Two of the most popular  liberal news sites are calling for violence against Republicans for  obstructing the radical agenda of President Barack Obama.
CNN and Huffington Post have each published op-eds this past week by  regular contributors with headlines that explicitly call for Obama to  use violent gangland tactics against his political opponents.
CNN published a column by Roland Martin on February 11 with the  headline, Time for Obama to go ‘gangsta’ on GOP.
Martin concluded the article with a plea for Obama to emulate the  violent tactics of the Prohibition-era Chicago mob boss Al Capone.
Obama’s critics keep blasting him for  Chicago-style politics. So, fine. Channel your inner Al Capone and go  gangsta against your foes. Let ‘em know that if they aren’t with you,  they are against you, and will pay the price.
The Huffington Post followed-up with their own call for gangland  violence against Republicans with the publication on February 14 of a  column  by David Bourgeois with the title, Obama Better Start Breaking  Kneecaps.
Bourgeois concludes his article with this call for gangland violence.
You’ve given it your best shot, you’ve tried  numerous times to talk with the Republicans, to negotiate, to meet them  halfway on every single matter before the American people. But they hate  you for many reasons. It’s time you break kneecaps (bold in original).  It’s time to destroy the Republican Party. They don’t deserve a seat at  the table when all they want to do is score political points by being  the Party of No.
Huffington Post publisher Arianna Huffington recently excoriated Fox  News chief Roger Ailes for allegedly provocative rhetoric by Fox host  Glenn Beck.
    HUFFINGTON: Well, Roger, it’s not a question  of picking a fight. And aren’t you concerned about the language that  Glenn Beck is using, which is, after all, inciting the American people?  There is a lot of suffering out there, as you know, and when he talks  about people being slaughtered, about who is going to be the next in the  killing spree…
    …It’s not about the word police. It’s about something deeper. It’s  about the fact that there is a tradition as the historian Richard  Hofstetter said, in American politics, of the paranoid style. And the  paranoid style is dangerous when there is real pain out there.
Ailes  defended Beck, saying he was accurately talking about the governments  of Hitler and Stalin.
Violent rhetoric such as that espoused by CNN and the Huffington Post is  usually found in the bowels of Internet discussion forums, not as  sanctioned op-ed headlines on news sites with White House press passes.
CNN and Huffington Post would be well-advised to retract the calls to  violence and issue apologies to Republicans before Obama supporters are  incited by their violent rhetoric and start going gangsta and break  kneecaps of Republicans.
If they won’t do that of their own volition, then White House press  secretary Robert Gibbs should shame them into doing so. Surely the Obama  administration does not countenance violence against their domestic  political opponents.
 
VIENNA – Russia joined the U.S. and  France in urging Iran to stop enriching uranium to higher levels in a  statement shared Tuesday with The Associated Press, suggesting the  project reinforced suspicions that Tehran is seeking to make nuclear  weapons.
Shrugging off international concerns, Iranian  President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced the country was moving ahead to  expand its enrichment capacities by installing more advanced machinery  at its main enrichment facility.
Ahmadinejad told reporters in  Tehran the centrifuges are not yet operational but are five times more  efficient than the model now in use at its Natanz enrichment plant.
Because  enrichment can produce both nuclear weapons as well as reactor fuel,  Iran is under three set of U.N. Security Council sanctions for refusing  to stop its program. Its determination to expand such activities had  been criticized worldwide even before an announcement earlier this month  that Tehran would enrich to a higher level.
In a confidential  letter to the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the three  world powers questioned Tehran's assertion that it had started the  higher enrichment project to provide fuel to a research reactor  providing medical isotopes for cancer patients.
The one-page  letter was significant in reflecting unified Russian and Western  opposition to Iran's move. Russia in the past has often put the brakes  on Western attempts to penalize Tehran for defying U.N. Security Council  demands that it freeze its enrichment program, which can produce both  nuclear fuel and the fissile core of warheads.
"If Iran goes ahead  with this escalation, it would raise fresh concerns about Iran's  nuclear intentions, in light of the fact that Iran cannot produced the  needed nuclear fuel in time" to refuel the research reactor, said the  letter.
Iran's decision to enrich to the 20-percent  level is "wholly unjustified, contrary to U.N. Security Council  resolutions and represent(s) a further step toward a capability to  produce highly enriched uranium," said the letter to IAEA chief Yukiya  Amano.
The 20-percent mark represents the threshold between  low-enriched and high-enriched uranium.
Although warhead material  must be enriched to a level of 90 percent or more, just getting its  present stockpile to the 20 percent mark would be a major step for  Iran's nuclear program. While enriching to 20 percent would take about  one year, using up to 2,000 centrifuges at Tehran's underground Natanz  facility, any next step — moving from 20 to 90 percent — would take only  half a year and between 500-1,000 centrifuges.
Since its  clandestine enrichment program became known eight years ago, Iran has  insisted it is meant only to generate nuclear fuel. But its secrecy and  refusal to cooperate with an IAEA probe of allegations that it  experimented with aspects of a weapons program had increased fears about  its nuclear ambitions even before President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's Feb.7  announcement that Iran will raise the enrichment bar.
 
Vancouver: Vancouver Olympics schedule,  Vancouver Olympic medals & Vancouver Olympics results. Death of a  Georgian luge racer during a practice run at Vancouver Winter Olympics,  lights out to some concerns over soaring risk factors in the Games. In  response to Olympic officials' explanation of Nodar Kumaritashvili's  crash on the track that it was a fault from the athlete, voices were  raised against high speed tracks, even from the president of Republic of  Georgia.
The athletes turned up for the Games at  Vancouver are the best, and well-trained in their respective sporting  itmes. Anyway, it is sure that almost all items at the Games, which  include luge, skeleton, aerial skiing or snowboarding, the race for  faster, higher, more air have a touch of risk.  
"The  Winter Olympics has always had dangerous sports, but it's getting worse.  A lot of it has to do with maybe you want the ratings, and danger is  good for ratings. Perhaps not so good for the athletes", said Olympics  historian David Wallechinsky.
According to statistics  of past Games, there were thousands of accidents happened in the winter  Olympics. 139,332 American athletes were injured while skiing in 2007 ,  and another 164,002, hurt during snowboarding in the same year. Almost  all items at the games have recorded a similar kind accident cases.
The  2010 Winter Olympics has finally arrived. It was announced that there  will be a total of 15 winter sports events that will be part of the 2010  Winter Olympics which include alpine skiing, Biathlon, bobsleigh,  cross-country skiing, curling, figure skating, freestyle skiing, ice  hockey, luge, nordic combined, short track speed skating, skeleton, ski  jumping, snowboarding, and Speed skating. 82 participating countries  will compete in these games. Peru, Pakistan, Montenegro, Serbia, Ghana,  Colombia, and Cayman Islands, will make their winter Olympic debuts but  other countries like Venezuela, Virgin Islands, Thailand, Madagascar,  Luxembourg, Kenya, and Costa Rica, which competed at the previous Winter  Games in Turin will not participate in Vancouver. 
 
Labels:
Chicago News,
Fastnacht Day,
Fat Tuesday,
Fausnaught Day,
Lent,
Packzi,
Paczki,
Paczki Day,
Paczki Nutrition Facts,
Paczki Pronunciation,
Paczki Recipe,
Paczki Recipes
 
 
It is Paczki Day today, Feb.  16, 2010 - also known as Fastnacht Day and Fat Tuesday.
Paczki  Day is a Polish tradition in which people use up lard, sugar and eggs  in preparation for Lent, which begins the day after.
Paczki  (pronounced POONCH-key), or pączek, is described by Dictionary.com as  follows: "A round Polish pastry similar to a doughnut, usually filled  with fruit and topped with sugar or icing."
Paczki  Day is particularly popular in American cities with large Polish  populations such as Chicago, Buffalo, and Detroit.
The  Polish American Journal provides further information including recipes  (small, large, old Warsaw, or old Polish) to prepare paczki yourself.
Celebrations  are being held across the Midwest to honor the day and local bakeries  are making extra paczki to accommodate Paczki Day.
 
She was cheered by legions of Carnival fans, but  7-year-old Julia Lira, the youngest drum corps queen in memory at Rio's  lavish party, broke down crying after being surrounded by cameras early  Monday.
Dressed in a sequined halter top and a miniskirt  made of purple feathers, the youngster tentatively stepped through the  first 50 yards of the parade. Her father -- the president of the  parading Viradouro samba group -- then took her by the hand and  presented her to the crowd. She smiled big for the photographers and  adoring fans.
But 10 minutes into the group's parade and  surrounded by dozens of photographers and television cameramen, the  youngster broke down in tears and was immediately scooped up into the  arms of her unofficial handler, the group's spokeswoman Joice Hurtado,  and taken away from the attention.
After a five-minute cool  down, Julia returned to her place in front of the group's massive drum  line, but was quickly whisked through the parade grounds by her father  and out of the media's eye.
"She just got scared after  having all those cameras thrust in her face," Hurtado said after the  parade. "After we got her into her mother's arms, she quickly calmed  down and put on a great show."
While Julia bounced back and  began to samba at the helm of the parade, television coverage broadcast  to millions in Brazil steered clear of showing any more shots of her. 
Before  the parade began, Julia's father, Marco Lira, said that "she's happy,  she is ready to 
dance."
After the parade, however,  both father and daughter looked tired and emotionally exhausted, though  Julia managed a few furtive smiles but no words when asked how she liked  the event.
Some in the audience thought she was not ready for  the spotlight
"She is too young to be a drum corps queen," said  Marister Deniz, 60, who was watching from the stands. "A girl that size  shouldn't be thrust in such a role."
But Jorge Elias Souza, a  member of the Viradouro drum corps, said he was proud of the girl  regardless.
"She is the embodiment of all the love in our  school. Normally a famous person is the drum corps queen, but her father  is our president and she is the center of our family," he said. Putting  Julia in the Carnival role drew the ire of child welfare advocates who  were against a young girl taking on a role normally reserved for sultry  models and actresses.
Carlos Nicodemos, director of the Rio de Janeiro  state Council for the Defense of Children and Adolescents, two weeks ago  asked a judge to keep the girl from dancing, arguing that "what we  can't allow is putting a 7-year-old girl in a role that traditionally  for Carnival has a very sexual focus."
A judge ruled last week that  the girl could join the parade, and the overwhelming response in Brazil  was a shrug and acceptance.
Before Julia took to the parade ground, the Rio's reigning Carnival  Queen Shayene Cesario Vieira, 24, said she thought "it's cool" that the  girl would participate.
"I don't remember hearing of a drum corps queen being so young," she  said. "But her dad is the president of the group and if he thinks it's  OK, it's OK.
In the two weeks leading up to the Carnival parade,  Marco Lira said repeatedly that he and his wife would be with the girl  at all times and they would carefully watch to make sure she doesn't get  too tired during the parade. Both he and his wife were with the girl  through the entire parade.
The Viradouro samba group has a history of  controversial themes. A 2008 float portrayed Hitler amid a sea of naked  mannequins representing Holocaust victims. A judge banned that float  from being in the parade.
Nicodemos has also suggested that the samba  group put Julia into her role to get extra attention -- a charge  strongly denied by her father.
As 12 top-tier Rio samba  schools compete fiercely in the parades that are broadcast to viewers  nationwide, massive street parties continued to erupt across the city.
Tourism  officials said almost 730,000 visitors arrived in Rio this year for the  big party -- a 5 percent increase over last year.
It's the  first Carnival since Rio was named as host to the 2016 Olympics, and  officials have been working hard to show that the city, known for the  drug-gang violence that pervades its slums, can safely host major  events.
There have been few reports of violence during the  party so far.
A 37-year-old Dutch tourist was shot by a robber as  he tried to defend a Dutch woman he was with, police said. A spokesman  for the Silvestre Hospital said Alexander Kors Johannes had been  operated on and was in stable condition Sunday.
 
In the film  world, Kevin Smith is larger than life. And in the real world, he's too  big to fly on an airplane. The director, actor and comedian was escorted  off an airplane Saturday because he could not fit comfortably in his  seat.
Smith boarded a flight from Oakland to Burbank,  Ca, but was soon escorted off the flight because he was encroaching upon  the comfort of his fellow passengers.
"If a customer cannot  comfortably lower the armrest and infringes on a portion of another  seat, a customer seated adjacent would be very uncomfortable and a  timely exit from the aircraft in the event of an emergency might be  compromised if we allow a cramped, restricted seating arrangement,"  Southwest said.
Of course, Smith was not  happy about it. The Mallrats director took to Twitter soon after with a  series of rants.
"I broke no regulation, offered no 'safety  risk' (what, was I gonna roll on a fellow passenger?)" he wrote. "I saw  someone bigger than me on THAT flight! But I wasn't about to throw a  fellow Fatty under the plane as I'm being profiled. But he & I  made eye contact, & he was like 'Please don't tell...'"
"Don't  worry," he added. "[The] wall of the plane was opened & I was  airlifted out while Richard Simmons supervised."
Southwest  Airlines said they called Smith to offer their "heartfelt apologies,"  but reiterated that his removal was for the "safety and comfort of all  customers."
Smith has now joked he wants to start a boycott  of the airlines, and says that he will try to never fly Southwest again.
"The  SouthwestAir Diet. How it works: you're publicly shamed into a slimmer  figure. Crying the weight right off has never been easier!"
 
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia – U.S. Secretary of State  Hillary Rodham Clinton said Monday Iran is sliding into a military  dictatorship, a new assessment suggesting a rockier road ahead for  U.S.-led efforts to stop Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.
As  the first high-level Obama administration official to make such an  accusation, Clinton was reflecting an ever-dimming outlook for  persuading Iran to negotiate limits on its nuclear program, which it has  insisted is intended only for peaceful purposes. The U.S. and others —  including the two Gulf countries Clinton visited Sunday and Monday —  believe Iran is headed for a nuclear bomb capability.
Clinton  also was revealing the logic of the administration's plan to target the  Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps with a new round of international  sanctions intended to compel Iran to curb its nuclear ambitions before  it increases the likelihood of a military clash.
Clinton  flew to Riyadh, the Saudi capital, and then was driven in King  Abdullah's private bus about 65 miles northeast to Rawdat Khurayim, a  secluded royal hunting retreat where the vacationing king hosted her for  lunch — and where a large-screen TV was on. Afterward they met  privately in his elaborately appointed tent, which includes five crystal  chandeliers in the reception room. Clinton also met with Saudi Foreign  Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal in Riyadh and later was flying to Jeddah  on the Red Sea coast.
Earlier in the day, in Doha,  Qatar, Clinton spoke bluntly about Iranian behavior and what she called  the Obama administration's view of Iran as increasingly dominated by the  Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Last week the U.S.  Treasury Department announced that it was freezing the assets in U.S.  jurisdictions of a Revolutionary Guard general and four subsidiaries of a  previously penalized construction company he runs because of their  alleged involvement in producing and spreading weapons of mass  destruction.
The Revolutionary Guard has long been a pillar of  Iran's regime as a force separate from the ordinary armed forces. The  Guard now has a hand in every critical area, including missile  development, oil resources, dam building, road construction,  telecommunications and nuclear technology.
It  also has absorbed the paramilitary Basij as a full-fledged part of its  command structure — giving the militia greater funding and a stronger  presence in Iran's internal politics.
"The evidence we've seen  of this increasing decision-making (by the Revolutionary Guard) cuts  across all areas of Iranian security policy, and certainly nuclear  policy is at the core of it," Clinton told reporters flying with her  from Doha to Saudi Arabia.
Asked if the U.S. was  planning a military attack on Iran, Clinton said "no."
The  United States is focused on gaining international support for sanctions  "that will be particularly aimed at those enterprises controlled by the  Revolutionary Guard, which we believe is in effect supplanting the  government of Iran," she said.
Meanwhile, a  semi-official news agency quoted the head of Iran's nuclear program as  saying the country received a new proposal last week from the United  States, Russia and France, three of the countries trying to rein in  Tehran's uranium enrichment program.
Iran said that it  was studying the joint proposal purportedly made after the country  announced last week it had begun enriching uranium to a higher level  than previously acknowledged. The ILNA news agency quoted Ali Akbar  Salehi as saying various countries have also offered Iran proposals on a  nuclear fuel swap, adding that Iran is reviewing all the proposals. He  did not provide any more details.
Private U.S. experts  on the Iranian regime said they agreed with Clinton's assessment of  Iran's drift toward military dominance.
"When  you rely on the power of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to  remain in power it is only a matter of time before the regime becomes a  paramilitary dictatorship — and it is about time we realize this,"  Iranian-born Fariborz Ghadar, a senior adviser at the Center for  Strategic and International Studies, said in an e-mail to The AP. He  said the current regime is "beholden to the Revolutionary Guard for its  survival."
Ray Takeyh, a former administration adviser  on Iran who now follows Iranian developments from the private Council on  Foreign Relations, said by e-mail, "The Revolutionary Guards are  increasingly represented in all aspects of governance."
Clinton  told reporters it appears the Revolutionary Guard is in charge of  Iran's controversial nuclear program and the country changing course  "depends on whether the clerical and political leadership begin to  reassert themselves."
She added: "I'm not  predicting what will happen but I think the trend with this greater and  greater military lock on leadership decisions should be disturbing to  Iranians as well as those of us on the outside."
Clinton  said the Iran that could emerge is "a far cry from the Islamic Republic  that had elections and different points of view within the leadership  circle. That is part of the reason that we are so concerned with what we  are seeing going on there."
In her Doha appearance,  Clinton also said she foresees a possible breakthrough soon in stalled  peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians.
"I'm  hopeful that this year will see the commencement of serious negotiations  that will cover every issue that is outstanding," she said, adding that  "everyone is anticipating" progress after more than a year of impasse  between the negotiating parties.
The peace talks broke  down in late 2008 with Israel's incursion into Gaza, which had launched  rocket attacks on Israeli targets.
Clinton spoke in an  interview with the Al-Jazeera TV network before a live audience of  mostly Arab students at the Carnegie Mellon campus.