Dakryn's Batshit Theory of the Week

I'm not talking about aggression in the sense of retaliating for mortar/rocket attacks. I'm talking about all the fucking land-grabbing they do against the Palestinians, and the various other ways they marginalise those people.
 
Hooray, politics over justice!

Roll Call: House rejects probe of Pelosi's claims
By The Associated Press – 2 hours ago

The 252-172 roll call Thursday by which the House rejected a measure to investigate House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's assertion that the CIA misled her on the use of torture.

A "yes" vote is a vote against an investigation.

Voting yes were 250 Democrats and 2 Republicans.

Voting no were 0 Democrats and 172 Republicans.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5go13Ns4BjA9mGPpK3qcnTA4cNujgD98APMSO0
 
Well, like Condoleezza said:

"By definition, if it was authorized by the President, it did not violate our obligations under the Convention Against Torture."
 
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http://www.mcclatchydc.com/nation/story/69467.html

Could California become the first state in the nation to do away with welfare?

That doomsday scenario is on the table as lawmakers wrestle with a staggering $24.3 billion budget deficit.

County welfare directors are "in shock" at the very idea of getting rid of CalWORKs, which has been widely viewed as one of the most successful social programs in the state's history, said Bruce Wagstaff, director of the Department of Human Assistance in Sacramento.

"It's difficult to come up with the right adjective to react to this," Wagstaff said. "It would be devastating to the people we serve."

H.D. Palmer, a spokesman for the state Department of Finance, said California is in an unprecedented fiscal situation that has made all programs, from education to human services, vulnerable to deep and painful reductions.

"I don't wish for a moment to minimize the profound impact" that eliminating CalWORKs would have, Palmer said. "But the easy decisions are way past being in the rearview mirror for us. We face the specter of California not having cash on hand to pay its bills in July."

Wagstaff and other administrators are betting that the state will rescue the "welfare to work" program. But they are bracing for cuts that would slash benefits to the lowest levels since the late 1990s, when CalWORKs began as part of the federal government's bold reform of the welfare system.
 
I wonder how many Cali voters actually realised that "budget deficit + no tax increases = program cuts" when they shot down all those tax proposals last month.