August 16, 2005

Coretta Scott King hospitalized (Updated - 10P)

Professional widow Coretta Scott King was admitted to Piedmont Hospital in Atlanta this morning, for an undisclosed ailment.

A King family spokesperson is due to speak to the press later today; we'll know more details then.

UPDATE: Limited information was made available this evening.

"I can confirm that Mrs. King did come to Piedmont Hospital earlier today. She is in fair condition. She's resting comfortably. She's undergoing observation," said spokeswoman Diana Lewis.
Today's hospitalization marks the second for Mrs. King in the past four months. In April, she was hospitalized overnight for atrial fibrillation.

Atrial fibrillation can cause shortness of breath and can lead to stroke.

The King family is expected to release more information on Thursday.

Posted by: mhking at 09:30 AM | Comments (6) | Add Comment
Post contains 129 words, total size 1 kb.

Ain't that how Christopher Reeve got done in?

Sky News is reporting that Madonna has been seriously injured after falling off of a horse while celebrating her 47th birthday.

She's got three cracked ribs, a broken collarbone and a broken hand.

(Crossposting to The Dead Pool)

Posted by: mhking at 09:21 AM | No Comments | Add Comment
Post contains 53 words, total size 1 kb.

CAIR talking head balks when hit with hard questions

Project 21 member Mychal Massie interviewed Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) spokesman Ibrahim Hooper on his internet-only talk show Straight Talk last week for about five minutes. And in that five minutes, what started as a civl conversation ended with Hooper's sputtering angrily, followed by Hooper abruptly terminating the telephone interview.

In less than five minutes of air time, the person responsible for putting forth a favorable presentation of CAIR hung up, leaving the audience with nothing to warrant a change in opinion of him, his organization or his religion.

I had assured the gentleman prior to his agreeing to appear that I would not seek to embarrass or diminish him, but I also assured him I would ask straightforward questions. His rhetoric almost immediately degenerated into a puerile phonemic tirade, with him accusing me of "advocating genocide" and of saying "every Muslim on the planet is a member of terrorist organization." He fomented: "You'd kill me, you'd kill my family, you'd kill every member of my mosque ..." – none of which had I even remotely suggested. I submit he is in a much better position to know who within his element is a terrorist than I.

Hooper took offense when I pointed out that of the 400-plus recognized terrorist groups in the world, over 90 percent were Islamist groups. (Peaceful religion is not spelled I-s-l-a-m). But the fact remains it isn't the Amish, the Mennonites or the Seventh Day Adventists who are beheading innocent people and murdering innocent women and children – it is Muslims. It was not the Methodists who celebrated the dastardly attacks of 9-11 during candlelight vigils on certain college campuses – it was Muslims.

Despite his venomous excoriations and half-baked platitudes, it appears to be impossible for Hooper to denounce the terrorist actions of the fanatical elements of Islam.

And for CAIR to show righteous and outrageous indignation to hand-wringing when writers, columnists, talk show hosts and others rightly criticize them as an organization, and Islam as a religion, only adds to the perception that I and many others have: that CAIR is a front for the terrorist fringe elements within Islam. And I truly have to wonder how close that "fringe" is to the mainline center of Islam. Because Islam sounds less and less like a doctrinal religious faith; and more and more like a lunatic cult.

Posted by: mhking at 08:34 AM | No Comments | Add Comment
Post contains 410 words, total size 3 kb.

August 15, 2005

Bubba says he "would have" attacked Bin Laden

Former President Bill Clinton says that he "would have attacked" Osama Bin Laden, but the FBI and CIA couldn't provide him with proof that Bin Laden and Al Qaeda was behind the attack on the USS Cole in Yemen. Clinton made the claims in an article that appears in New York Magazine this week.

"I desperately wish that I had been president when the FBI and CIA finally confirmed, officially, that bin Laden was responsible for the attack on the U.S.S. Cole," Clinton tells New York magazine this week. "Then we could have launched an attack on Afghanistan early."

"I don’t know if it would have prevented 9/11," he added. "But it certainly would have complicated it.”

Despite his failure to launch such an attack, Clinton said he saw the danger posed by bin Laden much more clearly than did President Bush.

"I always thought that bin Laden was a bigger threat than the Bush administration did," he told New York magazine.

Bull. If Clinton had viewed Bin Laden as a "bigger threat," he would have taken Osama when he was offered to the US on a silver platter by Sudanese officials in the late 1990s.

Bubba will say anything to exonerate himself in the light of his Administration's failures regarding Osama Bin Laden.

Posted by: mhking at 07:04 PM | Comments (3) | Add Comment
Post contains 229 words, total size 2 kb.

Dick "Dastardly" Durbin caught in his own lie

Senate Minority Whip Dick Durbin (Full of it-IL) was the source of statements in a Los Angeles Times article last month by George Washington University professor John Turley regarding Supreme Court Nominee John Roberts. The statements amounted to a religious litmus test for the nominee.

Durbin has repeatedly and vehemently denied making such a statement.

Turley has produced an audio tape that proves his side of the equation.

"The taped message is consistent with my notes as well as my email and telephone communications with editors," George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley wrote in a letter earlier this month to Mr. Durbin. "There was never a question as to the accuracy of the [column]. The only issue ever raised by your staff was whether you would be mentioned in the article."

In a column last month in the Los Angeles Times, Mr. Turley wrote that during a private meeting with Mr. Durbin, Judge Roberts "was asked by Sen. Richard Durbin [Illinois Democrat] what he would do if the law required a ruling that his church considers immoral," Mr. Turley wrote.

"Roberts appeared nonplused and, according to sources in the meeting, answered after a long pause that he would probably have to recuse himself," wrote Mr. Turley, who added that it was "the wrong answer."

Conservatives immediately accused Mr. Durbin of applying a religious "litmus test" to the Roberts confirmation, and Mr. Durbin said the column was inaccurate.

"I don't know who was his source," Joe Shoemaker, Mr. Durbin's spokesman, said the day the column ran. "Whoever the source was either got it wrong or Jonathan Turley got it wrong."

Mr. Durbin's office refused to comment on the letter.

"I'm not going to dignify this with a response," Mr. Shoemaker said. "Turley got his facts wrong."

But Mr. Turley said that on the day before the column ran, he read the relevant portions of his column to Mr. Shoemaker.

"Mr. Shoemaker confirmed that he was present at the time and that 'it happened exactly the way the Senator said,' " Mr. Turley wrote in his letter to Mr. Durbin. "He agreed that the recusal statement was 'incredible.' "

The only quibble at that time, Mr. Turley said, was whether to quote Mr. Durbin by name even though the senator never requested anonymity.

My message to Durbin & Shoemaker (and to quote hacker-geek slang): "PWND!"

Posted by: mhking at 04:50 PM | No Comments | Add Comment
Post contains 407 words, total size 3 kb.

Howard Dean's smokin' the REAL good stuff

While on an appearance on CBS News' Face The Nation yesterday, DNC Chair Howard "YAAAARRRGGHH!!!" Dean claimed that Iraqi women would be much better off under Saddam Hussain than they are now.

Appearing on CBS' "Face the Nation" yesterday, the fiery former Vermont governor said, "It looks like today, and this could change, as of today it looks like women will be worse off in Iraq than they were when Saddam Hussein was president of Iraq."
Dean proves his lack of logic, and how he depends on the emotionalism of the left as more and more days go by.

Posted by: mhking at 04:23 PM | Comments (3) | Add Comment
Post contains 112 words, total size 1 kb.

PETA backs off of linking shackled blacks and animals

PETA, known for their controversial campaigns, has suspended a recent campaign where images of shacked black slaves were compared directly to those of shackled elephants and other animals.

"Animal Liberation," which includes 12 panels juxtaposing pictures of black people in chains with shackled elephants and other provocative images, had visited 17 cities before the Norfolk-based group put the tour on hold. The decision came within the past week.

PETA wrapped up the first leg of the tour in the District on Thursday.

"We're not continuing right now while we evaluate," said Dawn Carr, a PETA spokeswoman. "We're reviewing feedback we've received -- most of it overwhelmingly positive and some of it quite negative."

Suspended from a metal trellis, one cloth panel shows a black civil rights protester being beaten at a lunch counter beside a photo of a seal being bludgeoned. Another panel, titled "Hanging," shows a photo of a white mob surrounding two lynched blacks, their bodies hanging from tree limbs; a nearby picture shows a cow hanging in a slaughterhouse.

But controversy erupted last Monday, when the display stopped in New Haven, Conn.

"There was one man who began shouting that the exhibit was racist," Miss Carr said. "Then, there was a lot of shouting."

PETA tried to compare the suffering of Jews in the Holocaust to factory animals in 2003 and 2004, and caught similar flack.

Posted by: mhking at 08:33 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
Post contains 246 words, total size 2 kb.

"More cowbell in the White House!"

I don't know if this is serious or not (I'm thinking not, but stranger things have happened...), but considering that Christopher Walken is one of my favorite actors, it's at least a fun read...

UPDATE: It's fake. It's a hoax perpetrated by members of the GenMay.com boards Walken has no interest in politics.

It's STILL a fun read...

Posted by: mhking at 03:21 AM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 75 words, total size 1 kb.

August 14, 2005

Limbaugh offers to mediate spat between Eagles' McNabb & Owens

Rush Limbaugh, whose comments about Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb cost him a job as an ESPN analyst, has offered to mediate a dispute between McNabb and fellow Eagle Terrell Owens.

Owens, who is sitting out a one week suspension for team-related disciplinary problems, has been unhappy about his current contract with the Eagles. He took out some of his frustrations on McNabb, referring to the all-pro quarterback as a "hypocrite," further saying that the two of them could not be successful together.

Limbaugh wants to help mediate, inviting both Eagles to appear on his show.

"I am here to offer and to assist. I can," Limbaugh said on his nationally syndicated radio show Friday, according to a transcript on his Web site. "I could bring these two guys together. I've been there, folks, and I could do this, and I'm serious in my desire to do it."

"This rift cannot be allowed to continue, ladies and gentlemen. It just can't, and I would like to offer this program as a means of getting these two Americans and star players back together," Limbaugh said. "They may not want to talk to each other face-to-face, but perhaps they would join me on this program and speak to each other telephonically via this program and settle this."

No word from either McNabb or Owens at this point, but Limbaugh says the offer remains open.

Posted by: mhking at 08:42 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
Post contains 250 words, total size 2 kb.

August 12, 2005

Flip-flopping Cindy Sheehan with her handler behind her

Cindy Sheehan, the mother who completely flipped her position on the war after praising George W. Bush last year is seen in this January photo with Michael "Close Down The Buffet" Moore in the background at the "Words and Music in Honor of Fahrenheit 9/11" gathering, held at Los Angeles' House Of Blues.

Sheehan is presently holding forth in a moonbat-financed vigil outside President Bush's ranch in Crawford, TX. She is demanding an audience with the President.

Of course, she wouldn't be happy with a private meeting with President Bush. After all, that wouldn't help her case. She needs to have her fellow moonbats at her side so they can collectively yell slogans, insults and epithets. That's the only way she can continue to insult her son's memory -- in order to gain attention.

Sheehan's antics have been soundly denounced by her family.

Sent to a San Francisco radio station Thursday, the first public acknowledgement of a family rift came from Cherie Quartarolo, sister-in-law to Cindy Sheehan and godmother to her son, Casey, who was killed in action in Iraq last year.

Reached by phone Thursday, Quartarolo said she consulted with other family members before releasing the brief statement, but she declined to elaborate. She signed the memo on behalf of Casey's paternal grandparents, as well as "aunts, uncles and numerous cousins."

Noting that her family is still mourning the loss of Casey, Quartarolo wrote: "We do not agree with the political motivations and publicity tactics of Cindy Sheehan. She now appears to be promoting her own personal agenda and notoriety at the expense of her son's good name and reputation."

The family's e-mail said, "The Sheehan family lost our beloved Casey in the Iraq War and we have been silently, respectfully grieving. The rest of the Sheehan family supports the troops, our country and our president, silently, with prayer and respect." Cindy Sheehan did not return calls Thursday.

When challenged on the attention-grabbing, Sheehan's supporters have become venomous, as noted by a constant stream of invectives on radio stations, in blogs and in e-mails to those who would "dare" criticize Sheehan and question her sanity.

Moonbats across the nation are comparing Sheehan to Rosa Parks, which I personally find insulting.

Placing Cindy Sheehan in the same league with Rosa Parks is an insult to the hundreds, if not thousands of blacks who have died before and after segregation. Mrs. Parks took an action and made a symbolic statement without the watchful and adoring eye of the media. If one wants to throw around the word “courage”, let's do it:

Mrs. Parks could have been killed for what she did. Cindy Sheehan has movie stars adoring her.

I just have one question for Cindy Sheehan -- Are you getting paid to be a moonbat, or are you just plain crazy?

UPDATE: Here's a couple of photos from Sheehan's meeting with President Bush last year.

 

(More coverage from Michelle Malkin, In The Bullpen and others; Sheehan photo courtesy MattPhoto.com)

Posted by: mhking at 10:54 AM | Comments (39) | Add Comment
Post contains 510 words, total size 4 kb.

Bobby Knight may get reality series

ESPN is courting one Robert Montgomery Knight (Texas Tech's legendary basketball coach) as the subject of a new reality series.

The series -- which will run in six episodes beginning in February -- will give Knight 16 basketball players who are vying for one walk-on spot with the Division I Texas Tech team. The ESPN Original Entertainment series is being produced with RIVR Media and WealthEffectMedia.

It begins production next month.

"Knight School" will lead the candidates through Knight's way: drills, conditioning, tests, scrimmages and games. ESPN Original Entertainment said "Knight School" will show Knight's coaching style and priorities.

"Knight School?" I just knew it would be called "Who Can Dodge A Thrown Chair?"

Posted by: mhking at 10:19 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
Post contains 124 words, total size 1 kb.

FBI: Beware of truck bomb attacks in NY, LA & Chicago around 9/11 anniversary

The FBI has issued an alert for possible terrorist attacks with improvised truck bombs around the time of the 9/11 anniversary in early September.

The FBI has warned police that al Qaeda cells might use fuel trucks as weapons to attack Los Angeles, New York and Chicago, but officials stressed Thursday the warning was based on uncorroborated intelligence.

The bulletin warned police that terrorists could use fuel tankers in assaults on the three cities. The warning has not been substantiated, according to two law enforcement officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation.

The bad guys seem to like anniversaries, so September 11 would be suspect in any event.

Be safe, be aware of your surroundings.

Posted by: mhking at 05:41 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
Post contains 148 words, total size 1 kb.

Top 10 most liberal/conservative cities no surprise

The San Francisco-based Bay Area Center for Voting Research has come up with a list of the most liberal and most conservative cities in the nation. The numbers show that for the most part, cities with large black populations are usually more liberal than conservative.

Here are the top 10 liberal cities: Detroit; Gary, Ind.; Berkeley, Calif.; Washington, D.C.; Oakland, Calif.; Inglewood, Calif.; Newark, N.J.; Cambridge, Mass.; San Francisco; Flint, Mich.

The most conservative cities are: Provo, Utah; Lubbock Texas; Abilene, Texas; Hialeah, Fla.; Plano, Texas; Colorado Springs, Colo.; Gilbert, Ariz.; Bakersfield, Calif.; Lafayette, La.; Orange, Calif.

The folks who pieced together the study appear to be very surprised by the corrolation between liberalism and race. I don't understand why -- then again, I see that issue daily. Many folks can't see the corrolation, at least until black conservatives are painted as tyrants and Nazis as we were this past weekend.

Posted by: mhking at 05:09 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
Post contains 163 words, total size 1 kb.

NY state panel to "ensure" students taught "enough" about slavery

A New York state educational panel is crafting a new study to ensure that grade school students are taught "enough" about the "physical and psychological terrorism" of the African slave trade.

The Amistad Commission, named after the slave ship that was bravely commandeered by its unwilling passengers, could also recommend state-sponsored educational programs on racism and training for teachers.

The panel, which will consist of 19 politically appointed unpaid members who need not be academics, was approved by the Legislature and signed into law last week by Gov. Pataki.

The state already requires students to learn about slavery and the Underground Railroad, but supporters said the role slaves played in creating modern America cannot be overestimated and that a better understanding of their contributions need to be taught.

"Whatever we're doing in our school system right now to teach slavery is not enough," said Assemblyman Keith Wright (D-Manhattan), who championed the bill. "It's America's deep, dark secret, and for too long, it's been swept under the rug."

Swept under the rug? When will there be "enough" education? When every white student feels guilty? When every black student hates all whites?

And will the changes include information about black slave owners in the South or African blacks who sold their bretheren to the slave traders? Somehow, I doubt it. It doesn't fit into the political agenda of the handwringers in New York.

Posted by: mhking at 04:43 AM | Comments (7) | Add Comment
Post contains 251 words, total size 2 kb.

NCAA says it may rethink Seminole ban

The NCAA has said that it may rethink it's post-season ban on Amerindian-based mascots, at least when it comes to the Florida State Seminoles.

The head of the committee that came up with the list of 18 schools affected by the ban, Walter Harrison, says that Florida State has "good grounds" to file an appeal.

Among the reasons, he (Harrison) said, are that the NCAA Executive Committee thought the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma opposed FSU's use of the Seminole image as a mascot.

That was based partly on letters the committee received from David Narcomey, a member of the General Council of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma.

But Narcomey was not authorized to speak on behalf of the tribal nation and "misrepresented" its view, the tribe's attorney general said Thursday.

In fact, Narcomey pushed for a tribal resolution condemning the use of American Indian mascots and imagery, specifically at FSU. It was defeated last month by an 18-2 vote.

Harrison, flooded with hundreds of e-mails from FSU fans, also said Thursday he wants to better understand FSU's history with the Seminoles.

No word on whether the NCAA's political correctness run-amok can be appealed by other schools who have ties to Indian tribal councils (including Central Michigan and Utah).

Posted by: mhking at 04:03 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
Post contains 221 words, total size 2 kb.

August 11, 2005

Texas white Anglos become minority

Texas has become the fourth state to have a non-white majority, with 50.2% of Texas residents being minority. The other states are Hawaii, California and New Mexico, with Hispanics being the largest group in California and New Mexico as well as Texas, and Asians being the largest group in Hawaii.

Texas joins California, New Mexico and Hawaii as states with majority-minority populations — with Hispanics the largest group in every state but Hawaii, where it is Asian-Americans.

Five other states — Maryland, Mississippi, Georgia, New York and Arizona — aren't far behind, with about 40 percent minorities.

William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., said lawmakers need to start with immigration reform, while striving to bring minorities' education and salary levels in line with Anglos.

"Immigration is good for the United States ... it's important for us to keep our doors open, but we need to keep an eye on the people coming in," Frey said. "While initially it will be a state problem, eventually it will be a national issue, and education is the best way to deal with it."

According to demographic experts, the US will be made up of more than 50% minorities by 2050. The bulk of those will most likely be Hispanic.
(More coverage from Unpartisan, Outside the Beltway, Full of Crap & others)

Posted by: mhking at 02:29 PM | Comments (5) | Add Comment
Post contains 230 words, total size 2 kb.

August 10, 2005

Chris' sister needs help!

Day By Day's Chris Muir needs your help.

Posted by: mhking at 10:45 AM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 16 words, total size 1 kb.

BlogAds going invitation only

Just got wind that BlogAds is going invitation only.

Blogads is now invitation only. To participate in Blogads, you need to be sponsored by a blogger in the network. If you donÂ’t know a sponsor, write sellers@blogads.com and weÂ’ll notify you when a sponsor appears in your niche.
I guess saturation has become an issue.

Then again, you're welcome to advertise here by way of BlogAds - I'm more than happy to have you advertise here.

(Courtesy Gay Orbit)

Posted by: mhking at 10:03 AM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 85 words, total size 1 kb.

The WNBA continues to astound

The only thing I can say after looking at this pic is "Just damn."

In this shot, 5'6" New York Liberty guard Becky Hammon is trying to guard Margo Dydek, the 7'2" center for the Connecticut Sun in a WNBA game last week at Madison Square Garden.

That's just plain wrong...

Posted by: mhking at 09:09 AM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
Post contains 61 words, total size 1 kb.

Dick Gregory catches flack for "White Boy" comment on FNC

  
Monday night on Fox News Channel's Hannity & Colmes, activist Dick Gregory referred to CNSNews.com's Marc Morano derogatively as "White Boy" during an interview about Gregory's comments at a weekend rally in Atlanta, where he referred to Republicans as "racist thugs."
The exchange took place during the "Hannity & Colmes" program on the Fox News Channel. Gregory and Cybercast News Service Senior Staff Writer Marc Morano discussed comments Gregory made during an Aug. 6 march in Atlanta commemorating the 40th anniversary of the signing of the Voting Rights Act.

Reading from Morano's article, co-host Sean Hannity asked Gregory to confirm whether he had made a number of controversial remarks during the event.

The activist readily acknowledged that he had referred to Republicans as "white racist thugs" and called the United States "the most dishonest, ungodly, unspiritual nation that ever existed in the history of the planet."

But, when Gregory hesitated in his responses, Hannity turned to Morano for confirmation.

"You don't have to confirm what I said," Gregory charged. "I've already said it. So I don't need no white boy to come on and say yes, he said it."

Surprised by Gregory's reply, Hannity repeated, "No white boy? No white boy?" and asked Gregory if he wanted to apologize to Morano for calling him a racially charged term.

Gregory apologized for his remarks.

Rev. Jesse Lee Peterson remained unconvinced by Gregory's apology, however.

"Just imagine what would have happened if Morano had called Gregory a 'black boy,'" Peterson said. "They'd be protesting Cybercast News Service and Fox News Channel, calling for the heads of the presidents of these organizations.

"But because Dick Gregory said it to a white man, it's okay," Peterson said.

He added that "we have a double standard in this country today, where black liberals can do and say whatever they want" because whites "have allowed themselves to be intimidated" by the fear of being called racists.

Fellow Project 21 member Mychal Massie pointed out that Gregory's comments underlined the double-standard in this country when it comes to racist statements by some blacks.

Massie criticized Saturday's march, pointing out that antagonistic statements by Gregory, as well as others by many of the speakers, including Jesse Jackson and Harry Belafonte actually degrade blacks. Speaking specifically of Jackson and Belafonte, Massie said, "To hear Jackson and Belafonte and these people talk, the only thing black people can do is shine shoes at a bus stop."

Posted by: mhking at 06:53 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
Post contains 422 words, total size 3 kb.

<< Page 3 of 4 >>
132kb generated in CPU 0.032, elapsed 0.4108 seconds.
56 queries taking 0.3906 seconds, 211 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.