UNFAIR... UNBALANCED

I REPORT, I DECIDE

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Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Oscar De La Hoya Admits Love of Cocaine, Alcohol, Cheating... 'Obviously' not as Shitty as Tiger Woods

 Oscar De La Hoya talks about substance abuse, infidelity


(CBS) In an interview with Univision's "Aqui y Ahora," retired boxer Oscar De La Hoya tells interviewer Teresa Rodriguez about his drug and alcohol abuse and about cheating on his wife.

"Rock bottom was recently," says De La Hoya. "Within a couple years, just thinking is my life even worth it? I don't have the strength, I don't have the courage to take my own life. But I was thinking about it."
De La Hoya says his drugs of choice were alcohol and cocaine and that after getting out of rehab, he has been attending meetings of Alcoholics Anonymous.

Later in the interview, he says he was unfaithful. "We are obviously not talking a Tiger Woods here. But I was unfaithful."

When De La Hoya, 38, retired, he had a 39-6 professional record with 30 knockouts.

I'm glad that Oscar is in recovery and doing well as I hope for the best for anyone struggling with any addiction, but what a dick to throw Tiger into a story that has nothing to do with Tiger.  Isn't a big part of recovery not judging other people and worrying about your own side of the street?

Tea Party to Protest Mitt Romney's Tea Party Rally Touting Tea Party Support.... Wait, What?

FreedomWorks will protest Mitt Romney appearance

And Romney, for his part, hasn’t focused much energy on appealing to the movement. So it attracted considerable attention — both within the tea party and among the GOP operative class — when it was announced Tuesday that he intended to speak at a Sunday evening rally being staged by the Tea Party Express in Concord, N.H., as part of a cross country bus tour set to culminate in Tampa, Fla., ahead of a Sept. 12 GOP presidential debate co-sponsored by the Tea Party Express and CNN

FreedomWorks, which had been participating in the Tea Party Express’s tour and had helped turn out activists at rallies during prior stops, decided it could no longer be affiliated with the tour, said Brendan Steinhauser, a lead organizer for FreedomWorks.

Instead, it began working with local New Hampshire tea party groups to organize a counter rally set for about the same time in the same park in Concord as Romney’s speech.

“We have to defend our brand against poseurs,” Steinhauser said.

FreedomWorks had voiced quiet displeasure with the Tea Party Express’s decision to grant speaking time at a rally in Utah earlier this summer to Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), who has been targeted by FreedomWorks. But when Romney’s participation was announced, Steinhauser said that represented “a major line we would not cross.

“If we can’t make any distinction between any of the candidates, if we’re just going to provide cover for the establishment candidates, then what is the point of having the tea party?” Steinhauser said. “We’ve got to have a brand, and we can’t water down our brand.”

At least one prominent New Hampshire tea party group — the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire — is planning to participate in the protest, and its organizer, Andrew Hemingway, predicted at least five more groups would join in.

Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0811/62380.html#ixzz1Wcn266AL



 Mitt Romney to me is everything that is wrong with America.  He hasn't taken a stand or supported a single issue that he hasn't also opposed.  If you listened to him in 2004 he sounds exactly like Obama did in 2008, and now in 2012 he sounds exactly like Ron Paul did in 1988. The guy is the epitome of a politician.  He opens up the newspaper, reads the polls, and decides that he is the champion of every cause that is currently popular.  In 2004, when everything was dandy and we were all rich he was touting universal healthcare and welfare for everyone.  Now everyone is broke and he is a lean, mean cost cutting machine.  The guy has absolutely no foundation and lost any chance of earning  my support a long time ago.  Also, as a 'business genius' he created shit for jobs in Massachusetts in a time when the economy was booming.  He seems to me as more of a 'right place at the right time' kind of guy rather than someone with actual ideas.  

The thing about this article that really grinds my gears is that any organization claiming to hold tea party values would even consider for giving Romney a soapbox to stand on.  The Tea Party has credibility right now because of the absolute committment to the one cause: limited government.  That is the one and only underlying principle that all Tea Party supporters agree on.  Clearly, Romney doesn't represent that.  As soon as they stray from that principle the entire movement will fall.  What the hell is the Tea Party Express thinking?  I can only hope that this was some kind of political chicanery where Romney ended up on the nightly program by slipping through the cracks.

Props to FreedomWorks for standing their ground.




Ron Paul Says FEMA Sucks.... FEMA agrees






Fox News tries to bring the former FEMA director to criticize Ron Paul's view on FEMA, but he ends up agreeing with Ron Paul:

Michael Brown:

"Dr. Paul I think hits this correct, FEMA has these problems every single year, and as long as we have the flood insurance program, and continue to more and more give money out for these disaster programs, It will continue to face these problems"

"We don't have any money."

"42 cents of every dollar they give to FEMA will have to be borrowed."

"Whose gonna pay for it? We don't have the money right now."

"Let's have an honest conversation between government and the public about what's really occurring on the ground...I think goes for the media too."




I wish Bill Hemmer would un-tilt his head long enough to face some facts.  Unlike the rest of Fox which is figuratively slanted right, Bill Hemmer literally is.  It drives me crazy.  

Clearly the way he intro'd Paul's comments with his 'crazy Ron Paul cadence' was designed to set up Brown to 'straighten out the misconception.'

Too bad that unlike everyone else, Ron Paul bases his opinions on facts and stats and experiences instead of vaguery, polls, and politics.   

Props to Brown for shooting straight. 

Breaking News: Being Ugly is Just as Bad as being Black, Female, Crippled



Ugly? You May Have a Case

BEING good-looking is useful in so many ways. 


In addition to whatever personal pleasure it gives you, being attractive also helps you earn more money, find a higher-earning spouse (and one who looks better, too!) and get better deals on mortgages. Each of these facts has been demonstrated over the past 20 years by many economists and other researchers. The effects are not small: one study showed that an American worker who was among the bottom one-seventh in looks, as assessed by randomly chosen observers, earned 10 to 15 percent less per year than a similar worker whose looks were assessed in the top one-third — a lifetime difference, in a typical case, of about $230,000.
Beauty is as much an issue for men as for women. While extensive research shows that women’s looks have bigger impacts in the market for mates, another large group of studies demonstrates that men’s looks have bigger impacts on the job. 

Why this disparate treatment of looks in so many areas of life? It’s a matter of simple prejudice. Most of us, regardless of our professed attitudes, prefer as customers to buy from better-looking salespeople, as jurors to listen to better-looking attorneys, as voters to be led by better-looking politicians, as students to learn from better-looking professors. This is not a matter of evil employers’ refusing to hire the ugly: in our roles as workers, customers and potential lovers we are all responsible for these effects. 

How could we remedy this injustice? With all the gains to being good-looking, you would think that more people would get plastic surgery or makeovers to improve their looks. Many of us do all those things, but as studies have shown, such refinements make only small differences in our beauty. All that spending may make us feel better, but it doesn’t help us much in getting a better job or a more desirable mate.  A more radical solution may be needed: why not offer legal protections to the ugly, as we do with racial, ethnic and religious minorities, women and handicapped individuals? 

We actually already do offer such protections in a few places, including in some jurisdictions in California, and in the District of Columbia, where discriminatory treatment based on looks in hiring, promotions, housing and other areas is prohibited. Ugliness could be protected generally in the United States by small extensions of the Americans With Disabilities Act. Ugly people could be allowed to seek help from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and other agencies in overcoming the effects of discrimination. We could even have affirmative-action programs for the ugly

The mechanics of legislating this kind of protection are not as difficult as you might think. You might argue that people can’t be classified by their looks — that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. That aphorism is correct in one sense: if asked who is the most beautiful person in a group of beautiful people, you and I might well have different answers. But when it comes to differentiating classes of attractiveness, we all view beauty similarly: someone whom you consider good-looking will be viewed similarly by most others; someone you consider ugly will be viewed as ugly by most others. In one study, more than half of a group of people were assessed identically by each of two observers using a five-point scale; and very few assessments differed by more than one point. 

For purposes of administering a law, we surely could agree on who is truly ugly, perhaps the worst-looking 1 or 2 percent of the population. The difficulties in classification are little greater than those faced in deciding who qualifies for protection on grounds of disabilities that limit the activities of daily life, as shown by conflicting decisions in numerous legal cases involving obesity. 

There are other possible objections. “Ugliness” is not a personal trait that many people choose to embrace; those whom we classify as protected might not be willing to admit that they are ugly. But with the chance of obtaining extra pay and promotions amounting to $230,000 in lost lifetime earnings, there’s a large enough incentive to do so. Bringing anti-discrimination lawsuits is also costly, and few potential plaintiffs could afford to do so. But many attorneys would be willing to organize classes of plaintiffs to overcome these costs, just as they now do in racial-discrimination and other lawsuits. 

Economic arguments for protecting the ugly are as strong as those for protecting some groups currently covered by legislation. So why not go ahead and expand protection to the looks-challenged? There’s one legitimate concern. With increasingly tight limits on government resources, expanding rights to yet another protected group would reduce protection for groups that have commanded our legislative and other attention for over 50 years. 

We face a trade-off: ignore a deserving group of citizens, or help them but limit help available for other groups. Even though I myself have demonstrated the disadvantages of ugliness in 20 years of research, I nonetheless would hate to see anything that might reduce assistance to groups now aided by protective legislation. 

You might reasonably disagree and argue for protecting all deserving groups. Either way, you shouldn’t be surprised to see the United States heading toward this new legal frontier.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/28/opinion/sunday/ugly-you-may-have-a-case.html

So I was listening to Foxnews yesterday, and I hear  Mr. Hamermesh comparing being ugly to being black or deformed.  I'm not exactly sure I'm following his entire plan, but it sounds like he wants to give $230,000 to stubborn ugly people that won't admit they're ugly unless they get $230,000?

I'm not going into the merits of this proposal, but I think enforcement would be the biggest issue in order to insure the proper integrity of the system.  In order to keep things objective and to avoid discriminating against certain groups by having to decide whether an amputee should get more government assistance than a gang member, or whether someone with with a cleft palate is generally more capable than a woman (I could argue both ways).

I propose the simple sidewalk test.  Anyone who wants to qualify for job assistance has to walk down a sidewalk, and if you are sooo ugly/black/deformed that people cross the street the avoid eye-contact, you are are probably at a legitimate professional disadvantage and can go cash that check.  Not black enough to draw attention in public???  Sorry... its back to the unemployment line.

New Jersey Gets Tough on Serious Crimes..... Just kidding



Bullying Law Puts New Jersey Schools on Spot

Under a new state law in New Jersey, lunch-line bullies in the East Hanover schools can be reported to the police by their classmates this fall through anonymous tips to the Crimestoppers hot line.

In Elizabeth, children, including kindergartners, will spend six class periods learning, among other things, the difference between telling and tattling

And at North Hunterdon High School, students will be told that there is no such thing as an innocent bystander when it comes to bullying: if they see it, they have a responsibility to try to stop it. 

But while many parents and educators welcome the efforts to curb bullying both on campus and online, some superintendents and school board members across New Jersey say the new law, which takes effect Sept. 1, reaches much too far, and complain that they have been given no additional resources to meet its mandates. 

The law, known as the Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights, is considered the toughest legislation against bullying in the nation. Propelled by public outcry over the suicide of a Rutgers University freshman, Tyler Clementi, nearly a year ago, it demands that all public schools adopt comprehensive antibullying policies (there are 18 pages of “required components”), increase staff training and adhere to tight deadlines for reporting episodes. 

Each school must designate an antibullying specialist to investigate complaints; each district must, in turn, have an antibullying coordinator; and the State Education Department will evaluate every effort, posting grades on its Web site. Superintendents said that educators who failed to comply could lose their licenses. 

“I think this has gone well overboard,” Richard G. Bozza, executive director of the New Jersey Association of School Administrators, said. “Now we have to police the community 24 hours a day. Where are the people and the resources to do this?” 

In most cases, schools are tapping guidance counselors and social workers as the new antibullying specialists, raising questions of whether they have the time or experience to look into every complaint of harassment or intimidation and write the detailed reports required. Some administrators are also worried that making schools legally responsible for bullying on a wider scale will lead to more complaints and open the door to lawsuits from students and parents dissatisfied with the outcome. 

But supporters of the law say that schools need to do more as conflicts spread from cafeterias and corridors to social media sites, magnifying the effects and making them much harder to shut down. Mr. Clementi jumped off the George Washington Bridge after his college roommate secretly used a webcam to capture an intimate encounter between Mr. Clementi and another man and stream it over the Internet, according to the police. 

“It’s not the traditional bullying: the big kid in the schoolyard saying, ‘You’re going to do what I say,’ ” Richard Bergacs, an assistant principal at North Hunterdon High, said. 

Dr. Bergacs, who investigates half a dozen complaints of bullying each month, said most involved both comments on the Internet and face-to-face confrontations on campus. “It’s gossip, innuendo, rumors — and people getting mad about it,” he said. 

This summer, thousands of school employees attended training sessions on the new law; more than 200 districts have snapped up a $1,295 package put together by a consulting firm that includes a 100-page manual and a DVD. 

At a three-hour workshop this month, Philip W. Nicastro, vice president of the firm, Strauss Esmay Associates, tried to reassure a group of newly named antibullying specialists and coordinators gathered in a darkened auditorium at Bridgewater-Raritan High School

“I know many of you came in here saying, ‘Holy cow, I’m going to be dealing with 10 reports a day because everything is bullying,’ ” he told the audience, some of whom laughed nervously. 

Afterward, Meg Duffy, a counselor at the Hillside Intermediate School in Bridgewater, acknowledged that the new law was “a little overwhelming.” She said cyberbullying increased at her school last year, with students texting or posting mean messages about classmates. 

The law also requires districts to appoint a safety team at each school, made up of teachers, staff members and parents, to review complaints. It orders principals to begin an investigation within one school day of a bullying episode, and superintendents to provide reports to Trenton twice a year detailing all episodes. Statewide, there were 2,846 such reports in 2008-9, the most recent year for which a total was available. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/31/nyregion/bullying-law-puts-new-jersey-schools-on-spot.html?_r=1

This is what I'm talking about when I say there are common sense cuts that can be made at every level of government.  Dr. Bergacs says there about about 6 students bullied per month per district.  If you multiply that times 8 months in the school year that's 48 bullied kids per year.  Instead of spending $1,295.00 per district ($27.00 per bullied kid) on a bullying consultant package, I say every time some loser gets cut in line instead of having him call the police, we just have the antibullying specialist contact the antibullying coordinatoor and as long as the safety team approves, we just give the victim like 6 bucks for the inconvenience.  6 bucks is epic for an elementary school student.  Some bully cuts you in line and gets the last thaw and serve brownie... oh well.. you now have enough money to buy like 18 cookies.  Since the victim is most likely being victimized because of obesity, this seems like a perfect consolation prize.  WIN/WIN in my book

NJ State Plan: $1295.00 x 200 districts =  $259,000/year

Live Free or Die Plan: 48 bullied kids x 200 districts x $6 =$57,600

Total Savings: $201,400 and everyone is happy.   Somebody get Christie on the phone

Also, I'm pretty sure everyone knows the difference between 'telling' and 'tattling.'  If the cool kid calls out the loser he's just 'telling' on him and all his friends laugh.  If the loser calls out the cool kid its clearly 'tattling', everyone tells him to go cry to his mommy, and  then throw his lunch on the floor.  I don't need 6 periods to teach that.