ellisonz
ellisonz's JournalToons: Makin it with Mitt, Droppin the Ball, The End is Near and More. 12/28/11
By Sorensen, Slowpoke - 12/28/2011 12:00:00 AM
By Jimmy Margulies, The Record of Hackensack, NJ - 12/28/2011
By Joe Heller, Green Bay Press-Gazette - 12/28/2011
By Keefe, The Denver Post - 12/28/2011
By David Fitzsimmons, The Arizona Star - 12/28/2011
By Luojie, China Daily, China - 12/27/2011
By Clay Bennett, December 28, 2011
By Mike Luckovich, December 27, 2011
By Mike Luckovich, December 28, 2011
By Steve Benson, December 28, 2011
By Drew Sheneman, December 27, 2011
Only 1 in 3 American adults can name all three branches of government...
Retired U.S. Supreme Court justice helped initiate an online program called iCivics because not enough Americans know how government works.
By Howard Blume, Los Angeles Times
December 27, 2011
Only about a third of American adults can name all three branches of government, and a third can't name any. Fewer than a third of eighth graders could identify the historical purpose of the Declaration of Independence.
This slim knowledge of civics and the potential risk it poses to American democracy captured the attention of retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.
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O'Connor launched the effort that became iCivics in 2006, the year she retired from the court. It initially focused on the judicial branch alone, but "it became apparent pretty quickly it was needed across the board," she said.
"It's very disturbing," said O'Connor, 81, the first woman to serve on the nation's highest court. "I want to educate several generations of young people so we won't have the lack of public knowledge we have today."
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-civics-20111227,0,3247832.story
I think we need to redo the entire educational system and put civics/ethics/history on par with math and the three R's...it's an outrage that new citizens are frankly better educated in this subject than the majority of American citizens. I often run across people who put on the pretense of knowing the issues, but in actuality have very little idea how the government actually works beyond perhaps some sloganeering (Tea Party, Ron Paul people, I'm looking at you), and it's frightening how self-assured they can be. I think the propagation of general hostility towards the political superstructure of this country doesn't help; it just seems to make people more pessimistic and self-assured in their prejudice. What behaviors do you see this ignorance expressing itself in?
Teachers what do you think? Why are we failing so badly? How does this influence American life? How can we change the trend?
For the record, the three branches of government are the Legislative, the Executive, and the Judicial.
Toons: Swine, Dinosaurs, Mystery Elephants and More. -12/27/11
By Taylor Jones, El Nuevo Dia, Puerto Rico - 12/27/2011
By Joe Heller, Green Bay Press-Gazette - 12/27/2011
By Milt Priggee, www.miltpriggee.com - 12/27/2011
By Milt Priggee, www.miltpriggee.com - 12/27/2011
By Milt Priggee, www.miltpriggee.com - 12/27/2011
By Brian Fairrington, Cagle Cartoons - 12/27/2011
By Ted Rall, December 28, 2011
By Pat Oliphant, December 28, 2011
By Stuart Carlson, December 27, 2011
By Ben Sargent, December 28, 2011
LAT: Syria refugees find sanctuary in Libya
Syrians in Tripoli, Libya's capital, wave Syria's old flag during a demonstration to call for President Bashar Assad's ouster. (Mahmud Turkia / AFP/Getty Images / December 9, 2011)
Thousands of Syrians have sought refuge in the Libyan city of Benghazi. They arrive by bus daily in the city, which is still recovering from Libya's civil war.
By Ruth Sherlock, Los Angeles Times
December 26, 2011, 5:46 p.m.
Reporting from Benghazi, Libya
Even as it recovers from its recent civil war, Libya is fast becoming a place of sanctuary for thousands of refugees fleeing the bloodshed in Syria.
Buses from Damascus, crammed with Syrian families, are arriving daily in the eastern city of Benghazi, the cradle of the effort to oust the late Libyan leader Moammar Kadafi.
"Up to 4,000 Syrian families have sought refuge in Libya in the last weeks, and the numbers are increasing every day," said Mohammed Jammal, a Syrian community leader in the city. "The buses arrive full and go back empty. There used to be two a week, but now there are two a day."
Crammed full with families and young men, the buses pull into the station at all times of the night after a grueling 41/2-day trip, crossing first into Jordan, then across the Suez Canal, through Egypt and down the long road to Benghazi.
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/africa/la-fg-libya-syria-refugees-20111226,0,4985265.story?track=rssBy
The Rats of Libya Salute the Germs of Syria!
Toons: Managing Without, Wrong Paul, Mayan Calender, and More. -12/16/11
By Eric Allie, Caglecartoons.com - 12/26/2011
By Joe Heller, Green Bay Press-Gazette - 12/26/2011
By Bill Day, Cagle Cartoons - 12/26/2011
By John Darkow, Columbia Daily Tribune, Missouri - 12/26/2011
By Wolverton, Cagle Cartoons - 12/25/2011
By Taylor Jones, Politicalcartoons.com - 12/24/2011
By Yaakov Kirschen, Dry Bones - 12/26/2011
By Iain Green, The Scotsman, Scotland - 12/26/2011
By Ted Rall, December 26, 2011
By Glenn McCoy, December 23, 2011
By Matt Wuerker, December 26, 2011
Rubbish.
They just don't know where to look or what they should be looking for. Young Americans by the tens of million are embracing music with a political message - it's just not your classic baby boomer protest song. It is much deeper, much darker, and much more disappointed in a society that is failing to take care of its obligations under the social contract that is America. I think it's important to realize that music has come a long ways since the heady days of 1968.
These days there are far more popular genres and an artist is much more likely to engage in subliminal messaging; the message today is far more fundamentally about economics, rather than foreign policy, although that remains an issue, although generally only within the concept of the decaying urban core, bored suburbia, and despondent rural ares. Across hip-hop/rap, metal, reggae, electronica, rock, and pop there is a bubble of discontent over the lack of opportunity that has been bubbling and is now bursting with the election of Barack Obama and the Occupy Wall Street movement. Young people are wide and awake, they're just not mimicking their parents protest music.
Here are 10 representative songs by artists that the authors of this story should have paid attention to otherwise they're just preaching to the baby boomer choir. I apologize for the lengthy response but the last time an article like this was published the discussion would have benefited from something like this. I have excluded the wildly successful Eminem and Lady Gaga who are discussed in a post above. Enjoy the political music, trust me, it's in there:
2000:
2001 (This song was banned from radio by Clear Channel after 9/11:
2002:
2003 (Off of Hail to the Thief):
2004 (German, but very popular in Amerika):
2005 (Jamaican, Bob Marley's Son - popular in the US):
2006:
2007: Remember when John McCain said Nine Inch Nails was his favorite band?
2008: There's about 3-4 minutes of a Malcom X interview at the beginning.
2009:
2010:
Toons: Doing Nothing, Parades, a Syrian Cartoonist, and more. 12/23/11
By Kirk Walters, Toledo Blade - 12/23/2011
By Kirk Walters, Toledo Blade - 12/23/2011
By Taylor Jones, El Nuevo Dia, Puerto Rico - 12/23/2011
By RJ Matson, The St. Louis Post Dispatch - 12/23/2011
By Adam Zyglis, The Buffalo News - 12/23/2011
By Jimmy Margulies, The Record of Hackensack, NJ - 12/23/2011
By John Darkow, Columbia Daily Tribune, Missouri - 12/23/2011
By Randy Bish, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review - 12/23/2011
By Randy Bish, Pittsburgh Tribune-Review - 12/23/2011
By Bob Englehart, The Hartford Courant - 12/23/2011
By John Cole, The Scranton Times-Tribune - 12/23/2011
By Brian Fairrington, Cagle Cartoons - 12/23/2011
By Ted Rall, December 23, 2011
By Tom Toles, December 22, 2011
By Stuart Carlson, December 24, 2011
By Matt Wuerker, December 22, 2011
Jeff Danziger looks back at the year: http://www.danzigercartoons.com/
Happy Holidays to all the political cartoonists who make the often wretched days of our lives more bearable through the art of laughter.
This holiday season please keep Ali Ferzat, his family, and the people of Syria, who continue to suffer under the brutal regime of Bashar Assad, in your prayers for peace and goodwill among men.
Ali Ferzat (Arabic: علي فرزات‎; born 22 June 1951, Hama, Syria), is a renowned Syrian political cartoonist. He has published more than 15,000 caricatures between Syrian, Arab and international newspapers.[1] He serves as the head of the Arab Cartoonists' Association.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ali_Ferzat
Ali Farzat on December 10 was a recipient along with 4 other individuals involved in the Arab Spring, including Mohamed Bouazizi, to receive the Sakharov Prize "established in December 1988 by the European Parliament as a means to honour individuals or organisations who have dedicated their lives to the defence of human rights and freedom of thought."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakharov_Prize
Ali Ferzat remains in Syria and was not permitted to attend the awards ceremony in Paris on December 14, "He sent a video message expressing his grief and sorrow at the number of victims in Syria which 'increases with every minute.'"
http://au.news.yahoo.com/world/a/-/world/12354400/eu-parliament-awards-arab-spring-activists/
Syrian cartoonist Ali Ferzat poses in his atelier in Damascus, Syria, (AP).
His final cartoon before the beating:
http://www.ali-ferzat.com/
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By Nate Beeler, The Washington Examiner - 8/29/2011
Strange But True: Ron Paul Thinks The American Civil War Was 'Unnecessary'
Thu, 12/22/2011 - 8:38am
Avi Zenilman
Texas Rep. Ron Paul, the anti-government GOP presidential candidate who is now surging in Iowa, is not a fan of Abraham Lincoln. He believes the Civil War was a "senseless" bloodbath that was the result of Lincoln's desire to "enhance and get rid of the original intent of the republic."
"He shouldn't have gone to war," explained Paul in a December 2007 appearance on Meet The Press. Failing to fight for the union, however, would not mean embracing slavery -- after all, it was on its way out, and in 1833 the British Empire had successfully abolished it without violence. His advice to the north: "you buy the slaves and release them. How much would that cost compared to killing 600,000 Americans and where it lingered for 100 years?"
In other words, the "Godfather of the Tea Party" thinks the best policy would have been a massive public bailout of slaveowners. (There was no federal income tax until 1861, when it was implemented to fund the war.)
The rebels never indicated they were willing to sell off their slaves. The "peculiar institution" of owning human beings dominated the political and economic culture of the states that seceded. In March 1861, a few weeks before Lincoln's inauguration, the newly-minted Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens explained that the new government rested "upon the great truth that the negro is not equal to the white man; that slavery, subordination to the superior race, is his natural and normal condition."
One more paragraph: http://nationalmemo.com/article/strange-true-ron-paul-thinks-american-civil-war-was-unnecessary
Toons: Making a Point, Make it Stop, Trans-Snax and more. - 12/22/11
By Randall Enos, Cagle Cartoons - 12/22/2011
By Bill Day, Cagle Cartoons - 12/22/2011
By Jimmy Margulies, The Record of Hackensack, NJ - 12/22/2011
By Milt Priggee, www.miltpriggee.com - 12/22/2011
By John Cole, The Scranton Times-Tribune - 12/22/2011
By Adam Zyglis, The Buffalo News - 12/22/2011
By Dave Granlund, Politicalcartoons.com - 12/22/2011
By Tony Auth, The Philadelphia Inquirer, December 22, 2011
By Clay Bennett, December 21, 2011
By Stuart Carlson, December 23, 2011
By Matt Davies, December 21, 2011
By Chan Lowe, December 22, 2011
By Mike Luckovich, December 22, 2011
By Steve Sack, December 22, 2011
By Drew Sheneman, December 21, 2011
By Don Wright, December 22, 2011
Toons: Tax Holidays, Succession, Leading from Behind and more. 12/21/11
By Taylor Jones, Politicalcartoons.com - 12/21/2011
By Randall Enos, Cagle Cartoons - 12/21/2011
By RJ Matson, The St. Louis Post Dispatch - 12/21/2011
By Jimmy Margulies, The Record of Hackensack, NJ
By John Cole, The Scranton Times-Tribune - 12/21/2011
By Pat Bagley, Salt Lake Tribune - 12/21/2011
By Joe Heller, Green Bay Press-Gazette - 12/21/2011
By RJ Matson, Roll Call - 12/21/2011
By John Darkow, Columbia Daily Tribune, Missouri - 12/21/2011
By Dave Granlund, Politicalcartoons.com - 12/21/2011
By Tom Toles, December 20, 2011
By Pat Oliphant, December 20, 2011
By Ted Rall, December 19, 2011
By Jeff Danziger, December 21, 2011
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Name: Zachary EllisonGender: Male
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