Monday, October 9, 2017
FEMA head Brock Long dismisses San Juan mayor's complaints: 'Political noise'
![]() |
| FEMA Administrator Brock Long said his agency has "filtered out" San Juan Democrat Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz. (AP Photo/Carlos Giusti, Reuters/Jonathan Ernst, File) |
FEMA Administrator Brock Long said on Sunday that
as his agency responds to the crisis in Puerto Rico, it's also "filtered
out" San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz, adding: "We don't have time for
the political noise."
More than two weeks after Hurricane
Maria lashed the island, killing 36 people, Cruz tweeted Sunday:
"Increasingly painful to undestand the american people want to help and
US Gov does not want to help. WE NEED WATER!" She later wrote, "Power
collapses in San Juan hospital with 2 patients being transferred out.
Have requested support from @FEMA_Brock NOTHING!"
"We filtered out the mayor a long time ago," Long told ABC News' Martha Raddatz on "This Week" Sunday,
after Raddatz mentioned the tweets. "We don't have time for the
political noise. The bottom line is, is that we are making progress
everyday in conjunction with the governor."SAN JUAN MAYOR DONS 'NASTY' SHIRT FOR INTERVIEW ON TRUMP'S PUERTO RICO RESPONSE
![]() |
| Birds of a feather flock together ( Two Idiots ) |
Cruz and President Trump have traded shots in the weeks after the monster storm made landfall. Late last month, the mayor appeared on television in a black shirt with white letters that read, "HELP US, WE ARE DYING." Cruz argued that federal aid had been slow to reach Puerto Rico following Maria, which knocked out power to the entire island.
Trump tweeted the following day: "Such poor leadership ability by the Mayor of San Juan, and others in Puerto Rico, who are not able to get their workers to help." He added that Cruz was "very complimentary only a few days ago," but "has now been told by the Democrats that you must be nasty to Trump."
Later, Cruz wore a short emblazoned with the word "NASTY" for an interview with Univision.
Trump visited the island last Tuesday. Afterwards, while Cruz said she hoped new channels of communication with the White House would "put in motion what is needed" to save lives, she also said Trump sometimes was more a "miscommunicator in chief" than a commander in chief.
"In regards to the power failure, we are restringing a very fragile system everyday," Long explained. "As we make progress, simple thunderstorms pass through, knock the progress out."
Rebuilding the island, he said, "is going to be a greater conversation for the Congress in conjunction with the governor."
When hospitals have power failures, intensive care unit patients are being flown to the USNS Comfort, according to Long.
"As far as the political noise, we filter that out, keeps our heads down and continue to make progress and push forward restoring essential functions for Puerto Rico," Long said in the interview.
Pennsylvania mayor attacked by her son at campaign office, police say
![]() |
| Democrat Mayor Kim Bracey of York, Pa. and a mugshot (r) of her son Brandon Anderson, 30 (York Mayor's Office/York City Police Department) |
The son of a Pennsylvania mayor was charged with
assault last week after he punched and stomped the politician, who says
her son is battling an opioid addiction.
Police said the son of York Mayor Kim Bracey attacked her at her campaign office on Sept. 30, the York Daily Record reported.
The reports quoted police as saying Brandon Anderson,
30, of York, was charged with punching his mother in the face, knocking
her to the ground, and then stomping on her back, head and face while
she was down."Like thousands of families, our family is confronting the fact that my adult son is battling an opioid addiction," Bracey said. "No family is immune from this epidemic -- which is why we must do everything in our power to solve it."
She also asked for privacy.
Bracey is running for a third term as mayor.
A person who witnessed the attack intervened when Anderson tried to hit the mayor with a wooden flag pole, the York Daily Record reported Saturday.
A “Biker for Bracey” event was taking place at the campaign office the day of the alleged attack, according to the paper.
Bracey's Facebook page shared a photo showing her with bikers who attended the event.
A Democratic campaign operative who said he was speaking on Bracey’s behalf said the mayor was doing okay physically but said the family was shaken, the paper reported.
After a week behind bars, Anderson was released on bail Friday, the York Dispatch reported.
Cops didn’t say what, if anything, provoked the alleged attack.
Trump seeks sanctuary-city crackdown, curb on unaccompanied minors for 'Dreamer' deal
The Trump administration on Sunday announced it's
seeking several major changes to the country's immigration system — in
exchange for extending the Obama-era program known as Deferred Action
for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA.
The requests included additional
crackdowns on “sanctuary cities” that protect illegal immigrants;
reducing the number of incoming refugees; 10,000 more Customs and Border
Patrol agents; and new initiatives curbing the number of unaccompanied
immigrants who come to the U.S. illegally as children. Democrats already
have said many of the White House's terms are off the table.
“Unfortunately, over the last several decades respect
for the rule of law has broken down and immigration enforcement has been
sacrificed for the sake of political expediency. This has made us less
secure and it cannot stand,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a
statement. “Now President Trump has put forth a series of proposals that
will restore the rule of law to our immigration system, prioritize
America’s safety and security, and end the lawlessness. These are
reasonable proposals that will build on the early success of President
Trump’s leadership. This plan will work. If followed it will produce an
immigration system with integrity and one in which we can take pride.
Perhaps the best result will be that unlawful attempts to enter will
continue their dramatic decline.”DACA essentially allows law-abiding illegal immigrants brought into the U.S. by their parents to live and work in the country without fear of deportation.
Trump gave Congress six months to find a legislative alternative, then struck a framework deal last month with House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi of California and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York, leaving the door open for extending DACA.
In a joint statement, Pelosi and Schumer said the White House's new list of requests “goes so far beyond what is reasonable” and “fails to represent any attempt at compromise.
“The Administration can’t be serious about compromise or helping the Dreamers if they begin with a list that is anathema to the Dreamers, to the immigrant community and to the vast majority of Americans,” they wrote.
“If the President was serious about protecting the Dreamers, his staff has not made a good faith effort to do so,” they said.
“When crafting the Administration’s immigration principles, the President asked us to focus on measures that will assist the Department of Homeland Security’s law enforcement personnel with what they need to enforce our immigration laws, secure our border, and protect American communities across this country,” Department of Homeland Security Acting Secretary Elaine Duke said in a statement.
Congressional Hispanic Caucus Chairwoman Michelle Lujan Grisham, D-N.M., fired back: “The President’s draconian and anti-immigrant principles jeopardize the bi-partisan, bi-cameral progress that has been made to pass a legislative solution that will protect nearly 800,000 Dreamers. It is immoral for the President to use the lives of these young people as bargaining chips in his quest to impose his cruel, anti-immigrant and un-American agenda on our nation.”
House Speaker Paul Ryan’s spokesman Doug Andres said the House immigration working group would review the list and consult with Republican members and the administration.
Jerry Jones gives Cowboys players ultimatum: Stand for anthem or sit for game
Jerry Jones, the owner of the Dallas
Cowboys, wants his team to stand for the national anthem.
(AP)
Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said Sunday any player who disrespects the flag will not play.
Jones’ comments, the strongest made on the anthem controversy, came after he was asked about Vice President Mike Pence leaving the game in Indianapolis early after several San Francisco 49ers players took a knee during the national anthem.
Jones and the rest of the team knelt arm-in-arm before the national anthem before a game against the Arizona Cardinals two weeks ago, days after President Trump reignited the anthem-protest controversy.
Dallas players have stood on the sideline, many with hands over their hearts, during the anthem ever since former 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick started kneeling last season in protest of what he believed were instances of racial injustice in the U.S.
Jones said showing respect for the flag and the anthem is more important to him than any potential issues of team unity.
"There is no room here if it comes between looking non-supportive of our players and of each other or creating the impression that you're disrespecting the flag, we will be non-supportive of each other," Jones said. "We will not disrespect the flag."
Jones said he wasn't aware of whether any of his players had raised a fist at the end of the anthem before the Green Bay game.
"I don't know about that," Jones said. "But if there's anything that is disrespectful to the flag, then we will not play. OK? Understand? If we are disrespecting the flag, then we won't play. Period."
Additionally, Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross said he changed his view on how his team should handle the national anthem. Ross said because Trump made standing for the national anthem about “patriotism,” he evolved the way he looks at the protest, according to the Miami Herald.
Ross now wants all of the Dolphins players to stand for the anthem. Three Dolphins players – Kenny Stills, Julian Thomas and Michael Thomas – remained off to the sideline during the anthem Sunday.
The NFL has said the game operations manual distributed to teams includes a reference to players standing for the anthem, but that it's a policy and not a rule. The league has said it doesn't plan to punish players over anthem protests.
"The league in mind should absolutely take the rules we've got on the books and make sure that we do not give the perception that we're disrespecting the flag," Jones said.
Sunday, October 8, 2017
James Woods retires from acting after saying he's blacklisted because he's conservative
Just weeks after James Woods said he was
blacklisted in Hollywood because of his conservative views, the
Oscar-nominated actor said he was retiring from the industry.
Woods tweeted this summer that he had
“accepted the fact that” he was blacklisted from Hollywood because of
his views. He has said being conservative has made it tough to find work
in Hollywood the past few years.
The “Casino” actor has twice been nominated for an
Academy Award and has won an Emmy Award three times. His movie credits
include “Salvador (1986)” and “Ghosts of Mississippi (1996),” both of
which earned him a nomination for an Oscar. He's also played H.R.
Haldeman in Oliver Stone's "Nixon (1995)," starred alongside Barbra
Streisand and Robert Redford in Sydney Pollack's "The Way We Were
(1973)" and was also in Martin Scorsese's epic crime drama "Casino
(1995)."
He said on Twitter that he switched parties because of his disgust with the former president.
"Every single #Democrat without exception stood behind a convicted perjurer," he wrote on Twitter this summer. "That was the end."
His luck in Hollywood turned sour soon after he became a Republican. He has not had a major role in a film in at least a decade.
The news of his retirement was included in a press release issued by Woods' real estate agent offering Woods' Rhode Island lake house for sale.
Gammons said Woods' decision was not political.
The announcement comes after Woods was in a Twitter feud with actress Amber Tamblyn, who last month accused him of trying to pick her up when she was 16. Woods called it a lie. Gammons said Woods declined to comment Friday when asked about Tamblyn's accusation.
Woods has said there are many conservative stars who didn’t speak up because “the blacklist against conservatives in Hollywood is very real.”
The Harvey Weinstein scandal: Why are so-called feminists defending this creep?
![]() |
| Harvey Weinstein |
![]() |
| Lisa Bloom and Wendy Walsh |
Harvey Weinstein should go sign up
for the dating website OkCupid and make sure he gets that pink ribbon on
his profile, branding him a feminist and supporter of Planned
Parenthood. The media mogul is the ultimate bro-choicer, an adoring
donor to the Democratic Party, defended by some of the left’s most
powerful women.
Weinstein has been accused in a
lengthy New York Times story of doing some truly horrendous things to
women, totally unsolicited − also known as sexual harassment − over a
period of nearly three decades. His alleged victims were talented young
actresses and other women who had the potential to build successful
careers on their own without some ugly, creepy man coercing them into
giving him a massage or worse.
But this is Hollywood, and the feminists are the women who defend creeps like Weinstein.
Anita Dunn, a close associate of President Obama who became his communications director for a time at the White House, has been reported to have counseled Weinstein after the allegations broke in the media.
Even more troubling is that celebrity women’s advocate attorney Lisa Bloom is representing Weinstein. This is a woman who has represented victims in high-profile sexual harassment cases. Throwing that legacy away, she agreed to represent Weinstein, whom she said she has counseled that “times have changed” and he “needs to evolve into a higher standard.” Really?
Bloom’s reasoning regarding Weinstein gets better, though: “He has acknowledged mistakes he has made. He is reading books and going to therapy. He is an old dinosaur learning new ways. He wants to reach out to any of the women who may have issues with him to talk to them in a respectful, peaceful way, with me present if that is acceptable to them.”
I hope Bloom has a better answer for the women who Weinstein is accused of sexually harassing and forcing to look at him half-clothed or with no clothes at all, with tears in their eyes, as he emotionally blackmailed them for sex.
But this is Hollywood. This is Hugh Hefner’s world. This is the liberal paradise of promoting equal rights and justice for women, yet defending the men who use them for their own satisfaction, discarding them for younger versions every year, and then complaining about it years later when the women finally have the courage to say “enough!”
This is not true feminism. Supporting men who tear down women for their own use, supporting free access to taxpayer-funded abortion so men can cover up their own conduct, and mistreating women for decades is nothing for women to get behind.
These powerful women, these self-proclaimed feminists, are only hurting women when they stand up for and promote men who proudly use their own power to harass and demean women.
Penny Young Nance is president and CEO of Concerned Women for America, the nation’s largest women’s public policy organization. She is the author of the book "Feisty and Feminine: A Rallying Cry for Conservative Women" (Zondervan 2016).
Kim Jong Un promotes sister to North Korea's ruling politburo, reports say
![]() |
| Kim Yo Jong |
North Korean state media reported Sunday that
leader Kim Jong Un had promoted his sister, Kim Yo Jong, making her an
alternate member of the country’s top decision-making body, the
politburo.
Kim’s appointed of his 28-year-old sibling was viewed as a move to further consolidate his power.
An image of Kim Yo Jong, younger sister of North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un, is seen on a TV screen at the Seoul Railway Station in
Seoul, South Korea, Nov. 27, 2014.
(Associated Press)
The promotion was announced Saturday, at a meeting in which Kim also described North Korea’s nuclear weapons program as a “powerful deterrent” that guaranteed the nation’s sovereignty, Reuters reported, citing the state media report.
Kim Yo Jong, a vice director of propaganda for North Korea’s ruling Workers Party, was sanctioned in January -- along with six other North Korean officials -- by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control for “human rights abuses and censorship activities,” Bloomberg reported.
But the sister has appeared more prominently in public in recent months, Bloomberg reported.
“She’s been recognized for the work she’s done in the past year to idolize Kim Jong Un,” said Yang Moo-jin, a professor at South Korea’s University of North Korean Studies, the news agency reported. “Kim Jong Un is extending his father and grandfather’s practice of empowering family members.”
In other appointments Saturday, Kim promoted Kim Jong Sik and Ri Pyong Chol -- two of the three men behind Kim's banned rocket program, Reuters reported.
And North Korea's foreign minister, Ri Yong Ho was named a full member of the politburo, Reuters reported.
At Saturday’s meeting, Kim Jong Un said his country’s nuclear weapons were a “powerful deterrent firmly safeguarding the peace and security in the Korean Peninsula and Northeast Asia” against “protracted nuclear threats of the U.S. imperialists.”
The report of Kim’s remarks came hours after U.S. President Donald Trump asserted that “only one thing will work” in negotiations with the Hermit Kingdom, Reuters reported.
Trump’s remark seemed to suggest that the president was thinking about possible military action.
In recent weeks, North Korea has launched two missiles over Japan and conducted its sixth nuclear test.
Trump willing to pursue 'temporary deal' on health care
![]() |
| President Donald Trump speaks about healthcare in the Blue Room of the White House in Washington, July 24, 2017. (Associated Press) |
Looking to break the logjam in Washington on
repealing and replacing ObamaCare, President Donald Trump said Saturday
evening that he was willing to pursue “a temporary deal” to get a new
health care plan in place.
In remarks on the South Lawn of the
White House before leaving for a fundraising trip to North Carolina, the
president referred to a popular GOP proposal that would have the
federal government turn over money for health care directly to states in
the form of block grants.
“If we could do a one-year deal or a two-year deal as a
temporary measure, you'll have block granting ultimately to the states,
which is what the Republicans want,” he said. “That really is a repeal
and replace.”Meanwhile, in an interview taped earlier this week and aired Saturday night on Trinity Broadcasting Network, the president assured host Mike Huckabee that “We'll have health care before the election.”
Earlier Saturday, Trump said he had spoken with the Senate's Democratic leader on Friday to gauge whether the minority party was interested in helping pass "great" health legislation.
Democrats said they willing to hear his ideas, but were not willing to scrap the 2010 Affordable Care Act, also known as ObamaCare.
Trump's latest overture to Democrats followed GOP failures so far to fulfill the party's years-long promise to repeal and replace the ACA, despite controlling the White House and Congress since January.
The president tweeted that he called Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., on Friday to discuss the ACA, which Trump said was “badly broken, big premiums. Who knows!”
Trump said he wanted “to see if the Dems want to do a great HealthCare Bill.”
Schumer said through a spokesman Saturday that Trump "wanted to make another run at repeal and replace and I told the president that's off the table." Schumer said if Trump "wants to work together to improve the existing health care system, we Democrats are open to his suggestions."
Schumer said a starting point could be negotiations led by Sens. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Patty Murray, D-Wash., who have been discussing a limited bipartisan deal to stabilize state-level markets for individual health insurance policies. People covered under the health law represent about half of those who purchase individual policies.
Trump irritated GOP leaders in Congress when he reached a deal with Schumer and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., on a spending bill and the debt ceiling. The president has referred to those two Democrats as "Chuck and Nancy."
But the Trump administration announced Friday that it would allow more employers to opt out of no-cost birth control to women by claiming religious or moral objections. The move was one more attempt to roll back Obama's health overhaul, prompting Democrats to question whether Trump is committed to avoiding sabotaging the law.
Trump floated the potential talks as he approved an emergency declaration for a large part of Louisiana and ordered federal assistance for the state as Hurricane Nate approached the central Gulf of Mexico.
The president headlined a fundraiser on Saturday night in Greensboro, N.C., to benefit his Trump Victory joint fundraising committee with the Republican National Committee. The event was expected to raise $2 million, with donors paying up to $35,000 per couple to serve as co-hosts.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
-
How many times do we need to say this? If you’re here illegally and get caught, you’re going back. It’s the la...
-
CNN’s Scott Jennings once again took liberals to the cleaners on the Abrego Garcia case, the ‘Maryland man...
-
The problem with the courts is the same as the problem with many of our other institutions. Called the Skins...





















