Replica Watches wholesale – Watch Fairs

May 17, 2012

Happy Earth Day A Sneak Attack on the Wilderness

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 11:33 pm

No one could accuse the most rabidly anti-environmental Congress in history of resting on its laurels. This week, the Republican-controlled House of Representatives passed a package of bills that would destroy the fundamental wildlife and public lands protections enacted nearly 50 years ago in the Wilderness Act. Here’s how that landmark act famously defined “wilderness”:

“… an area where the earth and community of life are untrammeled by man Office 2011 MAC Key, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain.”

Millions of Americans have been fortunate enough to visit and enjoy these special wild places. Some have been hikers and backpackers. Some have been sportsmen and anglers. All have benefited from the conservation of wilderness for future generations. And many are out there this weekend, enjoying the great outdoors.

But by labeling the anti-wilderness legislation passed by the House this week as “The Sportsmen’s Heritage Act,” its sponsors were able to portray it as a defense of sportsmen’s rights. In reality, it sells them down the river. As anyone in the sportsmen community will tell you, protected wilderness areas are among the best places to find good hunting and fishing opportunities. This legislation would remove those protections and seriously degrade the “untrammeled” habitat that makes these places precious, not just to sportsmen Windows 7 Serial, but to all Americans.

If it were to become law Windows 7 Key, this act would:

Open more than 109 million acres of wilderness areas to motor vehicle use.
Effectively eliminate the president’s ability to designate any new national monuments like the one that was just announced for California: Fort Ord.
Potentially open our wilderness areas to oil and gas drilling, logging, and mining.

For more than a century, sportsmen’s groups and environmental organizations like the Sierra Club have cooperated to achieve our mutual conservation goal of preserving wild places that we all can experience “as a visitor.” And, in fact, the vast majority of the wilderness lands that would lose protections are already accessible to sportsmen. That won’t matter, of course, if we allow that wilderness to be destroyed for the sake of drilling, logging, and mining. What good is access to something that no longer exists?

Fortunately, it’s not too late to stop this disastrous legislation, which now goes to the Senate. Tell your senators today that we can’t afford to let one reckless Congress destroy our wilderness heritage.

Jessica Simpson and the Acceptable ‘Shape’ of Mode

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — admin @ 11:20 pm

Today, as Jessica Simpson celebrates the birth of a healthy 9 lb replica watches, 13 oz baby, the media is already salivating about her post-baby weight-loss regime. There is speculation that she will enroll as a Weight Watchers ambassador and rumors about the identity of the de rigueur personal trainer who will coax her ‘back into shape.’ Amidst all the frenzied speculation, it’s time to pause and ask where our obsession with eradicating the physical evidence of pregnancy and birth has come from, and whether there might even be another way to see — and even value — the bodily changes that child-bearing brings.

At the International Museum of Women we asked women all over the world to tell us about their experiences of pregnancy and birth — and the changes in their bodies that accompany motherhood. The results were striking. In particular, there is one film we are currently exhibiting that Jessica should really see before she embarks upon the post-baby regime the world is so anxious to foist upon her.

That film is called “Birth-markings.” Created by film director Margaret Lazarus, Birth-markings is a bold an ambitious film that catalogues the bodily changes motherhood brings to mothers of all ages, classes and races.

To women reared on a diet of post baby celebrity bodies, the film is almost shocking. Women celebrate their bare flesh — and particularly their bare stomachs. The camera dwells on a succession of bellies — complete with extra flesh and stretch marks — as the women narrate their feelings about their bodies and the stories they tell about their hopes replica watches, fears and experiences, and above all their identity as mothers.

Women confess their feelings of discomfort and insecurity about their changing bodies and their realization that the ‘perfect, taut stomach’ of a pre-pregnancy teenage girl is an expectation and a standard that they can no longer achieve. However, on the other side of these fears and realizations something remarkable happens. The women discover and own the beauty in their post partum bodies.

It is a striking and moving film, and — contrary to what we have been conditioned to expect — the women’s bodies, bellies and stretch marks acquire an aura of true beauty. The contours and ripples of the women’s bodies and stretch marks are a poignant echo of lives changed, hopes fulfilled and the vitality of life itself.

One woman reveals that her scars and stretch marks have become ‘her badge of motherhood’ and that she wears them as proudly as a man might wear his battle scars. Another says, “[My belly] isn’t un-marked and perfect — it looks like something happened here. It’s dynamic — it’s creation!” Each woman articulates how her body has been enhanced by the experience of something that is simultaneously so “ordinary and so sacred.”

Lazarus’s film is so provocative and so eye-opening because it gives us a template for valuing ourselves and our postpartum bellies as they really are — healthy, but unvarnished, un-air-brushed and without the intervention of cosmetic surgery. Our bellies are our mementos of our most meaningful experiences and of our narratives as mothers — and they are beautiful.

As Jessica Simpson contemplates her months ahead and the joyful life that is opening up for her as the mother of her daughter Maxwell replica watches, my wish for her is that — amidst the media expectations and bombardment — she feels confidence and pride in her changed body and belly, and the story that they tell about her new life as a mom.

“BirthMarkings” by Margaret Lazarus is on display as part of the International Museum of Women’s current online exhibition, MAMA: Motherhood Around the Globe.

UK minister says Murdoch allegations are ‘laughabl

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 10:50 pm

LONDON (Reuters) – The British minister accused of giving Rupert Murdoch special access during the media tycoon’s bid to increase his hold on Britain’s television industry labeled accusations against him as “laughable” on Wednesday. Tattoo Ink Kits

Jeremy Hunt, the culture minister who was last year tasked with reviewing Murdoch’s $12 billion plan to boost his stake in British pay TV operator BSkyB, is under immense pressure to resign after allegations emerged of his close contacts with Murdoch’s News Corp media empire.

In a hearing into media ethics on Tuesday, Murdoch’s media executive son James said Hunt had given News Corp special treatment during talks surrounding the government’s decision on whether to allow the TV deal to go ahead.

“The idea I was backing this bid is laughable Setting Tattoo Machine,” a visibly flustered Hunt told parliament to roars of approval from his own Conservative Party and jeers of derision from the opposition Labour party, which has led calls for him to be sacked.

The furor is the latest blow to Prime Minister David Cameron’s government after a torrid month in which he has lurched from crisis to crisis, garnering an embarrassing slew of negative headlines and raising questions over his leadership.

Speaking in parliament Tattoo Kits Free Shipping, Cameron said he gave his “full support” to his embattled minister and ruled out a separate investigation into his contacts with News Corp.

The row has already claimed the scalp of Hunt’s special adviser Adam Smith, who resigned earlier on Wednesday.

Media pundits have portrayed the bombshell dropped by James on Tuesday as more evidence that his father is on the warpath after being vilified by Britain’s once-fawning political establishment since allegations of phone hacking at Murdoch’s newspapers turned the octogenarian’s patronage toxic.

“Transcripts of conversations and texts published yesterday between my special adviser Adam Smith and a News Corporation representative have been alleged to indicate there was a back channel through which News Corporation were able to influence my decisions. This is categorically not the case,” Hunt said.

Hunt was thrust into overseeing the News Corp bid for BSkyB when his predecessor Vince Cable was removed from the role after he was secretly taped indicating he would not allow the deal to go through because of his dislike of Murdoch.

(Reporting by Mohammed Abbas and Tim Castle, editing by Matt Falloon and Maria Golovnina)

World Rupert Murdoch Related Quotes and News Company Price Related News

Weekly newspapers in Greenville, Bangor and Newpor

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 10:50 pm

BANGOR, Maine — Hometown Newspapers LLC has ceased publication of three weekly newspapers in an effort to focus attention on online content Cheap Tattoo Guns, according to publisher Robert Pushard.

The Highlands Journal-Moosehead Times in the Greenville area, the Citizen Journal in the Bangor area, and the SV Weekly-Somerset Times in the Newport area published their final issues last week, said Pushard. All three were free weekly newspapers.

Hometown Newspapers took over subscriptions for the Moosehead Messenger, which stopped printing in February, and replaced them with the Highlands Journal-Moosehead Times.

Another weekly paper published by Hometown Newspapers Starter Tattoo Kits, the Penobscot Valley Explorer in Lincoln, was launched on March 22 and will continue publication. Its corresponding website was launched the same day. The company also is keeping its North Country magazine.

Pushard said the economy is one reason for closing the three papers, but the company wanted to focus its attention on its new website.

“We’re melding more tightly with an online presence,” said Pushard. “We want to have a website with a newspaper rather than a newspaper with a website. Rather than try to run both models simultaneously in this kind of market, we’re changing the model of how we do business.”

The transition has eliminated only one job. Pushard said the company averages between seven and nine employees.

He said the Penobscot Valley Explorer has received an enthusiastic response.

“In the Lincoln area, we have tremendous support. We’re cooking with gas up there,” said Pushard.

Articles on the website and in the paper will be generated largely from people in the community.

“They’ll be written by folks in the community about things they’re interested in,” he said. “The future of micronews is community-based journalism.

“When we had all of our papers, we were covering about 35 high schools. It’s hard to do with few employees,” said Pushard. “Now readers can get the news they find interesting into the paper [by writing it themselves].”

Pushard said the Penobscot Valley Explorer will have a solid web presence as well as features on the iPad and Android devices.

“We figure it will be a month or so to get the kinks out with all our people working on it at the same time,” he said. “We’re trying to avoid the mistakes print guys typically make and what all web guys typically make [in moving to new computer systems].”

Although the three papers were eliminated, there’s still a chance they could make a return, according to Pushard.

“If a group of people really miss the papers Buy Tattoo Machine, they just need to contact us,” he said. “We’ll look at what it takes to get it back.”

May 16, 2012

François Hollande, the Accidental President

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 3:44 pm

A new president of France, François Hollande, will be sworn in on 15 May, 2012. At the beginning of last year, anyone who would have believed that Hollande would take up residence in the center of Paris as the master of Elysée Palace would have been thought to have been high, living in the twilight zone, or both. But a series of acts of god and missteps by supposedly more savvy politicians considered to have more presidential mien than Hollande, have brought this so -called “pedal-boat captain” to the centre of the halls of power in Europe.

Hollande, the first of his party to hold office in over 17 years has pulled off a remarkable feat despite his calls for a 75% tax on the rich and the snubs he received from other European leaders like David Cameron of Britain and Angela Merkel of Germany, who went so far as to insert herself into French domestic affairs by expressing support for Sarkozy during the course of the French election campaign.

Put in another way, the victory of Hollande could be seen not as an embrace of Hollande himself, but rather a rejection of Sarkozy and his European cohorts who have so far botched Europe’s response to the financial crisis and left Europe mired in high unemployment and low, if any, GDP growth. Sarkozy’s defeat could be seen as simply the latest, and perhaps most prominent, scalp, after prime minister Papandreou of Greece and prime minister Berlusconi of Italy, to be sacrificed at the altar of the ongoing crisis in Europe.

To look at how the improbable presidency of Hollande, branded as boring by allies and enemies alike, came to be Replica Karen Millen Dresses, one could look at three flashier politicians on both the left and the right of French politics, whose downfalls led to the accidental presidency of François Hollande, namely Nicolas Sarkozy, Dominique Strauss-Kahn and Ségolène Royal.

Nicolas Sarkozy – Sarkozy has been called many things that the French consider insults, including “Président bling, bling” and “Sarko l’Américain”. But one moniker that the French have not publicly given him, but one that he obviously deserves, is the label of hypocrite. Sarkozy is the son of a Hungarian immigrant, yet, as France got sucked deeper into the financial crisis, unemployment rose to historic levels and public support waned, Sarkozy turned to immigrant bashing in order to generate support for a second term and went so far as to recently declare that there are too many immigrants in France.

But his stance against immigration, and I mean all immigration, not just illegal immigration, is not the only reason why his candidacy failed. The dictatorial manner in which he rammed through the raise of France’s retirement age from 60 to 62 in 2010 despite widespread protests, an unfulfilled promise to reduce France’s unemployment rate to 5%, a failure that Hollande focused on during the sole Sarkozy-Hollande debate of the election season, and a January 2012 downgrade by Standard & Poor’s, which stripped France of its cherished AAA rating, all contributed to putting the nail in the coffin of the Sarkozy era.

Dominique Strauss-Kahn – DSK, as he is known in France, was a revered French politician and international figure who rose to become the president of the International Monetary Fund. He was intelligent, wealthy, but not showy, in a long term marriage to the Barbara Walters of French journalism and fluent in English, as well as his native French. As Sarkozy self-combusted, DSK was supposed to triumphantly return from the Washington headquarters of the IMF and slide easily into the role that he was born to play as Monsieur le President de la Republique.

He was supposed to bring respectability back to the Elysée Palace, but instead he became France’s national shame. In May 2011, DSK was removed by the NYPD from an Air France flight leaving New York for Paris, perp-walked through New York and ended up taking up residence at New York’s infamous Rikers Island jail charged with the rape of a hotel chambermaid. Despite French condemnation of American criminal justice, and some invoking the Frenchman’s droit de cuissage (the right of a master to have sex with his subordinate), DSK’s political career was over.

Ségolène Royal – The ex-common law wife of François Hollande was considered more of a heavy weight politician than the father of her four children. In 2007, the Socialist Party choose Royal, making her the first woman nominated for president by a major French party. She lost to a Sarkozy who was then popular and considered a breath of fresh air in French politics.

Hollande Replica Emilio Pucci Dresses, who was then running the Socialist Party, was blamed for her defeat and the couple ended their close to 30 year union.

In 2011, Royal ran against Hollande in the Socialist Party’s primary after DSK ended up in a jail cell in New York, but this time, she was not trusted enough by the party’s base to come out the victor in round 2 of Sarkozy versus Royal, so the party chose Hollande instead.

So today, as the almost 50% of French citizens who did not vote for Hollande resign themselves to defeat and prepare for a new socialist government in France, Hollande has many challenges ahead of him, not least of all is reducing unemployment, putting France back on a trajectory of growth and truly unifying France across ideological, religious and racial divides.

Believing that France needed to change, Hollande co-opted part of Barack Obama’s 2008 election slogan, declaring “changement c’est maintenant.” Enough French citizens believed that it was time for a change and Hollande now has five years to show France the change for which its citizens are longing. If he is able to pull it off, people will remember him more for being a great president than, rather than an accidental one.

May 15, 2012

Right-Wing Rewards

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — admin @ 10:41 pm

Harper’s, August 2008 An essay traces how, in the 1980s, a young Jack Abramoff helped transform conservatism into a money-making scheme for its adherents. “[C]onservative politicians had long served business interests Tattoo Supplies, and so businesspeople had long tended to be conservatives.” But the disgraced lobbyist developed the idea of “conservatism as business, conservatism as a source of profit for the people [he] once referred to as political entrepreneurs.”… A piece by Ken Silverstein examines the economic interests involved in directing foreign policy with China, revealing that “most of America’s so-called experts on China, including advisers to Obama and McCain, have a definite if unacknowledged stake in keeping close ties with Beijing.” The current policy of “constructive engagement” is not “working well for the United States or the Chinese people … [but] it is working quite well for the very individuals from whom we might hope to see a new approach emerge: namely, America’s foreign-policy elite. …”

New York Times Magazine, July 27 The cover story is a photo essay on the women of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the polygamist group whose children were taken away by the state of Texas earlier this year. The piece notes that “in a case … about doctrinaire male authority, and supposed abuse committed by men, it’s the women of the F.L.D.S. who have largely had to assume a public mantle these past months, making court appearances, trying to defend both their faith and their life style in the face of deep skepticism.”… A profile of European Grand Prix wunderkind Lewis Hamilton observes that the black British racer has been “compared with another sports prodigy, Tiger Woods.”… In her “Medium” column, Virginia Heffernan urges television producers to stop targeting young audiences: “Give up on the idea of edgy, contemporary shows featuring characters that mirror the audience producers hope to attract (’Will and Grace,’ ‘Friends,’ ‘Seinfeld’). Hip quarter-life characters no longer watch television, so why should their audience?”

Advertisement

American Scholar, Summer 2008 An essay by a recently retired Yale professor warns that an elite education “teaches you to think that measure of intelligence and academic achievement are measures of value in some moral or metaphysical sense.” The gilded universities also encourage “entitled mediocrity”—the notion that “for the elite, there’s always another extension, a bailout, a pardon, a stint in rehab—always plenty of contacts and special stipends. …” But the “most damning disadvantage” of Ivy League institutions is they are “profoundly anti-intellectual”—they seek to train “leaders, not thinkers—holders of power, not its critics.”… A piece considers the “unusual friendship” between Thomas Wentworth Higginson and Emily Dickinson, who sought out the radical abolitionist in hopes he would read her poems. The pair corresponded through letters for eight years without meeting. After their seemingly only face-to-face introduction, Higginson wrote that “he had never met anyone who ‘drained my nerve power so much.’ “

Time, August 4 The cover story names “100 Olympic athletes to watch.” The Cleveland Cavaliers’ LeBron James tops the list, which calls him the “rarest of athletes, a phenom who has actually exceeded the enormous expectations that trailed him out of an Akron, Ohio, high school.” No. 2 is 41-year-old swimmer Dara Torres, who already has nine Olympic medals. … In an interview on his foreign tour, Barack Obama says that while visiting the troops in Iraq, he “was reminded … just how high troop morale remains despite the difficulties. … [W]hen the troops are in the field, they are energized, and they are working hard, and they believe in the small slice of work that’s been given.”… In a column, Joe Klein declares McCain’s “greatest claim to the presidency—his overseas expertise—now seems squandered. … [He] has straitjacketed himself into an ideology focused more on enemies (real and imagined) than on opportunities.”

Economist, July 26 The cover story surveys a “glum” America beset by bad credit, high energy prices, and an unsuccessful war and warns that “countries, like people, behave dangerously when their mood turns dark. If America fails to distinguish between what it needs to change and what it needs to accept, it risks hurting not just allies and trading partners, but also itself.”… A briefing questions the belief that in modern societies Tattoo Supplies, “the elaborate discrimination which made religious allegiance into a public matter is … a thing of the past.” Though Westerners expect such a right, a “religious free-for-all is very much the exception, not the rule, in human history—and increasingly rare, some would say, in the world today.”… A piece reveals that “in many developing countries the newspaper business is booming.” Even nations “with more meddling governments” that restrict freedom of the press are experiencing an uptick in print circulation.

Must Read
New Scientist’s cover story unpacks a study that suggests men and women may have different brain structures—and explains how this is causing doctors to re-examine how diseases and medication affect the sexes.

Must Skip
There’s little meat in Newsweek’s profile of McCain adviser Mark Salter—except if the fact that he bought a beach house with proceeds from books he’s written about or co-authored with the candidate is a revelation.

Best Politics Piece
In Mother Jones, an article revisits the questionable dealings of former senator and former McCain guru Phil Gram that led to the Enron implosion and the subprime-mortgage crisis.

Best Culture Piece
An essay in the American Scholar condemns Ivy League schools for being “profoundly anti-intellectual,” observing that “the liberal arts university is becoming the corporate university, its center of gravity shifting to technical fields where scholarly expertise can be parlayed into lucrative business opportunities.”

Most Likely To Offend
In an interview with the New York Times Magazine, Nobel laureate Doris Lessing sounds off against feminism: “I don’t think that the feminist movement has done much for the characters of women. … What has happened is that given the scope to women to be critical and unpleasant, by God they have taken it, so men are suffering from it.”

May 14, 2012

REPORTNissan’s Ghosn rules out hybrid-only models

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 8:34 am

Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn with Leaf EV – Click above for high-res image gallery

Quick Replica DKNY Clothes, think of a hybrid automobile. Got it? Are you thinking of the Toyota Prius? Pretty much everyone instantly recognizes the well-known profile of the Prius Herve Leger sale, and it’s by far the most popular fuel miser on the market. A good bit of Toyota’s success with the Prius has been attributed to its unique look – some owners want everyone to know that they care about their environmental footprint Replica Chanel Dresses, and the Prius currently accomplishes that better than any of its competitors.

Honda followed a similar path with the second-generation Insight hatchback, which some believe follows the form of the Prius a little too closely. According to Nissan head Carlos Ghosn Replica Karen Millen Dresses, though Cheap Chloe Dresses, there’s no chance that Japan’s number three automaker will join that club. Speaking to Automotive News at the Tokyo Motor Show, Ghosn said:
We are not intending to play a leadership role in hybrids. One company already assumed leadership in the technology. We want leadership on EVs. Obviously Herve Leger sale, the company that leads in hybrids is Toyota, and Nissan’s intention is to score a similar position in the world of pure electric automobiles. The opening salvo on that front will be the upcoming Nissan Leaf, which is slated to hit the market about a year from now, and the company has ambitious plans for its following act. We’ll know if Ghosn’s plan is successful or not about five years from now. Stay tuned.

Related Gallery2010 Nissan Leaf EV
[Source: Automotive News - Sub. Req'd]

O’Farrell happy to front NSW inquiry

NSW Premier Barry O'Farrell says he's happy to appear before an inquiry into the sacking of Sydney's Star casino boss Sid Vaikunta.

He also says his communications director Cheap Christian Audigier Clothes, Peter Grimshaw DKNY Dresses sale, made the right decision to resign.

The opposition has been calling on the premier to front hearings in Sydney before the Independent Liquor and Gaming Authority.

It follows claims that Mr O'Farrell promised Mr Grimshaw he would “smash” the casino and Mr Vaikunta, who was embroiled in a sexual harassment scandal with Mr Grimshaw's partner.

Asked if he would appear before the inquiry, Mr O'Farrell said: “Absolutely”.

“The government will fully cooperate from top to bottom,” he told reporters on Wednesday.

It is up to the authority to request him to appear.

Mr O'Farrell also repeated the claim, made to parliament on Tuesday Cheap Marc Jacobs Dresses, that he regretted Mr Grimshaw's resignation.

“I regret the whole affair. I regret that it's come to this, but as I said yesterday Hale Bob Dresses sale, Mr Grimshaw's taken appropriate action,” he told reporters in Sydney's northwest on Wednesday.

“Regret is a word that's not only in the Macquarie Dictionary, but also the Concise Oxford Dictionary.

“It means what I said.”

Mr O'Farrell also maintains he did not text the word “smash” to Mr Grimshaw in November 2011, when the communications director had promised his partner the premier would destroy The Star's now sacked managing director.

“Not only do I not recall them Buy DKNY Dresses, but I don't believe they were said because the word 'smashed' for instance is not one … term I would use Herve Leger sale,” Mr O'Farrell said.

Who Should Replace Justice Stevens

Justice John Paul Stevens has announced his plans to retire. Let the shortlist parlor game begin. Of course, it already has. The three names that the White House has been bandying about to reporters are Judge Diane Wood of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, Solicitor General Elena Kagan, and Judge Merrick Garland of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. We asked some of our favorite legal friends to weigh in with their less-obvious choices. Here are their answers so far, and we’ll add more as they come in. Tell us your own choices in the comments, and we’ll round those up, too. Here’s Slate’s shortlist from last year, when the winner was Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

Hillary Clinton
I didn’t support Hillary Clinton’s candidacy for president, but I think she’d be a rock star of a Supreme Court justice. Clinton has all the makings of a full-throated, strong-minded liberal stalwart on the bench. She’s been an advocate for children and for families for as long as she’s been in public life. They are in need of as much help as they can get on the court. (Wait for this term’s ruling on whether juveniles can serve life without parole to see what I mean.) She knows how to frame ideas for a wide audience, which would help the liberal wing of the court counterbalance the genius rhetoric of Antonin Scalia. She’s a celebrity, which means she’ll automatically command the kind of attention that a junior member of the court usually does not. She’s served as secretary of state long enough to make a graceful exit. She is a former senator, which should win her some courtesy and deference during the godforsaken nomination process—will the Republicans who worked with her personally really throw grenades when they question her? And, of course Hale Bob Dresses sale, she brings a wealth of real-world political experience to the court. The only knock on Clinton is that at 62 Cheap Karen Millen Dresses, she won’t necessarily serve for decades upon decades. But she looks healthy and energetic as ever and I’d trade a few extra years for her mettle and character.
—Emily Bazelon, Slate senior editor

Advertisement

Bryan A. Stevenson
The nomination of Bryan Stevenson, director of the Equal Justice Initiative in Alabama and professor at the NYU Law School, would be a much-needed return to putting a great lawyer like Louis Brandeis or Thurgood Marshall on the Supreme Court—someone of great intellect who has heroically represented real people with desperate needs in actual cases and knows how the justice system functions in courthouses and communities all over the nation and the impact it has on people. The current members of the court have no real sense of the injustices and cruelty of the criminal justice system, the complete absence of any semblance of an adversary system in many parts of the country, the inability of the poor to get their day in court in any kind of case. The court would benefit immensely from Bryan Stevenson’s experiences and perspectives, just as Justice Marshall’s colleagues benefited from his experiences and insights as many related in their tributes to him after his retirement. Throughout its history, the court has been well-served by the diversity of experience of its members. It is urgently in need of that kind of diversity today.
—Stephen B. Bright, president and senior counsel, Southern Center for Human Rights

William Gunn
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes famously wrote that the life of the law is not logic but experience. Holmes Buy Herve Leger v neck, a thrice-wounded Civil War combat veteran, may have had his wartime experience in mind. In retiring, Justice John Paul Stevens will deprive the Supreme Court of its last sitting veteran. At a time when our nation is at war and the Supreme Court finds itself increasingly brought into cases involving war powers and the military, the court needs a justice with visceral military experience, if not combat experience as well. Accordingly, President Obama should choose a veteran to replace Stevens. One option would be William Gunn, current general counsel of the Department of Veterans Affairs. Gunn graduated with honors from the Air Force Academy and Harvard Law School and then served nearly 20 years in the Air Force Judge Advocate General Corps. He was part of the military that transitioned from the Cold War to the post-Cold War deployments of the 1990s to today’s global war on terrorism. His final assignment as chief defense counsel for the Office of Military Commissions put him at the epicenter of the court’s battles over national security policy, a tough position he performed well. And he’s been recently confirmed by the Senate, an asset for any pick.
—Phillip Carter, lawyer at McKenna Long & Aldridge and former deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee policy for the Obama administration

Charles Ogletree
There are many exceptionally qualified potential nominees, but because I think the court desperately needs to replace Stevens with an experienced trial lawyer, my favorite candidate is Charles Ogletree. Ogletree was a legendary trial lawyer with the D.C. Public Defenders and continues to consult and litigate while teaching at Harvard Law, where he also runs the clinical program. He a deeply religious Protestant and a leader of the African-American community. He is a beloved teacher and an important scholar. He would add several important elements to the current court in addition to his trial experience, including real-life exposure to a wide range of people and situations. He is a lawyer’s lawyer. He is far more representative of African-Americans than the court’s only other black member, Clarence Thomas. Most of all Discount White Herve leger, he is a real “mensch”—a man of great compassion, intellect, and courage. He also has a compelling life story. He has mentored many of the leading young lawyers, including our president. The selection of Ogletree would be memorable and dramatic. He would make an extraordinary justice.
—Alan M. Dershowitz, Harvard Law School professor

Stephen Carter, David Cole, Pam Karlan
If President Obama acknowledges that filling this vacancy is sufficiently important to warrant a fight, then I hope he will nominate someone like Pam Karlan or David Cole. Both are graduates of Yale Law School, and both are law professors who have straddled academia and legal practice. More important, both have been centrally involved in the most important legal issues of the day. In Karlan’s case, she is one of the nation’s leading experts on anti-discrimination law and oversees Stanford Law School’s Supreme Court clinic. In Cole’s case, he has been the country’s most informed vocal critic of the legal excesses that have accompanied the so-called war on terror, and he has been continuously litigating against these excesses. Either would provoke a vicious conformation battle, but, in either case, the battle would be worthwhile. If Obama wants a safe choice, then he might tilt toward an academic like Stephen Carter. Carter used to make the short list when Clinton was president, and although he is rarely mentioned anymore, he is still relatively young (not yet 60) and firmly planted in the middle of the political road. An expert on constitutional law (especially religion) as well as intellectual property, he’s probably a little too conservative for my personal taste Bandage dresses sale, but that’s exactly what makes him safe.
—David R. Dow, University of Houston Law Center professor, litigation director at the Texas Defender Service, and author of  The Autobiography of an Execution

Stuart Rabner
Many of us (myself included) would like to see President Obama nominate somebody with experience in elected office, like Jennifer Granholm or Janet Napolitano. Maybe it will happen, but it seems unlikely—the nominee would be attacked as “too political.” So how about a state court justice instead of a federal appellate judge? New Jersey Supreme Court justice Stuart Rabner is smart, young, and widely respected. He is a career prosecutor with a reputation for great integrity and for being nonpartisan: Democrat Jon Corzine appointed him, but Republican Chris Christie is also a fan. Plus, Rabner would add geographic diversity: He’s a North Jersey guy, whereas Alito and Scalia are South Jersey. (More seriously, geographic diversity, if it still matters to anyone, obviously cuts against my suggestion—but at least Stuart is not a Washington lawyer, a group that I think is already over-represented on the court.)
—Christopher L. Eisgruber, Princeton University provost

Harold Koh
Sure, conservatives will go ballistic. But why should they prevent President Obama from nominating an extremely smart, well-credentialed, thoughtful, and seemingly confirmable candidate? Koh, the former Yale Law School dean who is legal adviser for the State Department, would bring intellectual fire power to the court and broaden it in other ways as well. He’s never been a judge (a plus for the current court) but has a wealth of legal experience—as a lawyer, a scholar of international law, a law dean, and in the executive branch (under Reagan and Clinton and now Obama). And, yeah, he’d be the first Asian-American appointed to the court.
—Lee Epstein, Northwestern University School of Law professor

Elizabeth Warren
President Obama should nominate Elizabeth Warren to replace Justice Stevens. Warren is the Harvard law professor currently serving as chairwoman of the Congressional Oversight Panel investigating the banking bailout. She has for years been one of the nation’s foremost experts on bankruptcy, focusing on how it impacts working-class Americans. For years before the bubble burst, Warren warned us about the dangers of subprime mortgages. She has proved masterful at communicating this message to the public and to Washington. Her life story is an embodiment of what people can do when given the economic opportunities she has advocated in her writings. The daughter of a janitor, Warren did not attend elite private universities—she went to the University of Houston and Rutgers law school before eventually joining the Harvard faculty. The current Supreme Court has no justices with expertise in business matters, and has been pushing the law in a conservative direction in such cases. Warren adds that expertise as well as a progressive perspective. And for a White House that likes nominees it knows Discount BCBG Dresses, it is important to note that the president met Warren years ago, and promoted many of Warren’s ideas during his presidential campaign.
—David Fontana is a George Washington University law professor; Seth Grossman, who clerked for Justice Stephen Breyer, is a lawyer at Jenner & Block

Pam Karlan, Kathleen Sullivan, Deval Patrick, Cass Sunstein
At risk of compromised objectivity, I will suggest two of my own colleagues at Stanford, Pam Karlan and Kathleen Sullivan, both accomplished Supreme Court litigators, highly influential scholars of Constitutional law and uncannily perceptive and energetic interlocutors.  If you want an antidote to the “umpire calling balls and strikes” nonsense that has passed for jurisprudence recently, read Karlan’s book Keeping Faith With the Constitution. If you want to see a model of the judicial temperament in action, listen to almost any argument or lecture Kathleen Sullivan gives.

SINGLE PAGE Page: 1 | 2 | 3

May 13, 2012

Man charged after crashing into house

An allegedly drunk P-plate driver has crashed into a western Sydney home Replica Technomarine Watches sale, demolishing a fence Fake Breguet Watches, uprooting shrubs and slamming into a wall.

The 39-year-old veered off Hyatts Road Replica Aigner Watches, in Plumpton Audemars Piguet Replica Watches, in a black Mitsubishi sedan and smashed into the home at about 9.15am (AEST) on Monday.

It caused extensive damage to the car and caused part of a garage wall to collapse Corum Replica Watches, with firefighters called to the scene to make it safe.

The driver was breath-tested before being taken to Mount Druitt police station Tag Heuer Replica Watches, where he blew 0.274 in a second test.

He has been charged with high-range drink driving and is due to appear at Mount Druitt Local Court on May 4.

Older Posts »

Top quality Replica Watches,Cheapest Replica Watches Sale.
Fake Omega Watches | Fake Rolex Watches | Replica Tag Heuer Watches