Food Stamp Recipients, Advocates Sue Over Work Requirements

Photo Credit: Joe Raedle / Getty

Photo Credit: Joe Raedle / Getty

Most Americans agree that able-bodied adults should be required to do some type of work to receive welfare assistance. But two nonprofit groups and a handful of food stamp recipients in New Mexico are suing the state for trying to encourage just that.

Last Friday, a New Mexico district judge placed a temporary hold on the work requirements, which were set to go into effect Nov. 1. On Wednesday of this week, Republican Gov. Susana Martinez announced that the state would restart the process of putting the work requirements into place rather than going through the litigation process. The state will pursue the same work requirements.

While the food stamp program doesn’t have much of a work requirement, it does have a modest one for able-bodied adults without children (or other dependents). Able-bodied adults without children are limited to three months of food stamp benefits unless they work or participate in some type of work activity for at least 20 hours a week. However, since 2009 New Mexico—along with many other states—has received a federal waiver allowing them to bypass the work requirement. But New Mexico has decided to forego the waiver. The state also plans to insert modest work requirements for other able-bodied adults who don’t have young children (under age 6), requiring them to look for work or participate in community service.

But the New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty and the Southwest Organizing Project say that work requirements are unfair and are suing the New Mexico Human Services Department.

Read more from this story HERE.

It's Still Obama's Way Or the Highway

Photo Credit: AP / Pablo Martinez Monsivais

Photo Credit: AP / Pablo Martinez Monsivais

In his first public appearance since the “ass-whupping” his party received on Tuesday (to use Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin’s phrase), President Obama showed that he is still in full campaign spin mode.

“What’s most important to the American people right now,” Obama said, “the resounding message not just of this election, but basically the last several is: Get stuff done. Don’t worry about the next election. Don’t worry about party affiliation. Do worry about our concerns.”

Of course, this is a rather obtuse take on what the voters said and did. They punished one specific party affiliation. And they did so precisely because the “stuff” that that party and its president have focused on “getting done” apparently does not align with, and perhaps even exacerbates, many of their concerns.

Obama also asserted that “the American people … expect us to focus on their ambitions and not ours.”

Read more from this story HERE.

Dems Line Up Support for Lynch as AG

Photo Credit: AP / Manuel Balce Ceneta

Photo Credit: AP / Manuel Balce Ceneta

Top Senate Democrats are starting to rally around the possible selection of Loretta Lynch, a U.S. attorney in Brooklyn, as President Obama’s choice to replace Eric Holder as attorney general.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., a prominent member of the Senate Judiciary Committee and chairman of the Senate Democrats’ Policy and Communications Center, is a new convert on Lynch for attorney general, two sources familiar with the confirmation process told theWashington Examiner.

His support for a Lynch nomination boosts her candidacy and is viewed as a way to encourage other Democrats to quickly back her selection.

Schumer had twice recommended Lynch to the White House for U.S. attorney and said Friday that she would make “an outstanding attorney general.”

Early in the week, Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee were put on notice that Obama could name his pick for attorney general Thursday or Friday but the choice and timing would depend on election results, two sources said.

Read more from this story HERE.

Federal Sites Leaked the Locations of People Seeking AIDS Services for Years

computersoffice-7475Two federal government Web sites that help people find AIDS-related medical services have begun routinely encrypting user data after years in which they let sensitive information — including the real-world locations of site visitors – onto the Internet unprotected.

Until the change, these sites had risked exposing the identities of visitors when they used search boxes to find nearby facilities offering HIV testing, treatment and other services, such as substance abuse and mental health counseling, say security experts. Government smartphone apps associated with one of the Web sites, AIDS.gov, also transmitted the latitude and longitude of users seeking services, after collecting those details from the phones of users.

The sites and apps did not themselves track visitors, but their data was handled in ways that could have enabled monitoring by employers, universities or others with access to the data flowing between individual devices – such as computers and smartphones – and the Internet. Even using a public wifi signal, offered by a coffee shop or airport, could have allowed a nearby hacker to learn that an individual user, wielding a particular type of smartphone, was seeking treatment for HIV or drug addiction.

Privacy advocates long have argued that routine encryption – using a popular protocol called SSL – should be standard for Web sites or apps handling potentially sensitive information, especially when it relates to personal medical concerns. Government officials, in response to questions posed by The Washington Post, said they came to agree that their sites created privacy risks for those seeking AIDS-related services.

Read more from this story HERE.

A Creepy Website Is Streaming From 73,000 Private Security Cameras

ur6l2hmqjixgqabhpwriIt shouldn’t be so easy to peer into a stranger’s bedroom, much less hundreds of strangers’ bedrooms. But a website has collected the streaming footage from over 73,000 IP cameras whose owners haven’t changed their default passwords. Is this about highlighting an important security problem, or profiting off creepy voyeurism—or both?

Insecam claims to feature feeds from IP cameras all over the world, including 11,000 in the U.S. alone. A quick browse will pull up parking lots and stores but also living rooms and bedrooms. “This site has been designed in order to show the importance of the security settings,” the site’s about page says. But it’s also clearly running and profiting off ads.

Read more from this story HERE.

Parents Torture and Beat 3-Year-Old Boy to Death for Not Eating His Breakfast

Photo Credit: LifeNews

Photo Credit: LifeNews

In a horrific case out of Pennsylvania, police say a man and his girlfriend have been charged with murdering their three-year-old son — torturing and killing him because he didn’t want to eat his breakfast.

Chester County District Attorney Tom Hogan announced that Gary Fellenbaum and Jillian Tait were arrested yesterday. The arrests came after emergency personnel responded to a call at their mobile home about an unresponsive child. There, they found 3-year-old Scott McMillan suffering from bruises, lacerations and puncture wounds all over his body.

According to police, Fellenbaum, Tait, and Fellenbaum’s wife, Amber confessed to authorities that they beat Scott, hit him with sharp objects, tied him up to a chair with electrical tape and eventually hug the little boy up by his feet and beat him to death. Tait explained that the fatal beating began when the boy wouldn’t eat his breakfast, according to reports.

Why do these kinds of cases happen?

The pro-life movement has long said abortion has a slippery slope that leads to an overall disrespect for human life. When it’s just as easy to take the life of a child in an abortion as it is to purchase a can of soda at store, perhaps society has become a place where parents no longer have the respect for children they once did.

Read more from this story HERE.

Circuit Court of Appeals Upholds Traditional Marriage; Stage Set for Supreme Court Intervention

Photo Credit: Human Events

Photo Credit: Human Events

By The Associated Press.

A federal appeals court on Thursday upheld anti-gay marriage laws in four states, breaking ranks with other courts that have considered the issue and setting up the prospect of Supreme Court review.

The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel that heard arguments on gay marriage bans or restrictions in Ohio, Michigan, Kentucky and Tennessee on Aug. 6 split 2-1, with Circuit Judge Jeffrey Sutton writing the majority opinion. The ruling creates a divide among federal appeals courts, increasing the likelihood the U.S. Supreme Court will now take up the issue.

The ruling concluded that states have the right to set rules for marriage and that such change as expanding a definition of marriage that dates “back to the earliest days of human history” is better done through political processes.

“When the courts do not let the people resolve new social issues like this one, they perpetuate the idea that the heroes in these change events are judges and lawyers,” Sutton wrote, adding that it’s better to have change “in which the people, gay and straight alike, become the heroes of their own stories by meeting each other not as adversaries in a court system but as fellow citizens seeking to resolve a new social issue in a fair-minded way.”

The president of pro-gay marriage group Freedom to Marry, Evan Wolfson, blasted the ruling as “on the wrong side of history.”

Read more from this story HERE.

________________________________________________________________

Photo Credit: Alaska Family Action

Photo Credit: Alaska Family Action

Natural Marriage Laws Ruled Constitutional by 6th Circuit Court

By Jim Minnery, Alaska Family Action.

Earlier this year, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, widely known as one of the most liberal Justices on the bench, said the likelihood of the high Court taking up the marriage issue would largely depend on what the Sixth Circuit did with the issue. In her words, if the Sixth Circuit (representing Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee) upheld the state’s definitions of marriage between one man and women, “there will be some urgency” for the United States Supreme Court to put it on their to do list.

Consider this an alarm.

Earlier today, the Sixth Circuit ruled that laws in each of those states that define marriage as a relationship between a man and woman are constitutional.

The Court said it would be inappropriate of them to make a final determination on the issue of marriage:
“Of all the ways to resolve this question, one option is not available: a poll of the three judges on this panel, or for the matter all federal judges, about whether gay marriage is a good idea. Our judicial commissions did not come with such a sweeping grant of authority, one that would allow just three of us — just two in truth — to make such a vital policy call for the thirty-two million citizens who live within the four States of the Sixth Circuit: Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and Tennessee.” Click here to read the actual ruling.

Finally, they concluded that the legislative arena is the better place to resolve political debates over social issues:

“In just eleven years, nineteen States and a conspicuous District, account for nearly forty-five percent of the population, have exercised their sovereign powers to expand a definition of marriage that until recently was universally followed going back to the earliest days of human history. That is a difficult timeline to criticize as unworthy of further debate and voting. When the courts do not let the people resolve new social issues like this one, they perpetuate the idea that the heroes in these change events are judges and lawyers. Better in this instance, we think, to allow change through the customary political processes, in which the people, gay and straight alike, become fellow citizens seeking to resolve a new social issue in a fair-minded way.
For this reason, we reverse.”

This decision comes only four weeks after the Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal of other decisions ruling that marriage is unconstitutional including the outrageous abuse of power by Alaska District Court Judge Tim Burgess.

Judge Burgess and the Sixth Circuit Judge’s ruling couldn’t be farther apart in terms of judicial philosophy. Now it looks as though we might see where the U.S. Supreme Court comes down on what has become the most important public discussion we’ve had as a country since Roe v Wade in 1973.

Stay tuned and be of good cheer.

Boehner Wants Immigration Reform: ‘It Is Just Time to Deal With It’ (+video)

Photo Credit: AP / Carolyn Kaster

Photo Credit: AP / Carolyn Kaster

House Speaker John Boehner said at a press conference today that “it is just time to deal with” the issue of immigration reform, indicating he hopes to enact an immigration law in the coming year.

Meanwhile, Boehner’s spokesman, Michael Steel, did not respond this afternoon to an emailed question from CNSNews.com asking him whether the speaker would rule out enacting a law that granted legal status or a pathway to citizenship to illegal aliens.

Boehner also warned President Obama not to take unilateral action on immigration, saying that if he did so it would prevent Congress from actually passing legislation for the same purpose.

“I want to talk to our members about how to move forward, but I’ve made my position very clear,” Boehner said. “It is time for the Congress of the United States to deal with a very difficult issue in our society. This immigration issue has become a political football over the last ten years or more. It is just time to deal with it.”

When a reporter asked Boehner whether a Republican presidential nominee could “afford to run if you have not acted on this issue,” Boehner said: “This is not about politics. This is about doing the right thing for the country.”

Read more from this story HERE.

Obama Admin Releases Another Gitmo Detainee Originally Deemed 'Too Dangerous to Release'

Photo Credit: TownHall

Photo Credit: TownHall

By Leah Barkoukis.

The Obama administration released one of Guantanamo Bay’s longest-serving prisoners on Wednesday. Fawzi al-Odah, who had previously been classified as too dangerous to release, was sent back to Kuwait on the condition that he would serve one year in a militant-rehabilitation center.

In July, the board determined that al-Odah had most likely undergone terrorist training in Afghanistan and may have fought alongside the al-Qaida or the Taliban. The board, however, decided he had only a low level of training, did not have a leadership position in either group and could be released under certain conditions. The board has cleared a handful other detainees but they have not yet been released.

His father, Khalid al-Odah, said in several interviews with The Associated Press over the years that his son was only a teacher in Afghanistan who had been wrongly turned over to the U.S. authorities in exchange for a bounty. […]

Read more from this story HERE.

_________________________________________________________________

200px-Fouzi_Khalid_Abdullah_al_Awda-300x180Obama continues back-door action with release of suspected terrorist

By Allen West.

Yesterday I watched President Barack Hussein Obama give his one-and-half hour post-election press conference. If I were his advisor, I probably would have recommended against it.

It was a rambling sort of event with no real direction and included countless false statements – such as regarding immigration reform. He said it was a goal of his first term, but Republicans kept him from achieving it. But in the first two years of his first term, President Obama had a filibuster proof majority — which he used to ram through legislation like Obamacare and Dodd-Frank. He could have done the same with immigration reform.

I must admit, there was a part of me who felt bad for Obama — as someone who seems unable to accept responsibility for anything. I even went back and watched Bill Clinton after the 1994 midterm debacle he suffered and even he took immediate responsibility as the president. I’m trying to understand what Obama meant when he said, “The two-thirds of you who did not vote, I hear your voice as well.” I guess Obama wasn’t pleased that droves didn’t come out in support of his fundamental transformation of America.

The problem that President Obama fails to understand is that he is seen as just another politician — no different from any other. Also, it’s amazing that he continues to speak of Washington DC as if it’s an entity completely detached from his existence.

Read more from this story HERE.

Feminist Professor Who Attacked Pro-Life Protesters Now Hit With Civil Lawsuit

Photo Credit: opposing views

Photo Credit: opposing views

The pro-life group Life Legal Defense Foundation (LLF) filed a civil lawsuit Thursday against the University of California, Santa Barbara and feminist professor Mireille Miller-Young, who was recently convicted of stealing from and assaulting pro-life protesters earlier this year.

The feminist studies professor, who specializes in queer theory and pornography, went on a video-recorded rampage in March when she stole and destroyed a pro-life poster, before attacking and causing minor injuries to 16-year-old protestor Thrin Short.

In July, Miller-Young was convicted of assaulting Short, and stealing and destroying the protestors’ property.

Read more from this story HERE.