Sunday, March 3, 2013

Obama's modest gay marriage move

In a fascinating combination ? a modest legal plea wrapped inside an ambitious constitutional argument, the Obama administration on Thursday urged the Supreme Court to strike down California?s ?Proposition 8? ban on same-sex marriage.

Image via Chris Walton/Flickr.

Image via Chris Walton/Flickr.

This marked the federal government?s first entry into the controversy that has occupied the federal courts continuously since ?Proposition 8? was challenged in a potentially landmark federal court case four years ago.?? President Obama, of course, has said that he favors allowing gays and lesbians to marry the persons they love, but his government has never sought explicitly to have the courts open marriage to those couples.

Rather than seeking a nationwide ruling, to give same-sex couples marriage equality everywhere in the U.S., the administration?s lawyers offered a legal formula that would almost immediately make marriage available to gays and lesbians only in eight states ? including California ? that do not now allow it.

In addition to California, those states are Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, New Jersey, Nevada, Oregon and Rhode Island.

Considering what the administration might have proposed, that request qualified as quite modest.? After all, the two same-sex couples who originated the challenge to ?Proposition 8? are asking the court to strike down marriage bans for such partners all across America, wherever that is still banned.

But, in order to get to the result the administration is seeking (the overturning of the 2008 ballot measure adopted in the Golden State), the new legal brief filed for the government suggested that the court adopt a sweeping new constitutional test that clearly has the potential to nullify laws of many kinds that treat gays and lesbians less favorably than straight people.

If the court were to mandate that test (which judges and lawyers call ?heightened scrutiny?), that might one day mean the end of all bans on same-sex marriage, too.? The administration was not seeking that result at this point, the brief made clear.

In fact, at one point in the new brief, the government?s attorneys said the court could decide the pending case on ?Proposition 8? without having to decide what the Constitution might require ?under circumstances not present here.?? That somewhat opaque phrase was meant to emphasize that the government was not asking the Court to treat the basic right to marry, which the Constitution clearly protects, as an institution open to all same-sex couples.

In effect, the arguments made on Thursday offset the goal of advancing the cause of marriage equality to an important degree with a hesitation to push that goal from coast to coast.?? So, if the court were to follow the path suggested by the government, it very likely would mean that same-sex marriage would, for the time being, remain banned in 33 states (down from the current number, 41).

This arithmetic needs a bit of explaining.? There are nine states out of the 50 that currently permit same-sex marriages, along with Washington, D.C.?? Such marriages are not allowed in the other 41.? How would a court decision of the kind the government was suggesting get that number down to 33?

Eight states, including California, now provide all or nearly all of the benefits and legal rights of marriage to both same-sex couples and opposite-sex couples, so they are treated equally in that respect.? But, in those states, only opposite-sex couples can go beyond their access to those benefits, and legally get married.

It is those eight states that are the target of the Obama Administration?s legal challenge, even though it is framed as a challenge only to California?s ?Proposition 8.??? The argument that was made, in fact, is widely known by the phrase, ?the eight-state solution? for same-sex marriage rights.?? The government was not proposing a ?50-state solution.?

Under the government?s argument, the constitutional problem arose when the voters of California took away the marriage right for same-sex couples even as they left intact all of the marriage-like benefits for those couples.

When judged by a tough constitutional standard, or ?heightened scrutiny,? that differing treatment of same-sex couples violates the Constitution?s guarantee of legal equality, under the 14th Amendment, the government asserted.

?Proposition 8,? the brief contended, ?forbids committed same-sex couples from solemnizing their union in marriage, and instead relegates them to a legal status ? domestic partnership ? distinct from marriage but identical to it in terms of the substantive rights and obligations under state law.?

The designation of marriage, the brief said, ?confers a special validation of the relationship between two individuals and conveys a message to society that domestic partnerships or civil unions cannot match.?

Examining one by one the arguments that the sponsors of ?Proposition 8? make for that measure, the administration document found each of them insufficient to make up for the discrimination it argued is the result of that measure.

So, without any justification that would promote ?any important governmental interest,? the brief said, ?Proposition 8? in the end emerges only as the product of ?impermissible prejudice? against gays and lesbians.

Although the approach the government has taken in this new filing is notably more modest than the gay rights community had hoped, and that the two same-sex California couples are still pursuing before the court, the government argument does give the justices the option of deciding the pending case more narrowly, if they are not yet prepared to address same-sex marriage as a national issue.

What the brief did leave totally unmentioned, though, was that the court?s endorsement of the tough new constitutional test put forth by the administration would amount virtually to a very broad foundation for a historic new era of gay rights, going well beyond ?Proposition 8? and even beyond marriage.

Even though acknowledged, that is the potential that could be seen between the lines of 32 pages of legal reason.

Recent Constitution Daily Stories

When Canada was invited to join the United States

?Ohmmm? my goodness: Yoga and religion in public schools

Sequester facts: What happens next, what gets cut

Why Congress protected its own pay in the sequester deal

Also Read

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/not-ambitious-challenge-proposition-8-120808398.html

old school nick swisher jaco san jose sharks humber perfect game ufc 145 fight card ufc145

2 killed in Bangladesh as riots continue over war crimes verdict ...

Police said the two protesters died in clashes with security forces in the southern Chittagong district.

Violence ensued after police tried to remove barriers that had been erected by supporters of the Jamaat-e-Islami party on a main highway.

Police said a number of passenger buses were also vandalized in the area located 340 kilometres south-east of the capital, Dhaka.

Protesters also damaged a temple and set fire to homes belonging to minority Hindus in the south-western Bagerhat district.

42 killed in Bangladesh clashes between police and Islamic activists

Bangladesh violence death toll Friday rose to 42 after fierce clashes between activists of an Islamic party and law enforcers following a war-crime trial verdict.

According to local news agency UNB, 42 people were dead and dozens injured in about a dozen districts of Bangladesh.

But it was not known whether all the victims were engaged in party politics.

To thwart any further untoward incident, Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) personnel have reportedly been deployed in violence-hit Bangladesh cities and towns.

BGB personnel will mainly patrol some important areas in the capital city from Thursday night.

Clashes, arson, vandalism and detention have also been reported in parts of capital Dhaka and elsewhere in the country since Thursday.

Most of the deaths were reported in the incidents of violence erupted soon after the International Crimes Tribunal (ICT)-1 pronounced the verdict Thursday afternoon on a crime against humanity case, awarding death sentence to Delwar Hossain Sayeedi, believed to be the second-most important leader of Jamaat.

About 73-year old Sayeedi, considered a world famous orator on Islam and comparative religion, was indicted in October 2011 with 20 charges of crimes against humanity including looting, killing, arson, rape and forcefully converting people into Muslims during the war.

Jamaat says Sayeedi is the victim of a political vendetta.

Voice of Russia, Xinhua, dpa

Source: http://english.ruvr.ru/2013_03_02/2-killed-in-Bangladesh-as-riots-continue-over-war-crimes-verdict/

janelle monae MBTA national signing day Solomon Islands Mary Leakey Side Effects bob marley

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Boehner: No reason to block Keystone XL pipeline

FILE - In this Jan. 23, 2013, file photo, Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D, points at a illustration of existing pipeline, while speaking at a news conference about the Keystone XL oil pipeline on Capitol Hill in Washington. The State Department on Friday, March 1, 2013, raised no major objections to the Keystone XL oil pipeline and said other options to get the oil from Canada to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries are worse for climate change. But the latest environmental review stops short of recommending whether the project should be approved. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

FILE - In this Jan. 23, 2013, file photo, Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D, points at a illustration of existing pipeline, while speaking at a news conference about the Keystone XL oil pipeline on Capitol Hill in Washington. The State Department on Friday, March 1, 2013, raised no major objections to the Keystone XL oil pipeline and said other options to get the oil from Canada to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries are worse for climate change. But the latest environmental review stops short of recommending whether the project should be approved. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)

Map shows existing and proposed extension of Keystone XL pipeline

FILE - In this Feb. 8, 2013, file photo, Secretary of State John Kerry, right, speaks with reporters during a news conference with Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird at the State Department in Washington. The State Department on Friday, March 1, 2013, raised no major objections to the Keystone XL oil pipeline and said other options to get the oil from Canada to U.S. Gulf Coast refineries are worse for climate change. But the latest environmental review stops short of recommending whether the project should be approved. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

(AP) ? A new State Department report is the latest evidence that the long-delayed Keystone XL oil pipeline from Canada should be approved, supporters say.

The draft report, issued Friday, finds there would be no significant environmental impact to most resources along the proposed route from western Canada to refineries in Texas. The report also said other options to get the oil from Canada to Gulf Coast refineries are worse for climate change.

The new report "again makes clear there is no reason for this critical pipeline to be blocked one more day," said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. After four years of what he called "needless delays," Boehner said it is time for President Barack Obama "to stand up for middle-class jobs and energy security and approve the Keystone pipeline."

Environmentalists see the State Department report in a vastly different light.

They say it was inadequate and failed to account for climate risks posed by the pipeline. The report also is based on a false premise, opponents say ? namely, that tar sands in western Canada will be developed for oil production regardless of whether the Keystone XL pipeline is approved.

"Americans are already suffering from the consequences of global warming, from more powerful storms like Hurricane Sandy to drought conditions currently devastating the Midwest and Southwest," said Daniel Gatti of the group Environment America. Production of oil from Canadian tar sands could add as much as 240 billion metric tons of global warming pollution to the atmosphere, Gatti said, a potential catastrophe that would hasten the arrival of the worst effects of global warming.

Gatti and other opponents said development of the vast tar sands is far from certain, despite assurances by the project's supporters.

"Tar sands can be stopped, and we are stopping it," Gatti said, citing a rally in Washington last month attended by an estimated 35,000 people. Project opponents also have blocked construction in Texas and Oklahoma and have been arrested outside the White House gate.

The pipeline plan has become a flashpoint in the U.S. debate over climate change. Republicans and business and labor groups have urged the Obama administration to approve the project as a source of jobs and a step toward North American energy independence. Environmental groups have been pressuring the president to reject the pipeline, saying it would carry "dirty oil" that contributes to global warming. They also worry about a spill.

The State Department review stopped short of recommending approval of the project, but it gave the Obama administration political cover if it chooses to endorse the pipeline in the face of opposition from many Democrats and environmental groups. State Department approval of the 1,700-mile pipeline is needed because it crosses a U.S. border.

The lengthy report says Canadian tar sands are likely to be developed, regardless of whether the U.S. approves the Keystone XL pipeline, which would carry oil through Montana, South Dakota, Kansas, Nebraska and Oklahoma.

The report acknowledges that development of tar sands in Alberta would create greenhouse gases but makes clear that other methods of transporting the oil ? including rail, trucks and barges ? also pose a risk to the environment.

The State Department analysis for the first time evaluated two options using rail: shipping the oil on trains to existing pipelines or to oil tankers. The report shows that those other methods would release more greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming than the pipeline. The Keystone XL pipeline, according to the report, would release annually the same amount of global warming pollution as 626,000 passenger cars.

A scenario that would move the oil on trains to mostly existing pipelines would release 8 percent more greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide than Keystone XL. That scenario would not require State Department approval because any new pipelines would not cross the U.S border.

Another alternative that relies mostly on rail to move the oil to the Canadian west coast, where it would be loaded onto oil tankers to the U.S. Gulf Coast, would result in 17 percent more greenhouse gas emissions, the report said.

In both alternatives, the oil would be shipped in rail cars as bitumen, a thick, tar-like substance, rather than as a liquid.

The State Department was required to conduct a new environmental analysis after the pipeline's operator, Calgary-based TransCanada, changed the project's route though Nebraska. The Obama administration blocked the project last year because of concerns that the original route would have jeopardized environmentally sensitive land in the Sand Hills region.

The administration later approved a southern section of the pipeline, from Cushing, Okla., to the Texas coast, as part of what Obama has called an "all of the above" energy policy that embraces a wide range of sources, from oil and gas to renewables such as wind and solar.

The draft report issued Friday begins a 45-day comment period, after which the State Department will issue a final environmental report before Secretary of State John Kerry makes a recommendation about whether the pipeline is in the national interest.

Kerry has promised a "fair and transparent" review of the plan and said he hopes to decide on the project in the "near term." Most observers do not expect a decision until summer at the earliest.

Canadian Natural Resource Minister Joe Oliver said Friday that Canada will respect the U.S. review process and noted the importance of the pipeline to the Canadian economy.

Obama's initial rejection of the pipeline last year went over badly in Canada, which relies on the United States for 97 percent of its energy exports.

___

Associated Press writers Rob Gillies in Toronto and Dina Cappiello in Washington contributed to this report.

__

Follow Matthew Daly on Twitter: https://twitter.com/MatthewDalyWDC

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-03-02-Oil%20Pipeline/id-554e398adcfc411ebf6cb48bd5d8834c

glenn miller who do you think you are superpac steve appleton bishop eddie long madonna give me all your luvin video roseanne barr president

'Last Exorcism: Part II' Aims To Free Horror From 'Bad Name'

'Horror gets a bad name because a lot of the people who make it don't care,' Eli Roth says.
By Kevin P. Sullivan


Ashley Bell in "The Last Exorcism: Part II"
Photo: CBS Films

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1702831/last-exorcism-part-ii-eli-roth-secrets.jhtml

battle royale key largo arnold palmer invitational ryan madson louisiana primary syracuse basketball chipper jones

Financial aid: finding better ways to help college students

There are many ideas for improving federal assistance for low-income college students, Rueben writes, including better targeting of higher education tax credits.

By Kim Rueben,?Guest blogger / March 1, 2013

A college student holds a banner at a "Tear Up Your Debt" demonstration, during which students tear up mock tuition bills and loan papers to protest rising student loan debt in New Brunswick, N.J. Federal funds can be an important tool to help students get to college, Rueben writes, but we need to use those dollars in a smarter way.

Marko Georgiev/The Record (Bergen County)/AP/File

Enlarge

Earlier this week, my Tax Policy Center colleague Elaine Maag blogged about proposals by the Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP) to improve federal assistance for low-income college students, including better targeting of higher education tax credits. But there may be even more effective ways to help these students. One idea: Cut back on tax credits and use the savings to improve Pell grants and loan programs.

Skip to next paragraph TaxVox

The Tax Policy Center is a joint venture of the Urban Institute and Brookings Institution. The Center is made up of nationally recognized experts in tax, budget, and social policy who have served at the highest levels of government. TaxVox is the Tax Policy Center's tax and budget policy blog.

Recent posts

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

As part of the same broad initiative that generated the CLASP plan, I was one member of a group of experts assembled by HCM Strategists to reimagine financial aid. Our aim was the same as CLASP?s, but our proposals took a different tack: Refocus and simplify the whole federal financial aid system including federal grant, loan and tax programs so they work more effectively and cost-effectively.

We started by acknowledging that Congress has greatly expanded federal support for higher education?doubling the amount spent on both Pell grants and tax credits?but there is little evidence that all those extra dollars have similarly expanded the number of college graduates. Almost half of all undergraduates receive a Pell grant but Pell recipients are half as likely to get a Bachelor?s degree within six years as those getting no assistance. And while federal aid has made college more accessible to minority students, it has done little to improve their graduation rates. We concluded there must be a better way and suggested four reforms:

Simplify the aid process. We would replace today?s myriad of programs with one grant program and one loan program and make it possible for students to apply with a simpler application. Grants would be targeted to those who most need aid, and students would be encouraged to take more classes each semester?a step that raises graduation rates. Loans would be consolidated into a single program with common annual and aggregate limits for undergraduates and repayment based on income levels. For all students, the financial aid form would be automatically pre-filled with IRS data, with a small set of students needing to enter more information. By consolidating the application process to rely more on tax return information, the Department of Education could also require better reporting of education costs to the IRS, information that is currently reported on a haphazard basis.?

Bloomberg Businessweek expresses 'regret' over cover illustration

(Bloomberg BusinessWeek)

Bloomberg Businessweek is taking a beating from critics who say the magazine's current cover?featuring a cartoon illustration of what appears to be a black family rolling in cash from a housing rebound?is racist.

"Our cover illustration got strong reactions, which we regret," Josh Tyrangiel, Bloomberg Businessweek's editor-in-chief, said in a statement to Yahoo! News. "If we had to do it over again we'd do it differently."

The cover depicts the cash-grabbing family members as stereotypical caricatures inside a two-story pink home above the headline "The Great American Housing Rebound."

"Flips. No-look bids. 300 percent returns," the subhead reads. "What could possibly go wrong?"

"The claim that minorities are creating a housing bubble through flipping, no-look bids, and 300% returns is simply not reality," Jacob Gaffney wrote on HousingWire.com. "Flipping is a form of fraud and not a typical transaction. No-look bids are not exclusive to Hispanic and African-American investors. No one is making a 300% return."

"Businessweek Warns That Minorities May Be Buying Houses Again," Matthew Yglesias wrote on Slate.com.

"It?s hard to imagine how this one made it through the editorial process," Ryan Chittum wrote on the Columbia Journalism Review.

Andres Guzman, a Peru-born, Minneapolis-based artist, was commissioned by Bloomberg BusinessWeek for the illustration. "I was asked to make an excited family with large quantities of money," Guzman wrote on his Tumblr page. "I slipped in my lovely cat, Boo which was my favorite part. Too bad I wasn?t asked to draw large quantities of cats. Drawing dollars was a drag."

Bloomberg BusinessWeek has become known for its provocative covers. Tyrangiel was named Advertising Age's 2012 Editor of the Year because of his willingness--along with creative director Richard Turley--to push the envelope.

Last year, the magazine published a cover featuring two commercial jets having plane sex (under the headline "Let's Get It On") to illustrate the Continental-United merger. It also published a cover featuring Mitt Romney?then in the heat of the Republican primary?with the cover art from Bruce Springsteen's 1984 album "Born in the U.S.A." displayed in front of the former Massachussetts governor's backside, supporting the coverline: "SCORNED IN THE USA."

"I'm glad that our covers have captured a lot of attention and that some people call them controversial, but that's really only because the stories themselves are controversial," Tyrangiel told Ad Age. "Part of it is that we have a group of people here who are not afraid to handle really hot subjects."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/bloomberg-business-week-housing-cover-racist-173444874.html

notre dame notre dame football Bcs Bowl Chuck Hagel ncaa football CES russell wilson