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Anti-Abortion Leader Compares Rape And Incest To Accidents

News Briefs 05-24-2013 Hits:121 Huffington Post - avatar Huffington Post

Anti-Abortion Leader Compares Rape And Incest To Accidents

    The head of a pro-life group in Michigan made a controversial comparison on Wednesday, arguing that women in the state should be forced to pay extra for health insurance that covers abortions, even in cases of rape or incest. "It's simply, like, nobody plans to have an accident in a car accident, nobody plans to have their homes flooded. You have ...

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No Surprise: Some GOP Foaming At Mouth For Obama Impeachment Amid ‘Scandals…

Prime Politics 05-24-2013 Hits:286 News One - avatar News One

No Surprise: Some GOP Foaming At Mouth For Obama Impeachment Amid ‘Scandals’

The “Get-That-N*gger” sect of the GOP is not bending on their talk of impeaching President Barack Obama. Yes, despite many Republican leaders urging their sillier members to slow down, lunatics, such as Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah, pictured) can’t stop, won’t stop. In an interview with the National Journal, Chaffetz claims, ”This is an administration embroiled in a scandal that they created. It’s a cover-up. I’m not saying impeachment is the end game, but it’s a possibility, especially if they keep doing little to help us learn more.” SEE ALSO: Check Out Barack ‘Barry’ Obama’s Prom Pics![1] If only “Grey’s Anatomy” writer and producer Shonda Rhimes were able to write the end result of this spectacle. In her world, Chaffetz would either be transported to the afterlife or either some hole in the ground meant for suckers who don’t do as they’re told. And before you ask, no, I don’t really want Chaffetz to meet Jesus, Buddha, and Xenu. I just want him to shut the hell up. Case in point, ...

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School of Social Work Scholarship Fundraiser gets Supporters Ready for Summ…

Community 05-22-2013 Hits:162 Michigan Chronicle Staff - avatar Michigan Chronicle Staff

School of Social Work Scholarship Fundraiser gets Supporters Ready for Summer Attire

  Sundresses and linen are the theme of the School of Social Work’s June 20 “Dinner with Dean,” an annual fundraiser hosted by the school’s Alumni Association to raise money for scholarships. The event, which will be held at the Detroit Yacht Club on Belle Isle, will offer supporters of the school an opportunity to meet, mingle and learn from Dean Cheryl Waites about exciting initiatives involving research, funding and faculty. As always, the event will boast a “strolling supper” and a silent auction with can’t-miss items such as gift certificates, original art, themed baskets, sports paraphernalia, food, clothing, jewelry and alumni apparel. “‘Dinner with the Dean’ is one of the most anticipated events of the year for alumni,” said the association’s president, Larmender Davis. “Between the great food, the music, the bidding and the chance to catch up with friends and professors, there’s something for everyone.” The social hour, cash bar and silent auction will begin at 5:30 p.m., followed by dinner and speakers at 6 p.m. Strolling food stations this year include a fruit, vegetables and cheese table, a mashed potato bar, carved turkey, and a variety of desserts. Tickets are $25 for current School of Social Work students and $30 for the general public. To contribute an item to the auction, to buy tickets, or for more information on the event, please email Julie Alter-Kay, special assistant to Dean Waites, at ae8440@wayne.edu

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Mark Hackel Advocates a More Regional Focus

Prime Politics 05-22-2013 Hits:1178 Patrick Keating/Chronicle Staff - avatar Patrick Keating/Chronicle Staff

Mark Hackel Advocates a More Regional Focus

  If there is one issue Macomb County Executive Mark Hackel would like to see discussed at the Mackinac Policy Conference, it is regional focus. “In other words, how do we brand the region?” he asked, saying he deals with the same question at the county level. Macomb is comprised of 27 varying municipalities. Hackel’s job is to figure out how to brand the county — based upon the unique assets of the individual communities within it — so that people get a perspective of what the county is all about. He believes the same concept should be expanded to the region, because Southeast Michigan is competing with other regions throughout the world for resources, assets and attractions. “We have some unique things in this region that we don’t cross-promote as regional leaders,” Hackel said, adding that they need to figure out how to come together to get people to understand the importance of this region. He also noted that Macomb and the region are ignoring the recreational opportunities and quality of life assets that also are economic opportunities. “Lake St. Clair and the Clinton River,” he said. “It’s the mainstream main street.” Hackel’s eighth floor office overlooks the Clinton River, which he said ties into Oakland County. “How do we make that connectivity as regional partners?” he asked. He said the Clinton River runs through Mt. Clemens, and asked why there isn’t a vibrant downtown, with investment from the private sector building on that riverfront. “How come we don’t see canoe rentals?” he asked. He also said the Clinton River is greater in size than “little creeks” that have been developed by other states. Hackel said that near the mouth of the Clinton River, there are businesses, such as restaurants, where people on the river can stop. But these are far fewer than there once were. There used to be a great boating...

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Ficano Wants Municipal Finance Discussed at Mackinac

Prime Politics 05-22-2013 Hits:174 Patrick Keating/Chronicle Staff - avatar Patrick Keating/Chronicle Staff

Ficano Wants Municipal Finance Discussed at Mackinac

  According to Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano, municipal finance is the one issue attendees of the Mackinac Policy Conference need to discuss this year. He said Wayne County has lost $100 million since 2009 because it depends on property taxes. “The state’s revenues have gone up, and all of it has been because of action that helps themselves,” Ficano said. “For example, the auto industry really is the thing that has bolstered the state in the past couple of years because it has come back up.” He also said when there are increases in employment — such as 1,000 jobs at the Wayne Assembly Plant or 1,200 in Flat Rock — everyone pays income tax, but all that revenue goes to the state. “None of it is seen on the local level,” Ficano said. He also noted that when people are working, they buy more things, but the sales taxes from those purchases likewise go to the state. “On top of that, the state has increased its income tax rate from 3.9 to 4.25,” he said. “They’ve eliminated a number of deductions, and also tax pensions. So all that revenue goes to the state of Michigan, so if you had two charts, you would see the state of Michigan’s going up like that, and they never anticipated property values would drop like this. So we’re limited.” Ficano said that even if Wayne County bounced back to where it was in 2009 regarding property values, it would take until 2025 to get there because there is a 5 percent cap on each year it could increase. “Well, it’s not bouncing back at that rate,” he said. “So, that’s the dilemma we face in this.” Ficano pointed out that the state government increased its budget in every department except the Department of Corrections. “That’s their prerogative, but meanwhile revenue sharing and everything...

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Benghazi-IRS-Leaks-- What about jobs?

Prime Politics 05-21-2013 Hits:250 By Bob Weiner and Nakia Gladden - avatar By Bob Weiner and Nakia Gladden

Benghazi-IRS-Leaks-- What about jobs?

By Bob Weiner & Nakia GladdenThe nation's media are transfixed with obsessive coverage of Hillary Clinton's role (there was none) in the talking points on the Benghazi deaths, IRS investigation of Tea Party groups' tax deductions (the same way they earlier asked the same of the NAACP), the Justice Department's demand for AP's phone records concerning leaks on Yemeni terrorists (after Congress had demanded the investigation of the leaks); and the press properly wants to know what to do about Syria, and how to end sex abuse in the U.S. military.Meanwhile, WHAT ABOUT JOBS? That's the real problem that will define our future success as a country for the rest of this century, and it is a question Rep. John Conyers is asking. The silence has been deafening. At the President's news conferences, which we attended this week and last week, there was not a single question from the media about jobs.Despite the Dow reaching all-time highs, the number of jobs available has seen no such luck. "Are we in the midst of a jobless recovery?" asked MSNBC's Chuck Todd last week on "Andrea Mitchell Reports." According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, unemployment is at 7.5%. Though that is the lowest it has been in the last four years, the U.S.post-World War II norm is about 5% unemployment and has often been at 4% or under. . Michigan's unemployment rate is a staggering 8.5%. Michigan tops the list for African Americans who are unemployed at 18.7%.What are the major factors contributing to the slow recovery of jobs in the US? Outsourcing is at the top of the list. Shipping jobs overseas for cheaper labor hinders the opportunity for job growth. Moreover, based on recent tragic events in Bangladesh's and China's factories, lives would be saved because companies would be regulated...

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GOP candidates bow to King but...

MLK MemorialMonday, Jan. 16, is the Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday, the annual recognition of a man whose message was simple and to the point: a beloved community, where all of us can live in brotherhood and sisterhood, realizing that we are all wrapped in the same garment of destiny.  

In that same vein, the GOP candidates running for the presidency will also honor the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. by either taking a break from the campaign stretch or offer heartfelt words about King’s good deeds in the media. 

Since it will make for a great sound bite, we’ll hear their take on race relations, America’s strides toward greater equality, and anything that moves us away from discrimination. 

Some of them might even talk about how King’s work has personally transformed their views around the notions of justice and equity, as well as their positions on those ideas. 

But beyond the expected sound bites about the grandeur of King’s legacy, the GOP presidential candidates need to match their words with action. 

Unfortunately, none of the candidates — Newt Gingrich, Mitt Romney, Rick Santorum, Rick Perry, Ron Paul and John Huntsman — have offered anything in their plan to address inherent issues around race and gender discrimination in the nation. 

In fact, throughout the campaign issues  involving racial and gender disparity have been swept under the rug and only mentioned in passing. 

Because these are explosive subjects with the potential to drown any candidate’s campaign based on how they approach the subject, they’ve left it alone. But this is the cornerstone of the legacy of the man they’ll talk about or honor next week. 

King did not drag his feet on issues. He forced us to confront our own shortcomings and offered what he saw as a prescription to the maladies of race and gender inequality. 

As the New South flexes its political muscles in this Republican primary ahead of the King Holiday, let it be clear that it was King, not any Republican president, who helped to create this New South after the Civil Rights Movement achieved the right to vote for African Americans. Though the Deep South still bears elements — in  significant measure — of the past, it has come a long way including helping to put an African American, Barack Obama, in the White House. 

Toward the end of his life, and in his defining book. “Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community?” King sought to offer an economic vision that was based on the simple principle of equality for all. Some of the GOP candidates call that vision “socialism” in their bid to discredit President Obama. 

But the reality is that the candidates cannot talk from both sides of their mouths in an era where race and gender discrimination and economic inequality offer proof that the nation still has to a long way to go with regard to full equity for all. 

If we are to realize King’s dream, it is imperative that these candidates offer solution-oriented plans in line with the vision of the man they will speak so respectfully of next week. 

You can’t say you are supportive of King’s dream when your plan for building America does not help advance African Americans and other people of color.  

You can’t talk about your reverence for King and his equality message when you are mute on gender discrimination, with women getting paid less in the workplace.

You can’t tell the media King was an example for you growing up when your idea of an ideal society is one that excludes his message about the unfinished business of guaranteeing that every child has the basic necessities of life, including an empowering education in cites like Detroit. It’s one thing to codify those necessities to the notions of rugged individualism — often the nicely coined technical phrase — used frequently by some who want to abdicate social responsibility or others who want to show we each have individual strengths. 

Regardless of what position you take on the notion of rugged individualism, we each have a responsibility and a legacy to create in our community. 

King said, “An individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.”

And so do the candidates running for president of the world’s largest democracy. These individuals who are vying to occupy the White House cannot avoid questions that speak to the rapidly growing rainbow nation we are quickly becoming. 

Anyone who dares to become president certainly has an obligation that goes beyond the political fanfare in Iowa and New Hampshire. 

They must speak to the economic climate in Detroit and the rest of the hinterland. Every segment that makes up this democratic experience called America is important. 

That is why in King’s honor, we owe it an obligation to those who are cut out of the social and economic engines of society, including children, to work for a fair society and guarantee them a meaningful future. And those who dare to lead and want to lead have no excuse but to do just that. They cannot call themselves leaders when they are ignorant of the basic rudiments of leadership: step up when others will not. 

So far, the candidates in the GOP primary have offered nothing but titillating sound bites and a hate-filled and anger- driven rhetoric.  

Maybe someone with a more rational view will emerge to advance the presidential cause of the GOP and at the same time speak to King’s dreams as we prepare to pay tribute to him. 

King preached love. He accepted people of all stripe and never spoke ill of or talked down to them. He had the hallmarks of a leader. He said “a genuine leader is not a searcher of consensus, but a molder of consensus.” 

It’s hard to find in this GOP primary who among the candidates can mold consensus. 

They shouldn’t just talk about King to get political points. Rather, they should help fulfill his dream. 

Bankole Thompson is the editor of the Michigan Chronicle and the author of a six-part series on the Obama presidency, including  “Obama and Black Loyalty,” published last year. His latest book is “Obama and Christian Loyalty” with an epilogue written by Bob Weiner, former White House spokesman. His upcoming books in 2012 are “Obama and Jewish Loyalty” and “Obama and Business Loyalty.” Listen to him every Thursday, 11:30 a.m., on WDET 101.9 FM Detroit and every Sunday, 9 to 10 p.m. on the Obama Watch program on WLIB 1190 AM-New York.  E-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

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