Feds Release Thousands of Immigrants who are Sex Offenders

Photo Credit: Breitbart

Photo Credit: Breitbart

The United States government has released nearly 3,000 immigrant sex offenders, some of whom were illegal immigrants, since September 2012. Of those, nearly 3,000, or about 5%, were not even properly registered with local authorities as sex offenders.

According to a Government Accountability Office (GAO) report released last week, “nearly 3,000 sex offenders are part of the 59,347 immigrants who the courts have ruled cannot be held” as of September 2012 because they were unable to be sent home. These immigrants were released “under some sort of supervision.”

As Stephen Dinan of the Washington Times noted, though, the GAO concluded that “about 5 percent of the time U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement didn’t ensure that the immigrants released were properly registered with local authorities as sex offenders.”

“I’m surprised that only 5 percent of them are not properly registered,” said Jessica Vaughan, director of policy studies at the Center for Immigration Studies (CIS).

Read more from this story HERE.

Obama Nominee for Judge Says Abortion Frees Women From “Conscription Into Maternity”

Photo Credit: Life News

Photo Credit: Life News

The United States Senate Judiciary Committee will vote this week on President Obama’s nomination of Cornelia Pillard to the court that many consider the second-most powerful and important in the land, the Court of Appeals of the D.C. Circuit. Of President Obama’s judicial nominees who have exhibited hostility towards unborn children, perhaps none is as flagrant, or as out-of-touch, as Cornelia Pillard.

In a 2007 law review article, Pillard wrote that “[r]eproductive rights, including the rights to contraception and abortion, play a central role in freeing women from historically routine conscription into maternity” (emphasis added). She believes there is an “equal protection” right to abortion—a position never adopted by the United States Supreme Court.

In other words, she believes that women cannot be equal citizens unless they have an unlimited right to abortion, and rather than suggest that the Constitution be amended if her views win favor with the American people, she asserts that the Constitution already protects abortion by forbidding states to deny anyone the equal protection of the laws.

Given Pillard’s views on equal protection and abortion, she would likely find most laws enacted to protect unborn children and their mothers invalid, including such widely-supported measures as late-term abortion restrictions, parental involvement and informed consent requirements, and clinic regulations.

Pillard writes that “[a]ntiabortion laws and other restraints on reproductive freedom not only enforce women’s incubation of unwanted pregnancies, but also prescribe a ‘vision of the woman’s role’ as mother and caretaker of children in a way that is at odds with equal protection” (emphasis added).

Read more from this story HERE.

CDC: 94 to 95 Percent of HIV Cases Among Young Men Linked to Gay Sex

Photo Credit: CDC

Photo Credit: CDC

The above is a graphic from a CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) online slide presentation, “HIV Surveillance in Adolescents and Young Adults” [1] – breaking down the incidence of HIV among young men ages 13-24. In 2011, an astonishing 94.9 percent of HIV diagnoses among teenage boys (13-19-years-old) were linked to homosexual (“male-to-male”) sex. And 94.1 percent of the cases among young men ages 20-24 (more analysis below) were from “gay” sex.

With the incidence of HIV among men so closely tied to homosexual sex, shouldn’t the government and all concerned and compassionate adults be urging young men and teenaged boys not to engage in or experiment with dangerous homosexual behavior? And yet, the CDC and other pro-”gay” institutions (including many schools public and private) are doing exactly the opposite, as they focus instead on affirming “gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender” youth as a “sexual minority.”

Feds Fund ‘Gay’ Youth Activist Groups

Another CDC document, “HIV and Young Men Who Have Sex with Men” (June 2012), reports that in 2011, the CDC awarded funds to two homosexual activists groups — the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network (GLSEN) and the Gay-Straight Alliance Network (GSAN) — “to assist CDC-funded public health and environmental changes to help schools and communities meet the health and medical needs of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender youth.” See this CNSNews article on the CDC grant.

Read more from this story HERE.

‘We Seem to be Surrounding them’: Glenn Beck Asks if we are Still Preparing for a Syria Strike

Photo Credit: TheBlaze TV

Photo Credit: TheBlaze TV

Glenn Beck said on his weekday television program Monday that “something is wrong” with regard to the situation in Syria, and “it doesn’t appear as though the president is holding out much hope for the diplomatic solution to be successful.”

His own sources and various media reports indicate an enhanced military presence in Turkey and Jordan, Beck said, “and we are sending the signal that a military strike against Assad is still a very possible outcome, despite Vladimir Putin’s supposed heroics.”

After detailing the equipment and numbers of troops reported on the borders, Beck said it seems like we are “surrounding” them.

“This doesn’t seem — what was it that [John Kerry] called it? An ‘unbelievably small’ operation? It sure doesn’t sound like it,” he said.

Read more from this story HERE.

SSA: $1.29 Billion in Disability Overpayments a ‘Small Payment Error’

Photo Credit: AP

Photo Credit: AP

The Social Security Administration (SSA) gave $1.29 billion in payments to individuals who were not considered disabled, a mistake the agency says is a “small payment error.”

The SSA made improper payments to roughly 36,000 individuals who were able to earn more than $1,000 per month, rendering them ineligible for the Disability Insurance (DI) program, according to a Government Accountability Office (GAO) report released Friday.

The cost to the taxpayers was nearly $1.3 billion.

The SSA said that the overall rate of overpayment is low, but the sheer number of people involved in the program leads to large totals.

“While our overpayment accuracy rates are high, even small payment errors result in large costs to taxpayers and to DI beneficiaries,” said Katherine A. Thornton, deputy chief of staff for the SSA, in the SSA’s response to the report.

Read more from this story HERE.

Vitter Seeks Ethics Investigation of Reid, Boxer Over Prostitution Amendment

Photo Credit: Tom Williams

Photo Credit: Tom Williams

Sen. David Vitter is pushing back against a legislative proposal that alludes to his prior connection to a prostitution scandal.

In a letter to the Senate Ethics Committee, the Louisiana Republican seeks an investigation of Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and Ethics Chairwoman Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., contending that the offices of the two senators are running afoul of the rules with “attempted bribery.”

Politico reported that Senate Democrats have drafted an amendment to pending energy efficiency legislation that would keep lawmakers from getting employer contributions for their federal health benefits in the new health exchanges under Obamacare if there is “probable cause” that the lawmaker solicited prostitutes.

Vitter has admitted to a “serious sin” but did not fully admit to being a client of Deborah Jeane Palfrey, better known as the “D.C. Madam.” His phone number, however, did show up in the investigation of Palfrey. Because the alleged solicitation took place before Vitter arrived in the Senate, the Ethics Committee dismissed a complaint against him back in 2008.

The draft legislation appears to be in response to Vitter’s quest to secure a vote on an amendment to unrelated energy efficiency legislation over government employer contributions to members of Congress in the new health exchanges.

Read more from this story HERE.

Wait Until You See How A High Textbook Summarizes The Rights Guaranteed in the 2nd Amendment

Picture - Bill of RightsControversy is brewing around a school district in Denton, Texas, that is said to be using a United States history book that seems to summarize the Second Amendment inaccurately. However, the Denton Independent School District maintains it only uses the book as “supplemental” material and is “disseminating the correct information on the Second Amendment” from other texts.

But there are several other schools that appear to be using the book, too.

“The people have the right to keep and bear arms in a state militia,” the definition in the book, “United States History: Preparing for the Advanced Placement Examination,” which acts as a study guide for the Advanced Placement U.S. history test, reads.

The amendment as ratified by the U.S. reads [emphasis added]: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

Based on the book’s interpretation, citizens only retain the right to bear arms in a “state militia,” a case where citizens are called upon during emergencies to protect the state. Not surprisingly, many would take issue with that interpretation.

It could certainly be an accidental misinterpretation by the textbook’s author, but people are clearly unhappy with the language and there is already an effort underway to make school officials at Guyer High School aware of the discrepancy. A Texas blogger has also pointed out that the Denton ISD Board of Trustees meets on Sept. 24 at 6 p.m. and is encouraging parents to show up and demand answers.

Read more from this story HERE.

Neglecting Our Nukes – Now Vulnerable to Hackers?

picture_nuclear_bomb_reutersOn Oct. 23, 2010, at about 1:30 in the morning, the underground launch control centers at F.E. Warren Air Force Base in Wyoming lost communication with 50 Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles. Instead of showing the status of the missiles, the computer screens in the control centers displayed the acronym LFDN — Launch Facility Down.

Briefly losing contact with a few missiles wasn’t unusual. But having an entire squadron go down, simultaneously, was extraordinary. Closed-circuit television images of the missile silos, which sit miles away from their control centers, revealed that none of the Minuteman IIIs had lifted off. Almost an hour after the problem suddenly appeared, communication was re-established between the missiles and their launch crews. Nevertheless, heavily armed Air Force security officers spent the next few hours visiting all 50 silos, in the early morning darkness, to ensure that no security breach had occurred.

The Air Force dismissed the possibility that the computer network controlling its Minuteman IIIs had been hacked. The idea that a hacker could somehow disable 50 ballistic missiles — each of them armed with a nuclear warhead about seven times more powerful than the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima — seemed like the improbable plot of a Hollywood thriller.

An Air Force operations review board later found that the communications breakdown at F.E. Warren had been caused by a combination of equipment failure and human error: a circuit card, improperly installed in a weapons-system processor, had been dislodged by routine vibration and heat. But the incident privately raised concerns among high-level Air Force officials that America’s nuclear command-and-control system might not be secure against a cyberattack.

In fact, in January 2013, a Pentagon advisory group, the Defense Science Board, warned that the system’s vulnerability to such an attack had never been fully assessed. While testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee this past March, Gen. C. Robert Kehler, head of the U.S. Strategic Command, expressed confidence that America’s nuclear arsenal was well-protected against a cyberattack, and yet he acknowledged, “we don’t know what we don’t know.”

A world without nuclear weapons would, of course, eliminate the risk of accidental nuclear detonations. But that is an elusive goal, and until it’s achieved, America’s nuclear arsenal must be managed with the sort of ruthless efficiency and intolerance for error once championed by Curtis LeMay.

A world with many fewer weapons in fewer hands — carefully maintained, with no expense spared- – offers the best hope of avoiding mistakes whose consequences would be almost unimaginable. During his recent Senate testimony on command and control issues and the threat of cyberattacks, Kehler, the head of the U.S. Strategic Command, was asked whether Russia and China had the ability to prevent hackers from launching one of their nuclear missiles. Kehler paused for a moment and then replied, “Senator, I don’t know.”

Read more from this story HERE.

To Win Minority Vote, GOP Has to Show it’s Ready to Battle Privileged Interests

Photo Credit: Washington Examiner

Photo Credit: Washington Examiner

How can Republicans do better with minority voters?

The party establishment seems to think the answer begins with amnesty and more low-skilled labor — which just happens to be the policy preference of the GOP’s donor class. Beyond this, the party’s top consultants offer only rhetorical tweaks around the typical GOP package of low-tax corporatism.

A better minority outreach can be found in libertarian populism.

The libertarian populist argument is that the game is rigged in favor of the big and well-connected and against the small and unconnected. This argument should be aimed mainly at the “47 percent” that Mitt Romney wrote off and denigrated: working-class voters who find it hard to get ahead.

Political analyst Sean Trende noted that a large potentially Republican bloc of voters stayed home in 2012 — working-class white voters. Some conservatives have argued that the GOP can and must win these voters.

Read more from this story HERE.

At Least 12 People Killed in Shooting at Navy Building in Washington

reporter - navy yard shootingAt least 12 people have been killed at a Navy building in Washington by a gunman who was later killed but may not have acted alone, authorities said.

D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier told reporters that 12 people died in the 8:20 a.m. incident at the Naval Sea Systems Command headquarters in southeast Washington. There were conflicting reports on the number of victims and the number of gunmen in the ensuing hours, although a federal law enforcement official told Fox News that one shooter has died. Police said as many as two additional gunmen may still be at large, and thousands of workers who report to the building were being told to “shelter in place” until officials could safely evacuate them.

“This is not over,” Rear Admiral John Kirby, the U.S. Navy’s chief spokesman, told reporters. “The building is still in lockdown, as are other buildings. Still being treated as an active search. No one is moving right now.”

People who were inside the building said a gunman wordlessly sprayed fire from an AR-15 assault rifle as terrified civilians and Navy members scattered.

More than 20 members of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) responded to the scene, including the same Special Response Team that extracted the alleged Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev from the boat where he barricaded himself following the April 15 attack.

Read more from this story HERE.