Treaty Threatens U.S. Sovereignty

WASHINGTON – Former Sen. Rick Santorum, a former GOP presidential candidate and the father of a handicapped child, joined Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, in denouncing the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, saying it would open a “Pandora’s box” of legal interpretations resulting in a “direct assault on us and our families.”

In a press conference on Capitol Hill Monday, both Santorum and Lee said Articles 4 and 7 of the convention, which reference the rights of disabled children, represent a threat to both national sovereignty and the rights of families to make decisions on how to raise their own children.

“Our concerns with this convention have nothing to do with a lack of concern with the rights of persons with disabilities,” said Lee. “They have everything to do with protecting national sovereignty, protecting the interests of parents … and the interests of families.”

Article 4 of the convention compels member states to embrace “economic, cultural and social rights” that are rooted in the concept that government creates rights, as contrasted with the uniquely American view that rights are inalienable and God-given.

This is, Lee explains, “unknown in our legal system” as it presupposes that the state, not God, is the origin, of our rights.

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Pat Caddell: Republican ‘Consultant-Lobbyist-Establishment’ Complex Responsible For Romney Defeat

Speaking at The David Horowitz Freedom Center’s “Restoration Weekend” in Florida on November 16, Pat Caddell indicted what he called the Republican “consultant-lobbyist-establishment” complex for losing a presidential campaign in 2012 President Barack Obama had no business winning.

“No presidential campaign should be run by consultants,” Caddell said. “They should be run by people who are committed to the candidate and not into making big money.”

Caddell, the former Jimmy Carter adviser who consulted on the “Hope and the Change” movie that profiled disaffected Obama 2008 voters who were not going to vote for him in 2012, warned Republicans that the consultant-lobbyist-establishment complex may threaten to take the party into oblivion if not marginalized.

The Romney campaign, Caddell said, was driven be establishment consultants and was a failure of mechanics and message.

“But most of all, it was a failure of imagination,” Caddell said. ““It was the single worst campaign in modern history of a challenger who had a chance to win … and that’s the truth and nothing can take away from that.”

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China Lands J-15 Jet on Liaoning Aircraft Carrier

China has successfully landed a jet fighter on its new aircraft carrier for the first time, officials say.

A Chinese-made J-15 fighter landed on the 300m (990ft) former Soviet carrier during recent exercises, China’s defence ministry said on Sunday.

The Liaoning, China’s first aircraft carrier, entered into service in September.

China says the vessel has had extensive sea trials and will increase its capacity to defend state interests.

Analysts say the aircraft carrier will allow Beijing to help project its military might in territorial disputes.

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UK Foster Couple Lose Children for Being Members of Conservative Party (+video)

A UK couple had their three foster children taken away after social workers decided that the couple’s support for the supposedly “racist” policies of the UK Independence Party (Ukip) made them “unsuitable” caregivers, The Telegraph reports.

For those of you who are unfamiliar with the Ukip, it’s the conservative wing of British politics. If you want an understanding of the group’s principles, look no further than Nigel Farage, founding member and party leader:

“It is total and utter failure. This ship, the euro Titanic has now hit the iceberg and sadly there simply aren’t enough life boats,” said Farage, an infamously skeptical critic of the eurozone, to the European Parliament.

The Ukip advocates lower taxes, limited government, freer markets, and immigration reform. However, to certain social workers in the Labour-controlled Rotherham borough, supporting the above makes you an “unsuitable” foster parent.

The parents claim they were made to feel like criminals and that they had a “black mark” on them for supporting the conservative group. And now it has culminated in the loss of their foster children, one boy and two girls.

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Major League Baseball Front-loading Contracts to Avoid Obama Tax Hikes?

photo credit: shashibellamkonda

Team executives and agents wandered into the Agave Sunset lounge at the resort where the general managers’ meetings were held in Indian Wells, Calif. Four of the six flat-screen televisions were showing election coverage, with the other two turned to sports.

President Barack Obama’s victory over Mitt Romney was of as much interest to baseball’s money men as the game scores, given the millions of dollars routinely guaranteed in player contracts these days.

As free agents negotiate deals this offseason, tax policy is an area that comes up along with the usual issues. Some players are wrangling for as much money as they can get before the end of the year to avoid a take hike in 2013.

“Front-loading would make sense if at all possible as tax rates will definitely go up on January 1st on all high-income taxpayers,” agent Greg Genske said in an email. “The only question is HOW MUCH will the rates increase????”

This much is known for now: Starting Jan. 1, there is an additional 0.9 percent Medicare tax on wages above $200,000 for individuals and $250,000 for married couples filing jointly under the federal Affordable Care Act, a rise to 2.35 percent.

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Club for Growth to GOP Establishment: Define ‘Electable’

photo credit: donkey hotey

In response to signals that the GOP establishment is prepared to play a more aggressive role in 2014 Senate primaries, Club for Growth President Chris Chocola fires a shot across the bow in an op-ed published Wednesday.

“In the wake of some missed opportunities to pick up seats in the U.S. Senate over the past few cycles, one tactical change floated by the GOP establishment is that the party apparatus and its affiliated Super PACs should play a more influential role in primaries to make sure that more “electable” candidates are nominated.

It is hard to imagine a bigger mistake…

Everyone wants to avoid the next Todd Akin or Christine O’Donnell, neither of whom received any support from the Club for Growth PAC. But the Republican establishment has a horrendous track record of accurately identifying which candidates are truly unelectable and which are not. Too often, party insiders mistakenly substitute the word ‘unelectable’ for the word ‘conservative.'”

Chocola, a former GOP congressman from Indiana, points to a litany of top, establishment-favored candidates who lost in 2012 and also to a rogue’s gallery of so-called ‘electable’ GOP House and Senate candidates who backfired in spectacular fashion in recent years: Dede Scozzafava, Arlen Specter, and Charlie Crist.

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Tea Party Vows to Stay for Long Haul, Takes No Blame for GOP Losses

photo credit: fibonacci blue

Tea party leaders say they refuse to be the scapegoats for the drubbing Republicans took on Election Day, claiming it was the party establishment — not their insurgent movement — that cost the party seats in the House and Senate and returned President Obama to the White House.

In fact, various branches of the grass-roots movement vow to reassert themselves on the local and nation levels as Congress begins talks aimed at averting the “fiscal cliff.” They say their call for limited government is more relevant than ever before.

“As far as the tea party is concerned, we are still here,” said Amy Kremer, leader of the Tea Party Express. “We may not be out on the streets with the colorful signs like 2010, but we are here, we are engaged and we are going to continue to fight. We never thought this was a short-term process. It is going to take a long time to turn it around.”

Judson Phillips, head of Tea Party Nation, said the tea party’s first order of business is to rebut Republicans who want to blame the movement for their poor performance at the ballot box.

“They went well out of their way to ignore us, marginalize us and pretend we did not exist, and they gave us the most liberal nominee in the history of the Republican Party,” Mr. Phillips said, taking particular aim at Karl Rove, the mastermind behind former President George W. Bush’s career and founder of American Crossroads, a super PAC that spent more than $100 million in the campaign but had few successes to show for it.

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Video: ‘Favoritism’? Jill Kelley Was Awarded Joint Chiefs’ Second-Highest Civilian Honor in 2011

Jill Kelley, the Florida socialite responsible for outing Gen. David Petraeus’ mistress, Paula Broadwell, in 2011 was awarded the Joint Chiefs of Staff Award for Outstanding Public Service, the Joint Chiefs’ second-highest civilian honor.

The award consists of a silver medal, lapel pin, citation and certificate signed by the chairman, said Navy Cmdr. Patrick McNally, spokesman for the office of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The reason for the award? Kelley’s “selfless contributions” and “willingness to host engagements” for politicians, foreign dignitaries, and military leaders.

“You’re connected, you get it. You’re not connected, you don’t get it,” Central Comand’s (CentCom) Coalition Intelligence Center founder Col. E.J Otero, Ret., told FOX 13. “When a senior national representative from the coalition had a visitor from another country coming into town, they would call her — ‘I have General such-and-such. Do you mind if we go and have dinner?’” he added.

Gen. Petraeus recommended her for the award while he was still commander of CentCom, according to the Tampa Tribune. Adm. Mike Mullen signed off on the recommendation.

Read more from this story HERE.

Phantoms of the Lost Tribes

I am a proud Aleut elder of the Native Village of Kanatak. I lived in the village of Kanatak in the 1950’s. My Dad, who was Aleut-Russian, was born there and practiced his culture. He used to tell me stories of how his people buried fish heads in the ground to ferment. How they hung their summer catch of salmon on fish racks to dry for winter food. He hunted, trapped and fished, carrying on the tradition taught to him by his elders. He raised our family there, as he was raised. I love hearing and recounting the stories now, of the days we used to live in Kanatak and other village communities.

I am also proud to be an American. I would never trade my citizenship for that of any other country. But I can appreciate that, although our Government for many years has determined they know what is best for our people, we have become the most recent victims of governmental bureaucracy. Our forebears were taken from their homes and move to depleted broken down shacks during the war, children ripped from our souls to be sent to boarding schools, their native identities removed. Our lives have been rearranged. Assistance has been given, then taken back, (sort of like the term “Indian giver”) and its connotation, only it was not the Indians giving and taking away this time.

Some of us have now have been labeled “phantom”. Guess you could say we are “phantoms of the lost tribes”. How can anyone tell a person that they do not exist because they were forced to relocate from one village to another local? How can anyone make a person’s culture, ethnicity, lineage and personal identity be erased and asked to disappear, simply because where they once lived has been taken from them? Does a person become a phantom because they cannot return to their ancestral home?

I may be a figment of my own imagination, an ethereal being floating around this world, not knowing that I exist. You can see me, you can hear me, but in the minds of some people, I do not exist because I do not live on that piece of land that was once my village. I have always felt proud of being an Aleut, a minority. Even the word minority, used to describe our people, has a negative ring to it today. Doesn’t that mean secondary and less than? Minority has come to mean someone who is not Caucasian. Who decides when a person is a minority or not. Does that make those not considered minority, the “Majority”?

Does anyone recall the years when so many Alaska Native children of school age had to be sent away from their parents, families, and their total ethnic existence, to attend Government schools? The native way was all they knew. My Dad was one of those students. My Mom was one of those students. I was one of those students. They never spoke of their days in the Eklutna Government boarding school, but I can imagine it could not have been so different from mine, attending first Wrangell Institute, then Mt. Edgecumbe, in Sitka.

I cried so many tears in those first days, my eyes burned from the salt, my very being burning with longing for the things that were familiar to me. I craved the foods we ate, and the very nature of how we lived; the hunting and the fishing. All I wanted was to run away and go back home. I had to live in a small room in a boarding school that had several bunk beds in it, and I, at the age of 13, had to become a Mother figure to the three little 6 and 7 year-olds who were placed in that room with me.

They could not speak English. They had never been out of their village or away from their parents.

Can those of you who were never forced into that situation, imagine how it would be to send your 6 and 7-year-old children or grandchildren hundreds of miles away, to be tended by a 13 year old? Telephones did not exist in villages then. The mail took months to get there and back. Correspondence was almost non-existent. Now we are ostracized for having to be sent away, not by choice, but force.

We had to leave our families at a young age to attend schools in far away places to learn a strange culture, language, and way of life. If we chose not to return to our ancestral homes when we completed your teachings, were we not still Native, yearning for a way of life lost to us forever? I am not saying it was bad to get an education. I am not crying over spilled milk. What I am saying is, maybe it could have been done differently. Maybe, just maybe, it could have been done in a way that would cause my people and our culture less pain. Maybe it would have been less expensive to build one school in each village for many children instead of sending many children to a few boarding schools. Maybe not, but I ask that we not be punished now for something we had no control over.

It was the Government who divided our former tribal village land of Kanatak and gave it to one native tribe (Konaig) while our tribal members were assigned to a separate group in a different area (Bristol Bay). I like the one we were assigned to (BBNA). When most of the residents had to leave Kanatak after the volcanic eruption of Katmai and the flu epidemic, they moved to the area that accepted them and they had close family ties to (Bristol Bay). Their summer homes were in Bristol Bay, where they would fish the summer season to buy supplies to take back to Kanatak for the winter.

I would not want to have to change to a group other than Bristol Bay. No one from Konaig lives on the piece of land that was once our village site. Kanatak was decimated by the volcanic eruption of Katmai in 1912, the flu epidemic, the loss of the village school, post office and store, after the oil companies pulled out in the early 1950’s. The members of our tribe have tried for years to negotiate to buy or get back a small piece of our village land.

The following are the cultural memories that live on in my mind, from when I lived in Kanatak. Those cannot be erased from my mind by anyone. Nearly every one of our elders has passed on, and I am now one of the elders. I can recall only those things that a 6-year-old will remember. There are so many stories, but I will relate only those few listed below in the hopes that anyone who reads this, will try to place themselves in my position of defending myself as a real human and not as a phantom.

I can remember when my brother was born in 1956 and the Coast Guard came too late to assist in the birth, so my dad delivered him. I recall the sick horses that the oil company abandoned without any food and we did not know what to feed them. My Mom decided we would take care of them. She helped us bring them back to good health by feeding them seaweed and old soft potatoes that had been buried in the sand (for preservation) from the year before. Everyday we tended those poor sick horses. When they were well again, Dad taught us to ride them bareback. Mine was Snake Eye, and my younger brother and sister had Blue Boy and Silveretta. Dad trained those horses to walk around and around our large house. One even liked to open the door and come into the windbreak. Then someone from the oil company returned to the village and wanted to take the horses away.

Sometimes I close my eyes and let my mind drift to the beauty of the interior of the small Russian Orthodox Church, the icons later stolen and burned. We played in the old, red school building, finding chalk pieces to write with on the large, worn out blackboard as we pretended to be in school. Mom took us on picnics to the beach, crossed the small river to pick berries on the mountain, taught us how to catch salmon and hang them to dry.

One of my Mom’s most exciting accomplishments was shooting and killing a large Kodiak grizzly bear that had been stealing our dry fish off the rack.

On one particularly hard winter, we did not have any left from what was then called a “Winter Grubstake,” for an Easter dinner, except for a little flour, some lard, salt and rice.

My dad went hunting to see if he could get some ptarmigan or a caribou for our Easter dinner. While he was gone, Mom mixed some flour with water and lard and had we kids roll it very thin. She cut it into rounds and poked holes in it, which she sprinkled with salt, then baked in our wood stove oven. She told us those were called “crackers,” and I have never eaten better since. All that day, Mom taught me the Lord’s Prayer by making me repeat it over and over. Very late in the evening, dad came home with one skinny ptarmigan. Mom was so happy and everything was wonderful. Mom plucked, cleaned and chopped that tiny, little bird into littlest pieces and made curried ptarmigan with lots of gravy. This was served with our special crackers and boiled rice. And I was beaming with pride to recite the Lord’s Prayer for Dad at dinner.

To this day, I try to have ptarmigan for dinner every Thanksgiving and Easter. It is now a tradition for my family to go hunting for ptarmigan every Thanksgiving. This might not mean much to anyone else, but those ptarmigan have a way of preserving my culture and reminding me that I belong to a group of people who once were with us. Today we are known as a “Lost Tribe”, but some of us who actually lived in Kanatak still exist, no matter how lost others might consider us to be. I am thankful and blessed to have been born an Aleut woman, raised in Alaska and to be an American.

Verdict: Former “Price is Right” Model Discriminated Against by Show Because of Pregnancy

Jurors awarded nearly $777,000 Tuesday to a former “The Price is Right” model who claimed she was discriminated against by producers because of her pregnancy.

Brandi Cochran, 41, said she was rejected by the game show’s producers when she tried to return to work in early 2010 after taking maternity leave.

The Superior Court jury determined her pregnancy was the reason she wasn’t rehired and awarded Cochran $776,944 in the suit against producers FremantleMedia North America and The Price is Right Productions.

In their defense, producers said they were satisfied with the five models working on the show at the time Cochran sought to return.

A second phase of the trial will determine whether Cochran should be awarded punitive damages. Cochran’s attorneys had asked for more than $8 million, City News Service reported.

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