Sunday, April 27, 2014

Why Is the NAACP In Bed With Donald Sterling?

In an excruciating example of bad timing, the Los Angeles chapter of the NAACP was scheduled to bestow its Lifetime Achievement Award to Donald Sterling, owner of the Los Angeles Clippers basketball team, at its May 15 banquet. Sterling is now under fire for racist comments caught on a recording that surfaced on the TMZ website. Even President Barack Obama weighed in, condemning Sterling's remarks as "incredibly offensive." The NBA is now investigating Sterling's remarks and could invoke sanctions, including removing him as Clippers' owner.



Embarrassed by the controversy, the NAACP announced Sunday morning, via Twitter, that is was withdrawing the award, which was to be presented at the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles as part of the celebration of the chapter's 100th anniversary. The NAACP also plans to honor Rev. Al Sharpton and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti -- as well as Walmart's local charity and political operative and a top Fed Ex executive -- at the gala event.



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Of course, when the NAACP decided to honor Sterling, it could not have predicted that the billionaire would the center of a controversy about his racist remarks. The entire news media has been focusing on Sterling's angry comments to his girlfriend, who apparently taped their April 9 phone conversation in which the Clippers owner admonished her for posting photos of her with black people, including Magic Johnson, the former LA Lakers star and now LA Dodgers co-owner. "It bothers me a lot that you want to broadcast that you're associating with black people. Do you have to?" Sterling allegedly said. He also told her: "You can sleep with them. You can bring them in. You can do whatever you want. The little I ask you is not to promote it on that... and not to bring them to my games."



Yes, there's no way that the NAACP could have known that Sterling would be caught making those comments. But there's also no way that the NAACP could not have known that Sterling has a long history of racist comments and racial discrimination in his rental properties.



Indeed, the NAACP seems to suffer from amnesia. Almost exactly five years ago, a similar controversy arose when the civil rights group honored Sterling with the same award! At the time, Elgin Baylor, who served as the Clippers general manager from 1986 to 2008, had just filed an age and racial discrimination suit against Sterling. According to Baylor, Sterling had a "Southern plantation" view, preferring to field a team of "poor black boys from the South... playing for a white coach."



Despite the controversy, the NAACP proceeded to give Sterling its award, even though the billionaire's track record of housing discrimination against African Americans, compounded by the brouhaha with Baylor, was already well-known. To justify the 2009 award, the president of the Los Angeles branch told the Los Angeles Times that Sterling "has a unique history of giving to the children of L.A.," revealing that the owner donates anywhere from 2,000 to 3,000 tickets a game to youth groups for nearly every Clippers home game." (Of course, Sterling may simply have wanted to fill the many empty seats at the woeful Clippers' home games).



The NAACP had already given Sterling its Presidents Award in 2008, according to Sterling's website, which is primarily devoted to a long list of the many honors bestowed on him by various charitable groups to which he's contributed.



Many nonprofit groups rely on charitable donations from wealthy donors and corporations. Often their philanthropy is altruistic and heartfelt, but sometimes their gifts are self-serving, designed to help a company or a billionaire cleanse a soiled reputation or peddle influence with politicians. Many donors expect to see their names on buildings or to be rewarded with public celebrations of their philanthropy, including receiving awards. The NAACP-Sterling relationship raises the larger question of whether nonprofit organizations should have any standards for bestowing honors on their donors. When is a donor such a disreputable person (or corporation) that its donation -- and the strings attached to it -- soils the reputation and moral standing of the nonprofit group, despite its many good deeds?



In the early 1900s, John D. Rockefeller began his philanthropic foundation to try to divert public attention from his reputation as a vicious robber baron, particularly after his private army killed striking workers, women and children at the Ludlow Massacre in Colorado. In the 1970s, Tufts University bestowed an honorary degree on Philippines First Lady Imelda Marcos -- for "humanitarianism" no less! -- in exchange for a multi-million grant from the Marcos Foundation to the university's Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, at a time when her husband, the Filipino dictator Ferdinand Marcos, was being chastised by human rights groups.



Indeed, many corporate tycoons and other disreputable folks engage in philanthropy, attaching all kinds of strings to their giving, hoping it will wash away their sins. They operate under the adage, it is better to give and receive.



So it should be no surprise that Donald Sterling has likes to throw money around to nonprofit charities. What's troubling is why an organization like the NAACP, dedicated to eliminating racial injustice, should help Sterling whitewash his reputation.



Sterling, who turned 80 on Saturday, is one of the largest property owners and landlords in the Los Angeles area. He owns and manages about 119 apartment buildings with some 5,000 units, according to the U.S. Justice Department, which has sued him for discrimination.



In 2006, the Justice Department sued Sterling and his wife for excluding black tenants and favoring Korean tenants in some of their properties. According to the Los Angeles Times , Justice Department lawyers presented evidence that Sterling and his wife made statements "indicating that African Americans and Hispanics were not desirable tenants and that they preferred Korean tenants" occupy buildings they owned in Koreatown. Three years later, the Justice Department and Sterling reached a settlement. Sterling agreed to pay a record $2.7 million. It was, at the time, the largest settlement ever obtained by the U.S. Justice Department in a housing discrimination case involving rental apartments.



Sterling, in fact, has a long history of landlord misdeeds. In 2008, the LA Weekly summarized some of the most egregious examples of Sterling's grotesque greed.



2001: City of Santa Monica sued him, claiming he harassed eight tenants in three rent-controlled buildings by threatening to evict them for having potted plants on balconies. He paid $25,000 in settlements.



2002: Sterling sued apparent lover Alexandra Castro for the title to a $1 million Beverly Hills home. Castro said the dwelling was a gift from him to her. The case was settled for undisclosed terms.



2003: Legal Aid Foundation of Los Angeles represented a tenant Sterling tried to evict on Lincoln Boulevard for allegedly tearing down notices in an elevator. Sterling won. The tenant was evicted.



2004: Sterling and other landlords won a major appellate case against Santa Monica's stringent Tenant Harassment Ordinance, which Santa Monica's city attorney had used to order Sterling and other landlords to stop issuing eviction notices, terming the notices "harassment."



2004: Elisheba Sabi, an elderly widow represented by Los Angeles Legal Aid Foundation, sued Sterling for refusing her Section 8 voucher to rent an apartment.



2005: Sterling sued landowner Larry Taylor for allegedly reneging on an unsigned note that agreed to sell Sterling properties worth about $17 million. The "handwritten note" war made it to the California Supreme Court. Taylor won last year.



2005: Sterling settled a housing-discrimination lawsuit filed by the Housing Rights Center, which represented more than a dozen tenants. He paid nearly $5 million in legal fees and a probably much larger, but undisclosed, sum to plaintiffs.





In 2006, Sterling paid for a newspaper ad announcing that the Donald T. Sterling Charitable Foundation would develop a "state-of-the-art $50 million dollar" project for "over 91,000 homeless people" in LA's Skid Row neighborhood. The ad included a photo of a smiling Sterling above the quote: "Please don't forget the children. They need our help." At the time, many homeless advocates criticized the plan for being more like a mega-warehouse than a social service agency. But they need not have worried. Although Sterling spent millions of dollars to buy properties in the area, he never carried through on the homeless project. And now that the Skid Row neighborhood has gentrified -- pushing many low-income people out of the area, Sterling is sitting on valuable property.



In addition to this track record of civil rights and tenants' rights violations, as well as blatant indifference to human suffering, Sterling has a shameful reputation as a man who abuses his employees, acknowledges paying for sex with prostitutes and has had a string of girlfriends who live in expensive homes and drive luxury cars paid for by the real estate mogul.



Given his reputation and this history, why would the Los Angeles NAACP honor Sterling for "lifetime achievement?" The answer? For the same reason that the NAACP is scheduled to honor Javier Angulo, Walmart's director of community affairs, at the same May 15 banquet. Sterling and Walmart are both NAACP benefactors and the civil rights organization has been happy to take these corporation donations.



Anyone who has read the Los Angeles Times over the past decade has seen the hundreds of full-page and half-page ads that Sterling puts in the paper to promote his philanthropic endeavors. A self-congratulatory photo of Sterling inevitably adorns these advertisements, along with photos of the heads of dozens of nonprofit groups in the Los Angeles area who receive Sterling's largesse. Many of these organizations, in turn, bestow awards on Sterling for his humanitarian gestures. This I'll-scratch-your-back-you-scratch-my-back philanthropy is hardly unusual in America, but Sterling's blatant self-promotion, designed to cleanse his reputation and burnish his ego, should win an award of its own. In this way, the NAACP is simply another cog in the Sterling PR machine.



The NAACP has an even more incestuous relationship with Walmart, the world's largest private employer and the world's most controversial corporation. The Arkansas-based Walmart has a long history of law-breaking, not only in retaliation for employee activism but also in exploiting immigrants, paying women less than men for the same jobs, breaking environmental laws and bribing Mexican officials, among many other infractions.



The U.S. Department of Labor ordered Walmart to pay $4.8 million in back pay and fines to thousands of employees who were illegally denied overtime. It was also ordered to pay nearly $34 million in back pay to 87,000 employees. Last November, Walmart's 1.3 million U.S. workers won a big victory when the National Labor Relations Board ruled that the retail giant had broken the law by firing and harassing employees who spoke out -- and in some cases went on strike -- to protest the company's poverty pay and abusive labor practices. Clergy, labor, and community groups have complained that Walmart pays many of its employees poverty-level wages, insists that many employees work part time, and provides few employees with affordable health insurance. The company's low-paid employees are forced to apply, with direct assistance from Walmart, for publicly funded benefits like food stamps and Medicaid. A report released by the National Employment Law Project uncovered widespread abuse of low-paid temporary laborers who work in warehouses and transport goods to Wal-Mart's stores.



Human rights groups criticize Wal-Mart for its use of sweatshop labor, in China and elsewhere, to manufacture the clothing and toys it sells. Walmart has recently earned well-deserved negative publicity for its complicity in thwarting safety improvements at Bangladesh sweatshops that make clothes sold in Walmart stores. One of them was the eight-story Rana Plaza factory building near Bangladesh's capital, Dhaka, where in April 2013 at least 1,100 workers were killed after the building collapsed -- the deadliest garment industry disaster in history.



Walmart is also the largest seller of shotguns and ammunition in the country. For years it was a member and large contributor to the American Legislative Exchange Council, a conservative business lobby group that aggressively supported "Stand Your Ground" laws, the "shoot first" law that was implicated in the death of Trayvon Martin, among others. Walmart executive Janet Scott was the co-chair of an ALEC committee that encouraged state legislators to enact these controversial pro-gun laws.



To overcome its terrible reputation, Walmart and its corporate foundation has invested heavily in strategic donations. This influence-peddling strategy includes giving campaign contributions to politicians, hiring well-connected lobbyists to do its bidding, mounting expensive PR and ballot campaigns to win public support, supporting conservative think tanks and lobby organizations such as the Cato Institute, the Heritage Foundation and the American Legislative Exchange Council and buying the support (or at least neutrality) of nonprofit organizations through philanthropy.



The NAACP has been on the receiving end of Walmart's corporate philanthropy. Across the country, the NAACP has partnered with Walmart on a variety of fronts. Columnist Earl Ofari Hutchison observed that Walmart's public relations and philanthropic effort "is part of a well-greased, on-going national PR and ad campaign by Wal-Mart to make dependable allies of black consumers and leaders."



For more than a decade, Wal-Mart's single-minded goal has been to open more stores and generate more revenue--especially in urban areas, the company's next frontier. But it hasn't been easy. In many cities across the country, local environmental, consumer, labor, small business, religious, women's rights, and other groups have fought against Walmart's efforts to expand its low-wage business model.



Nowhere has the battle over Walmart been as intense as in the Los Angeles area. Eager to gain a foothold in the area a decade ago, Wal-Mart proposed building a mega-store in Inglewood, a mostly African-American and Hispanic working-class suburb. In 2004 the company spent about $1 million to mount a ballot initiative that would change the city's zoning laws to allow Walmart to build its supercenter. Despite being outspent ten-to-one, a local community coalition defeated the ballot measure by a two-to-one margin. That same year, the Los Angeles City Council enacted a big-box law making it difficult for Walmart to open new stores.



Walmart temporarily retreated, but in 2011 it returned to greater Los Angeles with a vengeance, attempting to open a store in the city's Chinatown neighborhood. It hired three powerful lobbying firms to help the company get the approvals it needed. And it hired the politically connected Javier Angulo--former employee at the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund and the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials--to coordinate its local philanthropic program. Under Angulo's guidance, Wal-Mart donated millions of dollars to dozens of local nonprofits, including the NAACP, the Urban League, Homeboy Industries, California Charter Schools Association, Los Angeles Parents Union, Goodwill, Catholic Charities, Salvation Army, Union Rescue Mission, Meals on Wheels, Chrysalis, Children's Hospital, and the Mexican American Opportunity Foundation, as well as several Asian American organizations, including Little Tokyo Service Center, Korean American Coalition, the Center for Asian Americans United for Self-Empowerment, and Chinatown Service Center.



Angulo made sure that whenever Walmart hands over a check to one of these groups, elected officials are there for the photo-op.



Walmart also sought to open a store in Altadena, a heavily African American suburb a few miles from Los Angeles. There, too, under Angulo's supervision, Walmart donated to the Altadena NAACP as well as other African American organizations. Angulo also led the effort to win community support for the proposed store. The strategy paid off. Despite considerable opposition, especially from locally-owned businesses, many of Altadena's African American leaders embraced Walmart's plans. The new store opened in March 2013.



And in yet another display of either bad taste or blatant hypocrisy, the LA NAACP is giving its President Award to Shannon Brown, senior vice president of Fed Ex. Fed Ex is well-known as a union-busting company. Indeed, the Leadership Conference, a major civil rights coalition of which the NAACP is a member, issued a 2007 report entitled "Fed Up with FedEx: How FedEx Ground Tramples Workers Rights and Civil Rights," about the company's history of anti-union practices.



In 1903, the great historian and sociologist W.E.B. DuBois wrote The Souls of Black Folk, now considered a classic critique of American racism and its impact on Black Americans, and three years later he was a founder of the NAACP. No doubt Du Bois would be turning in his grave if he knew that the NAACP - with its glorious history of civil rights activism - had sold its soul to Donald Sterling, Walmart, and Fed Ex.



Peter Dreier teaches politics and chairs the Urban and Environmental Policy Department at Occidental College. His most recent book is The 100 Greatest Americans of the 20th Century: A Social Justice Hall of Fame (Nation Books, 2012)



from The Huffington Post | The Full Feed

Teenagers can no longer tell the real world from the internet, study claims

Research commissioned by Google and Vodafone raises questions about whether UK schools are doing enough to educate children about the dangers that lurk online.



from Home | Mail Online

First Nighter: Mary Martin Let Down in Inventing Mary Martin

Somehow it should seem appropriate that Inventing Mary Martin is as corny as Kansas in August. But the kind of corniness prevalent in conceiver-writer Stephen Cole's revue, at the York, tributing one of Broadway's great musical comedy leading ladies, is never welcome.



The "corny as Kansas in August" quote is instantly recognizable to longtime Martin fans as an Oscar Hammerstein II lyric she warbled again and again in South Pacific, when for the second time in her career an appearance (this one opposite Ezio Pinza) earned her publicity and adoration of the sort few performers ever hope to receive.



These are the people whom Cole is courting--however many of them are left who remember Martin from her stage performances or even from the now hardly ever shown Peter Pan she made, well, unforgettable on television, too. On the other hand, Cole would also like to entice potential fans who may only know the Martin name but should be better acquainted with her celebrated achievements.



Having now sat through the 90-minute, uh, entertainment, I'm not certain how much sense it makes to recommend the proceedings to either the former constituency or the latter. Anyone who cherishes Martin's performances isn't likely to find many of the reprises here sufficiently delectable, and anyone who isn't clued in to Martin's charm when she was at her best may simply end up puzzled over the predominantly anemic attempts to replicate it.



Jason Graae, who hosts and narrates the biographical stuff, Emily Skinner, Cameron Adams and Lynne Halliday are the quartet recapping Martin's life from her birth in Weatherford, Texas to the toast-of-the-town response after her "My Heart Belongs to Daddy" in 1938's Leave It to Me to the spate of Bing Crosby and others '30s-'40s Paramount movies to South Pacific and Peter Pan and The Sound of Music and eventually to retirement on a Brazil ranch with manager-husband Richard Halliday.



The cast members' requirements are singing songs Martin either introduced or took on in touring companies of Annie Get Your Gun and Hello, Dolly!. And if they're not singing the fabulous standards in their entirety, they're asked to divvy up the lines within a single song or deliver parts of them in medleys.



In other words, Graae, Skinner, Adams and Halliday are asked to participate in a lot of songus interruptus, which does no one much good--not Martin and not the songwriters who wrote for her (Hammerstein, Rodgers, Cole Porter, Irving Berlin, Noel Coward, Johnny Mercer, Richard Whiting, Leonard Bernstein, Betty Comden, Adolph Green, Carolyn Leigh, Moose Charlap, Jule Styne, Leo Robin, Ralph Rainger, Tom Jones, Harvey Schmidt, Vernon Duke, Howard Dietz, Arthur Schwartz, Kurt Weill, Ogden Nash, among others). And Cole's approach certainly doesn't do audiences any good.



For one instance, imagine including only a part of the marvelously smoky "Speak Low," that Martin warbled in her silvery voice during the 1943 One Touch of Venus. Patrons who relish the song and only get a smidgen of it have to be frustrated (I was), while it can't help ticket buyers who don't know the piece of sultry material to hear incompletely what they've been missing by not having the song stored in their memory banks before this.



There's a reason--if not an acceptable one--for some of the stinginess. Significant Martin-related songs are so many that it's daunting to pack them into one revue. Understandably, there's the temptation to truncate some of them, but it's a temptation that should be adamantly resisted. Why don't more revue creators understand that fewer songs sung fully is a better policy?



A second reason for the mingy medleys is so that directors and choreographers--such as Cole and Bob Richard on this occasion--can show their ingenuity through appealing numbers. There are plenty of those here that have Adams, Graae, Halliday and Skinner moving around the stage and smiling to bet the band in time-honored '50s revue style. What they could have benefitted from individually is more opportunity to make a song theirs.



To his credit, Graae has a good time with Coward's "Alice is At It Again" from Pacific 1860, a 1946 London flop. In his lead-in to the racy ditty, Graae explains that Martin thought it far too racy and refused to sing it. Graae doesn't go on to say this caused a rift between the two stars that lasted until around 1955 when they reunited for the CBS special Together With Music.



To her credit Skinner, who's looking extremely chic these days, does an amusingly raucous version of "Flaming Agnes," which Martin sang in I Do! I Do! It would be nice to say that Adams acquits herself as well with "I'm Gonna Wash That Man Right Out of My Hair," but she doesn't. I'm all for finding new ways to interpret a familiar tune, but this pseudo-sexy deconstruction isn't one of them.



The group number that has true appeal is "The Lonely Goatherd," with the foursome manipulating puppets and the puppet Graae handles a bug-eyed Ethel Merman stand-in. Two other early inclusions bear mentioning, if not unearthing. They're the Dietz-Duke "Swattin' the Fly" and the Robin-Rainger "I Should Have Stood in Bed," both from early 's40 Martin credits that didn't make the grade.



Because Inventing Mary Martin has nothing on its mind other than sending the subject a love letter (as Justin West projects images of her over her 1913-1990 life span), Adams, Graae, Halliday and Skinner are barely asked to stop short of clutching their hearts as illustration of their devotion--and of Cole's--to the lady.



Delving into a more critical assessment isn't necessarily asked for, I suppose. Still, referring to Martin as the greatest of the Broadway leading ladies is going a step too far--not when her career overlapped with Ethel Merman's. In addition to Merman's showing up in the "Lonely Goatherd" sequence, she's mentioned as Martin's rival.



Perhaps the box office faves did think of themselves as rivals--and not just the impetus for debates among fans as to which was the better--but they surely weren't at sword's point when they joined forces in their acclaimed 13-minute 1953 Ford 50th Anniversary Show duet. (Now there's a medley that worked.) But when their careers are compared, one difference is that while over time Martin evolved into someone whose warmth began to cloy, Merman retained her astringent personality throughout.



Okay, it isn't obligatory that Cole go into all that, but once he took up the cause, he should have found a way to champion it better than Inventing Mary Martin does.



(Reviewer's note: Although in private life Martin was Mrs. Richard Halliday, Lynne Halliday seems to be no relation.)



from The Huffington Post | The Full Feed

Pilot Missing After Two Small Planes Collide Over Northern San Francisco Bay

RICHMOND, Calif. (AP) — The Coast Guard searched for a pilot in the northern part of San Francisco Bay on Sunday after two small planes collided over the water and only one of the aircraft landed safely, authorities said.



Debris was spotted in San Pablo Bay after the 4:05 p.m. collision near the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge, Petty Officer Loumania Stewart said. The collision involved a single-engine Cessna 210 and a single-engine Hawker Sea Fury TMK 20, Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor said. Each aircraft had one person on board.



The Cessna crashed into the water and the pilot of the Hawker was able to land safely at Eagle's Nest Airport in the small Northern California city of Ione, Gregor said. The pilot was reportedly uninjured.



Gregor said both planes took off from Half Moon Bay Airport, roughly 20 miles south of San Francisco.



FAA records indicate the Hawker is registered to Sanders Aeronautics Inc. in Ione. A man who answered the phone at the company's listed number declined to comment.



Sanders Aeronautics' website said the family-run company specializes in aircraft restoration and that its family members are avid air racers.



A Coast Guard cutter, three rescue boats and a helicopter were involved in the search, Stewart said.



from The Huffington Post | The Full Feed

Extreme Inequality: Is the Market Rigged or Fair?

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By: Mark Green



LISTEN HERE:







With three best-sellers saying markets are rigged -- Piketty, Warren, Lewis -- Shrum & Lowry debate economic and then racial inequality. Can tax policies mitigate a 400-1 ratio of top to average pay? 4000-1? Does bias against blacks = against whites, per Roberts Court?



Economic Inequality: On Piketty's Capital. What do our panelists think of Krugman's comment that this Amazon #1 is a "eureka" moment that'll permanently change the way we view economics and politics?



Bob agrees that it's a major book whose analysis of our new Gilded Age could lead to a TR-Wilson next progressive era. And critics trying to marginalize him as Marxist are wrong since Das Capital thought that "excessive returns on capital were self-destructive not self-perpetuating."






Rich doesn't contest Piketty's empirical conclusions about levels of inequality but thinks that a) it's fanciful for him to predict 100 years into the future, b) he exaggerates the level of immobility since Gates. Buffetts, and hedge-funders didn't inherit their wealth and c) in any event, inequality is the result of market forces and enot eternal.






Bob pushes back, citing studies showing immobility in the US to be worsening and blaming a decline in unionization and taxes on the rich (along with compliant boards of directors) as contributing factors. Lowry is asked: since top-to-average wages were 40-1 in the 50s and 400-1 today, would it bother you if it went to 4000? Any level bother you? He replies that that can't and won't happen in dynamic capitalism and, in any event, higher taxation on the super-rich can always be evaded by shrewd accountants and tax lawyers.






Lowry argues that if you care about inequality better to talk more about education, family structure, training. Then he puckishly asks -- do liberals ever reject a better paying job because it contributes to inequality? Shrum jumps through the microphone: "that's a ridiculous comparison." Of course an economy will have some inequality but the issue is massive inequality afflicting entire classes of Americans. And it's not either/or - more tax revenue from the super-rich can fund better education and safety net programs helping families cope.






There's agreement that anti-equality policies like tax hikes on the top .1%, increases in capital gains rates or a small financial transactions tax that could generate hundreds of billions can't now happen because of GOP instransigence. But what if it became a political issue in 2016 or beyond - could a ground-up reaction turn the impossible into the inevitable? Bob hopes so and thinks so, citing Obama's win over Mr. 47% as one example.






What about the Princeton Study of 1779 policies showing that economic elites invariably defeated average citizens despite 80% majority sentiment on climate, minimum wage, immigration, gun safety, single-payer etc. We losing our democracy? Rich thinks that conclusion silly since, when Democrats had a working majority in 2009-2010, they did enact significant progressive legislation






Host: Piketty should chime in here. He wrote that only economic ideology could conclude that paying $10-50 million annually is necessary to motivate CEOs when $5 million would probably do the job. Piketty also notes, dryly, that trickle-down economics might have worked, but didn't.






Two things now hold back a new populist electoral tide. As argued previously in this blogpost,, the money unloosened by Citizens United and now McCutcheon can be a circuit-breaker interrupting how votes not dollars guide policy. Also, metaphors matter. Remember how "dominoes" paralyzed thinking about the Vietnam War, leading to hundreds of thousands of casualties - or how "states rights" fronted for racism and "trickle down" and "a rising tide lifts all boats" justify programs that shaft the middle class and profit financial elites.






Eventually, will the reality of one percent grabbing 90 percent of all income gains - and one party urging yet more tax cuts for the rich even as inequality worsens -- motivate average voters to be driven more by facts than phrases? Happened before.






Racial Inequality: On Affirmative Action Decision. We listen to LBJ's famous observation 50 years ago that you don't take the chains off someone and then tell them to hobble to the starting line along with everyone else...and to Charles Krauthammer say that we can't have affirmative action in perpetuity.






Rich agrees with the majority in the 6-2 Court decision allowing a referendum to ban affirmation action in Michigan because the 14th Amendment sanctifies equality not inequality, or as Chief Justice John Roberts put it, "the way to end discrimination by race is to end discrimination by race."






Shrum counters that that phrase glibly ignores 300 years of slavery, a Civil War, Jim Crow. While affirmative action by race can't be in perpetuity, it is necessary to undo the affects of this history, which Justice O'Connor earlier had thought might last another 25 years...though her replacement, Justice Alito, surely doesn't






Now what? States that previously prohibited affirmative action saw dramatic declines in minority enrollment in their public universities. Rich says that is no longer the case in California and that criteria valuing extra effort in disadvantaged communities could work to get the diversity everyone wants.






Last: Bob says court rulings previously concluded that it violates the 14th Amendment to eliminate some preferences, like affirmative action, while keeping others intact like athletic scholarships and alumni legacies...not to mention the irony of those opposed to programs for racial minorities citing the great Civil War Amendment designed to help African Americans. And Rich notes how Justice Sotomayor's scathing dissent never mentioned Asian Americans perhaps because they'd be hurt by racial preferences that keep their numbers down in higher education. Bob answers: that's a sad political argument to try win back immigrants offended by GOP anti-immigrant policies.






Quick Takes: Consensus on Ginsberg, Bundy and Lying. After such sharp earlier disagreements, there's a three-for-three consensus!






The two agree that it'd be ok for 83 year-old Justice Ginsburg to time her retirement to make it more likely that a simpatico president would get appoint her successor. Rich adds that, given her liberal philosophy, she should do it right away before the Senate turns Republican and 2017 when there could be a Republican President. Question for Rich: would Senate GOP really have the cajones to filibuster an Obama nominee to succeed Ginsburg for two years? "Well, two years would be a long time..."






There's no debating Cliven Bundy's comment that "the negro" was better off in slavery than now. But why did Fox News and some leading Republicans adopt him and his cause? Rich allows that it's legitimate to question BLM policies generally but not in Bundy's case since "he didn't have a leg to stand on" when it came to taxes owed under existing rules about grazing on public land. "And the rule of law is a core conservative principle."






Bob thinks it exceedingly dumb for some leading conservatives to align with a wacko like Bundy against "jack-booted authoritarians" (Cruz).






Host: Let's stipulate there are nuts in all parties. But do we often or ever see a Democratic senator embrace, say, Truthers who blame Bush for 9/11? How come? The problem for the GOP is not that its base includes some nuts but millions of them who have bought into birtherism and anti-gay, anti-immigration, anti-black, anti-contraception positions. So Fox can't resist citing Bundy 400 times in April - and remember their early assaults on Shirley Sherrod -- seeking ratings and revenues. Note: mainstream conservatives at National Review and Weekly Standard did not embrace Bundy pre-racist rant.






Again consensus: while it'd be nice to prohibit lying in elections, Justices Shrum and Lowry agree that it's impossible to figure out standards and who decides. Criminalizing politics isn't left or right but truly nutty.






Mark Green is the creator and host of Both Sides Now.



You can follow him on Twitter @markjgreen



Send all comments to Bothsidesradio.com, where you can also listen to prior shows.




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from The Huffington Post | The Full Feed

Share Economy or Bare Economy?

The digital economy has given us new ways to be both part time entrepreneurs and consumers, in what enthusiasts call the Share Economy. Have a spare room? You can rent it out to strangers via Airbnb.com -- or use Airbnb to find cheap lodging. You'll meet fascinating new friends, and most likely nothing bad will happen.



Do you need a taxi? Use Uber or Lyft to hail a passing driver and catch a ride for less than the cost of a cab. Or supplement your income by becoming that driver.






Want your car to bring in some income while it sits idle in your driveway? Rent it out via RelayRide.com.






Have some spare time to run errands? You can sign up to be as TaskRabbit, maybe for what works out to less than minimum wage. Or you can hire a TaskRabbit to clean your garage.






As they say over at CNN, is all of this a good thing or a bad thing? Well, it's both.






As the New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman pointed out in a New York Times op-ed piece last week, "Many of these companies claim that the fact that their goods and services are provided online somehow makes them immune from regulation. Such regulation is deemed necessary to protect both consumers and neighbors."






Schneiderman has gone after Airbnb, arguing that



The longstanding distinction between hotels and apartment buildings protects the rights of building residents who didn't choose to live 10 feet away from a parade of strangers. The law also protects tourists -- who are usually unfamiliar with the rooms and buildings where they are sleeping -- by imposing stiffer fire safety and building codes on hotels.





Meanwhile, the city of Brussels has banned Uber from operating there on the premise that it represents illegal competition with licensed taxis. Drivers who use the Uber smartphone app to pick up riders face a 10,000 Euro fine.






And, judging by a sample of customer reviews of RelayRide on Yelp, some are satisfied while others complain about everything from clients who get into accidents to vehicles that are filthy, and slopping vetting of both parties to the transaction by the small staff at RelayRide that takes a big cut of fees paid to car owners.






What's going on here?






It's clear that digital technology and smartphone apps have enabled new ways for vendors and buyers to do end runs around traditional notions of what is commerce and what is informal barter. Many people argue that these innovations both expand personal liberties and allow for more efficient use of resources.






If two consenting adults want to put an economic value on an empty car or a vacant room, isn't that a net gain to both? Isn't this precisely what free markets do -- and why should government get involved at all?






There are two problems, say critics. First, the whole history of capitalism is one of balancing the entrepreneurial impulse against hazards to consumers. The fact that some consumers may be innocent of the hazards is not a good reason to pretend they are not there.






In theory, say the enthusiasts, the free market will sort this out. Uber insists that it vets drivers, provides insurance, and takes steps to prevent creeps taking advantage. If it fails to run a sound operation, ten other such companies will fill the vacuum.






On the other hand, long ago we as a society decided that it was good for both buyer and seller if there was a clear definition of what a taxi was, with regulated fares, inspected cars, licensed drivers, clear liability and a formal system for complaints. Long ago, we agreed to differentiate an apartment from a bed-and-breakfast from a hotel. Are we really ready to dispense with such protections and return to a Wild West sort of commerce?






Of course, there have long been informal exceptions to these seemingly rigid categories. People advertise for roommates, sublet apartments, get paid to drive someone's car cross country, run errands and do odd jobs.






The trouble with Uber, airbnb, RelayRide, TaskRabbit, et al is that that they turn these informal arrangements into full-blown commerce and start crowding out the more regularized sort. But what's wrong with that?






It seems to me that it's fine when these forms of barter operate around the edges. It's troubling when they make major inroads into the economy.






The second problem has to do with how people make a living. Back in the 20th century, most of the advanced capitalist nations decided that it was beneficial if working people could have access to regularized employment -- a job with a predictable paycheck, rules of engagement, and opportunities for advancement.






The new, deregulated economy is making such jobs scarce. A shift to the quasi-barter economy of Uber, RelayRide and TaskRabbit will make them even more scarce. Some people sign up as Uber drivers or rent out rooms via Airbnb because it's cool -- others because they can't find jobs that pay a living wage or an apartment they can afford.






So the new, ultra-libertarian digital economy is both the solution and the problem. As a cool add-on, the entrepreneurial apps that allow digital sharing are both fun and make for more efficient use of idle resources. But as the core of the economy, they reinforce an insecure society in which everyone is a free-lance.






Robert Kuttner's latest book is Debtors' Prison: The Politics of Austerity Versus Possibility. He is co-editor of The American Prospect and a senior Fellow at Demos, and teaches at Brandeis University's Heller School.






Like Robert Kuttner on Facebook. Follow Robert Kuttner on Twitter.






from The Huffington Post | The Full Feed

Annual Kindergarten Show Canceled to Allow Kids to Focus on College

Annual Kindergarten Show Canceled to Allow Kids to Focus on College


A beloved annual kindergarten show at a New York school was canceled this week by administrators in an apparent effort to prepare the five-year-olds for college, probably by teaching them that you can't trust anyone.


Read more...




















from Gawker

BREAKING NEWS: Olympic swimmer Geoff Huegill and his wife arrested 'after being caught with cocaine in private box at Randwick Races'

Star Olympian swimmer Geoff Heugill has been charged with drug possession after security guards at Randwick Racecourse allegedly noticed him snorting cocaine in a suite at the races on Saturday.



from Home | Mail Online

Theater: "Casa Valentina" Half Delights; "Act One" Fully Exhausts;" "Mary Martin" Mild

CASA VALENTINA ** 1/2 out of ****

ACT ONE ** out of ****

INVENTING MARY MARTIN ** out of ****





CASA VALENTINA ** 1/2 out of ****

MANHATTAN THEATRE CLUB AT SAMUEL J. FRIEDMAN THEATRE



The glass is half full, here. Playwright Harvey Fierstein must be on top of the world. Decades into an extraordinary career, he's reached a new peak, his musical Kinky Boots has become the Tony-winning, crowd-pleasing biggest new hit on Broadway, joining Newsies from one year earlier. Now he's got a new drama based on the true story of ostensibly straight men who would gather at a Catskills resort for the freedom to mingle with like-minded men in the clothing they felt most comfortable...women's clothing. (The nudist colony resort is just down the road for those who feel most comfortable in nothing.)



True, the play loses its way and doesn't quite work. But it's funny (of course), fascinating and filled with great actors creating vivid characters that we remember even as some plot twists fade away. Fierstein clearly tapped a rich vein and delivered enough substantial material so these men (and women) could create some magic.



As the show notes make clear, this is not a story about drag queens or gay men or men who want to be women. (At least, at first....) Most men who wear women's clothing are in fact straight. In 1962, as women and gays and blacks and other minorities began to ask why exactly they didn't have the same basic rights as others, these men who liked to dress as women decided to organize too. Charlotte (Reed Birney) -- the publisher of a magazine catering to their interests -- has formed a non-profit organization. She's come from the West Coast to meet with the group that gathers regularly at a private resort in the Catskills.



It's the usual diverse gathering: George (Patrick Page) runs the financially troubled resort with his wife Rita (Mare Winningham), who knows of his taste in formal wear and is fully supportive, not to mention handy (she sells wigs on the side). Old friends soon appear. Tom McGowan plays Bessie, a full-figured, wise-cracking gal, whose family is dimly aware of something about his hobby but prefers blissful ignorance. Nick Westrate is delicious as Gloria, a Rosalind Russell-ish dame who proudly (and accurately) says he's a good-looking broad and a great-looking guy and has the conquests among the ladies to prove it. John Cullum is Terry, a sweetheart of an elder statesmen matched in years and words of wisdom by "the Judge," Amy (Larry Pine). The newbie (you knew there had to be a newbie) is Jonathon (Gabriel Ebert of Matilda), who is adorably uptight as he transforms into Miranda.



Except for George (who soon dresses as the ring leader Valentina), they are unaware of Charlotte's push for visibility and legitimacy. Rather naively, Charlotte thinks society will soon recognize their essential decency and harmlessness and most importantly distinguish between them and the homosexuals everyone assumes they are. To hammer the point home, Charlotte proposes they all sign affidavits averring their true blue, All-American heterosexuality. In high heels or sensible pumps, as the case may be, but women-loving men nonetheless. All hell breaks loose.







Casa Valentina (directed with empathy and a sure touch by Joe Mantello) has a generally solid first act. The laughs come easily for Fierstein, but that doesn't mean we should underestimate the way he creates these distinct, memorable people with a few deft lines. It climaxes with a debate over legitimacy that's involving and genuinely moving.



It's almost a rite of passage for a new group seeking a place at the table to distance themselves from the more-despised people just below them. We're Irish but at least we're not Chinese. We're Jews but we're not atheists. We're gay but we're not effeminate (or transgender). It may not always be official policy for these groups, but it's almost always happened in some shape or form as they struggle for rights. (Transvestites still remain more invisible than not, with Eddie Izzard still raising eyebrows for enjoying a frock while doing his standup decades after the events of this play took place.)



But when Charlotte suggests the "I am not now nor never have been a homo" tactic, it exposes the facade of these particular men being peas in a pod. Soon we discover that some of them have dabbled in men, others haven't but yearn to with their whole heart and still others seem to truly be on a path towards gender reassignment. Before you know it, finding a good old straight male who likes frocks and females becomes downright difficult. Before that happens, their debate is the emotional and intellectual high point of the show. Gloria is wonderfully disdainful about throwing gays under the bus while Terry simply says that gays have always been welcoming to him and he can't imagine turning his back on them now. Cullum, always good, is especially moving here.



So we get to know this group of men, they face a heartbreaking choice or two and we wonder how they'll bear up. The central problem with the play is that however accurate it may be, seeing this group splinter and never come back together feels dramatically unsatisfying. A blackmail scene is riveting, with Larry Pine doing his best work of the night without saying a single word. But Miranda runs off into the night and the rest scatter to the four winds as well. They're never together again on stage, while the story wanders off towards Rita, who realizes the life she has built for herself and George isn't enough for him. She's sacrificed everything for George but it's Valentina that calls to him more and more.



So we're left vaguely dissatisfied but with some indelible moments. The scenic design by Scott Pask is an absolutely bizarre mishmash. Though the resort features several floors, the set is by and large on one level, with some upstairs rooms on stage left and others on stage right, with tables that serve as furniture in one room also serving double duty in another by being moved a foot or two. A large tree is shoving its way in from one corner. It must be a nightmare for the actors, who have numerous steps up and down and up again to get from one space to another and back again. And yet, somehow, it works. Touches like having actors come up out of the stage floor as if coming to the top of the stairs easily center us on where we are and the lighting of Justin Townsend and sound design of Fitz Patton (who also did the evocative music) surely work in concert with the staging of Mantello to pull this off. I've no idea how Pask imagined this or knew it would click, but it does.



Similarly, the costumes of Rita Ryack work in concert with the hair, makeup and wig design of Jason P. Hayes to create vivid and memorable characters. Before the curtain rose, I giggled with anticipatory glee at the idea of Cullum in a dress. But from the haunting opener where we see the men in various stages of dress to the finale, I never thought of giggling at the sight of these men even once. Someone much smarter than me could identify the various styles and looks on display here and how they reflect the character of each man and when he became enamored of dressing like a woman. All I know is they each felt absolutely right in their garb.



As did the acting. Winningham feels the most underused here, perhaps because Rita is becoming extraneous in George/Valentina's life as well. But her natural empathy and warmness makes Winningham the perfect stand-in for the audience -- unquestioning and unflappable and kind to the core. McGowan's Bessie is a little too rat-a-tat-tat with the one-liners but he delivers them with aplomb and has a touching moment with Winningham that deepens his character with one deft gesture. Page has the trickiest role as his George grasps onto Charlotte's struggle for legitimacy has a way to distract himself from the far more difficult struggle within himself.



But Reed Birney steals the show as Charlotte. He's simply never been better and talk about passing -- I would forget for long passages that this is a man playing a man playing a woman. I was so caught up in the machinations of Charlotte, I forgot everything but the person on stage Birney created. He's so faultless here, so completely in character, it ranks with Dustin Hoffman in Tootsie as one of the most complete and memorable performances of its type you'll ever see. Mind you, there's nothing lovable and heart-warming about Charlotte (if anything, you'll hiss her). But Birney's work is so good, it makes a visit to Casa Valentina one you won't forget, flaws and all.





ACT ONE ** out of ****

VIVIAN BEAUMONT AT LINCOLN CENTER



A few years ago, I read the autobiography Act One by Moss Hart and needless to say loved it. Anyone who loves the theater -- or just good writing -- will savor his story of a hard-scrabble youth followed by an apprenticeship with the great George Kaufman as they struggle to turn Hart's comedy Once In A Lifetime into a hit. Like many celebrity memoirs, Act One knows the richest material comes before that first big success. It's a gem.



Clearly, writer and director James Lapine fell in love with it as well, to a fault. He loved it so much he couldn't bear to cut a single passage out of this sprawling work that goes from a childhood where Moss's eccentric aunt would take him to the theater to leaving school and working at a furrier, to his first theatrical job as an office boy to summers in the Catskills and on and on and on until act two where we finally get to Moss and George in a room together working on a play.



It's exhaustingly comprehensive, down to three different actors playing Moss, including Matthew Schechter as the boy Moss, the wonderful Santino Fontana as the eager young man Moss and Tony Shalhoub as the elder statesman Moss (not to mention Moss's father and Kaufman to boot). Andrea Martin plays three roles (most touchingly as Kaufman's wife) and so do several other actors as well.



The feeling of "more is less" extends to the remarkably complex and equally exhausting scenic design of Beowulf Boritt. It's a massive, massive contraption, filled with three levels of sets in a gigantic circular form and it spins and spins like a roulette wheel on its side, taking us from Moss's childhood home to a theater to the offices of a producer to the resort to Kaufman's lavish home and about 27 more I've forgotten. Each particular scene is created with care and is effective as such. But visually it's a disaster: you're always seeing the sets to the left and right of the scene taking place, not to mention the sets way in the back and and the piano located here and there to deliver Louis Rosen's fine original music.



The result is a jumble of images that leave you disoriented and always aware there is more to come and more just passed. It's the perfect embodiment of a show over-stuffed with incident. At two hours and 45 minutes, Act One is way too short to justice to the entire work (that would need a TV miniseries) and far too long to focus in and offer up something dramatic and satisfying.







Of course, it's made with love and the cast is too talented to make the evening a bust, but the sense of dissatisfaction is never far away. Fontana is luckiest: he gets to play one part and play it well. The eager young talent who wants to do something -- anything! -- in the theater is the most appealing part of the show and Fontana brings his usual skill and warmth and comedic timing to the part.



Shalhoub is less fun as the successful Hart looking back on his youth. It may be true to reality, but his depiction of this man is somehow a little self-satisfied and priggish, be it the way he talks or what, I don't know. But he's just not very likable as the elder statesman Hart and I doubt that was the intent. He's equally problematic as Moss's father, in part because the costumes of the obviously hard-working Jane Greenwood seem designed to keep him a little obscured so we're not so aware it's the same actor. (It doesn't help that this family from Britain has a panoply of accents, ranging from Shalhoub's almost South African diction to lower and upper class for the rest. Martin's diction, of course, is intentionally different but why are all the rest so varied?)



Where Shalhoub absolutely shines is as the phobic, almost Monk-like Kaufman. He gets a laugh out of just raising a finger and makes this enigmatic come to life for us just as it slowly does for the awed Moss. Showing two guys in a room creating a play is very, very hard to do. They have one wonderful scene where they're rewriting dialogue and actors are delivering the lines below them on another set, changing the lines as they get erased and done over. It's very effective and you can't help wishing the show had begun with Moss knocking on George's door and stuck with this one, central section of the autobiography. It's the source of the richest material and funniest moments, both in the book and here on stage.



But even at the end, they can't resist including every single moment. The memoir ends with Hart famously coming home to his family's hovel in the Bronx as soon as the show has opened to huge success and bundling his family into a cab and moving them all to Manhattan right on the spot. I remember it well.



But the emotional climax comes earlier, when there's a curtain call and George S. Kaufman -- one of the giants of the theater at that time -- steps forward to say something. It's a gesture Kaufman disdains in general (along with sentimentality), but in a lovely gesture, he steps forward anyway, silences the roars of applause and tells the assembled people with modest grace that he wants them to know that 80% of the show they've just seen is due to Moss Hart. This tells you all you need to know about Kaufman and what a life-changing moment it was for Hart. It's dramatic and moving and wonderful and almost slips by here as the set begins to rotate because they're already moving on to the next scene.



Yes, I know, the next scene lets Moss make peace with his father and it's lovely in the book. But you've got to know how to cut away the underbrush. Kaufman knew. Hart learned. Lapine here, blinded by love, clearly forgot.



INVENTING MARY MARTIN ** out of ****

YORK THEATRE COMPANY





The York Theatre company makes a speciality of revues and their revival of Maltby and Shire's Closer Than Ever was one of the best in recent years. Now they're presenting a world premiere of a show looking at the great Mary Martin. The subtitle is the clever tag "the revue of a lifetime," since it tells the story of Martin and how she went from a Texas wife teaching dance steps to the local kids to an almost-big Hollywood actor and finally to a legendary Broadway star.



Unfortunately, despite some talent doing their darndest, that's about the extent of cleverness for this show conceived written and co-directed by Stephen Cole. (Bob Richard shares the directing duties. It's perfectly harmless fare, with some newly written lyrics to move the story of Martin's life forward via song. They've tossed in puppetry, a skit from a live television broadcast involving fashion, mild Ethel Merman jokes, some songs Martin never sang and more.



But it all feels a little routine. While the show avoids some of her signature numbers and rejiggers others to present them in a fresh way, the four performers never really get a chance to put their stamp on the material. A revue of course pays tribute to its subject, but it also needs to showcase the people on stage or why not just go back to the original cast albums?







Jason Graae is the hardest working man on stage. Okay, he's the only working man on stage, but he does do anything and everything for a laugh while genially and smoothly relating the facts of Mary Martin's life. It's telling that in a show about Martin with three women singing and dancing their hearts out, it's Graae you remember best. (Someone get this man a Borscht Belt comedy pronto!) Sure they offer tidbits some might not know (Martin turned down Oklahoma!) but it's safe to say everyone in attendance is already a fan.



Emily Skinner of Side Show was the draw for me. She shines on "I Got Lost In His Arms" and the playful "Swattin' The Fly" and I generally just got a little depressed she hasn't been on Broadway since Billy Elliot. Cameron Adams was the dancing triple threat on various numbers. And Lynne Halliday brought up the rear. The three worked together well on the Andrews Sisters-like "Most Gentlemen Don't Like Love."



But too much of this sincere show lands on obscure fare. I love every song in The Sound Of Music but doubt I'd pick "The Lonely Goatherd as a showcase for Martin. Did we need to hear Noel Coward's "Alice Is At It Again," a naughty tune she turned down (perhaps rightly if she feared being typecast forever as a saucy girl)? Yes, Graae delivers it very well, but in a 90 minute show, too many numbers feel beside the point. The result is you return to the cast albums not because they've reminded you what a remarkable talent she was but to remind yourself of what all the fuss was about in the first place.



THEATER OF 2014



Beautiful: The Carole King Musical ***

Rodney King ***

Hard Times ** 1/2

Rosencrantz And Guildenstern Are Dead **

I Could Say More *

The Loneliness Of The Long Distance Runner **

Machinal ***

Outside Mullingar ***

A Man's A Man * 1/2

The Tribute Artist ** 1/2

Transport **

Prince Igor at the Met **

The Bridges Of Madison County ** 1/2

Kung Fu (at Signature) **

Stage Kiss ***

Satchmo At The Waldorf ***

Antony and Cleopatra at the Public **

All The Way ** 1/2

The Open House (Will Eno at Signature) ** 1/2

Wozzeck (at Met w Deborah Voigt and Thomas Hampson and Simon O'Neill)

Hand To God ***

Tales From Red Vienna **

Appropriate (at Signature) *

Rocky * 1/2

Aladdin ***

Mothers And Sons **

Les Miserables *** 1/2

Breathing Time * 1/2

Cirque Du Soleil's Amaluna * 1/2

Heathers The Musical * 1/2

Red Velvet, at St. Ann's Warehouse ***

Broadway By The Year 1940-1964 *** 1/2

A Second Chance **

Guys And Dolls *** 1/2

If/Then * 1/2

The Threepenny Opera * 1/2

A Raisin In The Sun *** 1/2

The Heir Apparent *** 1/2

The Realistic Joneses ***

Lady Day At Emerson's Bar & Grill ***

The Library **

South Pacific ** 1/2

Violet ***

Bullets Over Broadway **

Of Mice And Men **

The World Is Round ***

Your Mother's Copy Of The Kama Sutra **

Hedwig and the Angry Inch ***

The Cripple Of Inishmaan ***

The Great Immensity * 1/2

Casa Valentina ** 1/2

Act One **

Inventing Mary Martin **



Thanks for reading. Michael Giltz is the founder and CEO of the forthcoming websiteBookFilter, a book lover's best friend. It's a website that lets you browse for books online the way you do in a physical bookstore, provides comprehensive info on new releases every week in every category and offers passionate personal recommendations every step of the way. It's like a fall book preview or holiday gift guide -- but every week in every category. He's also the cohost of Showbiz Sandbox, a weekly pop culture podcast that reveals the industry take on entertainment news of the day and features top journalists and opinion makers as guests. It's available for free on iTunes. Visit Michael Giltz at his website and his daily blog. Download his podcast of celebrity interviews and his radio show, also called Popsurfing and also available for free on iTunes.



Note: Michael Giltz is provided with free tickets to shows with the understanding that he will be writing a review. All productions are in New York City unless otherwise indicated.



from The Huffington Post | The Full Feed

Obama Heads To Philippines As U.S. Announces Defense Pact

US President Barack Obama heads to the Philippines Monday for the most complex leg of his Asian tour balancing act of reassuring allies wary of a rising China while avoiding antagonising Beijing.


Obama will land in Manila hours after the allies sign a new defence agreement allowing rotations of US troops and ships through the Philippines, part of a US rebalancing of military power towards rising Asia.


Anti-China sentiments run high in the Philippines, which is locked in a showdown with the Asian giant over disputed atolls in the South China Sea, part of a proliferation of maritime hotspots that has stoked Asian tensions.


During an Asian tour that has taken him to Japan, South Korea and Malaysia, Obama has repeatedly warned that small nations should not be bullied by larger ones, a clear reference to China's increasingly sharp geopolitical elbows.


"Disputes need to be resolved peacefully, without intimidation or coercion, and... all nations must abide by international rules and international norms," Obama said in Malaysia Sunday.


That is also a message that has resonance in America's East-West showdown with Russia over Ukraine -- a row to which Obama has had to return time an again during his Asian journey.


- Simmering disputes -


Opening his trip Obama made clear that US defence treaties with Japan did cover disputed islands long administered by Tokyo in the East China Sea, which are known as the Senkakus in Japan and Diaoyus in China.


The Philippines has its own territorial disputes with China in the South China Sea -- notably over the Second Thomas Shoal, an outpost in the remote Spratly Islands.


US officials have not been so specific over perceptions of their obligations towards Manila on territorial disputes -- but it is clear they do not believe them covered by the American Mutual Defense Treaty with the Philippines.


"With respect to some of the difficult territorial issues that are being worked through, it is hard to speculate on those because they involve hypothetical situations in the South China Sea," said deputy national security advisor Ben Rhodes.


"The US Japan agreement has very specific coverage of territory under Japanese administration.


"Some of the disputes in the South China Sea raise more hypothetical circumstances."


In essence, the difference lies in the fact that Japan already administers the Senkakus/Diaoyus while the status of other islands and reefs is disputed -- even though they lie within the Philippines' internationally-mandated exclusive economic zone and more than 1,000 kilometres (580 miles) from the nearest Chinese landmass.


Brunei, Malaysia, and Vietnam, as well as Taiwan, also have overlapping claims to the sea, believed to contain vast deposits of natural gas and oil.


Obama has repeatedly stressed that despite Beijing's territorial disputes with its allies, his Asia rebalancing strategy is not aimed at containing China's rise to regional, and perhaps global super power status.


But officials also make clear that they blame China for hiking tensions in the region over claims often well outside its territorial waters.


"We oppose the use of intimidation, coercion or aggression by any state to advance their maritime territorial claims," said Evan Medeiros, senior director for Asia at the National Security Council.


- US 'rebalance' to Asia -


The Philippines has accused China of becoming increasingly aggressive in staking its claims to the sea, and has called on the United States for greater military as well as diplomatic support.


During his overnight stay in the Philippines, his first visit as president and his last stop on this Asian journey, Obama will meet President Benigno Aquino, hold a press conference and attend a state dinner. The new defence agreement will not allow Washington to establish a permanent base in the Philippines or bring in nuclear weapons to the country.


But it represents a new era in defence ties. The Philippines hosted two of the largest overseas US military bases until 1992, when Manila voted to end their lease amid growing anti-US sentiment.


Amid rising regional disquiet over the implications of China's rise, the Philippines has sought greater military ties with Washington in recent years. John Blaxland, a security analyst at the Australian National University said that the new defence deal would be seen as an important US assurance for Manila.


"The presence, and the aura of the presence is something that the Philippines desperately wants, and is something that the US sees as being necessary to effect the rebalance to Asia," said Blaxland.


"Bolstering the US presence will undoubtedly induce the Chinese to think hard about ratcheting further the confrontation with the Philippines in the South China Sea."











from The Huffington Post | The Full Feed

Fury as 'insensitive' Salmond praises Putin for restoring Russia's pride in itself

The Scottish First Minister was accused of making 'ill-judged' remarks after revealing that he admires Putin for restoring 'a substantial part of Russian pride'.



from Home | Mail Online

Will 'Race' Defeat the Clippers in the First Round

Appearing on the Don Imus morning show earlier this past week, before the Donald Sterling story broke, Imus and I were discussing the Supreme Court ruling against Affirmative Action and other issues of "race" as we have consistently done over the past several years, and I made two points that have relevance to the current uproar over the Donald Sterling comments.



First, I indicated my concern and disagreement not only with the Supreme Court ruling (which was expected), but also the mass responses from average Americans and many prominent conservatives arguing that in the country today Affirmative Action was "no longer needed" or asserting that "we are past all of that now." The suggestion being that with Barack Obama in the White House we simply don't have the reasons we might have had in the past for needing Affirmative Action. Nonsense.



As Imus and I both agreed, not only was the election of Barack Obama not going to usher in a new "post-racial" society in America, but it was my argument that in some ways, Hillary Clinton would have been able to accomplish more for African Americans in eight years precisely because of racial undertones that would limit Obama's actions on the issue that would not limit Hillary's, or those of another White liberal.



Ironically, at Donald Sterling's level, the problem of bias and prejudice against African-Americans and other minorities is not quite as severe although Sterling's comments show clearly that the problem does exist there as well.



But at the Sterling level, the Magic Johnsons, Oprah Winfreys, Kobe Bryants, Tiger Woods and fellow owner Michael Jordon types of the world don't have to pay much attention to Sterling's biased and insensitive comments because Sterling can't affect their lives in a negative way with his bias as they are as powerful and influential as he is.



But if we move down several levels lower than Sterling, in any organization or corporate entity, the people at those lower levels who feel the same way as Sterling CAN affect many lives because sharing Sterling's attitude at that level, those that do can see to it (even subconsciously) that African-Americans, Hispanics and any other targeted group are not promoted, not included and not invited.



The Supreme Court was wrong in its decision, and for the constitutional purists, lets make sure you understand that I also understand the empirical substance of the ruling. The Court was essentially not ruling on the merits of the law but rather turning it back to the States to decide, and we and every member of the Court knows full well that there is popular opposition to Affirmative Action at the State level, largely from people not understanding that the problem really is still there.



And in making that decision the Court was saying that since we're against this, and we know the States are also, we'll just turn it back to them and let them overturn these laws at the State level.



But to say that "we're past that" or " we don't need it anymore" fails to understand the deep roots of this type of pernicious bias and intolerance. If a problem is still a real problem, then any solution you've implemented to address that problem is still needed until the problem is solved.



I mentioned Kobe Bryant earlier, and he was quoted as saying that he "wouldn't want to play for him" referring to Donald Sterling.



Frankly, I have also expressed my displeasure in the past with Black successful athletes for not taking bolder stands on issues of "race", and I particularly raised concerns several years ago when Donald Sterling settled the lawsuits charging him with discrimination and bias in renting and selling apartments and condos to African-Americans and Hispanics.



That was when players should have said "I won't play for him." And I am not naive on this. I also said that it would only work then if ALL the players protested and shut down -- not just one or two. And nothing happened.



Now it's too late on this current issue. The Clippers have to play this out and play for themselves and try as hard as they can to win and go as far as they can in the playoffs.



And they have to individually and collectively make clear that they are doing that for themselves and collectively for each other, not for Donald Sterling. And fate always has its place, as who could be better than "Doc" Rivers to coach the Clippers through this, and already he has demonstrated outstanding leadership.



But as everything else in America, the economics and money will ultimately play as major a role as any other component. And that will force the NBA to move on this quickly.



Does anyone out there think that Magic Johnson will be the only one not attending Clippers games, and when the camera pans around the stadium and sees half empty seats that's a bad image for the NBA to project, and it will get worse when sponsors pull out because, unlike Donald Sterling, they do want ALL the fans to come to the games (and where did he ever get that notion to say "don't come to my games" -- "my games").



If there is ever going to be a player boycott on an issue of "race", it would have to be during the regular season and would have to involve players on ALL the teams, not just one -- they would have to shut down the League (any league), so that the other owners would also feel the effect of the protest and then step in to stop the bleeding. For the Clippers, they just need to play on with the same fire and energy they have shown so far, and if they get bounced out of the playoffs, they need to let Golden State or OKC do it, not the "race" issue.



Earlier this morning I watched television coverage of the Sterling affair and one commentator mentioned that Donald Sterling was actually Jewish. I'm not sure what perspective that commentator was trying to suggest, but let me make sure that a positive one is also presented as well.



Yes, Donald Sterling is Jewish. But former NBA Commissioner David Stern is Jewish and Stern's hand-picked successor, current Commissioner Adam Silver, is also Jewish. And I, for one, am counting on the shared Black and Jewish heritage of understanding the awful consequences of hatred, intolerance, prejudice, and bigotry that both groups have faced throughout history to help forge a decisive response.



And I feel quite comfortable and confident that Silver and his current NBA administration will move quickly and decisively and draw on that nostalgic time in America when Blacks and Jews formed one of the most powerful political alliances in the country to make the proper statement and let Donald Sterling know by action and deeds that while we may not be in a "post racial" society, we have certainly progressed passed a plantation -- slave society. And maybe, just maybe, in the not too distant future, Donald Sterling will be gone from the arena while the Clippers will still be playing!



Carl Jeffers is a Los Angeles based columnist, TV political analyst, radio commentator, and a national lecturer and business consultant. Jeffers is President of Intelli Marketing Associates. E-mail: cjintel@juno.com Website: carljeffers.com



from The Huffington Post | The Full Feed

Adam Silver's First Crisis As NBA Commissioner Has Arrived And It's Donald Sterling

Adam Silver's first crisis of his short tenure as NBA commissioner has arrived, a race-tinged scandal leaving those associated with the game wondering how strongly and swiftly the league will respond.



Allegations that Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling was caught on tape making racist comments rapidly overshadowed perhaps the most entertaining opening playoff round in league history. The recording was first released by TMZ, and there still has been no official confirmation that Sterling is on the tape. Another tape was released Sunday by Deadspin. Silver's first priority is verifying Sterling's voice is in the recording. From there, Silver's next move remains unclear. He works for the owners — and so far that group seems to have no sympathy for Sterling's latest controversy.



"I'm obviously disgusted that a fellow team owner could hold such sickening and offensive views," said Michael Jordan, the six-time NBA champion player who owns the Charlotte Bobcats. "I'm confident that Adam Silver will make a full investigation and take appropriate action quickly."



Miami owner Micky Arison called the comments "offensive, appalling and very sad."



Silver started as commissioner Feb. 1, replacing the retired David Stern, who once famously said that the league decided to suspend Ron Artest — now Metta World Peace — for virtually an entire season by a vote that was "unanimous." By that, he meant the vote was 1-0, his being the lone voice that mattered.



On this, Silver probably needs more of a consensus.



The players union, still without an executive director since firing Billy Hunter in February 2013, asked former NBA All-Star and current Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson to take a leading role on the players' behalf.



Kevin Johnson said he called an emergency phone meeting of every player representative to the union Saturday and spoke with Silver before the Warriors-Clippers game Sunday. Calling it a "defining moment" for the league and commissioner, Johnson said the players trust Silver will accommodate their requests, which include:



—Sterling doesn't attend any NBA games for the rest of the playoffs because of the "enormous distraction."



—Give a full account of past allegations of discrimination by Sterling and why the league never sanctioned him.



—Explain the range of penalties that the league could bring against Sterling.



—Assurance the NBA and the union will be partners in the investigation.



—A decisive ruling, hopefully before the Clippers host the Warriors for Game 5 on Tuesday night in Los Angeles.



"They trust that Adam Silver will do the right thing," Johnson said.



The league and the Clippers are investigating, though ultimately the decision will be perceived as Silver's.



"He's got to come down hard," Hall of Fame player Magic Johnson, who was referenced on the audio recording, said Sunday on ABC.



The NBA Constitution is not public, though it's understood the commissioner's powers are broad when it comes to dealing with matters deemed "prejudicial or detrimental to the best interests of basketball." A fine, a suspension, a demand for sensitivity training, all that and more is surely at Silver's disposal.



It seems probable some sort of resolution comes before Game 5 of the series in Los Angeles.



"We're going home now," Clippers coach Doc Rivers said after Sunday's 118-97 loss. "Usually that would mean we're going to our safe haven. And I don't even know if that's true, to be honest."



Sterling agreed to not attend Sunday's game, though his wife — who has filed suit against the woman alleged to be on the tape — was present. There could be more audio coming; a person in the office of attorney Mac E. Nehoray, who represents the woman allegedly on the tape, said the full recording lasts about an hour. The attorney's office also insists that the recording is legitimate and that Sterling is the man on the tape.



Some players feel for the magnitude of the task Silver is facing.



"What, he's been three months on the job? And he has to deal with an issue like this," Washington's Garrett Temple said of Silver. "It's unfair to him. ... It's going to be a difficult situation for him to take care of, and he's probably going to act swiftly as he said. And he needs to do so. It's a very tough issue. A lot of different sides. But it's more than basketball."



The situation has elicited some incredibly sharp comments from players, with LeBron James and Kobe Bryant making no effort to hide their disgust.



"I couldn't play for him," Bryant wrote on Twitter.



Added former Clippers guard Baron Davis, also in a tweet: "Been going on for a long time."



Sterling has been the subject of many past controversies but this, particularly at playoff time and with his own team a potential title contender, has perhaps generated more outcry than the others combined. Even President Barack Obama addressed the issue Sunday at a news conference in Malaysia.



The next move will be made by Silver.



"The commissioner," Indiana's Paul George said, "is going to make the right call."



___



AP Sports Writers Antonio Gonzalez, Michael Marot and Joseph White and Associated Press Writer John Rogers contributed to this report.



from The Huffington Post | The Full Feed

These Children Say More About Gun Control Than Congress Has In Any Law

These children say more about gun control in a dance than Congress has in any kind of law.



from The Huffington Post | The Full Feed

Cancer teenager's fundraising total hits £3m - three times his target

Inspirational cancer sufferer Stephen Sutton, 19, (pictured with Roger Daltry) received a massive boost last night after his charity fund neared £3million – almost three times his target of £1million.



from Home | Mail Online

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Gardeners down the generations have passed on tips about the best way to grow flowers and veg. But with so many new books and the internet, we can all share the best advice...



from Home | Mail Online

Holocaust was 'most heinous crime against humanity', says Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas

Mahmoud Abbas's comment led Israeli premier Benjamin Netanyahu to urge him to end his reconciliation with rival Palestinian group, Hamas.



from Home | Mail Online

Now we envy the Joneses' recycling: Third of Britons admit they can't help eyeing up their neighbours' lifestyle

The poll by energy firm E.ON found our top priority is sizing up next door’s back garden but we also rate our neighbours on their looks, jobs, social life and car.



from Home | Mail Online

Almonds, perfect snack for health: Handful a day can keep heart healthy and beat the flab, results of six new studies conclude

The high-protein, nutrient-rich nuts help suppress the appetite, beat flab and also keep your heart healthy.



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SEBASTIAN SHAKESPEARE: Fury at snub to RAF hero who criticised bomber memorial

The Bomber Command Association declined to organise or attend a service for Squadron Leader Tony Iveson, a Lancaster pilot who died aged 94 in November.



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One in three councils switch off street lights to save money and energy: Half also make roads darker by dimming bulbs

Two-thirds of councils have switched off street lights to slash costs, a survey by the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE) reveals today.



from Home | Mail Online

ANDREW PIERCE: City watchdog bosses earn £1m AND 'avoid' tax

David Ruffley has used the Freedom of Information Act to uncover the arrangements that could be saving thousands of pounds for staff at the Financial Conduct Authority — while at the same time tougher rules are brought in to make it harder for homebuyers to get a mortgage.



from Home | Mail Online

DAILY MAIL COMMENT: Mere abuse won't stop voters backing Ukip

Are Mr Hunt and Co trying to suggest that almost a third of the population are disgusting, divisive and un-British?



from Home | Mail Online

Producers Want Millions from Actress Who Got Cancer During Rehearsals

Producers Want Millions from Actress Who Got Cancer During Rehearsals


The playwright and producers of a Broadway show are demanding $2 million from former lead actress Valerie Harper, claiming she hurt the play when a brain cancer diagnosis forced her to drop out.


Read more...




















from Gawker

PETER MCKAY: Ten years of Clegg? Let's all get ready to emigrate

There’s a settled view about our main party leaders, writes PETER MCKAY. It’s that David Cameron is doubted, Ed Miliband dismissed and Nick Clegg despised.



from Home | Mail Online

Aisle View: Fire without Substance

And here we have a revival of Jon Robin Baitz' 1991 play The Substance of Fire, which introduced a decidedly promising playwright and garnered all-round, well-deserved praise. Directed by Daniel Sullivan, it featured a career-making performance by character man Ron Rifkin as an aging publisher fighting bankruptcy, a trio of battling children, and increasingly debilitating memories of his experiences during the Holocaust. The play was exciting and provocative at both Playwrights Horizons and the Mitzi Newhouse, where it quickly transferred. (One of the final offerings from André Bishop during his reign as artistic director of Playwrights, he brought the production with him when he moved up to Lincoln Center Theater.) In revival twenty-three years later, though, this same play demonstrates only flashes of interest. This Substance of Fire generates very little heat.



This is something of a surprise, to this viewer at least. The new production at Second Stage Theatre--directed by Trip Cullman, who did a superb job last year with Choir Boy at the Manhattan Theatre Club--is not so good as the first, no; and the present acting company can't quite compare to original cast (which included Sarah Jessica Parker and Maria Tucci). But unless the director fouls things up altogether or the cast is unequal to the challenge, a well-written and incisive play--a quarter-century later--ought still to be well-written and incisive. The present Substance of Fire meanders its way along. The plot devices seem overly-familiar and decidedly non-gripping, and the play--in this production--doesn't seem to add up to much.



John Noble, in Rifkin's role of Isaac Geldhart, is not part of the problem. An Australian with intensive stage credits, he is better known for his roles on screen (The Lord of the Rings) and television (Fringe). Noble gives a convincing performance as the stubborn, embattled European émigré, and New York producers might well take note. The three actors playing his children are not quite so successful, presumably due to the direction; we don't care much about their characters or their characters' predicaments. By not being invested in them, we are ultimately only peripherally interested in Isaac. Thus, we sit there observing the story rather than feeling it.



Charlayne Woodard--author of four acclaimed solo plays and an original cast member of Ain't Misbehavin'--plays the fifth role, of the visiting social worker, and as usual she is a joy to watch. The scene has always seemed somewhat disjointed from the first act, though, and at Second Stage it seems as if we have launched into a totally different comedy altogether.



Anna Louizos (In the Heights) has provided two first-rate sets, a stately publishing house in the first act and an even more stately Gramercy Park apartment in the second. But the scenery, and the performance of Mr. Noble, are the main assets of this production of The Substance of Fire. Not enough substance to make a strong case for Mr. Baitz's script.



.





The Substance of Fire, by Jon Robin Baitz, opened April 27, 2014 at Second Stage Theatre



from The Huffington Post | The Full Feed

A million pilgrims bear witness on day of four popes: Two pontiffs made saints as two look on - but who invited Mugabe?

Polish pilgrims carrying the red and white flags of John Paul's beloved homeland were among the first to press into St Peter's Square well before dawn.



from Home | Mail Online

'Cover-up' claims over Blair minister suspected of abusing children at home run by paedophile

The suspect was implicated in a 16-month investigation into alleged attacks carried out a private flat in the home in Brixton, south London, in the early 1980s.



from Home | Mail Online