
It's interesting that she says the bill is "all about creating jobs" and not saving the environment. She also dismisses Green Peace's opposition to the bill by implying that they are a bunch of kooks.
Thoughts on politics, philosophy, life, and America. Avoiding rhetoric and name-calling in favor of ideas and clarity.
Six Men Shot Dead In 24 Hours In Chicago
Several Others Shot Or Stabbed
And Wounded
CHICAGO (CBS) ―
Shootings claimed the lives of six men in the city in a bloody and violent 24 hours over the weekend.The first shooting happened around 8:20 p.m. Friday, when Tijuan Edwards, 18, was talking to a 25-year-old man in the street at 1916 S. Trumbull Ave. when multiple gunmen approached on foot and shot both men. Edwards was dead on the scene, and the 25-year-old was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital with gunshot wounds to the left arm, chin and thigh, police said.
About 11:20 p.m. Friday, Jovon Lee, 24, was fatally shot at 5928 S. Maplewood Ave., and was dead on the scene, the Cook County Medical Examiner's office said. Police found Lee shot in the neck.
About 2 a.m. Saturday, a man was fatally shot across the street from his Northwest
Side home.Melvin Vallejo, 29, of 6100 W. Diversey Ave., was shot at 6105 W. Diversey Ave. and was dead on the scene, the medical examiner's office said. Police said Vallejo was involved in an argument that became violent and he was shot in the head.
About 2:20 a.m. Saturday, a man was fatally shot on the South Side. Rodrick Scott, 21, of an unidentified home address, was pronounced dead about an hour later at 3:34 a.m. at Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, after he was found shot on the 1000 block of West 60th Street.
Streets were quiet until Saturday night, when Ricardo Valdez, 20, was shot at 5924 S. Whipple St. and later pronounced dead. Police responded to the shooting at 8:18 p.m., according to police, who said the man was confronted on the street by six
Hispanic men who fled south from Whipple Street after firing shots.Also Saturday evening, Willie Short, 38, was shot and killed as he drove and
ultimately crashed into a fence Saturday night at 4103 W. Madison St. in the
West Garfield Park neighborhood, authorities said.Others were wounded in shootings over the weekend, including a 9-year-old boy who was walking home with his family when was wounded during a Friday night shooting at 6758 N. Ashland Ave. in the Rogers Park neighborhood, police said. Nobody else was wounded.
The boy was taken in good condition to Children's Memorial Hospital with a gunshot
wound to the thigh, police said.A 19-year-old man was also shot and wounded by police when he allegedly
pointed a gun at them at 6400 S. Wood St. in the Englewood neighborhood.
Tactical officers were working nearby when they attempted to approach the man,
who first fled, then pointed a gun at an officer, prompting him to shoot, police
said.Violence with other weapons also sent a few people to the hospital over the weekend.
A woman was stabbed with a branch cutter early Saturday, allegedly by her boyfriend Albert Parker, 40, of 7024 S. Clyde Ave., according to a police report. Parker was arrested by police at 4:55 a.m. Saturday, while the woman was
taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in serious condition, police said.In another incident, police say a man stabbed his girlfriend several times with a
screwdriver and set a fire in his South Side apartment during a domestic argument. The incident happened around 9:20 p.m. Saturday at 7930 S. Evans Ave.,
police said. The man and woman were taken to area hospitals in serious
condition. Both suffered smoke inhalation injuries and the woman also suffered
stab injuries, police said.
By FOUAD
AJAMI
President Barack Obama did not "lose" Iran. This is not a Jimmy Carter moment. But the foreign-policy education of America's 44th president has just begun. Hitherto, he had been cavalier about other lands, he had trusted in his own biography as a bridge to distant peoples, he had believed he could talk rogues and ideologues out of deeply held beliefs. His predecessor had drawn lines in the sand. He would look past them.Thus a man who had been uneasy with his middle name (Hussein) during the presidential campaign would descend on Ankara and Cairo, inserting himself in a raging civil war over Islam itself. An Iranian theocratic regime had launched a bid for dominion in its region; Mr. Obama offered it an olive branch and waited for it to "unclench" its fist.
It was an odd, deeply conflicted message from Mr. Obama. He was at once a herald of change yet a practitioner of realpolitik. He would entice the crowds, yet assure the
autocrats that the "diplomacy of freedom" that unsettled them during the presidency of George W. Bush is dead and buried. Grant the rulers in Tehran and Damascus their due: They were quick to take the measure of the new steward of American power. He had come to "engage" them. Gone was the hope of transforming these regimes or making them pay for their transgressions. The theocracy was said to be waiting on an American opening, and this new president would put an end to three decades of estrangement between the United States and Iran.But in truth Iran had never wanted an opening to the U.S. For the length of three
decades, the custodians of the theocracy have had precisely the level of enmity
toward the U.S. they have wanted -- just enough to be an ideological glue for
the regime but not enough to be a threat to their power. Iran's rulers have made
their way in the world with relative ease. No White Army gathered to restore the
dominion of the Pahlavis. The Cold War and oil bailed them out. So did the false
hope that the revolution would mellow and make its peace with the world.Mr. Obama may believe that his offer to Iran is a break with a hard-line American
policy. But nothing could be further from the truth. In 1989, in his inaugural,
George H.W. Bush extended an offer to Iran: "Good will begets good will," he
said. A decade later, in a typically Clintonian spirit of penance and contrition, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright came forth with a full apology for America's role in the 1953 coup that ousted nationalist Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh.Iran's rulers scoffed. They had inherited a world, and they were in no need of opening it to outsiders. They were able to fly under the radar. Selective, targeted deeds of terror, and oil income, enabled them to hold their regime intact. There is a Persian pride and a Persian solitude, and the impact of three decades of zeal and indoctrination. The drama of Barack Obama's election was not an affair of Iran. They had an election of their own to stage.
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad -- a son of the Ayatollah Khomeini's revolutionary order, a
man from the brigades of the regime, austere and indifferent to outsiders, an
Iranian Everyman with badly fitting clothes and white socks -- was up for re-election.The upper orders of his country loathed him and bristled under the system of controls that the mullahs and the military and the revolutionary brigades had put in place, but he had the power and the money and the organs of the state arrayed on his side. There was a discernible fault line in Iran. There were Iranians yearning for liberty, but we should not underestimate the power and the determination of those moved by the yearning for piety. Ahmadinejad's message of populism at home and defiance abroad, his assertion that the country's nuclear quest is a "closed file," settled and beyond discussion, have a resonance on Iranian soil.
His challenger, Mir Hossein Mousavi, a generation older, could not compete with him on that terrain.
On the ruins of the ancien régime, the Iranian revolutionaries, it has to be conceded, have built a formidable state. The men who emerged out of a cruel and bloody struggle over their country's identity and spoils are a tenacious, merciless breed. Their capacity for repression is fearsome. We must rein in the modernist conceit that the bloggers, and the force of Twitter and Facebook, could win in the streets against the squads of the regime. That fight would be an Iranian drama, all outsiders mere spectators.
That ambivalence at the heart of the Obama diplomacy about freedom has not served American policy well in this crisis. We had tried to "cheat" -- an opening to the regime with an obligatory wink to those who took to the streets appalled by their rulers' cynicism and utter disregard for their people's intelligence and common sense -- and we were caught at it. Mr. Obama's statement that "the difference between Ahmadinejad and Mousavi in terms of their actual policies may not be as great as had been advertised" put on cruel display the administration's incoherence.
For once, there was an acknowledgment by this young president of history's burden: "Either way, we were going to be dealing with an Iranian regime that has historically
been hostile to the United States, that has caused some problems in the
neighborhood and is pursuing nuclear weapons."No Wilsonianism on offer here. Mr. Obama will have to acknowledge the "foreignness" of foreign lands. His breezy self-assurance has been put on notice. The Obama administration believed its own rhetoric that the pro-Western March 14 coalition in Lebanon had ridden Mr. Obama's coattails to an electoral victory. (It had given every indication that it expected similar vindication in Iran.)
But the claim about Lebanon was hollow and reflected little understanding of the forces at play in Lebanon's politics. That contest was settled by Lebanese rules, and by the push and pull of Saudi and Syrian and Iranian interests in Lebanon.
Mr. Obama's June 4 speech in Cairo did not reshape the Islamic landscape. I was in Saudi Arabia when Mr. Obama traveled to Riyadh and Cairo. The earth did not move, life went on as usual. There were countless people puzzled by the presumption of the entire exercise, an outsider walking into sacred matters of their faith. In
Saudi Arabia, and in the Arabic commentaries of other lands, there was unease
that so complicated an ideological and cultural terrain could be approached with
such ease and haste.Days into his presidency, it should be recalled, Mr. Obama had spoken of his desire to restore to America's relation with the Muslim world the respect and mutual interest that had existed 30 or 20 years earlier.
It so happened that he was speaking, almost to the day, on the 30th anniversary
of the Iranian Revolution -- and that the time span he was referring to, his
golden age, covered the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the American standoff
with Libya, the fall of Beirut to the forces of terror, and the downing of Pan
Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. Liberal opinion would have howled had
this history been offered by George W. Bush, but Barack Obama was granted a
waiver.Little more than three decades ago, Jimmy Carter, another American
president convinced that what had come before him could be annulled and wished
away, called on the nation to shed its "inordinate fear of communism," and to
put aside its concern with "traditional issues of war and peace" in favor of
"new global issues of justice, equity and human rights." We had betrayed our
principles in the course of the Cold War, he said, "fought fire with fire, never
thinking that fire is quenched with water." The Soviet answer to that brave, new
world was the invasion of Afghanistan in December of 1979.Mr. Carter would try an atonement in the last year of his presidency. He would pose as a born-again hawk. It was too late in the hour for such redemption. It would take
another standard-bearer, Ronald Reagan, to see that great struggle to victory.Iran's ordeal and its ways shattered the Carter presidency. President Obama's Persian tutorial has just begun.
Mr. Ajami, a professor at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University and a fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution, is the author of "The Foreigner's Gift: The Americans, the Arabs, and the Iraqis in Iraq"
WASHINGTON -- The Obama administration plans to kill a controversial Bush
administration spy satellite program at the Department of Homeland Security,
according to officials familiar with the decision.The program came under fire from its inception two years ago. Democratic lawmakers said it would lead to domestic spying.
The program would have provided federal, state and local officials with extensive access to spy-satellite imagery — but no eavesdropping capabilities— to assist with emergency response and other domestic-security needs, such as identifying where ports or border areas are vulnerable to terrorism.It would have expanded an Interior Department satellite program, which will continue to be used to assist in natural disasters and for other limited security purposes such as photographing sporting events.
The Wall Street Journal first revealed the plans to establish the program, known
as the National Applications Office, in 2007."It's being shut down," said a homeland security official.
The Bush administration had taken preliminary steps to launch the office, such as acquiring office space and beginning to hire staff.
The plans to shutter the office signal Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano's decision to refocus the department's intelligence on ensuring that state and local officials get the threat information they need, the official said. She also wants to make the department the central point in the government for receiving and analyzing terrorism tips from around the country, the official added.
Lawmakers alerted Ms. Napolitano of their concerns about the program-that the program would violate the Fourth amendment right to be protected from unreasonable searches-before her confirmation hearing.
Once she assumed her post, Ms. Napolitano ordered a review of the program and
concluded the program wasn't worth pursuing, the homeland official said.Department spokeswoman Amy Kudwa declined to speak about the results of the
review but said they would be announced shortly.The lawmakers were most concerned about plans to provide satellite imagery to state and local law enforcement, so department officials asked state and local officials how useful that information would be to them. The answer: not very useful.
"In our view, the NAO is not an issue of urgency," Los Angeles Police Chief William Bratton, wrote to Ms. Napolitano on June 21.Writing on behalf of the Major Cities Chiefs Association, Chief Bratton said that were the program to go forward, the police chiefs would be concerned about privacy protections and whether using military satellites for domestic purposes would violate the Posse Comitatus law, which bars the use of the military for law enforcement in the U.S.
Rep. Jane Harman (D., Calif.), who oversees the House Homeland Security subcommittee on intelligence, said she was alarmed when she recently saw that the Obama administration requested money for the program in a classified 2010 budget
proposal. She introduced two bills that would terminate the program."It's a good decision," Ms. Harman said in an interview. "This will remove a distraction and let the intelligence function at [the department] truly serve the community that needs it, which is local law enforcement."
Supporters of the program lamented what they said was the loss of an important new terrorism-fighting tool for natural disasters and terrorist attacks, as well as border
security."After numerous congressional briefings on the importance of the NAO and its solid legal footing, politics beat out good government," said Andrew Levy, who was deputy general counsel at the department in the Bush administration.
"Obama: it's now or never"
By AMIE PARNES
05/28/09 2:13 PM
On a conference call with Organizing for America volunteers
Thursday, Obama urged thousands of callers to “work in your communities” to help
pass health care reform this year.
“If we don’t get it done this year, we’re not going to get it done,” Obama cautioned.
Obama urged volunteers to build on their experiences from the campaign and
“remobilize” to pass health care reform, calling it “one of our biggest priorities.”
“This is our big chance to prove that the movement that started during the campaign isn’t over,” he said. “We know what’s at stake. We know we need reforms. Businesses and families are just getting hammered… Millions of Americans have lost their health care.”
The president argued to supporters that Americans “want action.”
“Inaction on health care leads to unsustainable lives…everywhere,” he said. “If we want to cut our deficits…the most important thing we can do to close our budget gap is to rein in health care costs.”