swirlspice

aka swirlspice
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Posts tagged "news"

minnpost:

We just added Minnesota’s new congressional districts to an interactive map. Check out the changes, and see how the new districts slice through Minnesota demographic data.

Also, MPR’s version.

minnpost:

We’ve created two interactive tables: one of donations from marriage ban opponents, one of the supporter donations. 

You’ll see a huge discrepancy in the financial disclosure from the supporters of the ban. Read more about it here.

minnpost:

A lawsuit over Minnesota’s ban on same-sex marriage should not have been thrown out by a judge, the state Court of Appeals has ruled. The court sent the case back to the district court for further analysis of the constitutional issues.

Assuming the pro-equality side successfully plays defense and defeats the amendment in November, and depending on what the state house and senate look like after that election, pro-equality could possibly go on offense in 2012. This court case may have influence there.

I don’t begrudge anyone getting their due attention and diligence when they go missing. The coverage they receive more often than not helps in their eventual recovery, or at least leads to finding the parties responsible, and by no means is that a bad thing. More troubling is the lack of that kind of attention leveled on the missing African Americans. After all, we make up a a third of all missing persons cases in the United States, while being only 12 percent of the population.

The stories Find Our Missing features don’t make for less compelling television — can you imagine the uproar America would be in if the media caught wind of a kidnapped, disabled, white five year old? — and they don’t lack substance or quality. Why isn’t Ann Curry talking about Hassani or Pamela? Are we still seen as such an Other in this country that the heartstrings that tug at Elizabeth Smart’s name won’t also tug for Hassani Campbell? Or is it that kidnapping and mysterious disappearances simply aren’t seen as crimes that happens to Black people? Gang, drug, sexual, and domestic violence are ‘our’ crimes, and the media struggles to break away from that mold when giving coverage to stories of the missing.

It’s almost as if they’re confused when a comfortable, middle class black woman goes missing with no hints of the average ‘Black crime’ elements involved. (The common perception that there are ‘no black serial killers’ certainly helps explain the difference in the amount of national coverage Anthony Sowell received in comparison to other recent serial killers like Dennis Rader in yet another case involving several missing Black women in the Cleveland area.)

When it comes to shows profiling crimes and criminals, you’re more likely to see a person of color starring on Lock Up than you are on Dateline, and that’s one of the reasons I’ll be watching Find Our Missing every week. If given a platform and the exposure it deserves, I firmly believe that the program can help solve some of the cases it features.

Even if the cases aren’t solved, at least they’ll get people thinking and remembering that there aren’t just the white women disappearing in Aruba to worry about.

minnpost:

“A person could skim the news of Wangari Maathai’s death last week and come away with the impression that she was a quirky, tree-planting tree-hugger who somehow managed to win a Nobel Peace Prize …

Yes, and Rosa Parks was just a seamstress whose feet hurt.”

mauricecherry:

shortformblog:

sonicbloom11:

WSJ:

NEW YORK—Bank of America Corp., the largest U.S. bank by assets, plans to charge customers a $5 monthly fee for making debit-card purchases starting early next year, according to an internal memo sent to bank executives Thursday. [more]

I’m speechless.

Seem to remember rumblings of a similar fee elsewhere. No matter. This is a bad idea for many reasons.

I guess that $3/month fee from Wells Fargo doesn’t look so bad….

Credit unions, people. No excuses.

danwick:

theweekmagazine:

I liked Michele Bachmann. A lot,” says Lori Ziganto at RedState. That ends now. I don’t care if she’s “actually cuckoo pants or if she’s just lying and using children and the fears of their parents to score political points,” but this “tall tale” about a 12-year-old absurdly “catching” mental retardation — something you’re born with — tells me all I need to know: Bachmann’s “not very bright” and she’s a “Jenny McCarthyist.” Let’s not forget: “Vaccinations save lives.”

Michele Bachmann: ‘Anti-vaccine wingnut’?

Photo: REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

Nice to see the rest of the country waking up to what we in Minnesota have known about Bachmann for years.

“Jenny McCarthyist”

!!!

iteeth:

Thanks, Tyler!

3rdofmay:

The art: Jenny Holzer, YOU CAN WATCH PEOPLE ALIGN THEMSELVES WHEN TROUBLE IS IN THE AIR. SOME PREFER TO BE CLOSE TO THOSE AT THE TOP AND OTHERS WANT TO BE CLOSE TO THOSE AT THE BOTTOM. IT’S A QUESTION OF WHO FRIGHTENS THEM MORE AND WHOM THEY WANT TO BE LIKE. From The Living Series, 1989.

The news: “In [Minneapolis] Suburb, Battle Goes Public on Bullying of Gay Students,” by Erik Eckholm in the New York Times.

The source: Collection of the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. You may see the installation of the entire The Living Series here.

Nota bene: Today’s selection was selected by Paul Schmelzer, the web editor at the Walker. Schmelzer is also the former editor of the Minnesota Independent. His Eyeteeth Tumblr and his Eyeteeth blog are two of my all-time favorites.

My favorite exhibit at the Walker. One of my favorites ever, actually.

minnpost:

Sculptor of National Mall’s MLK monument was ‘discovered’ in St. Paul

Chinese sculptor Lei Yixin is the sculptor of the 30-foot likeness of Dr. King. He was selected for the work after monument organizers saw him working in St. Paul five years ago and decided he was the guy for the job.