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Cincinnati Killer-Cop "Felt His Life Was In Jeopardy." Ah... Feelings.

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Alan: Mr. Dubose was pulled over for failing to exhibit a front license plate. 

If the arresting officer were not fitted with a body cam, he would have walked.



"Apparently, Video Of Cincinnati Cop Killing Sam Dubose Is So Bad, The City Prepares For Riots"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/07/apparently-video-of-cincinnati-cop.html

Killing Good Black People Over Dysfunctional Tail Lights

Why Police Don't Pull Guns In Many Countries Whereas U.S. Cops Are Trained To Kill
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/07/why-police-dont-pull-guns-in-many.html

Diane Rehm Guest Gets To The Nub Of Police Violence And How Easily It's Prevented

"Bad Black People." Why Bill O'Reilly Is Wrong Even When He's Right"
Extrajudicial Execution By Killer Cops: Best Pax Posts

Cincinnati Officer Indicted in Samuel DuBose Shooting 'Felt His Life Was in Jeopardy'







A police officer indicted for murder "felt his life was in jeopardy" when he fatally shot a man during a traffic stop in Cincinnati earlier this month, his attorney told ABC News.
An arraignment was scheduled Thursday morning for Ray Tensing, who was indicted on murder and voluntary manslaughter charges in the shooting death of Samuel DuBose. If convicted, he faces life in prison.
"He’s been crucified since this thing first happened by the whole community without knowing what the evidence is," said his attorney, Stewart Matthews.
Matthews described Tensing, 25, as a man who only wanted to be a police officer and who sobbed when he learned he was being indicted.
"This is all he's ever wanted to do," he said. "His head just sank to the table. We were sitting around and his family -- mother, father and aunt -- were there with us and it just devastated all of them."
Tensing worked for the University of Cincinnati Police Department for the last year and a half, said Matthews. He was fired Wednesday when the indictment was announced.
Photos of Samuel DuBose hang on a pole at a memorial, July 29, 2015, in Cincinnati, near where he was shot and killed by a police office. Murder and manslaughter charges were announced against Ray Tensing for the shooting death of DuBose.
Tom Uhlman/AP Photo
Photos of Samuel DuBose hang on a pole at a memorial, July 29, 2015, in Cincinnati, near where he was shot and killed by a police office. Murder and manslaughter charges were announced against Ray Tensing for the shooting death of DuBose.
DuBose, 43, was killed during a traffic stop on July 19 near the University of Cincinnati's campus, authorities said, noting that he was stopped because his car did not have a license plate in the front. 
DuBose apparently refused to provide a driver's license, produced an open alcohol bottle and a struggle ensued, during which Tensing was knocked to the ground and fired one shot into DuBose's head, according to police.
Two videos were released by the Hamilton County Prosecutor's Office when the indictment was announced Wednesday. The first shows the shooting from Tensing's body camera. The second video, from the body camera of an arriving officer, shows Tensing lying in the road before he gets up to run toward DuBose's crashed car.
PHOTO: In this July 19, 2015, frame from body camera video provided by the University of Cincinnati Campus Police, university Officer Ray Tensing stands next to motorist Samuel DuBose during a traffic stop for a missing front license plate in Cincinnati.
University of Cincinnati Campus Police via AP
PHOTO: In this July 19, 2015, frame from body camera video provided by the University of Cincinnati Campus Police, university Officer Ray Tensing stands next to motorist Samuel DuBose during a traffic stop for a missing front license plate in Cincinnati.
Neither video shows Tensing being dragged as he has told investigators, according to a police report and his radio call. Matthews said he believed a jury would find that Tensing did not overreact during the traffic stop.
"He felt like his life was in jeopardy and that’s why the shot was fired," Matthews said.
ABC News' Avianne Tan and Katie Muldowney contributed to this report.


Hey, Rick Perry! How Does That Work If You're Black?

"Serpico" And Police Corruption

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Alan: Last night I watched "Serpico," a 1973 movie (by Sidney Lumet) based on the life of a New York City cop (played by Al Pacino) who refused to participate in ubiquitous police department corruption.

Serpico's straight-arrow rectitude caused fellow cops to hate him -- to the point of death threats and physical attack. 

"Serpico" is currently streaming on Netflix and serves as excellent reminder that police department corruption is likely worse than we wish to believe.

Paralleling the account rendered at http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/07/ray-tensing-is-seen-in-undated-photo.html, all police reports submitted in the movie "Serpico" misrepresented crime scenes, not only inaccurately but laughably. 

Serpico
The Movie



John Kenneth Galbraith Reprise: The Modern Conservative

Best Pax Posts On "No Vacation Nation" And The Degradation Of American Workers

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Jack Lemmon in "The Apartment"

Your Job Will Never Love You: Stockholm Syndrome In The Workplace
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/07/your-job-will-never-love-you-stockholm.html
“You were right—I do feel more productive standing.”


Alan: Our "social contract" is so frayed that American workers have come to adulate their oppressors or at least normalize their oppression.

"Plutocracy Triumphant"
Cartoon Compendium

"Politics And Economics: The 101 Courses You Wish You Had"

Arresting Cops Treat Dylann Roof To Burger King. Sandra Bland Dead After Failing To Signal Lane Change

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"Cops Bought Dylann Roof Burger King After His Calm Arrest"

Black Kids Get Shot For Their Mistakes. White Kids Get Psychologized

"American Plutocracy: Who's Punished And Who's Not?"

Sign in Sandra Bland's home town.

Killing Good Black People Over Dysfunctional Tail Lights

Why Police Don't Pull Guns In Many Countries Whereas U.S. Cops Are Trained To Kill
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/07/why-police-dont-pull-guns-in-many.html

Diane Rehm Guest Gets To The Nub Of Police Violence And How Easily It's Prevented


Ten Questions About The Sandra Bland Video Tape
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/07/10-questions-about-sandra-bland-video.html


How Cops And Citizens Should Handle "Pull Overs." Dialogue With Frog Hospital's Fred Owens
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/07/reply-to-fred.html

"Bad Black People." Why Bill O'Reilly Is Wrong Even When He's Right"

Famous Catholic's Unexpected Definition Of Catholicism

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Find books from the loved G.K. Chesterton here. Chesterton knew that Catholicism has substance: meaty, juicy, filling, satisfying.
Alan: From "the inside," Catholic culture -- as expressed in Carnival, Mardi Gras and boisterous reproduction -- is a very carnal enterprise, well-aligned with the ongoing Incarnation.

Most "outsiders" are mislead by dogma, doctrine and bad prelates, which -- truth be told -- are nowhere near as important as the continual Celebration.

"The Phenotypic Expression Of Religion Matters More Than Its Dogmatic Genotype"

"St. Apollonia And A Hundred Medieval Holidays (i.e., Holy Days)"

G.K. Chesterton Quotations... And More

G.K. Chesterton On Charity, Hope And Universal Salvation


Nigger


Guns Are The Problem In The Hands Of Anyone... Cops Included

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Alan: I know families whose children have used guns-in-the-home to kill themselves. 

I know families in which accidental killing has taken place. 

On the other hand, I do not know anyone who used a gun to successfully fend off a home invasion. 

Do you? 

Ask around. 

It is far more likely you will learn of firearm suicides and accidental deaths than successful resistance to unprovoked aggression by strangers. 

When the human mind considers self-defense "in the abstract," it tends to imagine super-hero scenarios in which --- Voila' --- bad guys with guns are vanquished by "good guys with guns." 


The Right-Wing Dream

Absolute Safety vouchsafed by ubiquitous firearms.
(The impossible quest to make Reality safer than God intended is the core appeal of fascism.)

If every passenger can "pack," then every terrorist would have a firearm and only a few citizens. (Would you take a firearm on board a plane?)

Those who think ubiquitous firearms are a solution to any of life's problems contribute to  the problem.

The likelihood that well-armed citizens will perform acts of sudden, salvific heroicism when a criminal already "has the drop" is vanishingly remote. 

Such wishful thinking is the product of arrested development, the vestigial puerility of children playing at "cowboys and Indians."

Many more innocent Americans are killed by firearms "in the home" than the piddling number of Americans saved by domestic firearm heroics.

And when, at rare intervals, such heroics do occur, they often result in the death of property thieves who harbor no violent intent.

Where are the Christian literalists when we need them?

“You have heard it said, ‘An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’ But now I tell you: do not take revenge on someone who wrongs you. If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, let him slap your left cheek too. And if someone takes you to court to sue you for your shirt, let him have your coat as well. And if one of the occupation troops forces you to carry his pack one mile, carry it two miles. When someone asks you for something, give it to him; when someone wants to borrow something, lend it to him. “You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your friends, hate your enemies.’ But now I tell you: love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, so that you may become the children of your Father in heaven. For he makes his sun to shine on bad and good people alike, and gives rain to those who do good and to those who do evil. Why should God reward you if you love only the people who love you? Even the tax collectors do that! And if you speak only to your friends, have you done anything out of the ordinary? Even the pagans do that! You must be whole—just as your Father in heaven is whole."

I am 67 years old and have friends "on both sides of the aisle."

I have never heard any of them say that their firearm saved a life.

I have never heard any of them say they know someone whose life was saved by a firearm.

Occassional anecdotes do not establish "general rules." 

On the flip side of this coin, I have heard several friends say firearms were used by family members to kill themselves.

Whether by accident... sudden eruption of anger... or by psychological disease... firearms in citizens' homes exact a terrifyingly high toll with correspondingly trivial benefit.

***

The belief that individual heroes will "save the day" is essentially self-ish.

Yes, an occasional hero will "save the day."

But arming an entire society increases cumulative carnage.

***


"One of the most disturbing facts that came out in the [Adolf] Eichmann trial was that a psychiatrist examined him and pronounced him perfectly sane. I do not doubt it at all, and that is precisely why I find it disturbing. . .  The sanity of Eichmann is disturbing. We equate sanity with a sense of justice, with humaneness, with prudence, with the capacity to love and understand other people. We rely on the sane people of the world to preserve it from barbarism, madness, destruction. And now it begins to dawn on us that it is precisely the sane ones who are the most dangerous. It is the sane ones, the well-adapted ones, who can without qualms and without nausea aim the missiles and press the buttons that will initiate the great festival of destruction that they, the sane ones, have prepared. What makes us so sure, after all, that the danger comes from a psychotic getting into a position to fire the first shot in a nuclear war? Psychotics will be suspect. The sane ones will keep them far from the button. No one suspects the sane, and the sane ones will have perfectly good reasons, logical, well-adjusted reasons, for firing the shot. They will be obeying sane orders that have come sanely down the chain of command. And because of their sanity they will have no qualms at all. When the missiles take off, then, it will be no mistake." 
"A Devout Meditation in Memory of Adolf Eichmann" in Raids on the Unspeakable." Thomas Merton - New York: New Directions Publishing Co., 1964 

***

In almost all "home invasions" or "street stick-ups," the bad guys already "have the drop on us" which makes it very difficult, verging impossible, for an ordinary citizen to overcome that advantage. 

Although statistics are unavailable, it is a reasonable postulate that using firearms to overcome a villain's preexisting advantage will result in an innocent citizen's injury (or death) than not using firearms. 

Much of the mythology surrounding "the well-armed citizen hero" is attributable to the urge to "do everything possible" to forfend violent assault. 

Thus fixated on "doing something," the human mind ignores the likelihood that "doing nothing" is safer than "upping the ante" by bringing even more firearms into play. 

In Luke 6:29, Yeshua offers this advice to his followers: "If someone steals your coat, offer him your shirt too," rendered by an exegete friend as ""If someone steals your outer garments, give him your underwear as well." (Here is the full contextualization of Luke 6:29: https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke+6%3A+27-38&version=VOICE)

"Love Your Enemies. Do Good To Those Who Hate You," Luke 6: 27-42

Yeshua Excoriates Fellow Pharisees: "The Woe Passages"


Thanks to Patrick O'Neill for forwarding the following article. Patrick is a pillar of the Fr. Charles Mulholland Catholic Worker House  in Garner, NC.

Alan

Fascinating how differently two nations can approach similar situations .... Guns are the problem -- in the hands of anyone, including cops

Patrick


-----Original Message-----


From: David McReynolds
To: undisclosed
Sent: Fri, Jul 17, 2015 3:01 am
Subject: Re: BANG BANG! YOU'RE NOT DEAD from Clancy


On Thu, Jul 16, 2015 at 3:41 PM, CS wrote: 




                BANG BANG! YOU’RE NOT DEAD
I hold no special brief for the British police at whose hands and batons I’ve split a lip or two.   But here in Los Angeles, where our trimly athletic LAPD shoots fewer civilians than, say, in Albuquerque or Baltimore, we’re seeing a spike in “he was reaching into his waist band” or “coming at me with a knife (or rock)”.  Police in Gardena, LA, shot two unarmed Hispanics looking for their stolen bike, one died (you can see the police-camera video on https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XkjGBEbfKyo); a few days ago police in the beach city of Venice shot and killed a homeless guy who allegedly had a knife; police in Los Feliz, LA, shot an unarmed jogger who approached them.  The dead guys tend to be black, brown or homeless.  It’s a weekly sometimes daily occurrence.  The city has paid victims' families over $20m in recent years.  
From the WashPost and the UK Independent, I’ve put together  one or two factoids for perspective.
Armed police in England and Wales only fired their weapons twice during 14,864 operations in 2013-14.  That’s TWICE in ONE year.
Only one person has been killed by armed police in England and Wales in the last four years, and one of them, near my old neighborhood, sparked four days of riots.
In the first 24 days of 2015, American police killed more people than police in England and Wales have killed in 24 years.   Read that sentence again.
The number of police shootings in England and Wales has fallen consistently over the last few years.
There are 5,875 specially-trained armed police in England and Wales (see below), but their numbers have fallen in recent years In 2011 police fired weapons six times.
In 2013, 30 U.S. officers were fatally shot while on duty in America where crazy people or anyone with a grudge can get a gun NQA, no questions asked. 
We are five times the size of Britain.  However, when population differences are taken into account, people in the USA are around 100 times more likely to be shot by the police than British people are.
                                    *
What can US cops learn from Britain's gunless police?
A British cop who applies for a gun first must walk the beat unarmed for years.
Then there is the rigorous selection process — an unforgiving complement of fitness tests, psychological appraisals and marksmanship exams. Finally, there is the training, which involves endless drilling on even the most routine scenarios.
Lightly armed Britain might seem an unorthodox place to look for solutions to our plague of police shootings. But is there a blueprint here?
In Britain handguns and assault rifles effectively banned.
Like the United States, Britain is large, urbanized, democratic and diverse. Police have to reckon with gang violence, organized crime and Islamist extremists, all amid persistent allegations that they unfairly target minority communities.
Other police forces facing similar problems also forego firearms including New Zealand, Iceland, Ireland and Norway.
Sir Peter Fahy, chief of the Greater Manchester Police, commands 6,700 officers — just 209 of whom are armed. Those authorized to carry guns, he says, face extremely tight protocols governing when they can be deployed and under what circumstances they can fire. Shooting at moving vehicles, at people brandishing knives and at suspects fleeing a scene are all strictly forbidden except under extreme circumstances.
Officers must serve for years before they can apply to carry a gun, and the selection of those deemed worthy is intensely competitive.
All officers, he said, are taught to back away from any situation that might otherwise escalate and to not feel that they have to “win” every confrontation.
“I constantly remind our officers that their best weapon is their mouth,” he said. “Your first consideration is, ‘Can you talk this through? Can you buy yourself time?’ ”
When Mark Williams applied to be a firearms officer in 1995, he was among a group of 16 who started the grueling regimen of physical and psychological trials. Three made it.
Williams was among them, but that wasn’t the end of the testing. He and his fellow firearms officers faced regular drills challenging them to find creative ways out of confrontations and spent long nights at the shooting range to upgrade their marksmanship.
Sir Denis O’Connor, a former police chief,  says cops here…know that someone is always looking over their shoulder.
“The cops here tend to fear getting it wrong and being criticized by a judge,” he said. “Cops in the U.S. fear getting shot. Those are two very different worlds.”

End-Time Problems That Weren't: Freak Outs Over Ebola, Obamacare, Benghazi, Iran, Ukraine

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Alan: American conservatives recall the hyponchondriac who died at 104.
His tombstone read "I told you something was wrong!"

"Conservatives Scare More Easily Than Liberals"

"Are Republicans Insane?"

"American Conservatives And Oppositional-Defiant Disorder"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/09/arrested-development-american.html

"Thomas Aquinas On American Conservatives' Continual Commission Of Sin"

"The Republican Party Is A Satanic Cult"

"Is Perfectionism A Curse? Paul Ryan Tells The Truth"

Ebola Presents A Trivial Threat To Americans' Health
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/10/cdc-depending-on-virulence-annual-us.html

"Bank On It: The South Is Always Wrong"

"The Reign of Morons Is Here," Charles P. Pierce, The Atlantic

"A Southerner Explains Tea Party Radicalism: The Civil War Is Not Over"

"People Who Watch Only Fox News 
Know Less Than People Who Watch No News"

The Daily Show Asks A Real Hostage Negotiator How To Handle The GOP 

http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2013/10/watch-daily-show-ask-real-hostage.html

"The Death Of Epistemology: Anti-Vaccine Epert (And Playboy Model) Jenny McCarthy"

"Ebola Represents A Trivial Threat To Americans' Health"

"Shark Attacks Rise Worldwide: Risk Assessment and Aquinas' Criteria For Sin"

http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2012/02/shark-attacks-rise-worldwide-risk.html

"Faulty Risk Assessment And The Epidemic Spread Of Self-Terrorization

"The Death Of Epistemology"

How the death of epistemology validates airheads:
"The Guardian: John Oliver's Viral Video Is The Best Climate Debate You'll Ever See"

"Do Republicans Do Anything But Piss, Moan, Whine, Bitch?

BBC Announcer Asks American Interviewee "Why Are Americans So Fond Of Punishment?"

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"Trial By Ordeal: The Bloody Old Testamental Roots Of Modern Justice"
Alan: In anticipation of President Obama visiting a prison as part of his initiative to reform the U.S. Justice system (with particular attention to eliminating needless mass incarceration and making prison sentences correspond to the crime), the overnight BBC anchor asked an American interviewee: 'Don't get me wrong. We Europeans think it's a rather quaint characteristic but why is your nation so extraordinarily fond of punishing people?"

The United States Is A Singularly Cruel, Vengeful Nation. Solitary Confinement For Kids

World's Most Humane Prison: This Will Not Happen In The United States Where Punishment Is Primary
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/03/the-worlds-most-humane-prison-this-will.html

Listen To This Report On Utah's Revival Of Firing Squads & Learn If You're Civilized Or Barbarian

http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/03/listen-to-this-report-on-utahs-revival.html

You Will Remember This White Woman's "F_____ Nigger" Rant The Rest Of Your Life

"The Caging Of America: American Prisons Routinely Used To Incarcerate The Mentally Ill. 500,000 Behind Bars"

Thomas Merton On Buddhism And Christianity

An Unseen Dimension Of Flag Waving

The Most Remarkable Single Sentence From A Focus Group Of Donald Trump Supporters

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What makes someone say they want Donald Trump to be the 45th president of the United States?
Bloomberg Politics' John Heilemann went to New Hampshire to try and answer that question -- sitting down with 12 people professing to support the Donald in 2016. The entirety of the focus group -- or at least the part Bloomberg has released today -- is worth watching. But one comment  -- from a woman named Jane -- stood out to me. Here it is:
He's like one of us. He may be a millionaire...but beside the money issue he's still in tune with what everyone is wanting.
WHAT.
DOUBLE WHAT.

Compendium Of Best Pax Posts: Plutocracy, Economic Inequality & Collapse Of Conservatism

Donald J. Trump has been called many things in his decades-long run as a public figure. I am betting that "one of us" is not one of them.  This is, after all, someone who at every turn professes how wealthy he is ($10 billion!!), how smart he is ("really smart") and who lives a life -- married to a super-model, star of his own reality TV show (until recently) -- that couldn't be further from the everyday life of the average person in the U.S..
And yet, despite all of the evidence of Trump's not-like-us-ness, he has quite clearly tapped into a populist message that plenty of people -- Jane from New Hampshire included -- are responding to.  That such a populist strain exists in American political life is no surprise. That Donald Trump is, at least at the moment, the chosen vessel for that populist fervor is stunning.
How is this happening?  My guess is that Trump's willingness to say whatever is on his mind appeals to people who feel like most politicians are totally detached from their lives.  Trump's wealth gets dismissed because, well, aren't they all rich? (The answer to that question is: Yes, most people who run for president are significantly wealthier than the average person.)
As always with Trump, it's hard to tell how much of what he says he a) believes and b) is doing with any sort of strategic goal in mind.  It's hard for me to imagine Trump sitting in his office -- a classy, luxurious one, of course -- thinking before he entered the 2016 campaign: "Yeah, I'll be the populist in the race."
But, Trump has been right a heck of a lot more than I have about his rise in this race. So maybe this is all part of his grand plan.
Probably not though.
Chris Cillizza writes “The Fix,” a politics blog for the Washington Post. He also covers the White House.


No Coffee And More Than 2 Cups Worse For Cognitive Impairment Than 1 or 2 Cups Per Day

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Yesterday’s coffee science: It’s good for the brain. Today: Not so fast…*

 
There's been a ton of news recently about how awesome coffee can be for many aspects of your health -- heart disease, longevity, depression, Type 2 diabetes, Parkinson's.  The scientific data has been so strong that the nation's top nutrition panel recommended earlier this year that people might even want to consider drinking a bit more.
Now comes a sobering report.
In a study evaluating 1,445 people, scientists found that consistently drinking one to two cups of coffee each day is associated with a significant reduction in the risk of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) -- a precursor to dementia and Alzheimer's -- compared to those who never or rarely consumed coffee. That supports previous work, published in 2010, that showed that caffeine may have a neuroprotective effect.
The surprise was that participants who increased their consumption over time saw their risk of mild cognitive impairment shoot up significantly. Those who went from one cup to more than one cup had twice the rate of MCI as those who reduced their drinking to less than one cup and 1.5 times the rate of MCI as those who continued to drink one cup a day.
The research, which involved participants in the Italian Longitudinal Study on Aging and were ages 65 to 84-years-old, was published in the latest issue of the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.
The results suggest that "cognitively normal older individuals who never or rarely consumed coffee and those who increased their coffee consumption habits had a higher risk of developing MCI," co-authors Vincenzo Solfrizzi and Francesco Panza, researchers at the University of Bari Aldo Moro, wrote.
Coffee's impact on the brain has been a critical question for modern-day nutrition scientists as coffee consumption grows with many billions of cups of the stimulant are now consumed each year.
One hypothesis the authors of the Italian floated is that coffee may work by reducing inflammation in the brain.  Another is that it could be activating adenosine A2A receptors which play a role in oxygen consumption and blood flow. They wrote that they believed a steady stream of caffeine may be required "for normal memory performance and over- or down- activation" may result in impaired memory functioning.
A third explanation is based on the simple fact that caffeine is a powerful psychoactive stimulate. "Caffeine could in part compensate the cognitive decline in older individuals because its effects on vigilance and attention, mainly in situations of reduced alertness," they said.


Camille Paglia Can Be Too Clever By Half But Her Socio-Political Instincts Are Scalpel Sharp

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Dear Byron,

Although Paglia gets snared by her own cleverness and narcissism, her underlying socio-political sensibility is unusually insightful. 

A bit like Gore Vidal perhaps.

That said, she is totally wrong about Hillary's imminent crash, even though Bernie may mount a meaningful challenge or her "private server" scandal will eat her alive.

Consider the following Q&A from Part 1 of Salon's recent 3 part interview: 
You’re an atheist, and yet I don’t ever see you sneer at religion in the way that the very aggressive atheist class right now often will. What do you make of Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, Christopher Hitchens and the religion critics who seem not to have respect for religions for faith?
I regard them as adolescents. I say in the introduction to my last book, “Glittering Images”, that “Sneering at religion is juvenile, symptomatic of a stunted imagination.”  It exposes a state of perpetual adolescence that has something to do with their parents– they’re still sneering at dad in some way. Richard Dawkins was the only high-profile atheist out there when I began publicly saying “I am an atheist,” on my book tours in the early 1990s. I started the fad for it in the U.S, because all of a sudden people, including leftist journalists, started coming out of the closet to publicly claim their atheist identities, which they weren’t bold enough to do before. But the point is that I felt it was perfectly legitimate for me to do that because of my great respect for religion in general–from the iconography to the sacred architecture and so forth. I was arguing that religion should be put at the center of any kind of multicultural curriculum.
I’m speaking here as an atheist. I don’t believe there is a God, but I respect every religion deeply. All the great world religions contain a complex system of beliefs regarding the nature of the universe and human life that is far more profound than anything that liberalism has produced. We have a whole generation of young people who are clinging to politics and to politicized visions of sexuality for their belief system.  They see nothing but politics, but politics is tiny.  Politics applies only to society. There is a huge metaphysical realm out there that involves the eternal principles of life and death. The great tragic texts, including the plays of Aeschylus and Sophocles, no longer have the central status they once had in education, because we have steadily moved away from the heritage of western civilization.
The real problem is a lack of knowledge of religion as well as a lack of respect for religion. I find it completely hypocritical for people in academe or the media to demand understanding of Muslim beliefs and yet be so derisive and dismissive of the devout Christian beliefs of Southern conservatives.
But yes, the sneering is ridiculous!  Exactly what are these people offering in place of religion? In my system, I offer art–and the whole history of spiritual commentary on the universe. There’s a tremendous body of nondenominational insight into human life that used to be called cosmic consciousness.  It has to be remembered that my generation in college during the 1960s was suffused with Buddhism, which came from the 1950s beatniks. Hinduism was in the air from every direction–you had the Beatles and the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, Ravi Shankar at Monterey, and there were sitars everywhere in rock music. So I really thought we were entering this great period of religious syncretism, where the religions of the world were going to merge. But all of a sudden, it disappeared!  The Asian religions vanished–and I really feel sorry for young people growing up in this very shallow environment where they’re peppered with images from mass media at a particularly debased stage.
There are no truly major stars left, and I don’t think there’s much profound work being done in pop culture right now.  Young people have nothing to enlighten them, which is why they’re clinging so much to politicized concepts, which give them a sense of meaning and direction.
But this sneering thing!  I despise snark.  Snark is a disease that started with David Letterman and jumped to Jon Stewart and has proliferated since. I think it’s horrible for young people!   And this kind of snark atheism–let’s just invent that term right now–is stupid, and people who act like that are stupid. Christopher Hitchens’ book “God is Not Great” was a travesty. He sold that book on the basis of the brilliant chapter titles. If he had actually done the research and the work, where each chapter had the substance of those wonderful chapter titles, then that would have been a permanent book. Instead, he sold the book and then didn’t write one–he talked it. It was an appalling performance, demonstrating that that man was an absolute fraud to be talking about religion.  He appears to have done very little scholarly study.  Hitchens didn’t even know Judeo-Christianity well, much less the other world religions.  He had that glib Oxbridge debater style in person, but you’re remembered by your written work, and Hitchens’ written work was weak and won’t last.
Dawkins also seems to be an obsessive on some sort of personal vendetta, and again, he’s someone who has never taken the time to do the necessary research into religion. http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/07/camille-paglia-takes-on-jon-stewart.html
Predictably, Paglia's own self-serving showmanship overlooks the Buddhism of "public atheist" Sam Harris.
"Neuroscientist Sam Harris Selects Twelve Books Everyone Should Read"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2015/07/neuroscientist-sam-harris-selects-12.html

Pax tecum
Alan

“Ted Cruz gives me the willies”: Camille Paglia analyzes the GOP field — and takes on Hillary Clinton

She dismisses Rubio, Jeb and Rand in part three of our interview, but warns Dems not to overlook Scott Walker


Catch up with the first two parts of our interview here and here.
"Ted Cruz gives me the willies": Camille Paglia analyzes the GOP field -- and takes on Hillary ClintonScott Walker, Hillary Clinton 
In the first two parts of Salon’s conversation with Camille Paglia, we covered Bill Cosby and Bill Clinton, the return of the ’90s sensibility, and then the rise of Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump.
Today Paglia trains her devastating insight and wit on the rest of the GOP field — look out Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and Jeb Bush. She also has some surprising thoughts on why Hillary Clinton will not be the Democratic nominee — and why it would be unwise for Democrats to overlook the appeal of Scott Walker.
Catch up with the first two parts of our interview here and here.
The Tea Party has been very successful in pushing the Republicans to the right. Now you’re finally seeing progressives understand they have to be active and aggressive if they want to exert power within the Democrats. The Sanders/Warren wing and #blacklivesmatter have changed the conversation. But Hillary remains the very likely nominee and she doesn’t even feel like she needs to answer questions on TPP and Keystone, for example. The Sanders enthusiasm makes for good copy, but progressives are going to lose those fights. Where are the 16 Democratic candidates who might make for a more robust and lasting debate?
First of all, when we look at the abundance of candidates who have put themselves forward on the GOP side, compared to the complete paralysis of the Democratic party by the Clinton machine, I think you have to be worried about the future of the Democratic party. Young feminists are asking why there hasn’t been a woman president and automatically blaming it on male sexism.  But there are plenty of women Democratic politicians who are too scared to put themselves forward as candidates because of the Clinton machine. There’s something seriously wrong here with Democratic thinking. You either believe in the country, you believe in your party, or you don’t!
Given the problems facing the nation, this passive waiting for your turn is simply unacceptable.  The Democrats have plenty of solid, capable women politicians who are just too timid to challenge the party establishment.  Well, excuse me, that proves they don’t deserve to be president!  You sure won’t be able to deal with ISIS if you can’t deal with Debbie Wasserman Schultz!  The paucity of declared Democratic presidential candidates is a major embarrassment to the party.  Look at that herd of eager-beaver competitive guys on the Republican side–overflowing with energy and ambition. There’s even a woman, Carly Fiorina, who has no political experience and therefore no chance of winning, but she is bravely putting herself forward and speaking out.  And she has impressively informed herself about international politics, which is a No. 1 requirement for any woman presidential candidate. I said in a recent op-ed for Time that women must take responsibility for mastering more than the usual social welfare issues. Women politicians have to develop themselves beyond the caretaking side of the spectrum. All this talk about the lack of women engineers and how that’s somehow evidence of sexism–oh, really?  It’s mostly a self-selecting process, as proved by the way that the overwhelming majority of women politicians around the world actually behave. What do they instantly gravitate towards?  Social welfare, caretaking, the environment.  They ignore military history and strategic geopolitics.
I have constantly said that Senator Dianne Feinstein should have been the leading woman presidential candidate for the Democratic party long ago.  Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi is a very deft and clever behind-the-scenes legislator and dealmaker, a skill she acquired from her political family–her father and brother were mayors of Baltimore. Both of these women, to me, are far better politicians than Hillary Clinton. Hillary has accomplished nothing substantial in her life. She’s been pushed along, coasting on her husband’s coattails, and every job she’s been given fizzled out into time-serving or overt disaster.  Hillary constantly strikes attitudes and claims she’s “passionate” about this or that, but there’s never any sustained follow-through.  She’s just a classic, corporate exec or bureaucrat type who would prefer to be at her desk behind closed doors, imposing her power schemes on the proletariat.  She has no discernible political skills of any kind, which is why she needs a big, shifting army of consultants, advisors, and toadies to whisper in her ear and write her policy statements.  There’s this ridiculous new theme in the media about people needing to learn who the “real” Hillary Clinton is.  What? Everything they’re saying about what a wonderful person Hillary is in private tells us that she’s not competent or credible as a public figure! A politician, particularly a president, must have a distinct skill or expertise in communicating with the masses.  It’s the absolutely basic requirement for any career in politics.
If you don’t have an effective public persona, if you’re not a good speaker, if you don’t like to press the flesh, if you’re not nimble enough to deal with anything that comes along, then you are not a natural politician!  And you sure aren’t going to learn it in your late 60s!  Get off the stage, and let someone else truly electable on! All this silly talk about how wonderful Hillary is in private.  Oh, sure, she’s nice to the important people and the people she wants or needs something from!  Then she’s Pollyanna herself!  There are just too many reports stretching all the way back to Arkansas about Hillary’s nasty outbursts toward underlings when things aren’t going well.  The main point is that the ability to communicate with millions of people is a special talent, and Hillary pretty obviously lacks it.
That said, is there a single candidate on the Republican side you could imagine as an actual president?
I thought that Mitt Romney was an excellent choice by the GOP four years ago, even though he was opposed by the Tea Party.  He was an old-style Rockefeller Republican, a type that doesn’t exist anymore. Nelson Rockefeller was governor of New York when I was in college in the 1960s, and he was flooding the state university system with tons of money in an attempt to make it equivalent to the University of California. I was very grateful for what he did, because I had a superb education at Binghamton, with wonderful new facilities and funding of programs like the film society.  Rockefeller collected abstract art.  It’s hard to imagine a Republican politician today–or actually a Democrat either–as an art collector. He was such a sophisticated, genial man, but today he would be considered a RINO by many Republicans–Republican In Name Only.  It’s unfortunate, because there was value in that old WASP patrician style–where people were born to wealth and privilege and yet they devoted their lives to public service.
At any rate, looking at this crop of GOP candidates, I don’t see anyone right now who seems authentically presidential or who has the necessary gravitas.
Let’s walk through some of them. The young senators – Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz.
Rubio is widely praised for his intelligence, but he comes across as unsettlingly glib to me. He’s sharp on foreign affairs–that’s a strong suit for him.  But he seems oddly weightless, like a peppy young boy. I don’t see any depth yet.  Ted Cruz–oh, lord!  Cruz gives me the willies. The guy is a fanatic!  He’s very smart, clever and strategic, and he has a fine education from Princeton, so people have to watch out for him. But I think he is self-absorbed and narcissistic to a maniacal degree.  I will never forgive him for his insulting arrogance to Dianne Feinstein when the Judiciary Committee was debating gun control two years ago. There’s a two-minute clip on YouTube which I urge people to look at it.  Cruz is smirkily condescending and ultimately juvenile.  He peppers Feinstein with a long list of rat-a-tat questions, as if he’s playing Perry Mason grilling a witness on the stand.  He was trying to embarrass her but only embarrassed himself.  A president must be a statesman, not a smart-alecky horse’s ass.
Rand Paul hasn’t caught fire and his foreign policy stances can be wildly inconsistent, but he is interested in a host of issues – civil liberties, the drug war, drones, privacy, the growth of the surveillance state – that I certainly wish the left would raise, yet are not exactly in Sanders’ wheelhouse.
Exactly! Code Pink’s Medea Benjamin wrote a protest book called Drone Warfare that is a very important statement.  I’ve been furious about the Democratic party’s lack of pressure on the Obama administration about the obscene overuse of drones.  As a libertarian, I find myself agreeing with Rand Paul on so many different social and political issues. Unfortunately, however, Paul lacks gravitas as a physical presence. The U.S. presidency has a highly ceremonial aspect.  The president isn’t merely a prime minister, a political leader–he’s the symbolic embodiment of the nation. Therefore, physical attributes and vocal style are very important.  Despite the cartoons that caricature and ridicule him as a befuddled boy with big ears, Obama has always known how to handle himself as a candidate and then president. He projects a sober, unflappable confidence and presents himself with elegance and grace–all of which produced his success early on, when Hillary was the frontrunner in 2008.  Many Americans were so sick of Bush, with that lumbering cowboy stance of his.  And remember that terrible moment at a European summit when Bush came up behind the seated Angela Merkel and grabbed her by the shoulders?  She jumped out of her skin.  What an embarrassment to the nation!  I was so happy when Obama took office–finally a president who projected class and dignity.  I’m talking only about persona here, not policies–because while I voted for Obama in 2008, I would not do it again in 2012, when I voted for Jill Stein of the Green Party.
In the primary debates, Cruz will benefit from having a tall and commanding physique, as Bill De Blasio did in the New York mayoral debates.  On the whole, Republicans don’t seem to realize that persona and self-presentation are crucial in a media age.  For example, Rand Paul has obviously had his eye on the presidency for years, so it’s astonishing that he apparently has never given any thought to how he should dress or cut his hair or even stand in front of cameras.  It’s as if his idea of style was flash-frozen in the Everly Brothers era. The tall candidate often has a big advantage in any campaign. It wasn’t the case with Jimmy Carter, but he was an exception.  People do want a sense of implicit authority in the president.  This is certainly what has also held women back from reaching the White House–they don’t present or conceive of themselves in an authoritative way. Dianne Feinstein is the only woman politician in America who has true gravitas. I’m not talking about her policies, about which there is huge division in California.  What I’m saying is that candidates for president must have a perhaps unteachable quality of inward power and steadiness–and Feinstein has it.  Rand Paul neglected this issue–which led to his surprisingly thin skin with the media. You would think after so many years in the public eye, he would be better about handling the press.  But right out of the gate, he was arguing and sniping with a woman TV interviewer.  It came across as petty and tacky–utterly unpresidential.
In the same way, Sarah Palin, who I had great hopes for as a dynamic new type of frontier-woman politician, was way too reactive with the media. She was fighting with bottom-feeders half the time, and they dragged her down to their level.  A major politician can’t do that! You have to learn how to take it but give it back in ways that don’t bounce back at you.  You have to pick the right fights.  It’s a game that every politician must learn–including the ability to satirize the media, which voters love. Being able to handle the media is an essential aspect to running for president, and here is where Hillary has failed abysmally in this campaign. You can’t simply ignore the media or spew memorized talking points at them.  Carly Fiorina is proving herself surprisingly superior to Hillary in knowing how to spar with the media.
Let me pull you back to the front-runners. Scott Walker.
I think that liberals are dangerously complacent about Scott Walker. They’ve tried to portray him as a madman, an uneducated rube, a tool of the Koch brothers.  Right now, Walker seems to be the true GOP frontrunner, but I also feel he lacks gravitas.  He’s not ready for his close-up.  What is this oddity about so many of the GOP candidates–their excessive boyishness, as if their maturation stalled?  But Walker is a very talented and combative politician, with far more substance than liberals are allowing for.
The union issue is huge–because as governor of Wisconsin, Walker went to war with unions and won.  Liberals are caught in the past right now in their rosy view of unions, which were heroically established during the progressive era that reformed the abuses of the industrial revolution.  But the union battle in Wisconsin had nothing to do with exploited working-class miners or factory workers.  In his push to balance the state budget, Walker took action against the middle-class public sector unions, whose negotiations with municipal and state governments outside the arena of private competition have become an enormous drain on local budgets as the economy has worsened. There has been a history of rampant corruption in the public sector unions, coming from their cozy quid pro quo relationships with politicians.  Liberals need to wake up about this!  All they have to do is read the obituaries of the smaller newspapers in metropolitan New York to see how the early retirement and lavish pensions of the public sector unions have grotesquely drained taxpayer dollars.  Obituary after obituary–so-and-so, aged 75, worked for fifteen or twenty years as a policeman or city sanitation worker, retired in his late 40s, and spent the rest of his life on the taxpayer’s dime, pursuing his hobbies of fishing, boating, and golfing.  Great work if you can get it!
And then the teachers’ unions! What a colossal tactical error American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten (a longtime Clinton friend and donor) made several weeks ago in unilaterally declaring her union’s endorsement of Hillary Clinton right in the middle of the Bernie Sanders surge. Probably for the first time ever, American liberals woke up to the corrupt practices that have become way too common in the political maneuverings of the big unions. The point here is that Scott Walker, in his defeat of the public sector unions, drew the roadmap for struggling municipal and state governments everywhere to balance their budgets, as he did in Wisconsin.  Because who ends up suffering the most? It’s the kids.  All that money outrageously pouring into inflated pension plans has been gutting public education and community arts programs.
Exactly how have the teachers unions improved the quality of education in our big cities?  Look at the dilapidated public schools in Philadelphia or in many other cities run by Democrats.  The rigid and antiquated seniority system imposed by the teachers unions has been a disaster–”last hired, first fired.”  So many young and vital teachers have been terminated during budget cuts–the entire future of the profession.  The unions value seniority over quality, and it’s inner-city children who have paid the price.
In my opinion, Scott Walker still lacks seasoning, presidential temper, and a working knowledge of international affairs.  But if Democrats try to use the union issue to take him down, they’re simply empowering him–and we’re going to end up with President Walker
The name Jeb Bush has not come up at all from you…
[loud laughter] What a joke! I didn’t remember him at all! This shows what a nothing he is! The major media have been constantly saying that Jeb is the GOP front-runner, which is utter nonsense. It’s the same thing with Hillary–the polls have just been showing name recognition, nothing more. I’ve been looking at the comments on political news articles since last year, and Jeb Bush seems to have absolutely no support whatever–like zero!  To this day, I’ve never seen an online commenter enthusiastically supporting him.  It’s really strange!  All these rich people throw big money at him, but I don’t know who his voters could possibly be.
If Jeb had run for president after his successful run as governor of Florida, he would have had a better chance.  But he lost his chops during his long hiatus, and he’s coming across as fuzzy and bumbling.  Conservative talk radio is totally against him–he’s dismissed as the ultimate RINO.  On the other hand, let’s see what happens in the primary debates.  It could well be that some of the younger GOP candidates will seem too shallow or shrill, and Jeb will gain because of his amiable personality and fund of government knowledge and experience.  Voters might well go for him in the end as the safe choice.
And there you are with a Bush versus a Clinton, and another of the returns to the 1990s we discussed earlier.
Oh, I don’t see Hillary as even getting as far as the debates!  If things continue to trend downward for her, in terms of her favorability and the increasing scandals, then the Democratic establishment will have to take action to avoid a sure GOP win.  Hillary has way too much baggage for a general election–that should have been obvious from the start.  If Vice-President Biden jumps in, that would change everything.  I don’t think Hillary wants to be defeated, so what I’ve been predicting all along is that there will be a “health crisis,” and she will withdraw.  Right now, her campaign is trying to change the headlines by releasing some new policy statement every day, but it’s not going to change the looming investigations into her conduct as Secretary of State.  And of course the GOP is holding back its real anti-Hillary ammunition until she’s the nominee.  Then we’ll all be plunged backward into the endless nightmare of the Clinton years–it will be pure hell!
I’m hoping, once we get to the debates, that Martin O’Malley can show himself to best advantage.  He was an experienced mayor and governor of Maryland, and he has an attractive, low-key temperament. He’s presented himself very well thus far in media interviews.  He’s relaxed, open, and actually enjoys being with people–which Hillary clearly does not. He has an outgoing, fun-loving Irish pol quality, which many people nostalgically remember from the Kennedy years.
O’Malley, really? He hasn’t caught much traction, has been supplanted by Sanders in hearts and minds – and was very damaged by the protests in Baltimore, and the stories about his very aggressive police practices, and the way those strategies created the environment in which Freddie Gray died in custody.
Yes, that’s true, but we’re still very early in the process.  I feel that once we get to the debates, O’Malley’s actual hands-on, day-to-day experience with complex big-city governance will get traction. Right now we’re in a volatile period of slogans being shouted and passions about racial and immigrant issues boiling over. That’s what’s currently driving the news, but we’re not at the point where people are sitting in front of their T.V.s and intently assessing candidates for the presidency. How is this person handling him or herself behind the podium? How is that person responding to questions or conflict? The actual debates are when the electorate is auditioning candidates for the presidency.  That’s where Obama gained big on Hillary.
If Biden enters, I’m not counting him out. He’s going to suck up a lot of Hillary’s support. I’ve never taken Biden too seriously–he always seemed like a lightweight.  But the death of his son Beau, a nice guy with military experience who seemed on track for the presidency, has given Biden more gravitas than he ever had before.  The way he handled himself at Beau’s funeral–standing for five hours, personally greeting all callers. Biden comes in as someone who doesn’t have enemies and who knows the departments of government and international affairs.  He handles himself well in debates–even though Sarah Palin defeated him!
Biden doesn’t have any of Hillary’s negatives.  Why do we want another divisive, polarizing figure in the White House? Who wants a president that half the country already hates? Does that make any sense? At a time when the U.S. has to negotiate with hostile or untrustworthy foreign states, you’d think we would want a president who has the support and good will of the nation.  People are tired of the polarization and looking for a uniter!
David Daley is the editor-in-chief of Salon

Washington Post Ranks Top 10 Republican Presidential Candidates

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How we rank the 10 men most likely to win the Republican nomination — now with (much) more Trump!

The obvious problem when sitting down (or standing up) and trying to rank the 10 people most likely to wind up as the Republican presidential nominee next year can be summed up in two words: Donald Trump.
On one hand, Trump is way ahead in most national polls on the primary race and even leads (or comes close to leading) in surveys conducted in early-voting states like Iowa and New Hampshire.
On the other, he is Donald Trump.
(The last time I ranked the 2016 GOP field -- June 12 -- Trump was barely a blip on the radar and didn't crack the top 10.)
I put the question of where to rank Trump to the Twitter world on Thursday afternoon -- and the responses were, well, all over the place.




I also put the Trump question to the five senior Republican strategists who aren't working for one of the 17 GOPers running for the nomination currently. (I kid; there are at least 10 unaligned GOP operatives.) What I got back from that group surprised me: They were much more bullish on Trump's chances than I expected -- with several arguing that Trump absolutely belonged in the top tier.
I won't spoil the surprise as to where The Donald wound up.  You have to scroll down for that. Remember that the candidates are ranked by their likelihood of winding up as the Republican nominee next year. And, remember too that there are a lot of months between now and then. So, these ratings can and will change.
10. Ben Carson: Carson's name came up quite a bit during my conversations with Republicans watching the race closely.  Not that the famed pediatric neurosurgeon would win but that he would likely stick around for an extended period of time in the race due to his very loyal core group of supporters.  It's worth noting that while people like Chris Christie and Rick Perry are fighting to stay in the top 10 for next week's debate, Carson has been solidly in the top 10 for quite a while now. (Previous ranking: N/A)
 9. Chris Christie: The New Jersey governor hangs on in the top 10 despite the fact that reports out of New Hampshire aren't all that encouraging. Why? Because I still think he is one of the most naturally talented candidates in the field and , at some point over the next six months, will get a second look from some GOP voters. But, he's clearly nowhere close to where he wants to be. (Previous ranking: 8)
8.  Rand Paul: There's one race that the Kentucky Senator is winning going away at the moment: Most disappointing candidate. Paul's fundraising -- both for his campaign committee and his super PAC -- were dismal and there seems to be dissension within his campaign ranks. Paul appears to be going back to his libertarian roots to regain his footing; that's a good move for his chances of remaining in the race for an extended period of time but likely decreases his chances of actually winning. (Previous ranking: 6)
7. Mike Huckabee Huckabee is going to Huckabee.  The former Arkansas governor has always been a poor fundraiser -- and he kept up that reputation over the first six months of the yearHe's also viewed himself as a major player in the culture wars too, which gets him into trouble with mainstream America fairly regularly. (The latest: His ill-advised "ovens" comment about Israelis and the Iran deal.)  Huckabee is talented. But he just never seems to get that talent isn't enough. (Previous ranking: 7)
6. Ted Cruz: Cruz's great strength in this race has long been that he was unchallenged for the tea party lane. Well, now Trump has barged into that lane and, for the the moment, taken it over.  Cruz's latest dust-up with establishment Republicans in the Senate won't hurt him with voters but it ensures that that powerful group will be even more dead-set on keeping the nomination from him. Cruz will have enough money and is right on the issues for the Republican base. But, Trump's emergence badly complicates his path to the nomination. (Previous ranking: 4)
5. John Kasich: Early returns for the Ohio governor are promising. An ad buy in New Hampshire bumped up his numbers in that crucial early-voting state and his polling numbers have moved up nationally as well -- likelyensuring him a spot in the first debate in his home state next week.  That said, Kasich's announcement speech was, um, terrible, and if he can't find a more coherent (and short) message going forward that could be problematic. (Previous ranking: 5)
4. Donald Trump: Yes, as of right now, Donald J. Trump is the fourth likeliest Republican to be the party's nominee.  I can't really believe it either. But Trump's poll numbers have not only risen rapidly but showed some level of durability, and every Republican strategist I talked to put him in the top four -- and many ranked him as high as two or three.  I still don't know if Trump can sustain his appeal with voters but as of today, it is what it is. (And, yes, I hate that phrase.) (Previous ranking: N/A)
3. Scott Walker: The Wisconsin governor has withstood the Trump Bump in Iowa and still looks like a favorite to win the first-in-the-nation caucuses there next February.  Among the Republicans I spoke with, real doubts remain about how ready Walker is for the big stage and how talented he actually is as a candidate.  I think his performance thus far has been mediocre with occasional moments of good to very good. Is that enough? (Previous ranking: 3)
2. Marco Rubio: There's no debate that the Florida Senator's poll numbers have dipped since the extended bump he received following his announcement. But, on the fundamentals, Rubio is in very good shape. His fundraising performance was quite strong, he remains the second choice of lots and lots of Republicans and conservative GOPers really like him. The most obvious problem for Rubio is that he doesn't have an early state where he is running very well; South Carolina seems his likeliest target. (Previous ranking: 1)
1. Jeb Bush: Amidst all of the Trumpiness of the race's last six week, the former Florida governor has looked more and more like the adult in the room -- the one guy willing to stand up and say
"Wait, a minute. What exactly are we doing here?" Bush runs little risk in taking on Trump since Trump supporters are never going to be Bush supporters and vice versa.  Plus, Bush's $114 million raised is an stunning number that ensures he will be in the race for as long as he wants to be in it. One note: Bush still has problems with the GOP base. But, if Trump becomes the candidate of the GOP base, it
s hard to see Bush losing that one-on-one fight. (Previous ranking: 2)


Chris Cillizza writes “The Fix,” a politics blog for the Washington Post. He also covers the White House.

Elle: "Why White Women Should Read Ta-Nehisi Coates' Book, Between The World And Me"

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"Ta-Nehisi Coates' Case Against American Exceptionalism"
The Week

WHY WHITE WOMEN SHOULD READ TA-NEHISI COATES' BOOK

That Between the World and Me was explicitly not written for white people (like me) is exactly why we should read it.

The most important book of the year, if not the decade, may be Between the World and Me, Atlantic staff writer Ta-Nehisi Coates' letter to his son about racism and being black in America today.  Speaking about the launch party for his book, held at the Union Baptist Church in Baltimore, Coates told the New York Times, "It was very, very important, as far as I was concerned, that the book be launched in an African-American space. I wanted to be very clear about who the book was written for, how it was written, what it came out of."
In other words, this is a book by a black author for black audiences about black reality, identity, and outrage.  Also true: White people can and should read it. 
Here's a news flash: Most books in our so-called literary canon are written by white authors. In 2011, 88 percent of the books reviewed by the New York Timeswere written by white authors. In 2015, 100 percent of the books recommended as "summer reads" by the New York Times were by white authors. Implicitly, they're also written for white readers. A twist on the old adage—don't just write what you know, write for who you know. A 2014 survey found that 75 percent of white Americans have all-white social networks. Want to break out of the reality of modern racial segregation? Start with your bookshelf. And hopefully expand your mind.
That Between the World and Me was explicitly not written for white people (like me) is exactly why we should read it. Because part of the ideology of white supremacy and racial hierarchy is the idea that everything white is better, and that people of color should learn from how white people dress and work and raise their kids and write. Want to subvert that subtle, implicit bias?  Tweeting #BlackLivesMatter is good, but expanding your intellectual as well as actual interpersonal relationships is even better. And especially if you live in a very white part of America, a book is a great place to start.
Plus Coates' book is a challenging one.  This is not some multicultural "Kumbaya" edition. This is all hard truths and sharp edges. Coates forces white people—those he calls "people who believe themselves to be white" or "Dreamers"—to face the brutal reality of black oppression in America's past and present:
As slaves we were this country's first windfall, the down payment on its freedom. After the ruin and liberation of the Civil War came Redemption for the unrepentant South and Reunion, and our body's became this country's second mortgage.  In the New Deal we were their guest room, their finished basement. And today, with a sprawling prison system, which has turned the warehousing of black bodies into a jobs program for Dreamers and a lucrative investment for Dreamers; today, when 8 percent of the world's prisoners are black men, our bodies have refinanced the Dream of being white. Black life is cheap, but in America black bodies are a natural resources of incomparable value.
It is impossible to read his text without wincing. And it should be. As the writer Rebecca Carroll has suggested, white discomfort is progress. "In my experience, white people can stand to feel badly, ashamed, annoyed, uncomfortable for about 25 seconds," Carroll has written. "But the right track is to feel all of that and then some for, say, 25 weeks. To start."
To pluck out a recent example from pop culture, when Nicki Minaj tweeted about her lack of Grammy nominations ("When the 'other' girls drop a video that breaks records and impacts culture they get that nomination"), she was critiquing the lack of recognition for artists of color in the music business. But Taylor Swift took it personally and got defensive. Minaj later clarified on Instagram that her comments had nothing to do with any of the other artists and "everything to do with a system that doesn't credit black women for their contributions to pop culture as freely/quickly as they reward others." Swift, to some credit, later tweeted, "I thought I was being called out. I missed the point, I misunderstood, then misspoke. I'm sorry, Nicki." Though it would have been great if Swift also lent her voice and power to Minaj's point—recognizing that white privilege plays a huge role in why artists like Swift and Miley Cyrus and Justin Bieber get rich and famous for appropriating culture originated by less-recognized black artists. Swift and others don't need to feel guilty for that; they didn't create racial bias. But they do need to acknowledge it and feel uncomfortable about it and start speaking up to name and validate that reality.
After all, it's not Nicki Minaj or Ta-Nehisi Coates' responsibility to undo systemic racism. Those of us who, by virtue of our white skin, have benefitted from white supremacy and racial hierarchy are the ones who must destroy it. As Coates writes:
[W]e cannot will ourselves to an escape on our own. Perhaps that was, is, the hope of the movement: to awaken the Dreamers, to rouse them to the facts of what their need to be white, to talk like they are white, to think that they are white, which is to think that they are beyond the design flaws of humanity, has done to the world.
But, Coates adds, "I am convinced that the Dreamers, at least the Dreamers of today, would rather live white than live free." If that assertion also makes you uncomfortable, good. Read all of Between the World and Me and get even more uncomfortable. Discomfort, self-critique, and self-awareness are progress. Then try to spend the rest of your life helping yourself and the world around you get free.
Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates, $14.40, amazon.com

Israelis' Vengeance Attack Kills 18 Month Old Palestinian

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Typical destruction wrought by Israeli military in Gaza.
"Like shooting fish in a barrel."

It is often said, and with good reason, that Israel is America's 51st state.
The tail that wags the dog.

"Is Israel The World's Worst Terror State? An Israeli General's Son Thinks So"

Israeli police: Palestinian toddler killed, relatives injured in 'price tag' attack

(CNN) A Palestinian's home was burned during a "price tag" attack Friday that killed a toddler and critically injured at least three other relatives, Israeli and Palestinian officials said.
The injured were the toddler's parents and a brother, said Ghassan Douglass, a Palestinian official in charge of settlement activity north of the West Bank, where the attack occurred.
The boy who died, Ali Saad Dawabsha, was about 18 months old, Douglass said.
Authorities found the words "price tag" on the walls of the house in Duma, said Luba Samri, a spokeswoman for Israeli police.
A "price tag" attack is a term used by radical Israeli settlers to denote reprisal against Palestinians in response to moves by the Israeli government to evacuate illegal West Bank outposts, according to officials.
Both Israelis and Palestinians described it as a terrorist attack, but the latter said it blamed Israel.
    "We hold the Israeli government fully responsible for the brutal assassination of the toddler Ali Saad Dawabsha," PLO official Saeb Erekat said in a statement. "This is a direct consequence of decades of impunity given by the Israeli government to settler terrorism."
    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was "shocked over this reprehensible and horrific" attack.
    "Israel takes a strong line against terrorism regardless of who the perpetrators are. I have ordered the security forces to use all means at their disposal to apprehend the murderers and bring them to justice," he said.
    Ahmad Asaf , a spokesman for Palestinian political party Fatah, also blamed the attack on the Israeli government. He urged the United Nations to take steps toward justice.
    A preliminary investigation shows suspects entered the village at night, set homes ablaze and sprayed graffiti on them.
    "This attack against civilians is nothing short of a barbaric act of terrorism. A comprehensive investigation is underway in order to find the terrorists and bring them to justice," said Lt. Col. Peter Lerner of the Israeli Defense Forces.

    WHO: Trials Show New Ebola Vaccine Is "Highly Effective"

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    "Ebola Represents A Trivial Threat To Americans' Health"

    WHO: Trials show new Ebola vaccine is 'highly effective'

    (CNN)
    A newly developed vaccine against the deadlyEbola virus is "highly effective" and could help prevent its spread in the current and future outbreaks, the World Health Organization said Friday.
    Trials of the single-dose VSV-EBOV vaccine began in March in Guinea -- one of three West African nations at the center of the recent outbreak -- and have shown such promise that this week it was decided to extend immediate vaccination to "all people at risk" after close contact with an infected person, a WHO statement said.
    "This is an extremely promising development," said Dr. Margaret Chan, the body's director-general.
    "The credit goes to the Guinean government, the people living in the communities and our partners in this project. An effective vaccine will be another very important tool for both current and future Ebola outbreaks."
    More research is needed, but the results so far on this trial show 100% efficacy.
    It will take weeks at the least, and possibly a couple of months, for more supply to be made, according to Chan.
      Researchers have been using a "ring" strategy -- based on that used in smallpox eradication in the 1970s -- to test the vaccine's effectiveness.
      "The premise is that by vaccinating all people who have come into contact with an infected person you create a protective 'ring' and stop the virus from spreading further," said John-Arne Rottingen of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, which has been involved in implementing the trial.

      Relatives, co-workers, health workers get jab

      To date, more than 4,000 close contacts of almost 100 Ebola patients, including family members, neighbors and co-workers, have voluntarily participated in the trial, the WHO statement said.
      Until this week, half were vaccinated three weeks after the identification of an infected patient and others straight away, to allow for comparison of the results. The randomization was stopped on Sunday "to allow for all people at risk to receive the vaccine immediately, and to minimize the time necessary to gather more conclusive evidence needed for eventual licensure of the product," the WHO said.
      The trial will now include 13- to 17-year-olds, and possibly children from age 6, on the basis of new evidence of the vaccine's safety, it added.
      WHO: New Ebola vaccine 'highly effective'
      WHO: New Ebola vaccine 'highly effective' 01:01
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      The vaccine has also been given to 1,200 front-line health workers, laboratory staff, cleaning staff and burial teams, Doctors Without Borders said.
      The VSV-EBOV vaccine was developed by the Public Health Agency of Canada and licensed to Merck and NewLink.
      The Guinea trial is being implemented by the Guinean authorities, the WHO, Doctors Without Borders and the Norwegian Institute of Public Health, with support from international and national organizations.
      Medical journal The Lancet published the phase three trial's interim results Friday.
      Dr. Bertrand Draguez, who's been leading Doctors Without Borders efforts to find new tools to combat Ebola, said more data was needed -- for example, on how soon protection kicks in after vaccination and how long it lasts -- but that the results suggest a "unique breakthrough" in fighting the disease.
      "Even if the sample size is quite small and more research and analysis is needed, the enormity of the public health emergency should lead us to continue using this vaccine right now to protect those who might get exposed to the disease: contacts of infected patients and front-line workers," he said.
      VSV-EBOV is an experimental vaccine against Ebola.
      Because the virus is concentrated in "hot spots" across the region, it makes more sense to focus on vaccinating those close to infected patients and front-line workers than to embark on a mass vaccination campaign, he said.
      Jesse L. Goodman, professor of medicine at Georgetown University Medical Center in Washington, said the results published in The Lancet provided "exciting preliminary evidence" that the vaccine is likely to be effective but also cautioned that further analysis was needed.
      "Nonetheless, the degree of protection reported seems convincing," he said.
      The concerted effort to find a vaccine reflects the severity of the crisis presented by Ebola, spread through contact with body fluids from an infected person or contaminated objects from infected persons. Other vaccines are also being tested.

      WHO: Lowest weekly total in more than a year

      There have been more than 11,000 reported deaths in the three worst-affected countries -- Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia -- since the epidemic took hold last year.
      The number of new Ebola cases is now far below that of the outbreak's peak, but it has remained stubbornly difficult to eradicate.
      This is the messy truth about Ebola
      This is the messy truth about Ebola 02:18
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      On Sunday, the WHO reported seven Ebola cases were confirmed in the preceding week -- four in Guinea and three in Sierra Leone.
      "This is the lowest weekly total for over a year, and comes after 8 consecutive weeks during which case incidence had plateaued at between 20 and 30 cases per week," the WHO said.
      Two people in Liberia, including a 17-year-old in Nidonwin, have died of Ebola since the end of June, weeks after the WHO declared the nation free of the disease. At the time, though, officials warned outbreaks in Guinea and Sierra Leone ran the risk of bringing the virus back to Liberia, where more than 4,000 people died after contracting it.
      All 33 contacts in Liberia who have been followed up since the latest infections there are two days from completing the 21-day period to be declared free of the disease.

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