Never Say ‘Never Again’

Our foolish obsession with stopping the next attack.

By Juliette Kayyem

P091111CK-0217 President Barack Obama and Firs...

There will be no politicians at the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center. They are no longer invited. Organizers of the memorial have now decided that they want to make the solemn events more intimate. The decision also reflects the continuing struggle between New York City, New York state, and New Jersey over the memorial, the museum, control of the site, and, as a consequence, the memory of 9/11. Last year, on this same day, the political grandstanding got so outlandish that it led to a showdown between Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Michael Bloomberg over the choice of readings.

But, whatever the motivation, the United States may be ready for a change on how to remember 9/11 too. It is time to make it personal again, to make it less an event or even a call to action. The burden of tragedy is private, but the 9/11 families lost possession of a day that was ultimately theirs. So many of them — embracing new lives, spouses, children, professions, but forever cognizant that it might have been so much different — have, at long last, carried on. America needs to do the same.

Read More Never Say ‘Never Again’ – By Juliette Kayyem | Foreign Policy.

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In Boston attack, a reminder of the difficulty in foiling terrorist plots

In memory of the victims of the terrorist atta...

By Scott Wilson and Peter Finn

After nearly a dozen years of foiled plots, the United States on Monday suffered the first large-scale bombing since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, opened an era of heightened security affecting nearly every aspect of American life.The disruption of those plots underscores the enormous strides that the American national security apparatus has taken, including the adoption of policies that remain the subject of intense concern among human rights and civil liberties groups.But the success of the strike on the Boston Marathon, an international symbol of a city’s pride, highlights the enduring difficulty that U.S. officials face in impeding a determined attacker.In remarks Monday evening, President Obama did not label the bombings as terrorism. But a White House official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the incident was an “act of terror,” the same term that the president used in the aftermath of the attack on the U.S. diplomatic post in Benghazi, Libya, in September.A former counterterrorism official said the Boston attack didn’t appear to have the signature of a coordinated al-Qaeda bombing, in which a sophisticated explosive device packed with shrapnel is detonated in an enclosed space to maximize casualties. The evidence could point to a domestic group, but White House officials and investigators cautioned that it was too soon to link the attack to any particular kind of perpetrator.“At this stage, it’s perplexing,” said the former official, who would discuss an ongoing investigation only on the condition of anonymity. “It’s not a military or particularly iconic target like Times Square or the New York subway. This could be someone with limited or no foreign connections.”From the FBI to local police departments, law enforcement agencies have dramatically shifted their emphasis to counterterrorism over the past decade, gathering intelligence on both domestic and foreign extremist groups. The George W. Bush and Obama administrations have created an enormous global apparatus designed to track and target terrorists.But officials have always warned that the United States cannot prevent every attempted strike on U.S. soil. In some recent plots, authorities have benefited as much from luck as investigative skill.The last mass terrorist killing on U.S. soil was carried out by Maj. Nidal M. Hassan, an Army psychiatrist, who fatally shot 13 people and wounded 30 more at Fort Hood, Tex., in November 2009. Hassan had connections to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and the American-born Islamic cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, who was later killed by a U.S. drone strike in Yemen.But there has been a series of failed or foiled bomb plots since the Sept. 11 attacks.Less than three months after airliners crashed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, Richard Reid tried to detonate a shoe filled with explosives on a flight from Miami to Paris.Eight years later, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab attempted to set off explosives in his underwear on a commercial flight near Detroit.

Read More In Boston attack, a reminder of the difficulty in foiling terrorist plots – The Washington Post.

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Heads up

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Take a Moment…

Capture

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Assault on Wall Street

MV5BNzY3ODI4MjkyOF5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwNzg3ODIzOQ@@._V1_SY317_CR0,0,214,317_A man snaps! That’s the movie. Who doesn’t want to snap against Wall Street and banks? Assault on Wall Street opens on May 10, 2013 and stars Dominic Purcell, Erin Karpluk, Edward Furlong, John Heard, and Keith David.

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Elysium

MV5BMTkyNzk0MjA3MV5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwNjY4OTUzOQ@@__V1_SX214_Elysium is a film that makes a social statements about immigration, wealth disparity, and the environment. In the future, the super rich (1%) live on a space station named Elysium. The rest of us lives on an overcrowded, environmentally bankrupt Earth. Of course, the majority wants to be on Elysium. The super rich have enacted anti-immigration laws to keep them out. Elysium stars the incredible Jodi Foster  and Matt Damon. Elysium arrives on August 9, 2013.

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Lines Are Being Drawn In Hip-Hop & Rick Ross Is The First Casualty

Rick Ross @ Sound Academy in Toronto

by Dimas S.

You know whom I kind of feel bad for?

Rocko.

Dude, who’s a C-class rapper, at best, has the hottest song of his life and all of the track’s momentum is getting killed by a single line — one that he didn’t rap. And one — assuming he has final say in his own music — he didn’t think was offensive.

The song is the Rick Ross and Future-assisted “U.O.E.N.O.” And the song would be perfect if it wasn’t for this one Ross line:

“Put molly all in her champagne, she ain’t even know, took her home and I enjoy that, she ain’t even know it.”

Only in hip-hop could someone get away with a line that brazen. Actually, only in hip-hop prior to last month could someone get away with a line that brazen.

Because criticism of the song, which has grown into a minor hit, has been fierce. There’s been a number of blogs, vlogs, panels, some dream hampton rants and petitions, including one directed towards Reebok, a company that does business with Ross.

Directing your complaints to an adversary’s sponsors is an effective strategy. And it worked: Ross apologized, twice. First, last Friday during an interview with a radio station and again yesterday on Twitter.

In layman’s terms, both apologies sucked.

And, amazingly, the second one was even worse than the first:

(And, just to make sure those pesky business sponsors were paying attention:)

Anyone with half a brain cell can see why the apology is faulty: There was nothing foreign. The line was describing and promoting rape.

Nothing needs to be interpreted.

Here’s the thing, though: I am convinced he doesn’t think he did anything wrong.

And, in some ass-backward sense, he’s right: he was just following hip-hop’s twisted rules.

Since gangsta rap has been classified as a thing, the music has been lawless. Murder, robbery, drug dealing, and, yes, rape have all been fair game. From Eminem to Notorious B.I.G., some of hip-hop’s most glorified legends have described and promoted rape.

Hell, I’ve been looking at lists like the one Smoking Section did, of 32 Overlooked Rape Lyrics In Rap, and thinking about sh*t that they left off.

When Ross was writing that verse he assumed he was following the twisted rules of hip-hop, where it’s cool to kill our people and drug and rape our women.

But those rules switched up on him. I’m not sure why. Maybe it’s because of cases like Steubenville getting so much press. But we’re at a new place where we expect more decency from our rappers. I’m not arguing against it. F*ck no; it’s a fantastic thing.

I’m just confused why people feel like someone like Ross should know this. I mean it was only only four years ago that Ross rapped a line that was far more brutal on “Gunplay:”

“Tellin’ lies, getting n*ggas wives tied up and raped.”

Also, if we’ve arrived at a place where rape is off limits, don’t we need to apply these rules fairly?

While writing this blog, I couldn’t help but think about Tyler, the Creator, who dropped his Wolf album this week.

If Tyler rapped that “molly” line, would he be getting the venom Ross has gotten?

Nope.

I know this because he’s rapped far worse, unapologetically, and he’s still treated as a critical darling.

The reason is because we take Ross more literal, when, in fact, we shouldn’t. Ross is a cartoon and judging by his past, and his persona now, he should be treated with as much parody as Tyler is.

So both should receive the same kind of backlash when discussing rape.

And when discussing borders for hip-hop, why stop at rape? Shouldn’t we go further?

Maybe we should also make a rule that a 16-year-old who laughs at a kid dying on Twitter can’t make songs about killing people?

Man, don’t look at me for answers. I’m still trying to figure out the rules.

Read More Lines Are Being Drawn In Hip-Hop & Rick Ross Is The First Casualty By Dimas S. | Global Grind.

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5 Ways Our Tax Code Benefits the Rich and Screws Everyone Else

By Travis Waldron

Happy tax day!

cashToday is Tax Day, the day on which federal and state taxes are due for all Americans. Republicans have, of course, spent the year since Tax Day 2012 arguing that tax rates are too high and pushing for tax cuts for the wealthy at both the federal and state level. In reality, however, America’s tax code provides substantial benefits to the rich that working class Americans don’t get to enjoy.

State tax codes are heavily slanted toward the rich, as we’ve highlighted before. At the federal level, huge tax expenditures also make the tax code friendlier to the wealthiest Americans. The United States spends more than $1.3 trillion a year on tax expenditures, and while some of them help the middle class, many of them are aimed specifically at the wealthy, who receive an extra $250,000 a year in income thanks to tax breaks. Here are five ways the tax code benefits the wealthy:

1. Deductions: The majority of tax breaks come through deductions, and while several deductions have substantial benefits for working class Americans, the advantages for the wealthy are much larger. Because of the way they are structured, popular deductions like those for mortgage interest, retirement savings, and charitable giving provide far bigger benefits for the wealthy than they do for average Americans, creating an “upside-down” effect that gives the biggest tax breaks to those who need them least and making the tax code look “more progressive than it actually is.” President Obama has proposed capping individual deductions at 28 percent, meaning the wealthy would get the same benefit as taxpayers in the middle class tax bracket. Other proposals, such as converting all deductions to tax credits, would make the tax code even more fair for middle- and lower-class families.

2. Capital gains: The capital gains preference taxes income from investments at a lower rate than ordinary wage income, providing a huge tax break to investors. Republicans argue that the low capital gains rate boosts the economy, but there is little evidence that higher capital gains rates hurt the economy. Instead, the preference increases income inequality, since capital gains income is earned almost solely by the wealthy. Cuts to the capital gains rate since Ronald Reagan equalized it with tax rates on normal income, in fact, are “by far the largest contributor” to increased income inequality over the last three decades, according to recent studies.

3. Carried interest: The carried interest loophole, which President Obama closes in his recent budget proposal, benefits wealthy hedge fund managers who take their pay from investors’ profits instead of through management fees, which makes the income subject to the lower capital gains rate than ordinary income rates. The loophole applies to virtually no one, but it allows those who use it — wealthy hedge fund managers and private equity executives like Mitt Romney — to substantially lower their tax rates. Eliminating it would both make the tax code more equitable and save as much as $21 billion over 10 years.

4. Estate tax: The estate tax rose at the beginning of 2013, but the tax deal that helped avert the “fiscal cliff” also locked in huge exemptions for the wealthy. The estate tax now allows individuals to exempt up to $5.25 million from taxation, meaning heirs to a couple’s estate can inherit $10.5 million without paying taxes. The estate tax now applies to only the wealthiest 0.14 percent of Americans, and from the income that is passed down each year (almost entirely from wealthy families), it raises less than 1 percent of revenue.

5. Deductions for vacation homes: The mortgage interest tax deduction, aimed at promoting home ownership, allows homeowners to deduct interest paid on their second home as well. That obviously benefits the wealthy, since they are more likely to have second homes, but it gets worse: the deduction can also apply to large yachts that have sleeping spaces, giving a tax break to wealthy boat owners. This loophole alone costs the U.S. an estimated $10 billion each decade.

Read more 5 Ways Our Tax Code Benefits the Rich and Screws Everyone Else | Alternet.

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Old School Monday part II

RnBHere’s a new edition of R&B throwbacks! For some this maybe their first time listening to the artist but for us old heads it will bring back some good times. All of the songs are available on iTunes and Amazon. Enjoy!

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Dan Ariely – What makes us feel good about our work?

Interesting presentation by Dan Ariely. What makes me feel good or lack of is summed up in P.R.I.D.E. (P=Passion; I gotta have it, R=Respect; Respect me and I will do the same, I=Interest; I must be interested and challenged, D=Dollars; Pay me well and provide good benefits, E=Education; Provide a vehicle to better myself and be of more value. What about you?

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