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n2doc

n2doc's Journal
n2doc's Journal
November 26, 2015

Scholar reclaims hometown of Cody, Wyo., and gays' and lesbians' place in the West

Gregory Hinton's rental car eases along the main drag of this town established by William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody. Hinton's a proud tour guide of his boyhood haunts in the place where his father was once top editor at the newspaper Cody founded.

Hinton drives streets wide enough for horse-drawn wagons to have made whip-driven turns, passing the white house where he lived until age 8. He gazes toward the window of his old bedroom with particular longing, a sense of something lost.

The gay scholar has come home again.

Through his novels, plays and scholarship, this native son of the Plains has tried to go beyond the hackneyed cowboys-and-Indians portrayal of the region and shed new light on the role gays and lesbians played — and continue to play — in the American West.

He's researched tribes that referred to cross-dressing members as "two spirits," lesbians who made no bones of their sexual orientation and frontier women who impersonated men as a measure of safety.

"We've been here since the beginning," he says. "We're stakeholders to our own story."

more

http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-gay-wyoming-20151126-story.html

November 25, 2015

Bernie's Wellesley fan club

At Hillary Clinton's alma mater, a small band of Sanders supporters is up against a well-organized machine.
By Annie Karni

WELLESLEY, Mass. -- It’s hard not to be aware of Hillary Clinton’s presence on the rolling lakeside campus of Wellesley College, even 46 years after the college's most famous alum graduated. Her portrait hangs here in the political science department, alongside letters she sent to her former professors. At the campus archives, librarians are happy to cart out a stack of yellowed newspaper clippings and worn-out yearbooks documenting Clinton’s four active years on campus. The bookstore sells a Hillary Clinton action figure.

If the students who currently attend didn’t expressly choose Wellesley because of its Clinton connection, they’re keenly aware of the school’s strong tie to the Democratic frontrunner seeking to make history as the first woman president – the buzz among students is that a Clinton White House will greatly increase the prestige of a Wellesley degree. The love is requited – Clinton has credited her alma mater as the “all-women’s college [that] prepared me to compete in the all-boys club of presidential politics.” It was at Wellesley, after all, that Clinton first became a star, using her 1969 commencement speech to challenge the speaker invited by the administration, Massachusetts Sen. Edward Brooke, for being out of touch with her generation. The bold move landed her on the cover of Time Magazine, making her famous before she even arrived at Yale Law School.

For politically active Wellesley women, it doesn’t feel like a duty to vote Clinton, but it can feel like bucking the trend not to. But on a chilly Monday afternoon before Thanksgiving break, a loosely organized group of about half-a-dozen students gathered in the empty basement of the campus student center to discuss their against-the-grain support for Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

They didn’t all know each other socially – the women quietly found each other through the Wellesley Students for Bernie Facebook page, which now has 275 members and counting (compared to 815 in the pro-Clinton student Facebook group). Many said their support for Sanders put them in the minority in their social circles, but they did not feel moved by the former secretary of state, despite living in the dormitories she once resided in and studying in the classrooms where she learned.

“My dad thinks my support for Bernie is totally misguided because I go to Wellesley,” admitted sophomore Claire Devlin. “He keeps saying it’s bad for the brand not to vote for Hillary, which I just think is the most absurd thing.”


Read more: http://www.politico.com/story/2015/11/bernie-sanders-wellesley-hillary-clinton-216203

November 25, 2015

Marco Rubio Is Using a Convicted Felon to Help Him Win Florida

Earlier this month, when Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) named his top campaign representatives across Florida, he tapped a conservative activist named Clyde Fabretti as one of the leaders of his presidential effort in Orange County, a key district that includes Orlando. But Fabretti, the co-founder of the West Orlando Tea Party, has a sketchy background that might not reflect well on Rubio's campaign: He is a convicted white-collar criminal with a history of questionable business dealings and associations with fraudsters. Most recently, Fabretti's name surfaced in an ongoing lawsuit by investors in a tea-party-related media startup who claim he played a role in a company that allegedly defrauded them. And records show that the 67-year-old activist may have committed voter fraud by registering to vote and casting ballots in Florida elections when his criminal record rendered him ineligible to do so.

In 1997, Fabretti pleaded guilty to a single federal felony count of conspiracy to commit income tax evasion, bank fraud, mail fraud, and failing to file tax returns. He was sentenced to 21 months in prison and three years of probation. He was also ordered to pay more than $200,000 in restitution.

According to the federal indictment, Fabretti used his then-wife Susan, who worked for him, to execute an elaborate scheme to defraud First Union Corporation, the banking giant that eventually merged with Wachovia and later Wells Fargo. Prosecutors charged that in 1990 Fabretti provided his wife with false documents inflating her income and assets, which she then used to obtain a loan to buy a five-bedroom, eight-bathroom mansion in Oakton, Virginia.

The indictment also charged that Fabretti attempted to hide his assets by putting them in his wife's name and masked his income by using corporate accounts he controlled to pay his rent, child support from a previous marriage, and living expenses. Susan pleaded guilty to bank fraud and tax evasion charges and was sentenced to three months in prison. Fabretti received a far harsher punishment.

more

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/11/marco-rubio-convicted-felon-clyde-fabretti

November 25, 2015

Wednesday Toon Roundup 5- The Rest

Terror








War









The Issue







Have a safe holiday, folks!
November 25, 2015

Rise in Early Cervical Cancer Detection Is Linked to Affordable Care Act

WASHINGTON — Cancer researchers say there has been a substantial increase in women under the age of 26 who have received a diagnosis of early-stage cervical cancer, a pattern that they say is most likely an effect of the Affordable Care Act.

Starting in 2010, a provision of the health law allowed dependents to stay on their parents’ health insurance until age 26. The number of uninsured young adults fell substantially in the years that followed. The share of 19- to 25-year-olds without health insurance declined to 21 percent in the first quarter of 2014 from 34 percent in 2010 — a decrease of about four million people, federal data show.

Researchers from the American Cancer Society wanted to examine whether the expansion of health insurance among young American women was leading to more early-stage diagnoses. Early diagnosis improves the prospects for survival because treatment is more effective and the chance of remission is higher. It also bolsters women’s chances for preserving their fertility during treatment. And women with health insurance are far more likely to get a screening that can identify cancer early.

Researchers used the National Cancer Data Base, a hospital-based registry of about 70 percent of all cancer cases in the United States. They compared diagnoses for women ages 21 to 25 who had cervical cancer with those for women ages 26 to 34, before and after the health law provision began in 2010. Early-stage diagnoses rose substantially among the younger group — the one covered by the law — and stayed flat among the older group.

more
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/25/health/rise-in-early-cervical-cancer-detection-is-linked-to-affordable-care-act.html?smid=tw-share&_r=1

November 25, 2015

Washington D.C. pot arrests at near zero after legalization

After one full year of legalizing cannabis in the nation’s capital, arrests for marijuana possession have dropped to single digits.

Data provided by the Metropolitan Police Department shows that they have conducted only seven arrests for marijuana possession this year, dropping a staggering 99.2 percent from 895 in 2014, the Washington City Paper reports.

“I’m not policing the city as a mom, I’m policing it as the police chief—and 70 percent of the public supported [Initiative 71],” Police Chief Cathy Lanier said in February, according to the Daily Beast. “All those arrests do is make people hate us.”

Despite the uncommonly small number of pot arrests in D.C., public consumption of marijuana is still considered illegal.

http://blog.sfgate.com/smellthetruth/2015/11/23/washington-d-c-pot-arrests-at-near-zero-after-legalization/

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