Rally Week: Jon Stewart from DC – Sanity Show 2
Outgoing Sen. Ted Kaufman (D-Del.) seems very sane. No wonder he’s leaving!
Outgoing Sen. Ted Kaufman (D-Del.) seems very sane. No wonder he’s leaving!
From the Shakespeare Theater, Jon Stewart interrogates Austan Goolsbee.
In honor of the upcoming Rally to Restore Sanity, I’ll try to post a few sanity-related items this week. First up: Is it sane to watch football? It doesn’t seem at all sane to play it.
Discuss.
Science Friday: This one is for all the “Elaine” dancers out there. Check it out here and below.
The Open Society Institute sends some serious cash to NPR to fund some serious state-government reporting. Read on. Time will tell what news comes from this good news.
Science Friday: A look at immunity from the cellular level. Check it out here and below.
Patrick Boyle, editor of Youth Today, is vying to become the Post’s next top pundit. Please read and vote here: http://tiny.cc/0jmh3.
Some bad screen shots of the first Chilean miner, 31-year-old Florencio Avalos, to emerge after 68 days underground (pictured as well are his wife and son, right before he comes up):
A hug with the president of Chile, Sebastian Pinera, who (I think, I was listening in Spanish) told rescue workers before the first miner came out that President Obama and leaders from around the world wished them “Buenas Suerte” (“Good Luck”):
The scene right after the capsule went down:
This federal district court ruling is another signal that the US Department of Defense’s Don’t Ask Don’t Tell (DADT) policy is on its last legs. It was already withering on the vine (excerpt via The Washington Post):
“U.S. District Judge Virginia A. Phillips ruled Tuesday that the policy ‘infringes the fundamental rights’ of military service members and prospective service members and violates their rights to due process and freedom of speech.
Her ruling bars the Pentagon from enforcing or applying the policy and orders the military to immediately suspend and discontinue any investigations, discharges or other proceedings related to potential violations of the law.”
It appears that if the DOJ decides to appeal, which it likely will, the court could continue to allow discharges to continue while the DoD continues its review of the policy.
Given the likelihood of appeal by an administration that clearly wants to end DADT, there must be a reason the Obama administration wants the policy to end via legislation — as it would if a pending defense authorization bill awaiting Capitol Hill action is passed — rather than in the courts. Maybe the military wants the policy to conclude in a more orderly fashion. At the end of the day — some day soon — DADT is toast.
Science Friday: Host Ira Flatow test drives an electric car. Check it out here and below.