8th Accuser: Al Franken Groped Me ’at a Media Matters Party During the First Obama Inauguration’

8th Accuser: Al Franken Groped Me ’At a Media Matters Party During the First Obama Inauguration’



Journalist Tina Dupuy became the eighth woman on Wednesday to accuse Al Franken of sexual misconduct, writing in The Atlantic that the embattled Minnesota Senator groped her in 2009 at a Media Matters party during Barack Obama’s inauguration.

“D.C. was decked out and packed in for the inauguration of a young and popular new president. The town was buzzing with optimism, and one of the many events on our list was a swanky Media Matters party with Democratic notables everywhere,” the former communications director for Democratic Rep. Alan Grayson wrote in the article titled, “I Believe Franken’s Accusers Because He Groped Me, Too.”

“Then I saw Al Franken,” Dupuy wrote. “I only bug celebrities for pictures when it’ll make my foster mom happy. She loves Franken, so I asked to get a picture with him. We posed for the shot. He immediately put his hand on my waist, grabbing a handful of flesh. I froze. Then he squeezed. At least twice.”

“Al Franken’s familiarity was inappropriate and unwanted. It was also quick; he knew exactly what he was doing,” wrote Dupuy, who said, “I don’t let my husband touch me like that in public because I believe it diminishes me as a professional woman.”

In addition to Dupuy, six other women have accused Franken of sexual misconduct after radio host Leeann Tweeden published a photo last month of Franken grabbing her breast during a two week USO Tour in 2006.

Democratic senators have come out in droves urging Franken resign, including several high-ranking female lawmakers.

“We have to rise to the occasion, and not shrink away from it, even when it’s hard, especially when it’s hard. That is what this larger moment is about,” Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand wrote on Wednesday in a statement on Facebook.

Franken took to Twitter Wednesday promising to address the growing scandal in a statement on Thursday.

Follow Jerome Hudson on Twitter @jeromeehudson

via Breitbart News

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‘Make Them Bake Cake’: The Bizarre Arguments against Bakers’ Free Speech Rights

Last week’s New York Times piece by Jennifer Finney Boylan, “The Masterpiece Cakeshop Case Is Not About Religious Freedom,” floored me with the number of distortions it crowded into a few paragraphs.  I can only conclude that the left’s discourse and values have become so wayward and impoverished that they would rather criminalize creativity than take on the serious issues the Supreme Court will be hearing on December 5.


Boylan begins with a dark narrative about the pharmacy Boylan frequents, “run by a conservative Republican.”  (Is there any other kind?)  Will he refuse to fill the demanded prescription, Boylan quails, “given my condition”?  What condition is that? I wondered, as clearly each reader was meant to – compulsive self-dramatizing syndrome?



Thus begins Boylan’s parade of horribles.  If Phillips wins in his appeal from lower court decisions, sick babies will die, HIV patients will be turned away from treatment clinics, pre-Civil Rights abominations will become the order of the day.  Except none of these scenarios is backed up with citations from the court papers.  There’s a good reason for that.  They’re not in there.  But after all, what do facts matter when it comes to the left’s self-suffering legerdemain?


Does Colorado’s state public accommodations law as applied to Jack Phillips’s refusal to accept a commission for a cake for two men trying to marry each other regulate speech or conduct?  Under First Amendment law, the latter is permitted.  The former, with minimal exceptions, is not.


That is the threshold question. 


Phillips argues he was being forced to convey an unwanted message by providing a custom-made cake for Craig’s and Mullins’s ceremony.  One of the cases Phillips and the Justice Department as amicus rely on is the Supreme Court’s 1994 ruling in Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc.  It held that a private sponsor, a veterans’ group, was not required to admit an LGBGT group to its St. Patrick’s Day parade because that would require the group to alter its message, which did not embrace approval of gay pride.  The same doomsday predictions we hear in advance of Tuesday’s oral argument were adumbrated there, too.  None of them came true.  But why learn from history? 


What about the actual case?  Disagreeing with Phillips’s characterization, Craig and Mullins and the Colorado Civil Rights Commission (respondents) claim that CADA permissibly regulates conduct, not speech.  The targeted conduct is the provision of a good or service.  According to them, the nature of the good or service is irrelevant.  Phillips’s action is discriminatory, plain and simple.  His claim that CADA is unconstitutional as applied to him is just a pretext for his religion-inspired reactionary hatred.


Boylan echoes this reductionism, and then some.  But while Craig and Mullins are bound to the papers and what they actually say, Boylan is not.  Boylan singlehandedly reinterprets pages of argument and counter-argument analyzing CADA, discussing precedents, and building on agreed upon facts with magical revision: 


There are two important things to know about the religious freedom/wedding cake case.  One is that it’s not about religious freedom – it’s about religious exemption.  The other is that it’s about a whole lot more than wedding cakes.  


While CADA does in fact grant religious exemptions, that is not what Phillips is seeking.  As David French at National Review notes, it is the other way around.  Craig and Mullins are demanding an across-the-board application of Colorado’s public accommodations law that amounts to a state exemption from the First Amendment. 


But Boylan is right about Masterpiece being about a whole lot more than wedding cakes (as though the Supreme Court would grant certiorari to a case that didn’t have far-ranging implications).  The undisputed facts show that Phillips serves customers attracted to members of their own sex all the time.  He limits his rejection of their requests to cakes for ceremonies meant to be weddings.  In other words, Phillips maintains, and his actions corroborate, that he is selectively choosing not whom to serve, but what product to offer.  He bases this refusal on his religious beliefs in light of the nature of the specific product he produces – the demands it takes on his time; the drawdown it makes on his creative energies; and, perhaps most important, the dissonance that would result if he were forced to deploy his talents robotically in the name of dogma.  


The real question, therefore, is not whether Boylan can get estrogen at his pharmacy because he thinks he is a woman.  (We finally get let in on the secret of his condition!)  It is, in my view, not even about religion.  It is about preserving some anarchic sweet spot in our increasingly alienated, doctrinaire, one-size-fits-all society – a space devoted to whimsy, invention, and psychic independence.  That is what creativity requires.  Just ask the artists whom Stalin banished to Siberia and certain death for no worse crime than painting more like the American abstract expressionist Willem de Kooning than Stalin’s stable of Soviet Realist lackeys.  When the government starts requiring creatives to perform in the service of the one true ideology, vision withers.


Not that any lockstep leftists nowadays would notice.  This is why the soulless Boylan can glibly misrepresent the question of whether Jack Phillips’s wedding cakes are “art.”  The entirety of the argument in Boylan’s seeming make-it-up-as-you-go discussion comes down to sleight-of-hand: Phillips can’t win on the issue of faith, so he defaults to calling his “nice-looking cakes” art.  That’s simply incorrect. 


The possible First Amendment implications of CADA are not at issue.  They have already been admitted by respondents, including the Colorado Civil Rights Commission.  Indeed, the commission declined to enforce CADA against bakers who refused to serve religious customers asking for a special-order wedding cake with words from Leviticus on it on just these grounds.  The unresolved question here is not whether the First Amendment may apply.  It is whether it does where there is no express written message – only an implied one. 


Technically, if the cakes are deemed “art” rather than “implied speech,” according to ample case law, their expressiveness is absolutely protected.  Art, unlike implied speech, doesn’t have to convey a “succinct and articulable” message.  It is “pure expression” and can simply be.  Perhaps it is no coincidence that the Hurley court used the express inarticulateness of Jackson Pollack’s abstract expressionist paintings as an example of this principle.  In any case, the point is, even if the cakes are not “art,” the constitutional challenge doesn’t go away.    


Even granting, moreover, that there is room to disagree over the artistic status of Phillips’s “masterpieces,” Boylan’s caution that “that argument demands that the court get into the business of defining art itself” is mind-boggling.  The courts are asked to decide on the nature of expression and its protectability literally all the time.  Can a tattoo parlor be singled out in a zoning law, or does it engage in protected speech?  Is a cropped copy of a Walker Evans photograph thievery or fair use (sanctioned by the First Amendment exception to copyright)?  How do you define obscenity?  Boylan’s idea that the Supreme Court shouldn’t be asked to distinguish between Phillips’s elaborately designed ritual object and, as Boylan puts it, a “well-manicured lawn” is so out of whack that even the respondents don’t venture it.


At the end of the article, Boylan acknowledges that his old-timey pharmacist never treated him with anything but “kindness and respect.”  It is almost as if he is disappointed that reality hasn’t lived up to his counter-factual histrionics.  Although this type of commentary is what we have come to expect from the Times, it is worth adding that it is cheap – dirt cheap.  Anybody at all who sees fit to suspend the facts can make a “slippery slope” argument.  Fortunately, we still live in a country where the supreme court of the land attends to more than horror-baiting.










Last week’s New York Times piece by Jennifer Finney Boylan, “The Masterpiece Cakeshop Case Is Not About Religious Freedom,” floored me with the number of distortions it crowded into a few paragraphs.  I can only conclude that the left’s discourse and values have become so wayward and impoverished that they would rather criminalize creativity than take on the serious issues the Supreme Court will be hearing on December 5.


Boylan begins with a dark narrative about the pharmacy Boylan frequents, “run by a conservative Republican.”  (Is there any other kind?)  Will he refuse to fill the demanded prescription, Boylan quails, “given my condition”?  What condition is that? I wondered, as clearly each reader was meant to – compulsive self-dramatizing syndrome?


Thus begins Boylan’s parade of horribles.  If Phillips wins in his appeal from lower court decisions, sick babies will die, HIV patients will be turned away from treatment clinics, pre-Civil Rights abominations will become the order of the day.  Except none of these scenarios is backed up with citations from the court papers.  There’s a good reason for that.  They’re not in there.  But after all, what do facts matter when it comes to the left’s self-suffering legerdemain?


Does Colorado’s state public accommodations law as applied to Jack Phillips’s refusal to accept a commission for a cake for two men trying to marry each other regulate speech or conduct?  Under First Amendment law, the latter is permitted.  The former, with minimal exceptions, is not.


That is the threshold question. 


Phillips argues he was being forced to convey an unwanted message by providing a custom-made cake for Craig’s and Mullins’s ceremony.  One of the cases Phillips and the Justice Department as amicus rely on is the Supreme Court’s 1994 ruling in Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc.  It held that a private sponsor, a veterans’ group, was not required to admit an LGBGT group to its St. Patrick’s Day parade because that would require the group to alter its message, which did not embrace approval of gay pride.  The same doomsday predictions we hear in advance of Tuesday’s oral argument were adumbrated there, too.  None of them came true.  But why learn from history? 


What about the actual case?  Disagreeing with Phillips’s characterization, Craig and Mullins and the Colorado Civil Rights Commission (respondents) claim that CADA permissibly regulates conduct, not speech.  The targeted conduct is the provision of a good or service.  According to them, the nature of the good or service is irrelevant.  Phillips’s action is discriminatory, plain and simple.  His claim that CADA is unconstitutional as applied to him is just a pretext for his religion-inspired reactionary hatred.


Boylan echoes this reductionism, and then some.  But while Craig and Mullins are bound to the papers and what they actually say, Boylan is not.  Boylan singlehandedly reinterprets pages of argument and counter-argument analyzing CADA, discussing precedents, and building on agreed upon facts with magical revision: 


There are two important things to know about the religious freedom/wedding cake case.  One is that it’s not about religious freedom – it’s about religious exemption.  The other is that it’s about a whole lot more than wedding cakes.  


While CADA does in fact grant religious exemptions, that is not what Phillips is seeking.  As David French at National Review notes, it is the other way around.  Craig and Mullins are demanding an across-the-board application of Colorado’s public accommodations law that amounts to a state exemption from the First Amendment. 


But Boylan is right about Masterpiece being about a whole lot more than wedding cakes (as though the Supreme Court would grant certiorari to a case that didn’t have far-ranging implications).  The undisputed facts show that Phillips serves customers attracted to members of their own sex all the time.  He limits his rejection of their requests to cakes for ceremonies meant to be weddings.  In other words, Phillips maintains, and his actions corroborate, that he is selectively choosing not whom to serve, but what product to offer.  He bases this refusal on his religious beliefs in light of the nature of the specific product he produces – the demands it takes on his time; the drawdown it makes on his creative energies; and, perhaps most important, the dissonance that would result if he were forced to deploy his talents robotically in the name of dogma.  


The real question, therefore, is not whether Boylan can get estrogen at his pharmacy because he thinks he is a woman.  (We finally get let in on the secret of his condition!)  It is, in my view, not even about religion.  It is about preserving some anarchic sweet spot in our increasingly alienated, doctrinaire, one-size-fits-all society – a space devoted to whimsy, invention, and psychic independence.  That is what creativity requires.  Just ask the artists whom Stalin banished to Siberia and certain death for no worse crime than painting more like the American abstract expressionist Willem de Kooning than Stalin’s stable of Soviet Realist lackeys.  When the government starts requiring creatives to perform in the service of the one true ideology, vision withers.


Not that any lockstep leftists nowadays would notice.  This is why the soulless Boylan can glibly misrepresent the question of whether Jack Phillips’s wedding cakes are “art.”  The entirety of the argument in Boylan’s seeming make-it-up-as-you-go discussion comes down to sleight-of-hand: Phillips can’t win on the issue of faith, so he defaults to calling his “nice-looking cakes” art.  That’s simply incorrect. 


The possible First Amendment implications of CADA are not at issue.  They have already been admitted by respondents, including the Colorado Civil Rights Commission.  Indeed, the commission declined to enforce CADA against bakers who refused to serve religious customers asking for a special-order wedding cake with words from Leviticus on it on just these grounds.  The unresolved question here is not whether the First Amendment may apply.  It is whether it does where there is no express written message – only an implied one. 


Technically, if the cakes are deemed “art” rather than “implied speech,” according to ample case law, their expressiveness is absolutely protected.  Art, unlike implied speech, doesn’t have to convey a “succinct and articulable” message.  It is “pure expression” and can simply be.  Perhaps it is no coincidence that the Hurley court used the express inarticulateness of Jackson Pollack’s abstract expressionist paintings as an example of this principle.  In any case, the point is, even if the cakes are not “art,” the constitutional challenge doesn’t go away.    


Even granting, moreover, that there is room to disagree over the artistic status of Phillips’s “masterpieces,” Boylan’s caution that “that argument demands that the court get into the business of defining art itself” is mind-boggling.  The courts are asked to decide on the nature of expression and its protectability literally all the time.  Can a tattoo parlor be singled out in a zoning law, or does it engage in protected speech?  Is a cropped copy of a Walker Evans photograph thievery or fair use (sanctioned by the First Amendment exception to copyright)?  How do you define obscenity?  Boylan’s idea that the Supreme Court shouldn’t be asked to distinguish between Phillips’s elaborately designed ritual object and, as Boylan puts it, a “well-manicured lawn” is so out of whack that even the respondents don’t venture it.


At the end of the article, Boylan acknowledges that his old-timey pharmacist never treated him with anything but “kindness and respect.”  It is almost as if he is disappointed that reality hasn’t lived up to his counter-factual histrionics.  Although this type of commentary is what we have come to expect from the Times, it is worth adding that it is cheap – dirt cheap.  Anybody at all who sees fit to suspend the facts can make a “slippery slope” argument.  Fortunately, we still live in a country where the supreme court of the land attends to more than horror-baiting.





via American Thinker

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Sexual Misconduct, the Loss of Virtue, and the Rise of Careers

The worst, and therefore most likely, outcome of the current rash of sexual misconduct accusations is that people will continue to think they are primarily about bodies, about who touched whose body, about who exposed his body when he shouldn’t have.  That most of us currently already assume that such incidents are mostly about bodies itself indicates our lack of vision.


Such interactions are really about souls – about the collective soul of our nation, and the sickness infecting it.



The disease afflicting our souls is liberalism, by which I mean not so much the policy positions of the Democrats, but all those cultural movements that have, in the modern era, conspired to liberate men and women from the strictures and formative influences of family, religion, tradition, and community.  Once we had thrown off these burdensome yokes, advocates of such changes promised, our lives would be free and unencumbered.  Instead, we now see that this revolution has led to an atmosphere of fear and decadence, where the only free and unencumbered thing is, allegedly, Matt Lauer’s penis.


The excesses of human misbehavior, we were told, could be curbed, if not eradicated, by a combination of education and legislation.  Sexual harassment seminars in the workplace combined with anti-discrimination laws would bring about a world where the age-old dynamics between powerful men and attractive women would evaporate like pheromones dispersed by the tender breeze.


The revelations of powerful men persisting in their scurrilous ways have exposed that lie.  Are we to believe that Louis C.K., for example, would have refrained from asking random women to watch him do disgusting acts if only he’d had an H.R. rep there to remind him that such behavior is wrong?  Indeed, that is exactly what we have been asked to believe until now: that telling people that forcing sexual conduct on the unwilling is “unprofessional” would somehow stop such things from happening.  What every human being knows, save members of Congress, corporate executives, and a few other comedians, apparently, is that human beings misbehave not because we lack knowledge, but because we lack love.


Because we lack love as individuals, the best of us once sought to build a culture that would encourage its development in the form of virtue.  It is precisely from the moral influence of that culture that we have been liberated.  Instead of virtue, we now have “careers.”


In all of the allegations so far, the notion of “career” as the ultimate source of meaning has been implicit.  Consider Gwyneth Paltrow’s allegations against Harvey Weinstein.  She did not come forward earlier, she said, because she feared that doing so would have hurt her career prospects.  For the sake of her career, she suffered whatever degradations Weinstein managed to inflict on her, and she allowed him and others in the industry to inflict even worse on other young women.  The idea underlying so many of these claims is that standing up to louche behavior puts at risk careers, and that careers are far too valuable to risk merely for the sake of doing the right thing.


We cannot blame Ms. Paltrow or any of the many other victims, though.  They were simply operating within the system of values they had been taught was normal.  They were operating within that scheme of liberation that we now see is its own sort of slavery.


To criticize our worship of “career” is not to say men and women ought to indulge in idleness or to refuse to cultivate industriousness.  But such virtues can be pursued in ways that do not place us so tightly in the liberal hold or leave us at the mercies of those whose appetites have, through indulgence, grown overpowering.


An example: I know a young woman who, as a teenager, started an online business.  By the end of high school, she had cultivated it to the point where she was able to open a brick-and-mortar store.  She has a secure income and a future.  Her most powerful coworker is her mother.  Her chances of being sexually harassed at work are, as you might imagine, slim.


This young woman’s efforts are entirely laudable, and she should be an example to others.  Work, even entrepreneurship, is not the problem.  The problem is “career” elevated to a source of spiritual meaning.  We cling to careers now, not only because they enrich us materially, but because, in our state of liberated poverty, they are all we have.


The answer to the problems that have come to light in recent weeks, we are told, is more education, more legislation, more shallow efforts to circumvent deep human nature.  In short, we are told that the solution to the problems liberalism causes is more liberalism.  This is always the way.  This prescription, we can be sure, will only worsen our malady.


The real and only cure for a sexually out-of-control culture is the cultivation of sexual self-control.  Only individuals, in pursuing the good, can heal societal moral sickness.  This does not mean that institutions play no role.  They do.  The role of our social institutions ought to be to reinforce and reinstitute the strictures that the bonds of faith, family, and virtue place on us.  When that happens, the number of such deplorable instances plummets.


But such medicine is repugnant to our body politic. It tastes bitter.  A society as deeply in the thrall of liberalism as ours finds itself is unable to consider ideas beyond that frame.  Thus does liberalism make all that truly leads to health seem noxious, everything that leads to life seem like steps backward toward decay.


And so, in the end, the steady flow of accusations will amount to little besides a bump in the ratings at The Today Show and grist for the gossip mill.  In a few weeks, audiences will tire of hearing about such things and will forget them.  Meanwhile, our culture will continue to weaken.  Our symptoms will only intensify.  And we, a sick and beleaguered people, blind to the causes of our pain, will deny ourselves the necessary treatment, darkening, ever more, our long-term prognosis.










The worst, and therefore most likely, outcome of the current rash of sexual misconduct accusations is that people will continue to think they are primarily about bodies, about who touched whose body, about who exposed his body when he shouldn’t have.  That most of us currently already assume that such incidents are mostly about bodies itself indicates our lack of vision.


Such interactions are really about souls – about the collective soul of our nation, and the sickness infecting it.


The disease afflicting our souls is liberalism, by which I mean not so much the policy positions of the Democrats, but all those cultural movements that have, in the modern era, conspired to liberate men and women from the strictures and formative influences of family, religion, tradition, and community.  Once we had thrown off these burdensome yokes, advocates of such changes promised, our lives would be free and unencumbered.  Instead, we now see that this revolution has led to an atmosphere of fear and decadence, where the only free and unencumbered thing is, allegedly, Matt Lauer’s penis.


The excesses of human misbehavior, we were told, could be curbed, if not eradicated, by a combination of education and legislation.  Sexual harassment seminars in the workplace combined with anti-discrimination laws would bring about a world where the age-old dynamics between powerful men and attractive women would evaporate like pheromones dispersed by the tender breeze.


The revelations of powerful men persisting in their scurrilous ways have exposed that lie.  Are we to believe that Louis C.K., for example, would have refrained from asking random women to watch him do disgusting acts if only he’d had an H.R. rep there to remind him that such behavior is wrong?  Indeed, that is exactly what we have been asked to believe until now: that telling people that forcing sexual conduct on the unwilling is “unprofessional” would somehow stop such things from happening.  What every human being knows, save members of Congress, corporate executives, and a few other comedians, apparently, is that human beings misbehave not because we lack knowledge, but because we lack love.


Because we lack love as individuals, the best of us once sought to build a culture that would encourage its development in the form of virtue.  It is precisely from the moral influence of that culture that we have been liberated.  Instead of virtue, we now have “careers.”


In all of the allegations so far, the notion of “career” as the ultimate source of meaning has been implicit.  Consider Gwyneth Paltrow’s allegations against Harvey Weinstein.  She did not come forward earlier, she said, because she feared that doing so would have hurt her career prospects.  For the sake of her career, she suffered whatever degradations Weinstein managed to inflict on her, and she allowed him and others in the industry to inflict even worse on other young women.  The idea underlying so many of these claims is that standing up to louche behavior puts at risk careers, and that careers are far too valuable to risk merely for the sake of doing the right thing.


We cannot blame Ms. Paltrow or any of the many other victims, though.  They were simply operating within the system of values they had been taught was normal.  They were operating within that scheme of liberation that we now see is its own sort of slavery.


To criticize our worship of “career” is not to say men and women ought to indulge in idleness or to refuse to cultivate industriousness.  But such virtues can be pursued in ways that do not place us so tightly in the liberal hold or leave us at the mercies of those whose appetites have, through indulgence, grown overpowering.


An example: I know a young woman who, as a teenager, started an online business.  By the end of high school, she had cultivated it to the point where she was able to open a brick-and-mortar store.  She has a secure income and a future.  Her most powerful coworker is her mother.  Her chances of being sexually harassed at work are, as you might imagine, slim.


This young woman’s efforts are entirely laudable, and she should be an example to others.  Work, even entrepreneurship, is not the problem.  The problem is “career” elevated to a source of spiritual meaning.  We cling to careers now, not only because they enrich us materially, but because, in our state of liberated poverty, they are all we have.


The answer to the problems that have come to light in recent weeks, we are told, is more education, more legislation, more shallow efforts to circumvent deep human nature.  In short, we are told that the solution to the problems liberalism causes is more liberalism.  This is always the way.  This prescription, we can be sure, will only worsen our malady.


The real and only cure for a sexually out-of-control culture is the cultivation of sexual self-control.  Only individuals, in pursuing the good, can heal societal moral sickness.  This does not mean that institutions play no role.  They do.  The role of our social institutions ought to be to reinforce and reinstitute the strictures that the bonds of faith, family, and virtue place on us.  When that happens, the number of such deplorable instances plummets.


But such medicine is repugnant to our body politic. It tastes bitter.  A society as deeply in the thrall of liberalism as ours finds itself is unable to consider ideas beyond that frame.  Thus does liberalism make all that truly leads to health seem noxious, everything that leads to life seem like steps backward toward decay.


And so, in the end, the steady flow of accusations will amount to little besides a bump in the ratings at The Today Show and grist for the gossip mill.  In a few weeks, audiences will tire of hearing about such things and will forget them.  Meanwhile, our culture will continue to weaken.  Our symptoms will only intensify.  And we, a sick and beleaguered people, blind to the causes of our pain, will deny ourselves the necessary treatment, darkening, ever more, our long-term prognosis.





via American Thinker

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Obama thanks himself in speech in which he takes credit for economic growth under Trump

Former President Barack Obama thanked himself in a speech Tuesday in which he took credit for American economic growth occurring under Republican President Donald Trump.

Obama told an adoring crowd at a Chicago climate summit that despite “resistance at every step of the way,” his administration’s efforts to fight climate change resulted in a better economy.

“As we took these actions, we saw the U.S. economy grow consistently,” Obama said. “We saw the longest streak of job creation in American history by far — a streak that still continues, by the way.”

He then added a zinger: “Thanks Obama.”

The crowd erupted in cheers and applause — and soon laughter.

As Obama silently waited for the reaction to die down, he appeared to wink at the audience.

What about the economy?

The stock market has gained about 30 percent in value since Trump’s election a year ago, the Washington Times reported, gross domestic product has increased more than 3 percent in both of the last two quarters and the jobless rate has dropped to a 17-year low of 4.1 percent.

Trump has received credit for an economic uptick this year from many business leaders and economists due to his loosening of regulations and move to cut taxes, the paper added.

U.S. Rep. Peter Roskam (R-Illinois) said earlier this year that Obama’s administration was the first to never have a “whole year of 3 percent growth” — a claim PolitiFact rated as “mostly true.”

Here’s the clip of Obama’s speech. The relevant portion begins just after the 4-minute mark:

via TheBlaze.com – Stories

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Merry ‘Resist-mas!’ You Can Now Get A Hillary Clinton Angel Christmas Tree Topper

According to one U.K. company, your Christmas decorations just aren’t complete without an “angel” at the top of your Christmas tree — and why settle for a regular blessed harbinger of the Word of God when you can have….Hillary Clinton?

The company, Women To Look Up To, considers itself a brand that “shines a light on modern female role models,” and to that extent, they’ve developed a line of “She-Ro” tree toppers, so that you can literally look up to a handful of “badass women” that they think deserve to sit at the top of your Christmas tree more than the Holy chorus that announced the birth of the Christ child.

The line already included tennis pro Serena Williams and pop icon Beyonce, but a contest for the next edition, held earlier this year, produced the Clinton angel, which is available from Women To Look Up To for around fifty bucks.

“Every Christmas we place a ‘Topper’ made of no more than plastic and glitter on top of trees,” the company says on its website. “For many, she has lost her meaning, which is why Women To Look Up To have created a range of modern female role models to place on top instead.”

The Clinton Angel comes complete with wings and a white pantsuit. Because, obviously.

There’s no word yet, however, on whether it smells of sorrow and corruption instead of the traditional “fir tree scent.”

Sadly, you probably missed your window to order. Shipping to the U.S. takes 5-7 days, the company says, and you have to have your order in several days before that because each tree-topper is custom made. A window of 15 days is necessary for the total arc, but at this point, because so many people have demanded a Clinton angel, they can’t guarantee a two week turnaround.

If complete sacrilege is your bag, but Clinton is not, the company can also make you a custom tree-topper with your “woman to look up to” of choice — they just have to make a trip to London to be scanned into the company’s 3D printer.

via Daily Wire

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Young People Say Calling Them a ‘Snowflake’ Damages Their Mental Health

Young People Say Calling Them a ‘Snowflake’ Damages Their Mental Health



A new survey reveals that young people believe being called a “snowflake” could be damaging to their mental health.

A new survey by insurance firm Aviva found that 72 percent of 16 to 24-year-olds believe the term “snowflake” is unfairly applied to millennials. 74 percent of respondents took it a step farther, arguing that they believe the use of the label could have a negative effect on young people’s mental health.

The study was born out of interest in the term “snowflake generation” which was originally used to describe young people who thought they were unique or special. Some suggest it was popularized by a line in the 1996 novel Fight Club and its 1999 film adaptation: “you are not special, you are not a beautiful and unique snowflake.” The word’s meaning eventually evolved to mean “overly-sensitive.” It is often used to describe college students who claim that they are offended by controversial or even mundane ideas.

Chuck Palahniuk, the author of Fight Club, has embraced the rise in popularity of the term. “There is a kind of new Victorianism,” he said. “Every generation gets offended by different things but my friends who teach in high school tell me that their students are very easily offended.”

Dr. Doug Wright argues that because young people are more likely to experience mental health issues than older generations, they are especially susceptible to damage as a result of usage of the “snowflake” label. “Our findings suggest that young adults are more likely to be experiencing mental health problems, so using a phrase which criticizes this age group could add to this issue,” he said. “Any term used disparagingly to a segment of the population is inherently negative.”

“While young adults in particular appear to take offence to the ‘snowflake’ label, the majority of adults agree that the term is unfair and unhelpful, so it’s important that people consider how such labels are used, and the cumulative effect they could have on their recipients,” he finished.

 

via Breitbart News

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Delingpole: #Winning – Grant Applications for ‘Climate Change’ down 40 Percent

Delingpole: #Winning – Grant Applications for ‘Climate Change’ down 40 Percent



Grants funded by the National Science Foundation have seen a 40 percent drop in 2017 of applications mentioning the words “climate change”.

If you believe NPR this is a terrible thing.

But no it’s not.

It’s a really, really good thing: one of the first major indicators that the Trump administration is starting to win the climate wars.

NPR reports:

Scientists appear to be self-censoring by omitting the term “climate change” in public grant summaries.

and

The change in language appears to be driven in part by the Trump administration’s open hostility to the topic of climate change. Earlier this year, President Trump pulled the U.S. out of the Paris climate accord, and the President’s 2018 budget proposal singled out climate change research programs for elimination.

Meanwhile, the Environmental Protection Agency has been systematically removing references to climate change from its official website. Both the EPA’s leader, Scott Pruitt, and Secretary of Energy Rick Perry have said they do not accept the scientific consensus that humans are causing the planet to get warmer.

Yep. The only bit NPR gets wrong is the mournful slant it has imposed on this happy-making story. Sure it’s bad news if you’re a second-rate hack – as so many climate scientists are – and the only way you’ve mentioned to turn your worthless environmental science/ecology/marine biology/whatever degree into paydirt is by tagging the all-important phrase “climate change” onto your research grant application.

But for the poor saps who have to fund this bogus research – ie: everyone else – it’s like a mugger in Central Park suddenly apologizing and handing your wallet and iPhone back.

Republicans – President Trump especially – are often accused by leftists of being “anti-science”.

Actually, though, the only science they’re against is the politicized #fake science promoted by people like Lysenko in the Soviet era and by climate alarmists like Gavin Schmidt and Michael Mann and James Hansen.

Most taxpayers not unreasonably believe that if their money is going to be confiscated from them by the government and funnelled into the science industry then the very least they should expect in return is that it goes towards research that is in some way important to the nation or beneficial to mankind or useful to the economy.

“Climate change” research, it is becoming increasingly obvious, fits none of those criteria.

It’s a fit subject for scientific study in much the same way, say, the breeding habits of Komodo dragons or the crystalline patterns of snowflakes or the chemical composition of Uranus are fit for scientific study: quite interesting, if you’re into that kind of thing. But definitely not a field you’d ever want to become so powerful it became the go-to area for any aspiring researcher, sucking attention, expertise and money from any number of potentially more useful areas.

Obviously if you asked any climate scientist to assess the merits of that previous paragraph, he would disagree quite violently.

But as Upton Sinclair famously said:

It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.

The sooner some of these environmental science graduates are where they belong – asking us whether we want a regular or large fries to go with that; drawing intricate patterns on the froth of our lattes or racing to get our pizzas to us before the deadline – the sooner that grant money can go back to be spent on useful stuff like curing cancer, wiping out malaria and perfecting all those personalized jet packs we were promised as kids but seem to have been a remarkably long time coming.

via Breitbart News

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Cuban State Media Confirms: Havana Runs Out of Toilet Paper

Cuban State Media Confirms: Havana Runs Out of Toilet Paper



A Cuban state media outlet confirmed last week that the nation’s capital, Havana, is suffering significant shortages of toilet paper. While the absence of common goods in the communist nation is not uncommon, such acknowledgment of a problem is rare.

The state newspaper Juventud Rebelde (“Rebellious Youth”) reported on Wednesday that toilet paper had “disappeared” from stores in Havana, announcing that the government’s state-run producer of toilet paper had acquired new machinery to generate toilet paper.

“They are not the super-machines, but they have an elevated technology level,” toilet paper engineer Manolo González García told the newspaper. One advantage of the new machines, he explains, is that they can simultaneously churn out two types of toilet paper rolls: a high-quality one for tourists, and an “ecological” one to sell to Cuban citizens.

The Miami-based Cuban news outlet Martí Noticias noted this week that Havana has suffered major shortages of toilet paper “for weeks” before Juventud Rebelde reported on them. Diario de Cuba adds that the Castro regime has begun importing higher numbers of toilet paper rolls from Vietnam while it adjusts its ability to produce the paper domestically, citing Spanish newswire service EFE.

While Cuban communist media covering the shortages may be new, EFE notes that “toilet paper shortages have been a constant in Cuban homes since the crisis of the 1990s, leading many families to use official state newspaper as toilet paper.” After decades of having its communist government subsidized by the Soviet Union, Cuba suffered what the Castro regime has dubbed the “special period” of extreme poverty following the collapse of its patron in the 1990s. Cuba has since established a close relationship with Venezuela, which has provided free oil and key resources to keep the regime afloat.

Venezuela itself, thanks to the imposition of a similar socialist economic system to that of Cuba, began experiencing toilet paper shortages in 2013. By 2015, Venezuelan luxury hotels began requesting that visitors bring their own toilet paper into the country to guarantee they would have access to it. That year, the Venezuelan government cut a deal with Trinidad and Tobago to essentially buy toilet paper with its crude oil, which did little to stop the shortages. The Venezuelan military announced this year that soldiers participating in the violent repression of anti-socialist protests could expert to be rewarded with rolls of toilet paper.

Venezuela’s oil reserves have not been enough to stop toilet paper shortages in Cuba, just as they have failed Venezuela. In 2009, for example, Miami’s El Nuevo Herald reported on the growing popularity of the previously noted phenomenon of using communist propaganda as toilet paper—not as a political statement, but out of necessity. Toilet paper is particularly hard to find because “it is not included in the ration cards that cover basic products at highly subsidized prices.”

“Chinese and North Korean magazines are the favorites because of the softness of the paper,” the Herald noted at the time.

Far more recently, in October, Diario Las Americas cited Hurricane Irma as having significantly hurt Cubans’ ability to acquire basic good like toilet paper. At the time, an unnamed official told the newspaper that “there is no such shortage” of paper, denying what the government would apparently find itself with no choice but to accept as reality a month later.

The Cuban government has consistently blamed the U.S. embargo on trade with the communist nation for its economic woes, despite the fact that Cuba has the rest of the world’s markets open to it and maintains friendly relations with economic giants like China. While President Barack Obama lifted some restrictions on American business in Cuba, those have largely served to enrich government-owned entities on the island.

Follow Frances Martel on Facebook and Twitter.

via Breitbart News

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Another Democrat Used Secret Congressional ‘Slush Fund’ to Settle Sexual Harassment Allegations

Another Democrat Used Secret Congressional ‘Slush Fund’ to Settle Sexual Harassment Allegations



Evidence reveals that another Democrat used a secret congressional “slush fund” to settle sexual harassment allegations, according to a report.

Although Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-NY) was not accused of sexual harassment himself, a former staffer accused him of firing her in 2006 for reporting alleged sexual harassment by someone who worked for one of Meeks’s donors.

Andrea Payne, who worked out of the New York Democrat’s district office in Queens, sued Meeks after she said she was fired for filing a complaint with the Office of Compliance.

The agency within Congress has drawn bipartisan criticism for using taxpayer funds to settle sexual harassment, discrimination, and other workplace violations during the past two decades.

“This is an action to recover for damages sustained by plaintiff when Representative Meeks violated her Constitutional rights by retaliating against her, and ultimately terminating her employment, because of her sexual assault lawsuit,” Payne’s attorneys wrote.

Payne sued a physical therapy practice, where she claimed one of the employees sexually harassed her. The business owner donated to Meeks and confronted the congressman about Payne’s lawsuit.

The lawsuit alleges that Meeks told Payne he would not pay her overtime for any extra hours she put in, and other staffers would allegedly verbally abuse her and refuse to reimburse her for expenses.

Payne then went to the Office of Compliance to file her complaint. Less than two weeks after she filed the complaint, Meeks fired her and told her, “I don’t think this is working,” according to the lawsuit.

Embattled Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) also used the “slush fund” to settle a sexual harassment claim. The Michigan Democrat reportedly paid the woman $27,000.

Ironically, the news about Meeks’s using the same fund as his colleague Conyers comes after Meeks asked for Conyers to step down from his position because of the sexual harassment allegations.

via Breitbart News

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