MuscleMeat

Verenigde Staten

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  • #3.921
Mississippi wil vuurpeloton, elektrocutie en gaskamer als executiemethodes
In de Amerikaanse staat Mississippi ligt een wetsvoorstel op tafel om het vuurpeloton, elektrocutie en de gaskamer als executiemethodes voor terdoodveroordeelden in te voeren. Dit voor het geval een rechtbank het gebruik van de dodelijke injectie zou verwerpen. Het wetsvoorstel is een reactie op rechtszaken die werden aangespannen door "libertaire, linkse radicalen", zo stelde de voorzitter van het rechtscomité binnen het statenparlement, de Republikein Andy Gipson. Het wetsvoorstel werd gisteren door het parlement goedgekeurd en moet nu naar de senaat.

De dodelijke injectie is momenteel de enige executiemethode in Mississippi. De staat wordt echter aangeklaagd in rechtszaken die stellen dat de drugs die daarvoor gebruikt zouden worden in strijd zijn met het grondwettelijk verbod op gewelddadige en ongebruikelijke strafmethodes.

Mississippi kan de drugs die ze voordien voor executies gebruikte niet meer bekomen, de laatste executie werd in 2012 uitgevoerd. Er zitten in de zuidelijke Amerikaanse staat 47 mensen in de dodencel, daarvan zijn er enkele die al decennialang in 'death row' zitten.

In de 33 Amerikaans staten die de doodstraf uitvoeren is de dodelijke injectie de belangrijkste executiemethode. Enkel Oklahoma en Utah hebben het vuurpeloton als optie, acht staten hebben ook elektrocutie als optie, vijf ook de gaskamer en in drie staten kan de executie ook door verhanging gebeuren.

"Iemand in mijn kiesdisctrict heeft een dochter die meer dan 25 jaar geleden werd verkracht door een seriemoordenaar en die is nog altijd aan het wachten op de doodstraf. De familie wacht nog altijd op gerechtigheid", zei Gipson, een advocaat en priester.

Democratisch afgevaardigde Willie Perkins is ook advocaat en is tegenstander van de doodstraf. Hij stelde Gipson een reeks vragen over hoe lang een gevangene zou lijden bij een executie door elektrocutie, de gaskamer of het vuurpeloton. Gipson moest bekennen dat hij dat niet wist.

Jim Craig, een advocaat die de staat Mississippi aanklaagt wegens het gebruik van dodelijke drugs als executiemethode, verklaarde dat elke voorgestelde nieuwe methode zou aangevochten worden voor de rechter.

Moeten we de VS echt als westers land zien? :o

"Iemand in mijn kiesdisctrict heeft een dochter die meer dan 25 jaar geleden werd verkracht door een seriemoordenaar en die is nog altijd aan het wachten op de doodstraf. De familie wacht nog altijd op gerechtigheid", zei Gipson, een advocaat en priester."


:roflol:
 
Stelletje voetzoekers bij de NOS

Sessions (70) is al langer omstreden. Enkele decennia geleden werd hem een baan als rechter geweigerd, omdat hij een zwarte advocaat zou hebben aangeduid met de racistische term 'boy'. Ook zei hij weinig moeite te hebben met de Ku Klux Klan, het racistische genootschap, "zolang ze maar geen wiet roken". Volgens Sessions wordt er een karikatuur van hem gemaakt.
Omstreden Jeff Sessions benoemd tot Trumps minister van Justitie

Doet me denken aan J.W. Pepper :p

 
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  • #3.923
"zolang ze maar geen wiet roken"

:roflol:

Het is ook een hardliner op het vlak van immigratie.
 
Te ordinair
 
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Trumps inreisverbod houdt ook in hoger beroep geen stand

Een rechtbank in de Amerikaanse staat Californië heeft vannacht verklaard dat Trumps inreisverbod voorlopig niet opnieuw mag ingaan. Het decreet ontzegt de onderdanen van zeven moslimlanden tijdelijk de toegang tot de Verenigde Staten.

De rechter zegt nu dat de Amerikaanse regering geen enkel bewijs heeft geleverd dat een verbod op reizigers uit de zeven landen zou rechtvaardigen. Er zou niet één inwoner van de zeven moslimlanden betrokken zijn bij een terroristische aanslag op Amerikaans grondgebied. Daarbij heeft de regering nagelaten volledige uitleg te geven op de handhaving van het inreisverbod, aldus de rechtbank. "Het volk heeft belang bij vrij reizen, bij het voorkomen dat families gescheiden raken en gevrijwaard blijven van discriminatie", oordeelden de rechters in het vonnis.
(demorgen.be)
Quot+i+was+whiter+back+then+quot+_c671eb04d39867ee5e9e17f7fac74384.jpg
 
Die landen dat trump aan reizigingsverbod voor opgezeft heeft warden al singled out door barack Obama, het gaat alleen maar om een tijdelijke maatregel voor 3 maanden zodat de intelligentiediensten zich kunnen heronganizeren.

De mainstream media heeft hier een grote invloed op de opinie zo te zien, op de bbc news wordservice op de radia was onlangs een geode reportage over trumps gebruik van twitter, door de geschiedenis communicuceerde presidenten op nieuwe manieren, eerst direct door de radio spreken, dan kwam Reagan er aan die de eerste pers conferenties gaf, een revolutie net zoals trump direct met het publiek spreekt via twitter, en dus de media niet meer nodig heeft, die alleen maar bias info geeft, het zogenaamde fake news.

One startling feature of the latest race to become the next president of the US - which begins in earnest with next week's Iowa caucuses - is the runaway success in the opinion polls of the outspoken billionaire, Donald Trump. But this should not be so surprising, says Michael Goldfarb, as Trump is just the latest example of a tendency in American politics that goes back a very long way.
Donald Trump and the politics of paranoia - BBC News
 
De rechter zegt nu dat de Amerikaanse regering geen enkel bewijs heeft geleverd dat een verbod op reizigers uit de zeven landen zou rechtvaardigen.
In al die landen is er een oorlog, en als je de geschiedenis een beetje kent van islam, eg de sunni's and shia's dan is een reisverbod van deze landen niet zo verbazelijk, maar goed zolang mensen geloven dat er moderate rebels bestaan, gaan ze dit niet snappen.

In yemen veroorzaken de regering (sunnis) terrorisme in een coalitie met saudia Arabia, constant terrorisme, de rian backed rebels zijn niet veel beter, refugies van Syria hebben ondertussen al problemen veroorzaakt in Europa, ook is een terroristische aanval in de us veel moeilijker met de NSA, Wikipedia dat.

De Jemenitische autoriteiten geven de Verenigde Staten geen toelating meer om nog grondtroepen in te zetten uit ergernis over de slachtoffers onder de burgerbevolking tijdens de eerste "antiterreuroperatie" onder Donald Trump. Dat schrijft de New York Times. De operatie van de Amerikaanse special forces op 29 januari in de provincie al-Baida was de eerste waarvoor Trump tijdens zijn ambtstermijn het licht op groen had gezet. De interventie was wel al goedgekeurd door de vorige Amerikaanse regering.

Centcom, het Amerikaanse commando in het Midden-Oosten, had zelf toegegeven dat bij de operatie ook burgers om het leven waren gekomen. Naast 14 al-Qaida-strijders werd ook een Amerikaanse soldaat gedood.

Het bericht in de krant werd bevestigd noch ontkend door de Amerikaanse regering en de Jemenitische overheid. Naar verluidt geldt de beslissing van Jemen niet voor interventies van Amerikaanse drones.

Het Witte Huis blijft de operatie als succesvol omschrijven. De beslissing van Jemen betekent tegelijkertijd een tegenvaller voor Trumps antiterreurstrijd. De Amerikaanse president had aangekondigd, agressiever op te treden tegen moslimterroristen. Volgens de New York Times velde Trump de beslissing voor de interventie tijdens een diner met veiligheidsadviseurs. Normalerwijze worden dergelijke operaties minutieus in de zogenoemde "Situation Room" van het Witte Huis overlopen en besproken.

De commando-actie, waarbij zowat alles verkeerd liep wat verkeerd kon lopen en ook kinderen werden gedood, heeft mogelijk ook gevolgen voor de machtsverhoudingen tussen het Witte Huis en het Pentagon.

Dat is slecht, what about drone killer in chief barack Obama? drones kill tons of civilians, en het selectief vermoorden van een bepaalde terrorist is niet effectief, and what about this;

List of material published by WikiLeaks - Wikipedia

De us veroorzaakte constant brutale warcrimes, heeft chaos veroorzaakt in libia, is de oorzaak van de IS, door de interventie in Irak, thank god dat assad support kreeg van rusland of anders was er geens kans dat is verslagen kan worden.

Srry voor mn slecht nederlands, ik kan alles onderbouwen indien hier iemand meer info over mn viewpoint nodig heeft.
 



16 Fake News Stories Reporters Have Run Since Trump Won

Early November: Spike in Transgender Suicide Rates
After Trump’s electoral victory on November 8, rumors began circulating that multiple transgender teenagers had killed themselves in response to the election results. There was no basis to these rumors. Nobody was able to confirm them at the time, and nobody has been able to confirm in the three months since Trump was elected.

Nevertheless, the claim spread far and wide: Guardian writer and editor-at-large of Out Zach Stafford [Link niet meer beschikbaar] which was retweeted more than 13,000 times before he deleted it. He later posted a tweet explaining why he deleted his original viral tweet; his explanatory tweet was shared a total of seven times. Meanwhile, PinkNews writer Dominic Preston wrote a report on the rumors, which garnered more than 12,000 shares on Facebook.

At Mic, Matthew Rodriguez wrote about the unsubstantiated allegations. His article was shared more than 55,000 times on Facebook. Urban legend debunker website Snopes wrote a report on the rumors and listed them as “unconfirmed” (rather than “false”). Snopes’s sources were two Facebook posts, since deleted, that offered no helpful information regarding the location, identity, or circumstances of any of the suicides. The Snopes report was shared 19,000 times.

At Reason, writer Elizabeth Nolan Brown searched multiple online databases to try to determine the identities or even the existence of the allegedly suicidal youth. She found nothing. As she put it: “[T]eenagers in 2016 don’t just die without anyone who knew them so much as mentioning their death online for days afterward.”

She is right. Just the same, the stories hyping this idea garnered at least nearly 100,000 shares on Facebook alone, contributing to the fear and hysteria surrounding Trump’s win.

November 22: The Tri-State Election Hacking Conspiracy Theory
On November 22, Gabriel Sherman posted a bombshell report at New YorkMagazine claiming that “a group of prominent computer scientists and election lawyers” were demanding a recount in three separate states because of “persuasive evidence that [the election] results in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania may have been manipulated or hacked.” The evidence? Apparently, “in Wisconsin, Clinton received 7 percent fewer votes in counties that relied on electronic-voting machines compared with counties that used optical scanners and paper ballots.”

The story went stratospherically viral. It was shared more than 145,000 times on Facebook alone. Sherman shared it on his Twitter feed several times, and people retweeted his links to the story nearly 9,000 times. Politico’s Eric Geller shared the story on Twitter as well. His tweet was retweeted just under 8,000 times. Dustin Volz from Reuters shared the link; he was retweeted nearly 2,000 times. MSNBC’s Joy Reid shared the story and was retweeted more than 4,000 times. New York Times opinion columnist Paul Krugman also shared the story and was retweeted about 1,600 times.

It wasn’t until the next day, November 23, that someone threw a little water on the fire. At FiveThirtyEight, Nate Silver explained that it was “demographics, not hacking” that explained the curious voting numbers. “Anyone making allegations of a possible massive electoral hack should provide proof,” he wrote, “and we can’t find any.” Additionally, Silver pointed out that the New York Magazine article had misrepresented the argument of one of the computer scientists in question.

At that point, however, the damage had already been done: Sherman, along with his credulous tweeters and retweeters, had done a great deal to delegitimize the election results. Nobody was even listening to Silver, anyway: his post was shared a mere 380 times on Facebook, or about one-quarter of 1 percent as much as Sherman’s. This is how fake news works: the fake story always goes viral, while nobody reads or even hears about the correction.

December 1: The 27-Cent Foreclosure
At Politico on December 1, Lorraine Wellert published a shocking essay claiming that Trump’s pick for secretary of the Treasury, Steve Mnuchin, had overseen a company that “foreclosed on a 90-year-old woman after a 27-cent payment error.” According to Wellert: “After confusion over insurance coverage, a OneWest subsidiary sent [Ossie] Lofton a bill for $423.30. She sent a check for $423. The bank sent another bill, for 30 cents. Lofton, 90, sent a check for three cents. In November 2014, the bank foreclosed.”

The story received widespread coverage, being shared nearly 17,000 times on Facebook. The New York Times’s Steven Rattner shared it on Twitter (1,300 retweets), as did NBC News’s Brad Jaffy ([Link niet meer beschikbaar]), the AP’s David Beard (1,900 retweets) and many others.

The problem? The central scandalous claims of Wellert’s article were simply untrue. As the Competitive Enterprise Institute’s Ted Frank pointed out, the woman in question was never foreclosed on, and never lost her home. Moreover, “It wasn’t Mnuchin’s bank that brought the suit.”

Politico eventually corrected these serious and glaring errors. But the damage was done: the story had been repeated by numerous media outlets including Huffington Post (shared 25,000 times on Facebook), the [Link niet meer beschikbaar], Vanity Fair, and many others.

January 20: Nancy Sinatra’s Complaints about the Inaugural Ball
On the day of Trump’s inauguration, CNN claimed Nancy Sinatra was “not happy” with the fact that the president and first lady’s inaugural dance would be to the tune of Frank Sinatra’s “My Way.” The problem? Nancy Sinatra had never said any such thing. CNN later updated the article without explaining the mistake they had made.

January 20: The Nonexistent Climate Change Website ‘Purge’
Also on the day of the inauguration, New York Times writer Coral Davenport published an article on the Times’s website whose headline claimed that the Trump administration had “purged” any “climate change references” from the White House website. Within the article, Davenport acknowledged that the “purge” (or what she also called “online deletions”) was “not unexpected” but rather part of a routine turnover of digital authority between administrations.

To call this action a “purge” was thus at the height of intellectual dishonesty: Davenport was styling the whole thing as a kind of digital book-burn rather than a routine part of American government. But of course that was almost surely the point. The inflammatory headline was probably the only thing that most people read of the article, doubtlessly leading many readers (the article was shared nearly 50,000 times on Facebook) to believe something that simply wasn’t true.

January 20: The Great MLK Jr. Bust Controversy
On January 20, Time reporter Zeke Miller wrote that a bust of Martin Luther King Jr. had been removed from the White House. This caused a flurry of controversy on social media until Miller issued a correction. As Time put it, Miller had apparently not even asked anyone in the White House if the bust had been removed. He simply assumed it had been because “he had looked for it and had not seen it.”

January 20: Betsy DeVos, Grizzly Fighter
During her confirmation hearing, education secretary nominee Betsy DeVos was asked whether schools should be able to have guns on their campuses. As NBC News reported, DeVos felt it was “best left to locales and states to decide.” She pointed out that one school in Wyoming had a fence around it to protect the students from wildlife. “I would imagine,” she said, “that there’s probably a gun in the school to protect from potential grizzlies.”

This was an utterly noncontroversial stance to take. DeVos was simply pointing out that different states and localities have different needs, and attempting to mandate a nationwide one-size-fits-all policy for every American school is imprudent.

How did the media run with it? By lying through their teeth. “Betsy DeVos Says Guns Should Be Allowed in Schools. They Might Be Needed to Shoot Grizzlies” ([Link niet meer beschikbaar]). “Betsy DeVos: Schools May Need Guns to Fight Off Bears” (The Daily Beast). “Citing grizzlies, education nominee says states should determine school gun policies” (CNN). “Betsy DeVos says guns in schools may be necessary to protect students from grizzly bears” (ThinkProgress.) “Betsy DeVos says guns shouldn’t be banned in schools … because grizzly bears” (Vox). “Betsy DeVos tells Senate hearing she supports guns in schools because of grizzly bears” (The Week). “Trump’s Education Pick Cites ‘Potential Grizzlies’ As A Reason To Have Guns In Schools” (BuzzFeed).

The intellectual dishonesty at play here is hard to overstate. DeVos never said or even intimated that every American school or even very many of them might need to shoot bears. She merely used one school as an example of the necessity of federalism and as-local-as-possible control of the education system.

Rather than report accurately on her stance, these media outlets created a fake news event to smear a reasonable woman’s perfectly reasonable opinion.

January 26: The ‘Resignations’ At the State Department
On January 26, the Washington Post’s Josh Rogin published what seemed to be a bombshell report declaring that “the State Department’s entire senior management team just resigned.” This resignation, according to Rogin, was “part of an ongoing mass exodus of senior Foreign Service officers who don’t want to stick around for the Trump era.” These resignations happened “suddenly” and “unexpectedly.” He styled it as a shocking shake-up of administrative protocol in the State Department, a kind of ad-hoc protest of the Trump administration.

The story immediately went sky-high viral. It was shared nearly 60,000 times on Facebook. Rogin himself tweeted the story out and was retweeted a staggering 11,000 times. Washington Post columnist Anne Applebaum had it retweeted nearly 2,000 times; journalists and writers from Wired, The Guardian, the Washington Post, Bloomberg, ABC, Foreign Policy, and other publications tweeted the story out in shock.

There was just one problem: the story was more a load of bunk. As Vox pointed out, the headline of the piece was highly misleading: “the word ‘management’ strongly implied that all of America’s top diplomats were resigning, which was not the case.” (The Postlater changed the word “management” to “administrative” without noting the change, although it left the “management” language intact in the article itself).

More importantly, Mark Toner, the acting spokesman for the State Department, put out a press release noting that “As is standard with every transition, the outgoing administration, in coordination with the incoming one, requested all politically appointed officers submit letters of resignation.” According to CNN, the officials were actually asked to leave by the Trump administration rather than stay on for the customary transitional few months. The entire premise of Rogin’s article was essentially nonexistent.

As always, the correction received far less attention than the fake news itself: Vox’s article, for instance, was shared around 9,500 times on Facebook, less than one-sixth the rate of Rogin’s piece. To this day, Rogin’s piece remains uncorrected regarding its faulty presumptions.

January 27: The Photoshopped Hands Affair
On January 27, Observer writer Dana Schwartz tweeted out a screenshot of Trump that, in her eyes, proved President Trump had “photoshopped his hands bigger” for a White House photograph. Her tweet immediately went viral, being shared upwards of 25,000 times. A similar tweet by Disney animator Joaquin Baldwin was shared nearly 9,000 times as well.

The conspiracy theory was eventually debunked, but not before it had been shared thousands upon thousands of times. Meanwhile, Schwartz tweeted that she did “not know for sure whether or not the hands were shopped.” Her correction tweet was shared a grand total of…11 times.

January 29: The Reuters Account Hoax
Following the Quebec City mosque massacre, the Daily Beast published a story that purported to identify the two shooters who had perpetrated the crime. The problem? The story’s source was a Reuters parody account on Twitter. Incredibly, nobody at the Daily Beast thought to check the source to any appreciable degree.

January 31: The White House-SCOTUS Twitter Mistake
Leading up to Trump announcing his first Supreme Court nomination, CNN Senior White House Correspondent Jeff Zeleny announced that the White House was “setting up [the] Supreme Court announcement as a prime-time contest.” He pointed to a pair of recently created “identical Twitter pages” for a theoretical justices Neil Gorsuch and Thomas Hardiman, the two likeliest nominees for the court vacancy.

Zeleny’s sneering tweet—clearly meant to cast the Trump administration in an unflattering, circus-like light—was shared more than 1,100 times on Twitter. About 30 minutes later, however, he tweeted: “The Twitter accounts…were not set up by the White House, I’ve been told.” As always, the admission of mistake was shared far less than the original fake news: Zeleny’s correction was retweeted a paltry 159 times.

January 31: The Big Travel Ban Lie
On January 31, a Fox affiliate station out of Detroit reported that “A local business owner who flew to Iraq to bring his mother back home to the US for medical treatment said she was blocked from returning home under President Trump’s ban on immigration and travel from seven predominately Muslim nations. He said that while she was waiting for approval to fly home, she died from an illness.”

Like most other sensational news incidents, this one took off, big-time: it was shared countless times on Facebook, not just from the original article itself (123,000 shares) but via secondary reporting outlets such as the Huffington Post (nearly 9,000 shares). Credulous reporters and media personalities shared the story on Twitter to the tune of thousands and thousands of retweets, including: Christopher Hooks, Gideon Resnick, Daniel Dale, Sarah Silverman, Blake Hounshell, Brian Beutler, Garance Franke-Ruta, Keith Olbermann (he got 3,600 retweets on that one!), Matthew Yglesias, and Farhad Manjoo.

The story spread so far because it gratified all the biases of the liberal media elite: it proved that Trump’s “Muslim ban” was an evil, racist Hitler-esque mother-killer of an executive order.

There was just one problem: it was a lie. The man had lied about when his mother died. The Fox affiliate hadn’t bothered to do the necessary research to confirm or disprove the man’s account. The news station quietly corrected the story after giving rise to such wild, industrial-scale hysteria.

February 1: POTUS Threatens to Invade Mexico
On February 1, Yahoo News published [Link niet meer beschikbaar] about a phone call President Trump shared with Mexican president Enrique Pena Nieto. The report strongly implied that President Trump was considering “send[ing] U.S. troops” to curb Mexico’s “bad hombre” problem, although it acknowledged that the Mexican government disagreed with that interpretation. The White House later re-affirmed that Trump did not have any plan to “invade Mexico.”

Nevertheless, Jon Passantino, the deputy news director of BuzzFeed, shared this story on Twitter with the exclamation “WOW.” He was retweeted 2,700 times. Jon Favreau, a former speechwriter for Barack Obama, also shared the story, declaring: “I’m sorry, did our president just threaten to invade Mexico today??” Favreau was retweeted more than 8,000 times.

Meanwhile, the Yahoo News AP post was shared more than 17,000 times on Facebook; [Link niet meer beschikbaar] was shared more than 66,000 times; ABC News posted the story and it was shared more than 20,000 times. On Twitter, the report—with the false implication that Trump’s comment was serious—was shared by media types such as ThinkProgress’s Judd Legum, the BBC’s Anthony Lurcher, Vox’s [Link niet meer beschikbaar] Politico’s Shane Goldmacher, comedian Michael Ian Black, and many others.

February 2: Easing the Russian Sanctions
Last week, NBC News national correspondent Peter Alexander tweeted out the following: “BREAKING: US Treasury Dept easing Obama admin sanctions to allow companies to do transactions with Russia’s FSB, successor org to KGB.” His tweet immediately went viral, as it implied that the Trump administration was cozying up to Russia.

A short while later, Alexander posted another tweet: “Source familiar [with] sanctions says it’s a technical fix, planned under Obama, to avoid unintended consequences of cybersanctions.” As of this writing, Alexander’s fake news tweet has approximately 6,500 retweets; his clarifying tweet has fewer than 250.

At CNBC, Jacob Pramuk styled the change this way: “Trump administration modifies sanctions against Russian intelligence service.” The article makes it clear that, per Alexander’s source, “the change was a technical fix that was planned under Obama.” Nonetheless, the impetus was placed on the Trump adminsitration. CBS News wrote the story up in the same way. So did the [Link niet meer beschikbaar]

In the end, unable to pin this (rather unremarkable) policy tweak on the Trump administration, the media have mostly moved on. As the Chicago Tribune put it, the whole affair was yet again an example of how “in the hyperactive Age of Trump, something that initially appeared to be a major change in policy turned into a nothing-burger.”

February 2: Renaming Black History Month
At the start of February, which is Black History Month in the United States, Trump proclaimed the month “National African American History Month.” Many outlets tried to spin the story in a bizarre way: TMZ claimed that a “senior administration official” said that Trump believed the term “black” to be outdated. “Every U.S. president since 1976 has designated February as Black History Month,” wrote TMZ. BET wrote the same thing.

The problem? It’s just not true. President Obama, for example, declared February “National African American History Month” as well. TMZ quickly updated their piece to fix their embarrassing error.

February 2: The House of Representatives’ Gun Control Measures
On February 2, the Associated Press touched off a political and media firestorm by tweeting: “BREAKING: House votes to roll back Obama rule on background checks for gun ownership.” The AP was retweeted a staggering 12,000 times.

The headlines that followed were legion: “House votes to rescind Obama gun background check rule” (Kyle Cheney, Politico); “House GOP aims to scrap Obama rule on gun background checks” (CNBC); “House scraps background check regulation” ([Link niet meer beschikbaar]); “House rolls back Obama gun background check rule” (CNN); “House votes to roll back Obama rule on background checks for gun ownership” ([Link niet meer beschikbaar]).

Some headlines were more specific about the actual House vote but no less misleading; “House votes to end rule that prevents people with mental illness from buying guns” (the Independent); “Congress ends background checks for some gun buyers with mental illness” ([Link niet meer beschikbaar]); “House Votes to Overturn Obama Rule Restricting Gun Sales to the Severely Mentally Ill” ([Link niet meer beschikbaar]).

The hysteria was far-reaching and frenetic. As you might have guessed, all of it was baseless. The House was actually voting to repeal a narrowly tailored rule from the Obama era. This rule mandated that the names of certain individuals who receive Social Security Disability Insurance and Supplemental Security Income and who use a representative to help manage these benefits due to a mental impairment be forwarded to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System.

If that sounds confusing, it essentially means that if someone who receives SSDI or SSI needs a third party to manage these benefits due to some sort of mental handicap, then—under the Obama rule—they may have been barred from purchasing a firearm. (It is thus incredibly misleading to suggest that the rule applied in some specific way to the “severely mentally ill.”)

As National Review’s Charlie Cooke pointed out, the Obama rule was opposed by the American Association of People With Disabilities; the ACLU; the Arc of the United States; the Autistic Self-Advocacy Network; the Consortium of Citizens With Disabilities; the National Coalition of Mental Health Recovery; and many, many other disability advocacy organizations and networks.

The media hysteria surrounding the repeal of this rule—the wildly misleading and deceitful headlines, the confused outrage over a vote that nobody understood—was a public disservice.

As Cooke wrote: “It is a rare day indeed on which the NRA, the GOP, the ACLU, and America’s mental health groups find themselves in agreement on a question of public policy, but when it happens it should at the very least prompt Americans to ask, ‘Why?’ That so many mainstream outlets tried to cheat them of the opportunity does not bode well for the future.”

Maybe It’s Time to Stop Reading Fake News
Surely more incidents have happened since Trump was elected; doubtlessly there are many more to come. To be sure, some of these incidents are larger and more shameful than others, and some are smaller and more mundane.

But all of them, taken as a group, raise a pressing and important question: why is this happening? Why are our media so regularly and so profoundly debasing and beclowning themselves, lying to the public and sullying our national discourse—sometimes on a daily basis? How has it come to this point?

Perhaps the answer is: “We’ve let it.” The media will not stop behaving in so reckless a manner unless and until we demand they stop.

That being said, there are two possible outcomes to this fake news crisis: our media can get better, or they can get worse. If they get better, we might actually see our press begin to hold the Trump administration (and government in general) genuinely accountable for its many admitted faults. If they refuse to fix these serial problems of gullibility, credulity, outrage, and outright lying, then we will be in for a rough four years, if not more.

No one single person can fix this problem. It has to be a cultural change, a kind of shifting of priorities industry-wide. Journalists, media types, reporters, you have two choices: you can fix these problems, or you can watch your profession go down in flames.

Most of us are hoping devoutly for the former. But not even a month into the presidency of Donald J. Trump, the outlook is dim.

rt fake news - Bing video
 


All the news we hear is fake news, the newssites reporting others to post fake news, are acused of fake news themselves, het is een grote fars, maar goed de laatste hype nu dat de oorlog in aleppa over is
 


Lol
 
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  • #3.933
En als ze een nieuw profiel aanmaken? DAAR AL EENS AAN GEDACHT?!!??!

Frappant, in Duitsland zijn ze het ook van plan:
Immigratieambtenaren mogen in Duitsland de mobiele telefoon van asielzoekers in beslag nemen en doorzoeken als ze hun identiteit trachten te verbergen, zo heeft de minister-president van de Duitse deelstaat Hessen donderdag gezegd over de nieuwe voorstellen om de terugkeer van afgewezen asielzoekers naar hun thuisland te versnellen.

De huidige wetgeving verhindert het personeel van BAMF (Bundesamt für Migration und Flüchtlinge) telefoons uit te lezen, zei Volker Bouffier, de minister-president van Hessen. "Dat zou nu mogelijk moeten zijn met dit nieuwe beleid. We beschouwen dit als absoluut noodzakelijk." Hij stipte aan dat zo'n maatregel alleen genomen zou worden wanneer een identiteit niet bevestigd kan worden en dat de uitlezing alleen zou dienen om daarover zekerheid te krijgen.
 
  • Topic Starter Topic Starter
  • #3.935
Trump niet achter kolonisatie Palestijns land

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De nieuwe Amerikaanse president Donald Trump heeft zich in een Israëlische krant gekeerd tegen de voortdurende Joodse kolonisatie van Palestijns land. "Ik ben niet iemand die gelooft dat het uitbreiden van nederzettingen goed voor de vrede is", zei Trump in een vrijdag verschenen gesprek met de krant Israel Hajom.

"Het is nu eenmaal een beperkt gebied en elke keer als je er nog meer land voor nederzettingen van afpakt, blijft er minder over'', aldus Trump. Hij wil graag dat "beide partijen in het conflict zich verstandig gaan gedragen". Trump uitte afgelopen week ook al bedenkingen tegen de kolonisatie van Palestijns land.

De Israëlische regering onder leiding van premier Benjamin Netanyahu leek in de komst van de Republikein Trump als Amerikaanse leider een groen licht te zien voor nog meer kolonisatie. Sinds Trump president werd in januari heeft Netanyahu 6.000 nieuwe woningen voor kolonisten in bezet Oost-Jeruzalem en de Westelijke Jordaanoever aangekondigd.

Trump leek ook bereid de Amerikaanse ambassade van Tel Aviv naar Jeruzalem te verhuizen, maar hij zei tegen Israel Hajom dat hij daar nog over nadenkt.

Dan toch geen bromance met Bibi?
 
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  • #3.938
Donald Trump overweegt "gloednieuw" immigratiedecreet
De administratie van Donald Trump is voorlopig niet van plan naar het Amerikaanse Hooggerechtshof te stappen om de blokkering van het inreisverbod aan te vechten, zo berichtten Amerikaanse media. De Amerikaanse president zei gisteren dat er genoeg andere opties zijn, zoals "een gloednieuw decreet".

"We zullen deze strijd winnen. Het ongelukkige eraan is dat het tijd zal vragen, maar we zullen de strijd winnen. We hebben ook veel andere opties, zoals gewoon een gloednieuw decreet indienen", zo zei Trump aan de journalisten aan boord van de Air Force One.

Op het vliegtuig naar Florida, waar hij dit weekend gaat golven met de Japanse premier Shinzo Abe, zei hij dat hij volgende week nieuwe stappen gaat zetten. "Misschien maandag of dinsdag", klonk het.

Op de vraag of zijn plan is om een nieuw presidentieel besluit uit te vaardigen, antwoordde Trump: "Dat zou heel goed kunnen. We moeten snel zijn uit veiligheidsoverwegingen, dus het zou heel goed kunnen."

Donderdag werd het beroep dat de Trump-administratie instelde tegen de tijdelijke opschorting van het inreisverbod door een federale rechter afgewezen. Dat verbod moest inwoners van 7 moslimlanden de toegang tot de VS verbieden. Na de beslissing tweette Trump "Ik zie jullie in de rechtbank!", wat deed vermoeden dat hij naar het Hooggerechtshof zou stappen.

Dat blijkt nu voorlopig dus niet het geval te zijn, al wordt de optie niet helemaal uitgesloten. "We houden de deur open voor alle mogelijkheden", zo klonk het vrijdag bij medewerkers van het Witte Huis.

Give it a rest
 
Eeum, het punt is dat Obama die landen heeft geindentificeerd als landen waar bepaalde restricties op gezet warden, er claimt niemand dat obame een drastische ban zoals trump deed, trump is gwn een stuk stricter, hut punt is dat dit war torn countrys zijn waar potentieel terroristen van naar de US kunnen komen, en toen Obama president was, was er geen heronganisering aan de gang van de intelligenceservices, de ban is maar een tijdelijke ban tot dit compleet is.
 
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