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US Senator Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) passed away this morning. From NorthJersey.com (The Record): Frank R. Lautenberg, who rose from a poor Paterson boyhood to become a multimillionaire businessman and New Jersey’s longest-serving U.S. senator, died  Monday at 89 of viral pneumonia, his office said. The oldest member of...

The Boston Spanish language paper El Planeta has an Op-Ed by its former(*) Director and longtime Spanish language media executive Gerardo (Jerry) Villacrés, in which Republican Senate candidate and former Navy pilot and SEAL Gabriel Gomez is called a LINO (Latino in name only)(h/t @DBernstein), ¿Qué es un...

Question Professor, I live in the liberal blue state of California. I really get the sense that liberals are trying to outlaw everything that conservatives find important. It really feels like they look at a menu of conservative issues, values, and hobbies and pick the next thing...

Darrell Issa says that the IRS targeting of conservatives was coordinated out of the Washington headquarters office and that he and other lawmakers are getting the proof. From CBS News: House Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., citing the testimony of IRS employees who spoke to his...

Back in Ithaca this past weekend. Spotted a few blocks from my house. ...

1) Remember when they used to talk about Israel like this? I'm not used to Arabs talking this way about Arabs: Brigadier General Salim Idris, the current chief of Staff of the Supreme Military Council of the FSA, said: “If the attacks of Hezbollah [on] Syrian territory...

I am still chuckling over Glenn Reynolds' lede into a story about California: WHAT IS GOOD IN LIFE? Dems Enraged Over Perry ‘Raids’ on Out of State Businesses. “Texas Governor Rick Perry has angered some Democrats for his high profile visits to blue states, inviting businesses...

That's the question asked in a column at The Guardian, Why are liberals so rude to the right? (via Instapundit), Why is it that liberals feel no qualms about being rude? Far too many people who are  perfectly polite and courteous, otherwise, think nothing of insulting you...

It's great to be back in Ithaca for the weekend. It's The Ithaca Festival, which is similar to the full moon. I'm kinda upset I missed the Volvo Ballet this year: ...

What would we do at the Saturday Night Card Game if Touré Neblett stopped pontificating? Oh, I know, we'd write about any of a dozen or so pontificators at the completely race-obsessed cable channel also known as MSNBC. This Tweet by Touré caught my eye this week: There's...

Jean Stapleton died today. A very accomplished actress, Jean always will be remembered for her role as Edith Bunker on All In The Family. For those of us of, um, a certain generation, the impact of that show cannot be overstated. Update: Dan Riehl corrects my grammar: @leginsurrection...

Private First Class Bradley Manning, the soldier responsible for leaking over 700,000 documents containing classified information to Wikileaks, will finally face military trial this week at Fort Meade, Maryland.  Colonel Denise Lind will ultimately decide the soldier's case. From Reuters:
Manning, an intelligence analyst, was arrested in May 2010 while serving in Iraq. He was charged with downloading intelligence documents, diplomatic cables and combat videos and forwarding them to WikiLeaks, which began releasing the information that year. Manning testified in February that he had released the files to spark a domestic debate on the military and on foreign policy in general. "I take full responsibility for my actions," he said at the time. "I felt I accomplished something that would allow me to have a clear conscience." One of the leaked U.S. military videos showed a 2007 attack by Apache helicopters that killed a dozen people in Baghdad. They included two Reuters news staff, photographer Namir Noor-Eldeen and driver Saeed Chmagh. The judge in the case, Colonel Denise Lind, said last month she would close parts of the trial to the public to protect classified material. Rather than face a jury, Manning has chosen to have Lind decide his case. Manning pleaded guilty in court in February to 10 lesser charges that he was the source of the WikiLeaks release. But prosecutors rejected the pleas and are pursuing the original charges.
Last November, Manning took the stand in a pre-trial hearing to recount what his legal defense had described as "unlawful pretrial punishment,”  an attempt that was aimed at convincing the judge to dismiss the charges.  His attorney presented a partial plea offer at that time - not a plea agreement or government deal, rather, an acceptance of responsibility for a subset of charges through a process known as "pleading by exceptions and substitutions."  While the judge accepted the language in it, prosecutors ultimately decided to move forward with the original charges on all 21 counts.  The most serious one includes that of "aiding the enemy."

The action in and around Taksim Square’s Gezi Park in Istanbul, Turkey continues today. What started out as a peaceful demonstration over a proposed park demolition earlier in the week has morphed into a broader anti-government protest after Turkish police stepped in.   And it's quite...