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Daily Archives: January 13, 2021
Liberal leader urged to take ‘clear stand’ against controversial MP Bernie Finn – The Age
Posted: January 13, 2021 at 4:51 pm
"For Michael to claim ignorance about Bernie's comments, the way he did on Monday, was just stupid, and supporting Bernie doesn't do anything to improve the assessments of his political judgements. And I say that as someone who really likes Michael."
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A day before the violence at Capitol Hill in Washington erupted, Mr Finn shared a lengthy post reiterating false claims of election fraud and wrote that US President Donald Trump had "set a wonderful example to every other national leader by putting America first".
And while rioters stormed the building, Mr Finn shared an image of former US president Ronald Reagan and an excerpt from one of his speeches.
"Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction," the snippet from Mr Reagan's speech began. "It must be fought for, protected and handed on for them to do the same."
David Davis, the Leader of the Opposition in the Legislative Council and the third most senior Liberal MP, last week said the party would confront Mr Finn over his pro-Trump social media posts.
Mr O'Brien on Monday dismissed comments about the US Capitol riots as a "fourth order" issue and refused to indicate when he would address Mr Finn's posts.
He said Liberal members had not raised any issues about Mr Finn with him.
"I'm not interested in having a conversation about every single opinion held by every single member of my party," Mr O'Brien said.
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The Opposition Leader on Tuesday refused to answer further questions about Mr Finn, would not reveal if he had spoken to his MP and said he did not discuss private conversations with his colleagues. Mr O'Brien last year revealed he had cautioned one of his frontbench MPs against calling the Premier inappropriate names.
Several Liberal Party sources said Mr Finn's status as a factional ally of Mr O'Brien was one of the reasons the Opposition Leader had refused to take an effective stand against the Western Metropolitan MP, who is also the shadow assistant minister for autism and small business.
Liberal MPs were "furious" when Mr Finn recently shared a Photoshopped image of Premier Daniel Andrews with a cross-eye that critics slammed as "ableist".
"Can you imagine if anyone else made the comments about the disabled community the way Bernie had? People would be talking about their preselection. It was f---ing outrageous," one Liberal MP, who is not an ally of Mr O'Brien, told The Age.
"There is no doubt that Bernie Finn is ... a protected species.
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"Our colleagues want to skin Bernie. We are sick of him."
One Liberal MP, factionally close to Mr O'Brien, said there were "bigger things in the world" than one MP's views, and that Mr Finn was one member of the parliamentary team working to win the next election.
Another Liberal MP said Mr O'Brien should not be held liable for the conduct of Mr Finn and his future in the caucus, warning Mr Clark, a factional ally to Mr O'Brien, and the administrative committee had far greater responsibility to manage the situation.
"Michael deserves the term, Michael deserves a chance and he doesn't need distractions like Bernie," the MP said.
"I think this is an issue for the party president and for the administrative committee I don't think this is an issue solely for Michael O'Brien ... It's the party's problem, I think it's unfair and unreasonable to put it all on Michael."
Liberal state director Sam McQuestin declined to comment. Mr Clark and Mr Finn have been contacted for comment.
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Sumeyya is a state political reporter for The Age.
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Liberal leader urged to take 'clear stand' against controversial MP Bernie Finn - The Age
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It’s absurd to conflate support for Tories with white nationalism but Liberals will try – The Globe and Mail
Posted: at 4:51 pm
Members of the Proud Boys fight with a counter protestor during a rally at the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, Ohio, on Jan. 6, 2021.
Joshua A. Bickel/The Associated Press
The Trudeau government is investigating whether the extreme right-wing group the Proud Boys should be declared a terrorist organization. That is a legal decision. But theres politics in it as well. The Liberals are trying to discomfit Erin OTooles Conservatives by linking the party to extremists.
On the Proud Boys, officials will be analyzing useful intelligence and evidence as that comes forward, Mary-Liz Power, press secretary to Public Safety Minister Bill Blair, said in a statement on Sunday.
When this work is completed, it will form the basis of the decision whether or not the Proud Boys or any other ideologically motivated violent extremist organization reaches the legal threshold for listing.
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Insurrection at the U.S. Capitol: What the pro-Trump mob did, how Congress responded and what happens next
Jagmeet Singh isnt prepared to wait.
The Proud Boys helped execute Wednesdays attack on Capitol Hill, the NDP Leader tweeted Thursday. Their founder is Canadian. They operate in Canada, right now. And I am calling for them to be designated as a terrorist organization, immediately.
It will surprise no one if investigations into the attack on the Capitol Building last Wednesday conclude the Proud Boys were among the main culprits.
But prominent Liberals arent waiting for official reports or arrest warrants. They know that most Canadians despised U.S. President Donald Trump even before he incited the mob that attacked Congress.
Ive been shocked at the admiring words about Trump and Trumpism that I have personally witnessed usually off the record from members of Canadas conservative establishment, Peter Donolo wrote in an op-ed that appeared Saturday in the Toronto Star. Mr. Donolo was a senior aide to former Liberal prime minister Jean Chrtien and former Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff.
Liberal MP Mark Gerretsen claimed Mr. OToole and other senior Conservatives had accounts on Parler, where extreme right-wing figures migrated after Twitter banned Mr. Trump and others who incite violence.
Maybe its time to delete your Parler accounts, Mr. Gerretsen tweeted.
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The OToole account is fake, Melanie Paradis, Mr. OTooles director of communications, messaged me. Other accounts were either created as placeholders (to prevent fake accounts), or were created before Parler became associated with extremist speech. Ms. Paradis said. Google and Apple have now banned the app.
Anyone who knows Mr. OToole knows he has no truck with the radical right.
Conservatives support the listing of various white supremacist groups as terrorist organizations, the Conservative Leader declared in a statement released Sunday.
But the Tories have a political problem that the Grits are happy to exploit. Although its ludicrous to conflate support for the Conservative Party with support for white nationalism or any other form of racism lets not forget that more people voted Conservative in the previous election than for any other political party there are Canadians who support Mr. Trump, and some of them also support the Conservatives.
Elections are won or lost in Canada in the swath of suburban ridings surrounding Toronto. Those ridings contain large numbers of immigrant voters. The Liberals know that if they can plant the notion in peoples minds that the Conservatives are racially intolerant, those voters will reject the party.
Mr. OToole condemns right-wing extremism, supports a robust immigration policy, defends the rights of LGBTQ Canadians and other minorities. But he also, at times, makes poor choices. Slogans such as Take back Canada are a gift to those who seek to portray Conservatives as intolerant. Who would he take it from?
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There is a photo that shows deputy leader Candice Bergen wearing a Trump MAGA hat floating around on social media. Ms. Paradis said that someone handed Ms. Bergen the hat and asked for a photo at an event a few years ago. Its not her hat. But the photo doesnt do the Tories any favours.
The trauma of the attack on the Capitol will dominate American politics for months to come, and influence Canadian politics as well, at a cost to the Conservatives. Mr. OToole will do everything in his power to focus the voters attention elsewhere: on problems with the COVID-19 vaccine rollout, on deficits and lost jobs. But there is a lot of politically damaging noise coming from south of the border.
And the Liberals will do everything they can to amplify that noise at the Conservatives expense. Politics is a tough game.
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Democracy is fragile, and the Liberal Partys embrace of Trumpism puts Australia in danger – The New Daily
Posted: at 4:51 pm
The day after Trump supporters stormed the Capitol in Washington, the Financial Times the worlds pre-eminent financial journal observed: America has a national security problem in the form of the far right.
This closed world of misinformation, paranoia and grievance receives succour from mainstream conservatives, public office holders and cable news anchors, it added, beforeconcluding that the costs, are increasingly unmistakable.
We all watched those events at the US Capitol with a sense of horror, and yet for me at least, without a great deal of surprise.
For ever since Donald Trump descended his golden escalator, his has been a slow-motion insurrection against all the institutions of a great democracy.
Of course it was going to end like this. This is always how insurrections end.The real question is how do they start?
From the end of the second World War until the elections of Margaret Thatcher in the United Kingdom and Ronald Reagan in the United States, the gap between rich and poor narrowed in Western countries as prosperity grew.
It was the pay-off for the defeat of fascism, the 30 glorious years as the French called them.
From 1980 onwards, the world became a place of stunning inequalities. In that time the bottom 50 per cent captured 9 per cent of total income growth, the top 1 per cent captured 28 per cent.
So the biggest economic losers of the past 30 years have been Western low- and middle-income earners, and the biggest winners in advanced economies have been the Western elite the top one per cent.
Twelve years ago, the collapse of the US financial system and housing market brought the Global Financial Crisis and the great recession that accompanied it.
As Barack Obama assumed the US presidency, the American financial system was imploding, taking the global financial system with it, and unemployment everywhere was exploding.
Just as Obama struggled to right the ship, the right-wing Tea Party faction burst on the scene and eventually took control of the Republican Party.
It threw sand in the gears of American governance and set out to cripple Obamas presidency. But their aim was deeper and broader.
As Obama puts it in his memoir, A Promised Land: GOP candidates adopted a central theme: That someone else was getting something we werent and government couldnt be trusted to be fair. Government was taking money, jobs, college slots and status away from hard-working, deserving people like us and handing it all to people like them. Those who didnt share our values, who didnt work as hard.
This, according to Obama, led to a deep and suffocating cynicism.
Economic discontent simmered amid race and cultural wars, fed by this increasingly extreme Republican sentiment.
Their aims were cynical as Obama said but their ultimate achievement was something else: Assisting Trumps takeover of the party and delivering him the presidency.
We can think that this was unintentional on the part of the Republican leaders like Mitch McConnell. But if it was, it turned out to benefit them and their donor class hugely.
And they enabled Trump every step of the way right up until the moment their front door was quite literally knocked off its hinges by a violent mob.
Incidentally this is what makes home-grown Trumpers like Deputy Prime Minister Michael McCormack, and LNP backbenchers George Christensen and Craig Kelly so dangerous the only rats ever seen running on to a sinking ship.
We shouldnt need to see the ransacking of the Capitol to remind us that inequality breeds disdain, resentment, bullying and callousness.
We know from history that when trust is lost, people can turn to authoritarian leaders.
We are living with a political volatility of the type the world hasnt experienced since the 1930s. A ring of fire of nativist and extremist political forces, aided and abetted by state actors like China and Russia, is destabilising our world.
We ought to be encouraged that the US democracy held and incoming US President Joe Biden was bolstered by a large popular vote.
Yet 74 million Americans voted for Trump, almost 40 per cent of those believed the election outcome was rigged, and 8 per cent believe it should be overturned.
Their loss of faith in democracy wont dissipate quickly.
There was a sombre aspect to the Democrat result.
With turnout surging they still didnt do as well with working-class voters and not just white working-class voters. Whether the Democrats can figure out how to do better with working-class and middle-class voters is the biggest challenge they face.
So the economic volatility not seen for 80 years until the GFC has been followed by political volatility not seen in 90 years. And there is a connection. Big economic shocks and growing inequality have big political consequences.
This is where it all started growing inequality. And sadly COVID-19 has the potential to accelerate the process.
But it arrived several years after US politics went through the looking glass of the Trump political insurrection.
The unimaginable human tragedy of hundreds of thousands of American dead is rivalled only by the horror of watching public health measures become only the latest arena for a full-blown Trump culture war.
Trumps success has been to convince a large portion of working- and middle-class people to vote against their economic interests by pitting American against American using culture, race and identity to breed resentment.
To be serious about rescuing democracy requires social democratic parties to convince working people they can restore a measure of fairness to the operation of the market economy.
Biden did a good job of this but there is a long way to go to convince working Americans that government has the competence and the compassion to restore dignity to the American workforce and credibility to its safety nets.
There are many lessons from this experience for Australia.
Moderate small L Liberals have been driven from the party and there has been a contest among the contenders and pretenders over who is the more Trumpian.
As former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull has said, up until last week Scott Morrison was content to be seen as a Trump-lite refuge in the southern hemisphere.
While its arguable whether Robodebt or the handling of the China relationship is Morrisons biggest self-inflicted disaster, the handling of both issues owes much to his tough, right-wing swagger.
It doesnt matter whether its climate change, industrial relations, removal of the Australia Post chief or a war with the ABC, the government is always out to prove its right-wing credentials to the cable TV anchors, climate change deniers, high-profile plutocrats and conservative cultural warriors.
The Prime Ministers refusal last week to condemn Trump for inciting violence is significant. As President-elect Biden said, a leaders words matter. Our Prime Minister needs to say them.
He needs to set an example and pull his far-right backbenchers into line and distance himself and our country from extremist Sky News and right-wing commentators.
As historian Timothy Snyder observed: Post-truth is pre-fascism. When we give up on truth, we concede power to those with the wealth and charisma to create spectacle in its place.
For Labor it has never been more important for us to put forward a platform serious about jobs and economic recovery, the quality of our democracy and real action on climate change.
The pandemic and its fallout not only makes it easier but also more urgent for us to politically dismantle the essence of the governments trickle-down agenda tax cuts for the wealthy, wage suppression for the rest, and continuous undermining of social security and the wider safety net.
We could be just nine months away from an election.
Its vital that we use our March conference to frame the choice available to Australians. Its a choice between the Labor Party led by Anthony Albanese that understands whats important to ordinary families and has a clear plan to get Australia back to work, and a failed Coalition government that didnt do enough to save jobs or get Australians back to work after COVID, and wasted the recovery with too many rorts and too much time playing politics.
In light of the recent events in the US it has never been more urgent for measures that enhance and protect accountability in our democracy.
Truth in political advertising laws, full donation transparency and campaign spending limits, a National Integrity Commission, and enhanced independence and funding for the ABC are long overdue.
The pandemic delivered to our nation a master class in why a strong social democratic state underpins our quality of life, the strength of our economy and, indeed, the durability of our democracy.
They feel acutely the pain of rising inequality and workforce deregulation. They are our people and our fight for them is our fight for our democracy.
Yes, soon enough and not a moment too soon, Trump will be gone. But the politics and the people who abetted his rise and enabled his crimes will still be there.
As far as the US is concerned, holding them to account will be the task of a hopefully newly vigorous US democratic system.
But we need to understand the Trumpers in our midst as well.
Wayne Swan was Australias Treasurer from 2007 to 2013, and Deputy Prime Minister from 2010 to 2013.
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Liberals cant have it both ways (letter to the editor) – SILive.com
Posted: at 4:51 pm
Its amazing to me that Dr. Frusci would demand Nicoles resignation, but not surprising as CSI has become a brainwashing liberal college. My son went there for a year and left after he could not take being ridiculed or chastised by professors who did not let any Trump supporters voice their opinions.
Where was the doctor when the far left was saying we need unrest in the street, and our city and others were being trashed and burned to the ground? Lives were destroyed then, and not a word from the doctor or any other far-left hypocrites. We, as a nation, should stop the nonsense of only one side counts.
We should focus on getting back to normal and if there is corruption on either side, lets eliminate it. But you cannot have it both ways, Doc. I dont condone any violence anywhere, but all parties need to wake up and concentrate on making America a better place.
Right now, we are in sad shape and, as my mother always said: It takes two to fight, so dont blame one side and not the other.
(John Coughlin is a Meiers Corners resident.)
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Liberals cant have it both ways (letter to the editor) - SILive.com
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JIM VIBERT: Theres no clear front-runner in Liberal race – The Guardian
Posted: at 4:51 pm
Jim Vibert
The Chronicle Herald
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@JimVibert
The race to replace Premier Stephen McNeil is moving into its final frenetic lap without a clear front-runner.
In less than a month on Feb. 6 Iain Rankin, Labi Kousoulis or Randy Delorey will win the leadership of Nova Scotias Liberal Party and, very soon thereafter, become the premier of the province.
Who among them will be the partys chosen one is anybodys guess. The race has tightened to the point where none of the Liberals I talked to this week would hazard such a guess. (The campaign insiders and other Liberals interviewed for this column agreed to speak on background, which means, while I can disclose what was said, I cant identify the source.)
As with so many things during the pandemic, this leadership race is unlike any before in Nova Scotia, at least in living memory. There are no rallies, no coffee klatches or tea parties crowded with local party faithful trying to size up those who would be their leader.
Just one of four all-candidate encounters had the contenders in the same room. The other three were disappointing, technology-dependent events erroneously billed as debates that produced very little political heat and not much more light.
And so, after four months of COVID-limited campaigning described as always difficult and sometimes painful by one campaign insider we are nearer to knowing who will be the next premier, but only as measured by the calendar.
Key players on each of the three campaign teams believe their man has secured more than a third of the vote or, more accurately, of the points but none expects to win on the first ballot, which would require a candidate to take 50 per cent plus one of the available 5,500 points. (Each of Nova Scotias 55 ridings is worth 100 points, assigned based on vote share.)
When the race began four months ago, many Liberals felt that Delorey was the man to beat. He came out of the starting blocks with the backing of several caucus and cabinet colleagues and a potent campaign team headlined by well-known and better-connected Grits like Kirby McVicar, McNeils former right-hand man and John Gillis, MD and former party president.
Judged by the company he kept, Delorey was almost immediately dubbed the establishment candidate. Im not quite sure who the establishment is, but Delorey is the candidate of continuity; the guy who will mostly stick to the direction set by McNeil.
Iain Rankin, another former McNeil cabinet minister all three candidates served in McNeils cabinet but resigned to offer for the leadership was, in those early days, expected to give Delorey the best run for the top.
Like Delorey, Rankin has considerable support from his caucus and cabinet colleagues. At 37, hes the youngest of the three candidates and from the outset has been advocating the most progressive policies among the three.
Dont go to sleep on Labi, was the advice one prominent, long-time Liberal offered this week, echoing the opinion of a number in the party who believe Kousoulis, initially considered the longest shot in the short field, is outperforming expectations and, in the view of some, his two opponents.
Kousoulis is the son of Greek immigrants who worked in the family restaurant in his youth, then worked his way through university. After stints in banking and with Wilsons, he started his own business, just like Stephen McNeil, he reminds his Liberal listeners.
The three candidates have made a plethora of promises and policies announcements and on most of the major issues theres not much difference between them. But as the vote draws near, predictably, the barbs are becoming a little more frequent.
Kousoulis proposes to twin the highway from Sydney to Yarmouth, a promise Rankin has derided as a low priority with a big price tag. Conversely, Rankins drawn criticism from the other camps for pledging to get Nova Scotia off coal by 2030, because to achieve that goal, they say, power bills will go through the roof. Friday, 56 per cent of Nova Scotias electricity was generated by burning coal.
Wednesday evening, when most folks were still glued to screens watching the horrific Trump-inspired attack on the U.S. Congress, the candidates had their final debate. Like the earlier versions, it was more Q-and-A than give-and-take.
Delorey, who bills himself as the most experienced candidate all three were first elected in 2013, and all three served in cabinet, although Delorey arguably held more senior portfolios in health and finance said, now more than ever, we need a proven leader.
While that may well be true, Liberals have to pick a leader from among these three guys, and exactly how any of them has proven his leadership chops escapes me.
The final words are from a former Liberal MLA and cabinet minister in a long-gone government:
Taking the measure of a candidate is incomplete without face-to-face connection. Tasting skimpy samples of statements, debates and stories are part of a meager buffet. It is strangely comforting to be detached and yet very challenging to decide on who best to lead.
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JIM VIBERT: Theres no clear front-runner in Liberal race - The Guardian
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In a bid to oppose UPs anti-forced religious conversion law, Liberals end up endorsing paedophilia – OpIndia
Posted: at 4:51 pm
On Tuesday, the liberal-secular self-proclaimed journalists and activists attempted to not only mislead the public by peddling false propaganda on a recent incident that had allegedly occurred in Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh but also endorsed paedophilia in their bid to oppose Uttar Pradesh governments recent law to stop forced conversion.
Self-proclaimed liberals took to Twitter to share a Times of India report that claimed that Bengaluru man who flew to UP to meet girl was thrashed and detained by the Uttar Pradesh. The Times of India carried out a report that claimed that a 21-year-old Muslim youth flew down from Bengaluru toLakhimpur Kheri, Uttar Pradesh to see a Hindu girl he had met online.
Reportedly, the youth was allegedly beaten up by some right-wing groups who later handed over the guy to the local police station. The man, who worked as an engineer in Bengaluru allegedly started talking to a teenager girl online since April last year. As it was her birthday, the youth wanted to see her, so he booked a flight, brought gifts a soft toy, chocolates and sweets and reached Lucknow.
The report claimed that when he got there, the parents of the girl asked him who he was. As he revealed his identity, the neighbours gathered and soon a group of right-wing outfit joined, who beat him up and informed the police, the report claimed adding that the groups acted on the apprehension of forced conversion.
The usual fake news peddlers descended on social media platform to peddle misleading information on the incident. Rohini Singh, associated with leftist propaganda website The Wire, took to Twitter to claim that a Muslim man was jailed and beaten as he wanted to wish the girl on her birthday.
Singh, who has a complicated relationship with the facts, insinuated that the youth was beaten up as he was a Muslim youth and went on to deliberately ignore the real facts pertaining to the issue.
Rana Ayyub, the Islamist troll masquerading as journalist, as usual used the opportunity to spew venom against the country. Sharing misinformation, she claimed that Muslim youth was thrashed and detained by Uttar Pradesh police for meeting a Hindu girl. Shockingly, without any shame, Ayyub called India a shithole country.
Vidya Krishnan, who claims to be a Health reporter, also ignored the facts of the case and instead shared a misleading article put up by Times of India, which was devoid of facts in the first place. Vidya then went on to blame Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the alleged incident.
Shehla Rashid, who wants Dalits to give up their reservations for Muslims compared PM Modi to Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.
However, the claim that the youth was beaten up by the right-wing groups only because he was a Muslim is a blatant lie.
The report by Times of India has left out important facts pertaining to the incident. It seems like Times of India has deliberately chose to ignore certain facts in the case as it fails to mention that the Hindu girl was a minor. The 21-year-old Muslim youth had reportedly lured the minor girl on social media platform and got access to her phone number.
Most importantly, the minor girl did not even recognise the Muslim youth when he visited her house in Uttar Pradesh. The accused did not visit to the residence of minor girl alone, but was accompanied by one of his companions, whofledfrom the spot after neighbours confronted them.
Contrary to the reports that the youth was in a relationship with the Hindu girl, in reality, the youth had only talked with the girl a few times on social media. However, there was no relationship between the two. The Muslim youth was in an one-sided affair, who mistook their conversations as some kind of relationship and reached Lucknow to meet the minor girl.
Despite the fact that the Muslim youth was chasing a minor Hindu girl and was in a one-sided relationship, the liberal-secular intelligentsia and the left-wing trolls on social media continue to spread false propaganda on the issue by claiming that the Uttar Pradesh government was harassing consenting inter-faith couples. However, it is not true.
In their hurry to target the Uttar Pradesh government over the recent law to stop the forced religious conversions, especially the Grooming Jihad cases, the left-liberals have not gone to the extent of supporting the heinous act of paedophilia.
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Liberals accuse Facebook of lying about its moderation of ‘Stop the Steal’ content – Washington Examiner
Posted: at 4:51 pm
Liberals are criticizing Facebook executive Sheryl Sandberg's claims that her platform is not responsible for the attack on the U.S. Capitol despite significant evidence of violence being incited on Facebook in the days before the attack.
I think these events were largely organized on platforms that dont have our abilities to stop hate, and dont have our standards and dont have our transparency, Sandberg, the company's chief operating officer, told the Reuters Next conference on Monday.
Media Matters for America, a liberal watchdog that has been monitoring Facebook content, said that Sandberg's claims are designed to deflect attention from Facebook and shift the blame to other platforms like Parler or Gab, which are popular among conservatives.
On Monday, at the same time that Sandberg made these comments, there were at least 70 active Stop the Steal groups active on Facebook, according to Media Matters, meaning that tens of thousands of Facebook users are still using such groups and racking up millions of interactions. Forty-six of these Stop the Steal groups were private, and so it would be difficult for the public to know the communications occurring within them. The "Stop the Steal" phrase refers to President Trump's claim that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.
Democrats have accused Sandberg of making false statements and being disingenuous in her denial of Facebook's role in fomenting violence that led to the Capitol attack.
"Its amazing how effortlessly Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg can lie through her teeth," said Jon Cooper, an ally of President-elect Joe Biden who has worked for both Biden's and President Barack Obama's campaigns in the past.
"This is demonstrably false," Rachel Cohen, communications director for Democratic Sen. Mark Warner, said of Sandberg's claims. Cohen on Twitter cited news articles with evidence of Facebook allowing its users to organize and incite violence before the Capitol attack.
Some went so far as to call Sandberg to leave her leadership role at Facebook.
"Is a Sheryl Sandberg denial a prelude to a Zuckerberg apology? Either way both are inadequate and demonstrate why they both need to resign," Democratic Illinois Rep. Jan Schakowsky said on Twitter on Tuesday.
Sandberg on Monday admitted that Facebook's content moderation enforcement "is never perfect, so Im sure there were still things on Facebook."
Just hours after Sandbergs comments on Monday, Facebook announced, many weeks after the election and five days after the attack on the Capitol, that it would remove all content containing the phrase "stop the steal" in an attempt to curb misinformation that could incite violence during Biden's inauguration.
Media Matters, the liberal watchdog, said Monday that Facebook's actions to censor "Stop the Steal" content was "once again too little, too late."
Facebook's explanation Monday for the delay was that they have been allowing robust conversations related to the election outcome and that will continue."
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Letter: The culture war is just as much liberal as it is conservative – Deseret News
Posted: at 4:51 pm
Regarding Jennifer Grahams opinion piece (The culture war will continue to rage in 2021, Jan. 3), it lays out clearly that there is a culture war and it is mainly over such as things as abortion, same-sex marriage and religion. She seems to blame the war part on conservatives (seven times); Republicans, including Trump and Reagan (3 times); and Santa Claus (once). Santa is the only one on the left. She never mentions Antifa, Black Lives Matter or riots. She seems to praise Biden (who blames Trump for killing more than 300,000 Americans) for wanting to be president for all Americans. If you oppose the lefts agenda to change American culture, you are a culture warrior.
She should have read the adjoining article (Gordon B. Hinckleys Standing for Something turns 20, and its the handbook our politics needs today, Jan. 1), which quotes President Hinckleys book and public statements on the growing moral deficit in America and that religion has left the public square and substituted human sophistry for the wisdom of the Almighty. We should add his name to the leaders who are waging cultural warfare by opposing abortion and supporting virtue.
As the scriptures indicate, there will always be a culture war between good and evil.
Lee Farnsworth
Provo
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Review: ‘Cobra Kai’ is poignant and funny – News from southeastern Connecticut – theday.com
Posted: at 4:49 pm
Corn Nuts. Fotomat. A Truckasaurus rally.
The 1980s are alive and kicking in the San Fernando Valley courtesy of "Cobra Kai's" Johnny Lawrence (William Zabka), a hard-drinking, heavy metal holdover from an era when Twisted Sister ruled the charts and "No Fat Chicks" bumper stickers were commonplace.
The karate dramedy's lead carries Season 3, which premiered New Year's Day on its new platform, Netflix. The streamer picked up the YouTube Premium series last year, delighting loyal "Kai" fans by adding the first two seasons to its catalog and announcing there would soon be a third.
Season 3 of the self-aware, kitschy soap takes place 36 years after the original "Karate Kid" movie, on which the series is based. Though Johnny and Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio) are now in their 50s, their long-simmering rivalry has spilled over to the students of their competing dojos. Now the Valley is home to an all-out struggle between karate gangs. These food-court warriors include LaRusso's earnest daughter, Samantha (Mary Mouser); Johnny's delinquent son, Robby (Tanner Buchanan); and Johnny's neighbor, high schooler Miguel Diaz (Xolo Mariduena). And Johnny's former teacher, Kreese (Martin Kove), who stole his dojo, is more than happy to fan the flames.
Campy, fun and nostalgic, this series from Josh Heald, Jon Hurwitz and Hayden Schlossberg continues to build pop culture lore around the aging film franchise, looking toward the future by drawing from the past. The main characters' fortunes have reversed since they battled it out at the All-Valley Karate Tournament way back when. Rich kid Johnny is a broke, divorced handyman who lives alone in a crappy Reseda apartment. Poor kid Daniel is a successful businessman who lives in the upscale West Valley with his seemingly perfect family.
But while a lot has changed since 1984, Johnny is not part of the evolution. Watching the Coors Banquet-drinking, "Tango & Cash"-loving waster navigate today's Valley, with its vegan menus, overpriced rental market and confusing array of craft cocktails, is a blast.
The unapologetic throwback still calls women "babes," wears a long-sleeved thermal under his flannel shirt and rocks out to the Cre's "Kickstart My Heart." Pretty much everything he says is politically incorrect, and not in a Rush Limbaugh sort of way. Snowflakes are still just frozen water to Johnny.
Those of us who grew up in the Valley in the '80s will recognize Johnny as a former classmate or perhaps a version of our clueless, high school selves "Dude!" "Bro!" He'll either make you shudder or laugh. I did both.
But there's a charm and innocence in the way he views modern times through vintage Ray-Bans. Facebook is mostly still a mystery to him, but when he does manage to type a message out, it's in ALL CAPS. Why would that imply he's a serial killer?
Season 3 of "Cobra Kai" capitalizes on Johnny's woefully out-of-touch ways and the steep learning curve he faces while trying to impress an old flame, at once helping the viewer understand the character's time-capsule quality and poking fun at it. The teens he trains in karate even coach him on the basics of living in the 21st century: Bullying is bad, sexism is worse, and it's not OK to nickname students things like "penis breath." (Hand-to-hand combat never drops out of fashion in the world of "Cobra Kai" though.)
There are too many spoilers to get into plot specifics, but if you liked the last two seasons, you'll love the new one. Original characters from the first film appear throughout, giving the sense that the series has a much wider arc than it really does, while new characters continue to push the story forward.
"Cobra Kai" has already been renewed for a fourth season, so expect more high-flying kicks in the tony homes west of Ventura Boulevard and in the dilapidated mini-malls of Reseda. Or is it Van Nuys? Johnny doesn't care where it is or how the place has changed . The Valley is still the Valley, where rock rules and karate is as bitchin' as ever.
COBRA KAI
Where: Netflix
When: Any time
Rating: TV-14 (may be unsuitable for children under the age of 14)
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Review: 'Cobra Kai' is poignant and funny - News from southeastern Connecticut - theday.com
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Celebrity birthdays for the week of Jan. 17-23 – Minneapolis Star Tribune
Posted: at 4:49 pm
Celebrity birthdays for the week of Jan. 17-23
Jan. 17: Actor Betty White is 99. Actor James Earl Jones is 90. Talk show host Maury Povich is 82. Singer Chris Montez is 79. Singer William Hart of The Delfonics is 76. Actor Joanna David ("Downton Abbey") is 74. Actor Jane Elliott ("General Hospital") is 74. Former Rolling Stones guitarist Mick Taylor is 73. Singer Sheila Hutchinson of The Emotions is 68. Singer Steve Earle is 66. Singer Paul Young is 65. Actor-comedian Steve Harvey is 64. Singer Susanna Hoffs of The Bangles is 62. Writer-Director Brian Helgeland ("42," Mystic River," L.A. Confidential") is 60. Actor Jim Carrey is 59. Actor Denis O'Hare ("The Good Wife," True Blood") is 59. Actor Joshua Malina ("The West Wing," Sports Night") is 55. Singer Shabba Ranks is 55. Drummer Jon Wysocki (Staind) is 53. Actor Naveen Andrews ("Instinct," "Lost") is 52. Electronic musician DJ Tiesto is 52. Musician Kid Rock is 50. Actor Freddy Rodriguez ("The Night Shift," Six Feet Under") is 46. Actor-writer Leigh Whannel ("Saw" and "Insidious" movies) is 44. Actor-singer Zooey Deschanel ("New Girl") is 41. Singer Ray J is 40. Country singer Amanda Wilkinson of The Wilkinsons is 39. Actor Ryan Gage ("The Hobbit") is 38. DJ Calvin Harris is 37. Drummer Jeremiah Fraites of The Lumineers is 35. Actor Jonathan Keltz ("Reign," Entourage") is 33. Actor Kelly Marie Tran ("Star Wars: The Last Jedi") is 32. Actor Kathrine Herzer ("Madame Secretary") is 24.
Jan. 18: Singer-songwriter Bobby Goldsboro is 80. Comedian-singer Brett Hudson of the Hudson Brothers is 68. Actor-director Kevin Costner is 66. Country singer-actor Mark Collie ("Nashville") is 65. Actor Mark Rylance ("Bridge of Spies," The Other Boleyn Girl") is 61. Actor Alison Arngrim ("Little House on the Prairie") is 59. Actor Jane Horrocks ("Absolutely Fabulous") is 57. Comedian Dave Attell ("Insomniac") is 56. Actor Jesse L. Martin (TV's "The Flash," Law and Order") is 52. Rapper DJ Quik is 51. Singer Jonathan Davis of Korn is 50. Singer Christian Burns of BBMak is 47. Actor Derek Richardson ("Men in Trees") is 45. Actor-screenwriter Jason Segel ("How I Met Your Mother," Freaks and Geeks") is 41. Singer-actor Samantha Mumba is 38. Actor Ashleigh Murray ("Riverdale") is 33. Actor Zeeko Zaki ("FBI," "24: Legacy") is 31. Actor Mateus Ward ("Hostages") is 22.
Jan. 19: Actor Tippi Hedren is 91. Journalist Robert MacNeil is 90. Director Richard Lester ("A Hard Day's Night," "Superman II" and "III") is 89. Actor-singer Michael Crawford is 79. Actor Shelley Fabares is 77. Country singer Dolly Parton is 75. TV chef Paula Deen is 74. Singer Martha Davis of The Motels is 70. Singer Dewey Bunnell of America is 69. Actor Desi Arnaz Jr. is 68. Actor Katey Sagal ("Sons of Anarchy," Married... With Children") is 67. Comedian Paul Rodriguez is 66. Keyboardist Mickey Virtue (UB40) is 64. Actor Paul McCrane ("ER") is 60. Singer Whitfield Crane of Ugly Kid Joe is 53. Singer Trey Lorenz is 52. Actor Shawn Wayans ("White Chicks," Scary Movie") is 50. Singer-guitarist John Wozniak of Marcy Playground is 50. Actor Drea de Matteo ("Joey," The Sopranos") is 49. Comedian Frank Caliendo ("Frank TV," Mad TV") is 47. Actor Drew Powell ("Gotham") is 45. Actor Marsha Thomason ("Las Vegas") is 45. Actor Bitsie Tulloch ("Grimm") is 40. Actor Jodie Sweetin ("Full House") is 39. Actor Shaunette Renee Wilson ("The Resident") is 31. Actor Briana Henry ("General Hospital") is 29. Actor Logan Lerman ("Percy Jackson" films) is 29. Rapper Taylor Bennett is 25. Actor Lidya Jewett ("Hidden Figures") is 14.
Jan. 20: Singer Eric Stewart (10cc, Wayne Fontana and the Mindbenders) is 76. Director David Lynch is 75. Drummer George Grantham of Poco is 74. Guitarist Paul Stanley of Kiss is 69. Bassist Ian Hill of Judas Priest is 69. TV host Bill Maher ("Politically Incorrect") is 65. Actor Lorenzo Lamas is 63. Actor James Denton ("Desperate Housewives") is 58. Bassist Greg K. of The Offspring is 56. Country singer John Michael Montgomery is 56. Actor Rainn Wilson ("The Office") is 55. Actor Stacey Dash ("Clueless") is 54. Actor Reno Wilson ("Mike and Molly") is 52. Singer Edwin McCain is 51. Actor Skeet Ulrich is 51. Drummer Questlove of The Roots is 50. Drummer Rob Bourdon of Linkin Park is 42. Singer-songwriter Bonnie McKee is 37. Country singer Brantley Gilbert is 36. Singer Kevin Parker of Tame Impala is 35. Actor Evan Peters ("American Horror Story") is 34.
Jan. 21: Opera singer Placido Domingo is 80. Actor Jill Eikenberry is 74. Guitarist Jim Ibbotson (The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band) is 74. Singer-songwriter Billy Ocean is 71. Actor Robby Benson is 65. Actor Geena Davis is 65. Actor Charlotte Ross ("NYPD Blue") is 53. Singer Marc Gay of Shai is 52. Actor Karina Lombard ("The L Word") is 52. Actor Ken Leung ("Marvel's Inhumans," Lost") is 51. Rapper Levirt of B-Rock and the Bizz is 51. Drummer Mark Trojanowski of Sister Hazel is 51. Singer Cat Power is 49. DJ Chris Kilmore of Incubus is 48. Singer Emma Bunton (Baby Spice) of the Spice Girls is 45. Actor Jerry Trainor ("Wendell & Vinnie," iCarly") is 44. Singer Nokio of Dru Hill is 42. Actor Izabella Miko ("Coyote Ugly") is 40. Actor Luke Grimes (TV's "Yellowstone," film's "Fifty Shades") is 37. Actor Feliz Ramirez (TV's "Grand Hotel") is 29.
Jan. 22: Actor Piper Laurie is 89. Singer Steve Perry (Journey) is 72. Bassist Teddy Gentry of Alabama is 69. Actor John Wesley Shipp ("The Flash," Dawson's Creek") is 66. Actor Linda Blair is 62. Actor Diane Lane is 56. Country singer Regina Nicks of Regina Regina is 56. Rapper-actor DJ Jazzy Jeff is 56. Celebrity chef Guy Fieri is 53. Actor Olivia D'Abo ("Law and Order: Criminal Intent," The Wonder Years") is 52. Actor Katie Finneran ("The Michael J. Fox Show") is 50. Actor Gabriel Macht ("Suits") is 49. Actor Balthazar Getty is 46. Actor Christopher Kennedy Masterson ("Malcolm in the Middle") is 41. Jazz singer Lizz Wright is 41. Singer Willa Ford is 40. Actor Beverley Mitchell ("Seventh Heaven") is 40. Guitarist Ben Moody of The Fallen (and formerly of Evanescence) is 40. Actor-singer Phoebe Strole ("Glee") is 38. Rapper Logic is 31. Actor Sami Gayle ("Blue Bloods") is 25.
Jan. 23: Actor Chita Rivera is 88. Actor-director Lou Antonio ("Cool Hand Luke") is 87. Jazz vibraphonist Gary Burton is 78. Actor Gil Gerard is 78. Singer Anita Pointer of the Pointer Sisters is 73. Bassist-keyboardist Bill Cunningham of The Box Tops is 71. Actor Richard Dean Anderson ("MacGyver") is 71. Singer-guitarist Robin Zander of Cheap Trick is 68. Singer Anita Baker is 63. Bassist Earl Falconer of UB40 is 62. Actor Peter Mackenzie ("black-ish") is 60. Actor Boris McGiver ("House of Cards," Boardwalk Empire") is 59. Actor Gail O'Grady ("American Dreams," NYPD Blue") is 58. Actor Mariska Hargitay ("Law and Order: Special Victims Unit") is 57. Singer Marc Nelson (Az Yet) is 50. "CBS Evening News" anchor Norah O'Donnell is 47. Actor Tiffani Thiessen ("Beverly Hills, 90210") is 47. Bassist Nick Harmer of Death Cab for Cutie is 46. Actor Lindsey Kraft ("Living Biblically") is 41.
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Celebrity birthdays for the week of Jan. 17-23 - Minneapolis Star Tribune
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