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'Sesame Street' on YouTube to resume after hacking
CNS News
October 19, 2011
The YouTube channel for "Sesame Street" is expected to be back online shortly after hackers forced its shutdown by loading X-rated material.
'Ron Paul Represents the Ideology Republican Insiders Most Fear: Conservatism'
ronpaul2012.com
December 26, 2011
For many Republican politicians, being a "conservative" is similar to flying American flags at a used car lot. It's not that used car salesman are extra-patriotic, they just know that such symbolism is good for business. For them, it's mere marketing.
The same is true of many "conservative" Republicans. Every Republican from Sen. Lindsey Graham to Mitt Romney claims to be a "conservative" these days, without having the slightest semblance of a voting record to back up such a claim. Ron Paul has always remembered and represented what it means to be an actual conservative within a Republican Party that has largely forgotten what that term means in any substantive way. NPR's John Nichols elaborates on this important point further: Ron Paul represents the ideology that Republican insiders most fear: conservatism. Not the corrupt, inside-the-beltway construct that goes by that name, but actual conservatism.
'Real' Unemployment Rate Remains at 14.5 Percent
by Matt Cover
May 7, 2012
The "real" unemployment rate - a broader, more inclusive measure of the country's jobless picture than the one usually used - remained unchanged at 14.5 percent in April, as the economy created a paltry 115,000 jobs.
Known formally as the U-6 unemployment rate, this measure includes those formally counted as unemployed, those known to be marginally attached to the workforce, and those who are working part-time because they cannot find full-time work. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the U-6 unemployment rate remained flat in April at 14.5 percent - meaning some 22.8 million people are either unemployed, have stopped looking for work, or need full-time work but can only find part-time employment.
'Precatory' earns 7th-grader newspaper spelling bee title
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA)
by Ervin Dyer
July 16, 2011
Damian Metcalf, a home-schooled seventh grade student from Coraopolis, walked away as the winner in a nail-biter of a contest at the 53rd Annual Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Spelling Bee yesterday.
The first prize is an all-expense paid trip to Washington, D.C., where Damian will represent Western Pennsylyania at the National Spelling Bee in May.
'Poor for a day' simulates area's challenges
Manatee Connects
by Timothy R. Wolfrum
March 4, 2010
The first step in fighting poverty is understanding the struggle of the poor, according to the organization charged with leading that fight in Manatee County.
That's why the Manatee Community Action Agency is starting a program aimed at giving those who want to make a difference a crash course on what it means to be poor. The MCAA will hold a Life on the Edge workshop and panel discussion March 18 at First Baptist Church Family Life Center. It's the starting point of a $20,000 anti-poverty initiative paid for by federal stimulus funds.
'Police Said I Wasn't Raped Because He Didn't Orgasm'
secretsofthefed.com
July 24, 2013
The University of Southern California is facing a federal civil rights investigation after students filed a complaint alleging that the school ignored rapes on campus and even failed to prosecute attackers after they confessed.
One USC student, remaining anonymous, involved in the complaint stated that campus police decided the young woman wasn't raped because her attack did not orgasm. "Because he stopped, it was not rape," she was told, according to the complaint. "Even though his penis penetrated your vagina, because he stopped, it was not a crime." Because her attacker did not orgasm, campus police decided not to refer the case to Los Angeles Police. Another student cited a similar occurrence.
'Occupiers' Shut Down a Preschool
pjmedia.com
by Barry Rubin
December 2, 2011
Aided by clueless church members, Occupy Fort Myers sets up on school grounds.
For nine days, Occupiers in Ft. Myers, Florida, took over the grounds of a Unitarian Universalist church and an adjoining preschool, driving out parents, toddlers, and teachers for the week. Unitarian elders originally invited the group to squat on church property after Sheriff Mike Scott ordered them out of the city's Centennial Park for permit issues. But not one of the elders felt obligated to inform the staff of Creative Minds Montessori School, which rents permanent classroom facilities there.
'Not-at-home'-schoolers have lots of activities to choose from
Calgary Herald
by Jennifer Brown
September 4, 2008
With the popularity of home education growing in our city, local facilities are meeting the increased demand for daytime programming.
Ranging from school-group style field trips to registered programs at City of Calgary facilities, an array of specialty classes are now available during school hours. Home-school students can meet to learn new languages, take swim lessons, play a musical instrument, and participate in numerous programs previously exclusive to classroom groups.
'No More Che Day' To Educate Students Who Honor Man Who Murdered Thousands
by Ron Meyer
September 17, 2012
As if we didn't know the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) leans (more like trips) left, an official email commemorating the beginning of "Hispanic Heritage Month" included an image of known-murderer Che Guevara.
Not only is the image outrageous, it was also plagiarized. BuzzFeed reports, "that text and the photo appear to be lifted word-for-word and without attribution from the website Buzzle.com." The EPA released an apology - but, apparently, for the plagiarism, not for using the image of Che: "The email was drafted and sent by an individual employee, and without official clearance. Shortly after sending the email in question the individual apologized to her colleagues for the inadvertent error." It's hard to believe the employee didn't know who Che was, so she must be referring to the plagiarism.
'New Civility' Update: Wisconsin DoJ Investigating Several Death Threats
Michelle Malkin
by Doug Powers
March 10, 2011
After reading this story I waited for a tsunami of reminders from the left that we're supposed to be in the age of the "new tone" and this kind of language has no place in modern-day political dialogue, but I haven't yet heard a single one...