought homosexuals made up less than 5 percent of the population.

But even 5 percent turns out to be an exaggeration. The best research to date on American sexual preference is a 2014 study from the Centers for Disease Control with a monster sample of 34,557 adults. It found that 96.6 percent of Americans identified as heterosexual, 1.6 percent identified as gay or lesbian, and 0.7 percent as bisexual. The percentage of gays and lesbians isn’t much higher than the percentage of folks who refused to answer the question (1.1 percent).

Then there’s the matter of the roots of homosexuality. Important to the narrative behind the same-sex marriage movement has been the insistence that sexual orientation is genetically determined and not a choice. But now that same-sex marriage is a reality, some activists are admitting that this view might not, strictly speaking, be true. For instance, in the avant-garde webzine n+1, Alexander Borinsky argued that sexuality is a characteristic to be actively constructed by the self. He was making a philosophical argument from the safety of gay marriage’s now-dominant position. Others were less philosophical and more practical. Here, for instance, is how the dancer and writer Brandon Ambrosino tackled the subject in the New Republic in January 2014:
[I]t’s time for the LGBT community to start moving beyond genetic predisposition as a tool for gaining mainstream acceptance of gay rights. .  .  .

For decades now, it’s been the most powerful argument in the LGBT arsenal: that we were “born this way.” .  .  .Still, as compelling as these arguments are, they may have outgrown their usefulness. With most Americans now in favor of gay marriage, it’s time for the argument to shift to one where genetics don’t matter. The genetic argument has boxed us into a corner.
It’s always a little unsettling when a movement that claims the mantle of truth, liberty, and equality starts openly admitting its arguments are mere “tools” to be wielded for their “usefulness.” But that’s where the movement is these days. Remember when proponents of same-sex marriage mocked people who suggested that creating a right to same-sex “marriage” might weaken the institution of marriage itself: How could my gay marriage possibly affect your straight marriage? Those arguments have outlived their usefulness, too. Here’s gay activist Jay Michaelson last year in the Daily Beast:
Moderates and liberals have argued that same-sex marriage is No Big Deal—it’s the Same Love, after all, and gays just want the same lives as everyone else. But further right and further left, things get a lot more interesting. What if gay marriage really will change the institution of marriage, shifting conceptions around monogamy and intimacy? . . .

[T]here is some truth to the conservative claim that gay marriage is changing, not just expanding, marriage. According to a 2013 study, about half of gay marriages surveyed (admittedly, the study was conducted in San Francisco) were not strictly monogamous.

This fact is well-known in the gay community—indeed, we assume it’s more like three-quarters. But it’s been fascinating to see how my straight friends react to it. Some feel they’ve been duped: They were fighting for marriage equality, not marriage redefinition. Others feel downright envious, as if gays are getting a better deal, one that wouldn’t work for straight couples. . . .

What would happen if gay non-monogamy—and I’ll include writer Dan Savage’s “monogamish” model, which involves extramarital sex once a year or so—actually starts to spread to straight people? Would open marriages, ’70s swinger parties, and perhaps even another era’s “arrangements” and “understandings” become more prevalent? Is non-monogamy one of the things same-sex marriage can teach straight ones, along with egalitarian chores and matching towel sets?

And what about those post-racial and post-gender millennials? What happens when a queer-identified, mostly-heterosexual woman with plenty of LGBT friends gets married? Do we really think that because she is “from Venus,” she will be interested in a heteronormative, sex-negative, patriarchal system of partnership? . . .

Radicals point out that gay liberation in the 1970s was, as the name implies, a liberation movement. It was about being free, questioning authority, rebellion. “2-4-6-8, smash the church and smash the state,” people shouted.
Slate’s Hanna Rosin agrees, suggesting that gay marriage won’t just change “normal” marriage, but will do so for the good:
The dirty little secret about gay marriage: Most gay couples are not monogamous. We have come to accept lately, partly thanks to Liza Mundy’s excellent recent cover story in the Atlantic and partly because we desperately need something to make the drooping institution of heterosexual marriage seem vibrant again, that gay marriage has something to teach us, that gay couples provide a model for marriages that are more egalitarian and less burdened by the old gender roles that are weighing marriage down these days.
Of course, not everyone in the same-sex marriage movement wants to help traditional marriage evolve into something better. Some want to burn it to the ground. Again in the New Republic, for instance, one member of a married lesbian couple wrote about her quest to use her own brother’s sperm to impregnate her wife. Why would she seek to do such a thing? Because “The queer parts of me relished the way it unsettled people. Uprooting convention, collapsing categories, reframing and reassigning blood relations was a subversive wet dream.” This is quite intentionally not, as Andrew Sullivan once promised, a “virtually normal” view of marriage.

Other changes are coming...
I'm sure they are.

No surprise to me, of course. I warned about many of these developments over the years since Prop. 8. The hate campaign against dissenters is the least surprising of all. It's been a constant in the news for years now. What's next is the continued marginalization of religion from the public square, and the further evisceration of robust public morality.

Keep reading, in any case.

Again, more specific expectations going forward depend on what happens at the Supreme Court in the coming days. Once we find out how the Court rules, we'll have a better sense of the coming arc of the homosexual agenda. That, and the virtually inevitable majority backlash against same-sex licentiousness and immorality. As I always say, social issues are not settled. Support for homosexual marriage in public opinion has probably peaked. Aggressive hate campaign by the left will drive public opinion back down. This is the worst outcome for the radical left's homosexual activists and SJWs, and they'll do anything to prevent the emergence of a traditional marriage movement rivaling the pro-life movement (and all its successes). This includes destroying lives with complete impunity and even using political violence against dissenters.

America's in for a long cultural war, with thanks to the left's ideological demons of hate and perversity.

Seven Reasons the GOP Should Fear Donald Trump

Seems like Trump's more of a carnival barker, but he says things no other candidates are willing to say, and sometimes he inflicts casualties.

He won't win the nomination. And I don't think the top-tier candidates have anything to fear in him. But you never know.

At Politico, "He’s a nuisance, a hothead and totally unqualified. But that’s what they said about Ross Perot":

Donald Trump, you’ve already performed one campaign miracle. You’ve cheered me up.

Frankly, I didn’t think anyone could lift my spirits so quickly after the season finale of “Game of Thrones.” But Trump’s entry into the 2016 race has everyone in Washington smiling again. Especially the Democrats. How much fun did the folks at the DNC have over crafting this response? “Trump’s entry adds much-needed seriousness to the GOP field.” (Whoever came up with that line is just clever enough to be dangerous.)

Of course, the Democrats can afford to laugh, but the Republicans – well, not so much. And for seven key reasons...
Keep reading.

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras Attacks IMF's 'Criminal Responsibility' for Greece Economic Crisis

What a soap opera, sheesh.

At the Telegraph UK, "Alexis Tsipras launches scathing attack on IMF as Greek authorities vow to fight desperate state cash grab":
Greek premier says IMF bears “criminal responsibility” as authorities vow only to transfer reserves if its the "last drop of blood" that will save the country from a euro exit.

Greek prime minister Alexis Tsipras escalated his defiance towards the country’s official creditors, with a pointed attack on the International Monetary Fund, accusing the institution of “financial asphyxiation”.

In a firebrand speech to his parliament, Mr Tsipras said the IMF bore "criminal responsibility" for his country’s cash crisis.
"The fixation on cuts...is most likely part of a political plan...to humiliate an entire people that has suffered in the past five years through no fault of its own,” said Mr Tsipras.

This is the first time the Greek premier has targeted his government’s ire at the Fund in such a public manner. The IMF, which holds the position of senior creditor in the country's €240m rescue, is demanding Syriza cross its sacred red line on pensions, which they calculate as amounting to 16.2pc of GDP.

The combative speech came after the prime minister had met with his parliamentarians and leader of opposition centrist To Potami party. According to reports, Mr Tsipras told his counterparts the country would not fulfil its latest IMF repayment on June 30 if no deal was reached.

His defiant address further exposes the rift between Greece’s troika of lenders, whose competing demands on the country have led to a five-month negotiating stalemate.

“Our biggest battles [with creditors] still lie ahead and we must be ready to fight,” added Mr Tsipras.

IMF chief economist Olivier Blanchard has admitted the debtor country will need a further write-off on its mounting debt pile - a measure which has all but been ruled out by Greece’s European paymasters...
More.

Six Dead in Berkeley Balcony Collapse

At the San Francisco Chronicle, "6 dead, 7 hurt in Berkeley balcony collapse."

And at CBS News San Francisco, "Raw Video: Irish Students Among 5 Dead, 8 Injured In Berkeley Balcony Collapse," and "Chopper Aerials of Deadly Berkeley Balcony Collapse.

Plus, "Team Coverage of Deadly Berkeley Balcony Collapse."

So, This 'Unequivocal' Climate Science Dude Isn't Too Bright

Two tweets, and actually just one actual rejoinder, was enough to send this climate cultist heading for the tall grass. [ADDED: Clicking back over on this dolt's handle I see he's got me blocked, and again that's after just one reply. That's it. Towering intellectuals over on the left's "scientific" bench, lol.]

It's a religion with these people. Seriously, climate change politics is actually a faith, and it's so far gone now that you have a real religious leader --- the Pope --- marching at the front of the shock troop formations of the global left. It's pretty fascinating as a study in mass hysteria.

Katrina vanden Heuval prompted this with her piece, at WaPo, "Cracks appear in the climate change deniers’ defenses."

France's National Front Announces New 'Far Right' Coalition in European Parliament

Geert Wilders is on board.

At LAT, "Far right forms coalition in European Parliament":
France's National Front announced Tuesday it had formed a new far-right bloc in the European Parliament that will qualify for up to nearly $20 million in funding over the next four years.

Marine Le Pen, leader of the FN, said the group would be called Europe of Nations and Freedoms.

Her allies share Le Pen's desire to curb immigration and the influence of Islam in Europe -- a concern that critics have described as xenophobic. They include the Dutch Party for Freedom, the Freedom Party of Austria, Italy's Lega Nord and Vlaams Belang from Belgium as well as lawmakers from the Polish KNP party.

At a press conference in Brussels, Le Pen described it as a "political strike force that will go far beyond our previous situation." She said far-right parties like the FN had “growing support” in Europe.

“This group is the result of a year of efforts, and our wish to avoid making dubious alliances like other groups. It’s good news for our countries, our people, our freedom,” she said.

Geert Wilders, a member of the European Parliament from the Dutch Freedom Party, told reporters: "Today is D-day, it’s the beginning of our liberation. ... I really believe today is a historical moment."

He added: "We are the voice of the European resistance, we defend national identity, our prosperity and our sovereignty. This is an excellent day because we will gain influence in the European Parliament with the newly formed group."

Wilders then addressed the European far-right’s major concerns: immigration and Islam. "The timing is right. A catastrophe is coming to the European Union and Europe today,” he said. “One million people are trying to arrive from northern Africa and this mass immigration should be stopped.”

He said the group would fight the “Islamization" of the continent and “stand for our own national values.”

As well as more money, the group will get more speaking time during European parliamentary sessions, more staff and access to key posts increasing its influence across the continent.

Reaction from more centrist European parties was dour. A German member of the European Parliament, Herbert Reul of the center-right Christian Democratic Union party, told journalists it was a "bad day for Europe."

European Parliament groups must be made up of at least 25 members from at least seven countries...
More.

And at WSJ:


St. Louis Cardinals Investigated by F.B.I. for Hacking Astros

Talk about a change of pace, wow.

At the New York Times, "Cardinals Face F.B.I. Inquiry in Hacking of Astros’ Network":
WASHINGTON — The F.B.I. and Justice Department prosecutors are investigating whether front-office officials for the St. Louis Cardinals, one of the most successful teams in baseball over the past two decades, hacked into internal networks of a rival team to steal closely guarded information about player personnel.

Investigators have uncovered evidence that Cardinals officials broke into a network of the Houston Astros that housed special databases the team had built, according to law enforcement officials. Internal discussions about trades, proprietary statistics and scouting reports were compromised, the officials said.

The officials did not say which employees were the focus of the investigation or whether the team’s highest-ranking officials were aware of the hacking or authorized it. The investigation is being led by the F.B.I.’s Houston field office and has progressed to the point that subpoenas have been served on the Cardinals and Major League Baseball for electronic correspondence.

The attack represents the first known case of corporate espionage in which a professional sports team has hacked the network of another team. Illegal intrusions into companies’ networks have become commonplace, but it is generally conducted by hackers operating in foreign countries, like Russia and China, who steal large tranches of data or trade secrets for military equipment and electronics.

Major League Baseball “has been aware of and has fully cooperated with the federal investigation into the illegal breach of the Astros’ baseball operations database,” a spokesman for baseball’s commissioner, Rob Manfred, said in a written statement.

The Cardinals officials under investigation have not been put on leave, suspended or fired. The commissioner’s office is likely to wait until the conclusion of the government’s investigation to determine whether to take disciplinary action against the officials or the team...
 Fascinating.

Continue reading, as well as the responses at Memeorandum.

ADDED: More from Bill Shaikin:


Are Social Issues Hurting Democrats?

From the letters to the editor, at the Wall Street Journal, "Do Social Issues Hurt Democrats?":
Karl Rove asks, “Are Social Issues Hurting Republicans?” (op-ed, June 4). I wonder why his question is rarely, if ever, asked about Democrats. Do they not lose as well as gain votes by the positions they take on sociocultural issues? Are the political platforms of the Democrats less laden with these concerns than those of the GOP? I wonder how many votes the Democrats lose because of their position on such issues as late-term abortion, same-sex marriage, their encouragement of dependency on government, their opposition to school choice through vouchers and charter schools, limits on religious freedom, distribution of contraceptives and referrals for abortion to school children without parental consent. Are these social issues hurting Democrats?

Edward Maillet
Charlottesville, Va.
Great questions.

Democrats got hammered last November in the congressional elections, and not just on the economy. I expect we're reaching the tipping point on many of the social issues addressed at the letter, and if the Democrats struggle to mobilize commensurate numbers of voters from 2012, the party's nominee could get hammered in 2016. Immigration, especially, is bound to be a hot-button issue, as it raises both economic and social issues. Homosexual marriage continues to be explosive, even more so with so much uncertainty going forward on constitutional grounds. (Folks like the lying sack Michael LaCour aren't doing the Democrats any favors either.) On racial issues in particular, don't be surprised if the Democrats get tagged with unflattering connections to Rachel Dolezal, especially on racial preferences in the workplace and campus political correctness.

The Democrats are the fringe party of American politics. The media elite also happen to be fringe whackjobs, which is why Hillary can count on a least a two-to-three point handicap going up against the generic GOP nominee, and perhaps even more.

Doctor Linked to Drug Deaths Allowed to Practice on Probation

This story's a blast from the not-too-distant past.

The brother of one of my students, a lovely young woman, was one of the patients discussed in a 2012 report at the Los Angeles Times, "DYING FOR RELIEF: Legal drugs, deadly outcomes."

Now it turns out the doctor at the center of the case, Van H. Vu, is still practicing medicine.

See, "Doctor linked to drug deaths allowed to practice on probation":
An Orange County doctor accused of gross negligence in the care of two patients who fatally overdosed on drugs he prescribed has been placed on probation by the Medical Board of California.

Van H. Vu, who owns a busy pain clinic in Huntington Beach, agreed not to contest the board's accusation, to take classes in prescribing and record keeping and to submit to an outside practice monitor for five years. In exchange, the board allowed Vu to keep his license and continue prescribing potent painkillers.

A 2012 Times investigation revealed 16 patients' overdose deaths associated with Vu's practice and raised questions about the medical board's oversight of doctors who prescribe dangerous narcotics. The Times found that even when the board sanctioned doctors for problem prescribing, in most cases it allowed them to continue practicing and prescribing with few or no restrictions. Eight doctors disciplined for excessive prescribing later had patients die of overdoses or related causes. Prescriptions those doctors wrote caused or contributed to 19 deaths, The Times found.

A board spokeswoman said the agreement with Vu, which took effect Friday, served the public interest by avoiding the expense and uncertainty of a trial.

“It makes the resolution faster,” spokeswoman Cassandra Hockenson said. “We still have the upper hand. He will be watched very, very closely.... If he deviates one iota from these probationary requirements, revocation is back on the table.”

Lawyers for Vu did not return calls.

Sally Finnila-Sloane, whose brother died after getting a prescription from Vu, said she was disappointed with the board's decision.

“He had his hand slapped, and my brother's dead,” she said.

The Times revealed that Karl Finnila, 43, died on a sidewalk hours after getting a prescription from Vu. The medical board faulted Vu for prescribing to him even after learning he was suicidal and seeking drugs. The coroner left half a dozen messages for Vu asking for information about Finnila, but the calls went unreturned, records showed.

“How is that right? How is that fair? Where's justice?” his sister asked. “The worst thing that's happened is the guy had his name published in the newspaper.”

A criminal investigation opened in the wake of the Times report is ongoing, according to law enforcement sources familiar with the inquiry.

In interviews in 2012, Vu described himself as a conscientious, caring physician. He declined to comment on individual cases, citing confidentiality laws, but he said he treats many “very, very difficult patients” whose chronic pain is sometimes complicated by substance abuse and depression, anxiety or other mental illness.

“Every single day, I try to do the best I can for every single patient,” he said. “I can't control what they do once they leave my office.”

Clarissa Ward Reports: An Inside Look from Yemen -- A Country in the Midst of Civil War

This is excellent reporting, from last night's CBS Evening News:


How to Destroy Islamic State?

A symposium, at National Journal, "What Should the U.S. Do About ISIS?"


Justine Ezarik and Tony Hawk

Not expecting to see this pairing.

From iJustine on Twitter:



Charlotte McKinney Poses in Super Revealing Sheer Lingerie for Nicholas Routzen

At Egotastic!, "CHARLOTTE McKINNEY SHEER LINGERIE REVEALS HER BLONDE GOODIES."

Megyn Kelly Interviews Larry and Ruthanne Dolezal

There's still more steam to this story, as Rachel Dolezal is expected to hit some major network talk shows today, especially the Today Show on NBC.



Critics Say L.A.'s Minimum-Wage Victory is Tainted by Organized Labor's Push for Exemptions for Union Workplaces

You think?

At the Los Angeles Times, "Labor leaders' credibility slips in minimum-wage debate":
L.A.'s decision to boost the minimum wage should have been the sweetest of victories for organized labor.

Mayor Eric Garcetti helped union leaders and their allies achieve a long-sought goal Saturday, signing an ordinance that moves the city's hourly minimum to $15 by 2020.

But for some partisans on each side of the debate, that historic moment has been tainted by labor leaders' last-minute push for an exemption for unionized workplaces. The request for a union waiver — proposed and then abruptly shelved — drew national attention, much of it negative, to the county Federation of Labor and its recently installed top executive, Rusty Hicks.

When Hicks and his allies advocated for the increase, "they basically said everybody who works in Los Angeles is entitled to $15 an hour — that that's the minimum people should be paid so they can pay rent and support their families," said lobbyist Steve Afriat, who bucked other business officials by endorsing a $15 minimum wage last fall. "And then … they hardly take a break before they say, 'We want our members exempt from it.'"

That request hurt the credibility of union leaders, Afriat said, particularly among L.A. leaders who are not their "knee-jerk" supporters. Other assessments were similarly harsh.

Political analyst Harold Meyerson, an expert on organized labor, called Hicks' handling of the proposal a "self-inflicted disaster" in an op-ed in The Times. The gossip site Gawker outright mocked backers of the idea.

And USA Today's editorial page said the opt-out clause showed labor was looking to use the minimum wage increase as "a weapon to pressure companies to unionize," since unionized companies would then have the ability to negotiate a subminimum wage.

Hicks said he broached the idea of an exemption to the citywide minimum wage last month, in phone calls to staffers with City Council President Herb Wesson and Councilman Curren Price. Those calls took place after the council had backed a plan for raising the wage but before its vote on the specific language. Once the information got out, spurring a backlash, Hicks held a news conference to explain that city leaders would take additional time to study the idea.

Wesson is now planning a discussion of the issue this fall. But others say labor leaders might have done better to let the idea die a swift and public death...
Continue reading.


Ted F'king Cruz!

He wasn't in the news yesterday, but Jeb "Amnesty" Bush was, heh.

Cool.



Broad Questions About Race After NAACP Chapter Leader's Resignation

A great piece on the Dolezal phenomenon, at WaPo.

Universal Pictures Announces 'Pitch Perfect 3'

Anna Kendrick's got a profitable franchise going there.

At WSJ:



Brace Yourself: Huge Majority Expects Nationwide Racial Unrest This Summer

The poll's from April, "Baltimore Riots: Poll Finds 96% Expect More Racially-Charged Unrest Nationwide."

But John Fund's picked up on it, at National Review, "Most Americans Expect a Long, Hot Summer of Racial Unrest. Moynihan Would Not Be Surprised."

No justice. No peace.



Watters' World: What's Off Limits in Today's PC-Drenched Cultural Minefield?

From yesterday's O'Reilly Factor, a great segment with Jesse Watters:



Monday, June 15, 2015

Reactions to 'Game of Thrones' Season Finale

This is good. At the Los Angeles Times, "All these people are done with 'Game of Thrones.' Are you?"

Plus, a great interview with Kit Harrington, at Entertainment Weekly, "Game of Thrones star on that shocking death: 'I'm not coming back'."

And at BuzzFeed, "29 Questions I Have After the “Game of Thrones” Season 5 Finale."



Syria's Aleppo Shows Toll of Nearly Three Years of War

A great piece, at LAT, "In war-shattered Aleppo, some of Syria's toughest civilians stay put":

A series of checkpoints and barriers cobbled together from tumbleweeds, discarded furniture and assorted urban detritus mark the path to one of the world's most storied sites: Aleppo's ancient covered market, the heart of the Old City.

Much of the magnificent souk, with its vaulted ceilings, stone arches and hanging lamps, is now a charred ruin. Labyrinthine corridors trod upon for centuries in this former Silk Road terminus stand silent, abandoned except for Syrian army special forces.

The troops are posted about 30 yards away from rebels who occupy the other half of the bazaar, the core of the Old City, a United Nations World Heritage site. Below ground, the two sides engage in tunnel warfare: Rebels seek to blow up military positions from their tunnels, while soldiers aim to thwart subterranean assaults from their own passageways.

At street level, the staccato of gunfire and thud of mortar rounds sporadically break the stillness. And then there are the hellish improvised bombings, loud explosions followed by the cries of anguished survivors.

"If we only had six months of peace, people would come back and this could all be reconstructed," a Syrian army commander said as he strolled through the market, noting that many of the centuries-old stone walls were still intact, albeit blackened by fire.

But a rare visit by a Western correspondent to the government-controlled neighborhoods of Aleppo makes clear the jarring toll of nearly three years of warfare.

This historic city, once Syria's commercial hub, is divided between government forces and various Islamist rebel groups, whose brigades form a semicircle around the town. A stalemate set in almost three years ago, and shows no sign of abating.

President Bashar Assad has vowed not to withdraw forces from the once-bustling city of about 3 million, despite recent rebel gains elsewhere in the north against an overstretched military.

Power and water shortages, along with daily mortar and sniper attacks, leave the estimated 2 million who remain here on edge. The Internet and other communications are spotty. Many of the factories that made Aleppo a thriving industrial capital have been looted and destroyed, the machinery and wiring carted off to neighboring Turkey, business leaders say.

In May 2014, rebels with Al Nusra Front managed to cut off most of the water supply to government-controlled areas for 13 days. The Al Qaeda affiliate is one of several opposition factions in Aleppo. Islamic State, the Al Qaeda offshoot that is a rival of Al Nusra, was driven out of Aleppo city in early 2014 by other rebel groups, but maintains a presence in the rural Aleppo region.

With the airport mostly out of service, the army keeps the city resupplied via a circuitous eight-hour road link to Damascus that skirts rebel territory...

Wet and Wild Erin Heatherton

Here's a break from the fake black woman blogging, lol.

Via Sports Illustrated Swimsuit.

I love this lady. She's not a malnourished waif:



More: "Erin Heatherton Body Paint," and "Victoria's Secret Model Erin Heatherton Shows Off Bikini Body During St. Barts Photo Shoot."

Eastern Washington University Scrubs Rachel Dolezal from Africana Studies Department Homepage

Well, her mug used to be proudly displayed at the department's website, but it's gone now. The Google search for her name there redirects as well, lol.

From John Nolte, at Big Government, "RACHEL DOLEZAL’S NAME REMOVED FROM UNIVERSITY FACULTY PAGE":

Rachel Dolezal photo enhanced-10513-1434072564-1_zpsoilkzrb8.png

Early Monday afternoon, Rachel Dolezal, the 37 year-old blonde-haired, freckle-faced white woman who was caught pretending to be black last week, was still listed as a professor of Africana Studies at Eastern Washington University.

Dolezal’s name and profile have now been removed from EWU’s website.

In the wake of Dolezal’s resignation from the NAACP Monday, Breitbart News reached out to EWU to ask about her status. At 1pm ET, when we left numerous voice mail messages for EWU’s media relations department, Dolezal’s name and profile were still live on the web page.
More.

Leftists Explain Away 'Ferguson Effect' Crime Wave

This is one of those "just wow" pieces that makes you shake your head. Man, I still get flabbergasted as the left's shameless depravity.

From Heather Mac Donald, at the Wall Street Journal, "Explaining Away the New Crime Wave."

Hat Tip: Elizabeth Price Foley, at Instapundit, "NOTHING TO SEE HERE, KEEP MOVING: Explaining away the Ferguson Effect. Heather MacDonald explains the price of anti-police agitation by the political left."

Also at Memeorandum.

Austrian Brothel in Salzburg Offers Free Sex to Protest High Taxation

Well, they were offering free drinks too, but I'll bet men were coming for the free sex, heh.

Watch: At Ruptly, "Austria: Brothel offers free SEX in protest against taxation."

Defiant Rachel Dolezal Refuses to Apologize After Stepping Down from Spokane NAACP

She's a disgusting moral reprobate. And a leftist. But I repeat myself.

At London's Daily Mail, "EXCLUSIVE PICTURES: Race-faker Rachel Dolezal puts on a bold front as she steps down as NAACP chapter president - but still REFUSES to apologize for lying about being white, not black."



'Vexatious' Rachel Dolezal Sued Howard University for 'Racial Discrimination' in 2002

Man, this lady is the consummate operator who's been working all the angles. Sheesh.

The Smokin' Gun has the story, "NAACP Imposter Sued School Over Race Claims: Rachel Dolezal Alleged She Was Victim of White Discrimination."

And from the comments at Black America Web:
Rachel Dolezal has not always pretended to be black. In 2002, when I worked at Howard University, she filed a lawsuit against the University and the incoming chairman of the Art Department, as “Rachel Moore,” her married name at the time, asserting various grounds of discrimination, including her race (Caucasian), color, gender and pregnancy. She alleged that the defendants refused to grant her a scholarship and Teaching Assistant position for her second year, and a faculty position upon graduation based upon her race, pregnancy and gender. She lost the case on all counts in the D.C. Superior Court. The case was Rachel Moore v. Howard University, Civ. No. 02-7193 (D.C. Super. Ct. 2002). She also lost her appeal to the D.C. Court of Appeals, App. No. 04-CV-00234 (D.C. 2004). She seems to be an opportunist and clearly embraced her white race when she filed the lawsuit.
At the time, Dolezal was using the surname of her ex-husband, Kevin Moore.

She lost the case, lost an appeals case, and had to pay court costs to Howard University, even found to be "vexatious" litigant.

She hadn't "transitioned" to black quite yet. See, "When Rachel Dolezal Attended Howard University, She Was Still White."

Added: More at Hot Air, "Revealed: Rachel Dolezal sued Howard University for … discriminating against her because she’s white."

Plus, the blogs beat the mainstream media to this story --- again, heh.

At Telegraph UK:



Ferguson Businesses Struggle to Rebound After Radical Left-Wing Riots and Destruction

One more of the "Ferguson effects" now savaging communities across the United States. Of course, in this case, it is Ferguson, struggling to overcome the left's revolutionary anarchy and violence.

At the Wall Street Journal, "In Ferguson, Mo., a Long Road Getting Back to Business":

Ferguson Riots photo tumblr_nflrjd6Kmr1s4t1cno1_1280_zps6537dd3d.jpg
FERGUSON, Mo.—Idowu Ajibola, 57, opened a pharmacy in this area eight years ago, tapping savings, family money and funds from his retirement plan. He added a beauty-supply business to the premises in 2008.

Mr. Ajibola’s fortunes changed last year after the shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old, by a white police officer. During a period of widespread unrest, looters cleaned him out of high-price items, such as packages of hair extensions that sold for around $200 each. Mr. Ajibola estimates the rioting cost him $50,000 in stolen or destroyed merchandise; another $50,000 in fixtures were ruined.

“I lost quite a few customers,” said Mr. Ajibola. “People wouldn’t come in. It was a bad situation.”

Ten months after Mr. Brown’s death, businesses are still struggling to rebound in this suburb of St. Louis whose population of 21,000 is two-thirds African-American and has a median household income of less than $40,000.

With sales and traffic down on West Florissant Avenue, the Ferguson area that bore the brunt of looting and vandalism, Mr. Ajibola, who emigrated from Western Nigeria more than 30 years ago, decided to convert his wrecked beauty-supply shop into a dollar store. The new place sells items such as coffee mugs and kitchen supplies—goods less likely to attract shoplifters or looters.

Nearly half of the roughly 500 businesses operating in Ferguson and adjacent communities, such as Dellwood and Jennings, suffered property damage or lost revenue as a result of the unrest, according to the regional development association, North County Inc. Sixteen businesses closed. Seven of those have yet to reopen, while four have relocated, according to a city tally.

In April, the nation was again reminded of the emotional and physical scars that can result from civil unrest. The death of a 25-year-old Baltimore black man, Freddie Gray, who died after being arrested, set off another wave of protests, riots and looting. Close to 400 businesses, most of them small, suffered some kind of property damage or inventory loss, according to the Baltimore Development Corp.

And yet the cities’ challenges are different. Baltimore has a larger tax base spread out over a diverse, stable middle class. It also enjoys a strategic location near the nation’s capital. As for Ferguson, “it’s going to be harder” to recover, said Bruce Katz, founding director of the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brookings Institution. Mr. Katz notes that Ferguson has a relatively weak local economy. Local government in the region is split among dozens of municipalities with limited authority and funding, making it more difficult to spur growth.

Sales tax distributions to Ferguson fell 3.5% to $2.6 million in the period between August 2014 and May 2015 compared with the same period a year earlier, according to the Missouri Department of Revenue. This figure likely understates the pain felt by local business owners, since it includes receipts from Wal-Mart, Home Depot and other big-box stores that contribute a substantial portion of the total.

In December, Moody’s Investors Service assigned a “negative outlook” to Ferguson, which could mean a downgrade to its credit rating later on. A lower rating could affect rates at which the city can borrow money in the future...
The damage in Ferguson is just a fraction of the devastation the left is inflicting on America.

The truth is coming out.

Keep reading.

Negative Externalities: Consolidation Wave in Health-Insurance Industry Intensifies — #ObamaCare

This is the kind of industry tendency you see when markets are dysfunctional from heavy-handed regulation. It's funny too, since leftists used to be the ones decrying big corporations as the enemy of the little people. Not any more. The insurance industry is shaking out to a few big providers of services, no doubt the result of a survival of the fittest effect following our national ObamaCare nightmare.

Remember, with this kind of consolidation you get monopolistic effects, and less competition means higher costs to consumers in the long run. ObamaCare has not reined in costs as Obama and his clueless proponents have argued. Rates continue to rise and now insurers are scrambling to bulk up among regulatory incentives. The government and big business axis is enlarged at the public's expense, putting the lie to Democrat Party claims as the ally of struggling American families.

At the Wall Street Journal, "Anthem Talks to Cigna on Possible Takeover":
Anthem Inc. has made a takeover approach to Cigna Corp. as talks for consolidation in the health-insurance industry intensify.

The companies have been in discussions for months and within the past 10 days Anthem has made two takeover bids, the last at about $175 a share, according to people familiar with the matter. Anthem’s efforts have been rebuffed by Cigna, the people said.

Cigna Chief Executive David Cordani wants to be in charge of a combined Anthem-Cigna and that has created a stumbling block to a deal, according to some of the people.

Cigna, based in based in Bloomfield, Conn., had a market value of $35 billion Monday morning before The Wall Street Journal reported on the talks. With a typical takeover premium, a takeover could value the company at well over $40 billion. Anthem, based in Indianapolis, had a market value of $43 billion.

Shares of Cigna rose 15% on the news to $157.37 in midday trading, while Anthem’s stock rose 2.5% to $164.75.

The industry is facing intense pressure to squeeze out costs and find ways to capture opportunities arising from the Affordable Care Act. An ever-larger share of the companies’ business is tied to government programs and the health law’s exchanges, where cost-conscious individuals buy their own plans. Getting bigger also could give insurers increased leverage in negotiating rates with hospitals, many of which have expanded through their own mergers.

The big health insurers have long been expected by analysts to turn to mergers that will give them the heft to better compete as the industry evolves, and when The Wall Street Journal first reported last month that Humana Inc. is exploring a sale of itself, it became clear a consolidation effort in the industry was finally under way in earnest.

The Anthem talks for Cigna show that the next deal in the industry won't necessarily be a sale of Humana, as many industry watchers expected. Indeed, if Anthem and Cigna were to get together, that would remove two possible buyers of Humana, which could leave it with only one major dance partner, Aetna Inc., which itself could be a takeover target.

Humana has hired Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to explore so-called strategic alternatives and had held sale talks with companies including Cigna and Aetna, people familiar with the matter have said. Humana, based in Louisville, Ky., gets the bulk of its revenue from its business administering the private version of the federal Medicare program. The company is seen as a prize because of its powerful Medicare franchise, which is growing rapidly as baby boomers age into eligibility and opt for these plans, known as Medicare Advantage.

Aetna has been viewed by some industry analysts as the most likely acquirer of Humana, and executives at Aetna have spoken publicly about their interest in acquisitions. Anthem also has been linked to Humana, though some industry experts believe such a tie-up could face regulatory challenges over Humana’s commercial business, which overlaps with Anthem’s in markets such as Kentucky.

Meanwhile, UnitedHealth Group Inc., the biggest player in the industry by revenue, is eyeing Cigna and Aetna, according to people familiar with the matter. A UnitedHealth deal for Humana has been seen as less likely because of the potential size of the two companies’ combined Medicare businesses, which could draw antitrust pushback.

The welter of takeover activity in the industry stands out even by the standards of what has become one of the hottest mergers-and-acquisitions markets in years. As always with M&A, it is possible no big deals will be struck in the industry in the foreseeable future and other potential combinations may yet arise...
More.

Driver Killed in Fiery Crash on La Cienega in Beverly Hills

Gnarly.

At LAT, "Driver killed in fiery crash in Beverly Hills; La Cienega Boulevard closed."

And watch at CBS News Los Angelers, "Witnesses Unsuccessfully Try to Pull Driver from Fiery Car Crash In Beverly Hills."

Girl, 10, Dies After Losing Consciousness on Magic Mountain Roller Coaster

This is horrible!

At LAT:



Outraged Spokane Community Members Want Apology from Disgraced Race Appropriator Rachel Dolezal (VIDEO)

Spokane's KXLY 4 News is really going all out to bring the latest on the Rachel Dolezal story.

Listen to the elderly community member talk some common sense on this issue. The big thing is the lies. Dolezal is a disgusting liar. And while the women say that race isn't the issue, at least one of the women indicates that Dolezal's racial appropriation is an issue, "because you have to live it" to really know what it's like to be a black person in America.

And remember, these are regular folks. Not the rotten egg leftists that are polluting out culture with lies, depravity, and cultural deviancy.

More of these interviews, KXLY. Moar please!



PREVIOUSLY: "Rachel Dolezal's 'Birth Parents' Do Not Understand Why She's Misrepresenting Her Ethnicity (VIDEO)," and "UPDATED: Rachel Dolezal Steps Down as President of NAACP in Spokane - #Dolezal Statement Added!"

Rachel Dolezal's 'Birth Parents' Do Not Understand Why She's Misrepresenting Her Ethnicity (VIDEO)

Well, this story should finally start fading from major media attention, although Dolezal's Big Lie is a turning point for far-left racial grievance hucksterism.

Her parents, of course, have huge material interests in discrediting their daughter, with the brother's child molestation case, although taken on their own the parent's statements show that Rachel's years-long racial appropriation campaign has been extremely damaging and malevolent.



And ICYMI, "UPDATED: Rachel Dolezal Steps Down as President of NAACP in Spokane - #Dolezal Statement Added!"

UPDATED: Rachel Dolezal Steps Down as President of NAACP in Spokane - #Dolezal Statement Added!

This just in from various sources. Expect updates:



More tweets coming in:



Here's the report at the Spokesman review, "Rachel Dolezal resigns as president of Spokane NAACP":
Rachel Dolezal resigned as Spokane NAACP president this morning. In a letter sent to the NAACP Executive Committee she wrote, “It is with complete allegiance to the cause of racial and social justice and the NAACP that I step aside from the Presidency and pass the baton to my Vice President, Naima Quarles-Burnley.”

Dolezal’s resignation comes after accusations that she’s been passing as a black woman for years, when her family says she’s white. Although the NAACP hasn’t taken an official position, some leaders and former leaders are calling for her resignation. One member started an online petition on Friday, calling for Dolezal’s resignation. A demonstration is planned for tonight in downtown Spokane.

Charles Thornton, the former vice president of the Spokane NAACP chapter, called for Dolezal’s resignation via email.

“It is difficult for me to believe anything Rachel Dolezal says. She has completely lost the trust I had in her,” Thornton wrote. “The lies she told to me go deeper than I could imagine. Rachel Dolezal needs to resign.”
Here's her statement, from Spokane NAACP Facebook page:
Dear Executive Committee and NAACP Members,

It is a true honor to serve in the racial and social justice movement here in Spokane and across the nation. Many issues face us now that drive at the theme of urgency. Police brutality, biased curriculum in schools, economic disenfranchisement, health inequities, and a lack of pro-justice political representation are among the concerns at the forefront of the current administration of the Spokane NAACP. And yet, the dialogue has unexpectedly shifted internationally to my personal identity in the context of defining race and ethnicity.

I have waited in deference while others expressed their feelings, beliefs, confusions and even conclusions - absent the full story. I am consistently committed to empowering marginalized voices and believe that many individuals have been heard in the last hours and days that would not otherwise have had a platform to weigh in on this important discussion. Additionally, I have always deferred to the state and national NAACP leadership and offer my sincere gratitude for their unwavering support of my leadership through this unexpected firestorm.

While challenging the construct of race is at the core of evolving human consciousness, we can NOT afford to lose sight of the five Game Changers (Criminal Justice & Public Safety, Health & Healthcare, Education, Economic Sustainability, and Voting Rights & Political Representation) that affect millions, often with a life or death outcome. The movement is larger than a moment in time or a single person's story, and I hope that everyone offers their robust support of the Journey for Justice campaign that the NAACP launches today!

I am delighted that so many organizations and individuals have supported and collaborated with the Spokane NAACP under my leadership to grow this branch into one of the healthiest in the nation in 5 short months. In the eye of this current storm, I can see that a separation of family and organizational outcomes is in the best interest of the NAACP.

It is with complete allegiance to the cause of racial and social justice and the NAACP that I step aside from the Presidency and pass the baton to my Vice President, Naima Quarles-Burnley. It is my hope that by securing a beautiful office for the organization in the heart of downtown, bringing the local branch into financial compliance, catalyzing committees to do strategic work in the five Game Changer issues, launching community forums, putting the membership on a fast climb, and helping many individuals find the legal, financial and practical support needed to fight race-based discrimination, I have positioned the Spokane NAACP to buttress this transition.

Please know I will never stop fighting for human rights and will do everything in my power to help and assist, whether it means stepping up or stepping down, because this is not about me. It's about justice. This is not me quitting; this is a continuum. It's about moving the cause of human rights and the Black Liberation Movement along the continuum from Resistance to Chattel Slavery to Abolition to Defiance of Jim Crow to the building of Black Wall Street to the Civil Rights and Black Power Movement to the ‪#‎BlackLivesMatter‬ movement and into a future of self-determination and empowerment.

With much love and a commitment to always fight for what is right and good in this world,

Rachel Dolezal

Added: There's now a Memeorandum thread as well.


Clinton Campaign Denied Access to David Martosko, Political Editor of Britain's Daily Mail

A closed, insular and obstructionist campaign is going to flail in the increasing and sustained spotlight of the presidential campaign trail. You'd think the Clintons, political veterans if there ever were any, would know this.

At London's Daily Mail, "Hillary Clinton campaign denies access to DailyMail.com political editor as Monday's pool reporter in New Hampshire" (at Memeorandum):
The Clinton campaign denied access to the designated print pool reporter in New Hampshire this morning.

David Martosko of DailyMail.com was told by Hillary for New Hampshire staffer Meredith Thatcher that he was not approved for Monday's pooled events.

When Martosko asked Thatcher to phone her boss, Harrell Kirstein, he was again told that he had not been approved by the campaign.

Martosko pressed further and asked Thatcher if he was being prohibited from getting on either of the pool vans, to which she replied; 'I'm afraid that's right.'

When he asked why, she responded; 'All I know is what Harrell has told me. I got an email saying the print pooler would be changed for today. Sorry.'

Martosko then spoke with Clinton press aide Nick Merrill for 10 minutes and learned that the campaign would not be allowing the designated print reporter to cover Mrs. Clinton today.

Merrill offered varied and contradictory reasons for this decision.

First he confirmed that the concern had to do with the Daily Mail’s status as foreign press, saying; 'We’ve been getting a lot of blowback from foreign outlets that want to be part of the pool and we need to rethink it all, maybe for a day, and just cool things off until we can have a discussion.'

Martosko then informed Merrill that the Guardian is part of the pool, and that the pool does not discriminate on the basis of media ownership.

Merrill said that the campaign’s position is that the Daily Mail does not qualify because it has not yet been added to the White House’s regular print pool – something Martosko informed him was a timing issue, not a White House choice, since Francesca Chambers, the Mail's White House correspondent, has been vetted and has a hard pass.

'We’re just trying to follow the same process and system the White House has,' said Merrill.

Merrill then insisted that the decision had 'nothing to do' with the campaign considering the Daily Mail foreign press.
'We don’t consider you foreign press,' he said.

Merill then added; 'This isn’t about you. It’s about a larger...' and did not continue his sentence...
"About the larger" what? About the larger critical coverage at the Daily Mail? Well, we wouldn't want to throw the Clinton coronation of track, now would we?

Or maybe "the larger" issue is that Martosko is conservative. Martosko a former executive editor at the Daily Caller, the right-wing media shop owned by Tucker Carlson.

Yeah, that might have something to do with it. The Clinton campaign's showing its ideological discrimination and bigotry against conservative journalist. Who'd have thunk it?!!

More at Memorandum and Politico.



Angry Black Lady Slams #RachelDolezal: A 'WTF Story That Will Hopefully Fade Away...'

Imani Gandy is the "Angry Black Lady" on Twitter, and she's angry about racial appropriator Rachel Dolezal.

She's really pissed off about this, so scroll her TL if you want to read more.

Seriously, though, if you're a so-called left-wing progressive supporting the lying sack Dolezal, you're a "racist" and "shit-stirrer." You really need to rethink your commitments, because Rachel Dolezal is a terrible person and if you're backing her you are too.

'Game of Thrones'— Season 5 Recap

If you missed the season finale and are planning to watch the reruns, skip this post.

Otherwise, a great recap, at the Wall Street Journal, "‘Game of Thrones’ Season 5 Finale Recap: ‘Mother’s Mercy’."