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Anti-LGBT Developments In Russia "A Complete Travesty," Advocate Says

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“Most nations on the cusp of hosting Olympic Games would want to make their country seem more hospitable, not less,” a Human Rights Campaign spokesman says. HRC is not, however, yet taking a position on whether it supports calls for a boycott of the 2014 Olympics.

Russian President Vladimir Putin (right) and International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Jacques Rogge attend the International Olympic Committee's executive board meeting in St. Petersburg on May 30, 2013.

Via: Pool / Reuters

WASHINGTON — As a growing number of LGBT advocates have begun to speak out against Russia's increasingly anti-LGBT environment and laws, a spokesman for the largest LGBT rights group in America talked Monday evening for the first time about the calls for a boycott of the 2014 Olympics in Sochi.

"The events unfolding in Russia should rightly cause concern for all fair-minded citizens of the world. They're a complete travesty meant to divert the attention of the Russian people from President Putin's failure as their leader," Human Rights Campaign vice president for communications Fred Sainz told BuzzFeed.

HRC stopped short, however, of taking a position at this time on whether it would add its support to the calls for a boycott of the games.

"Most nations on the cusp of hosting Olympic Games would want to make their country seem more hospitable, not less. The very clear implications of these laws pose real concerns for LGBT Russian citizens and visitors alike," Sainz said. "As such, we're consulting with our partners so that we're acting in a unified manner that is impactful. Stay tuned."

HRC had previously launched a petition-signing drive regarding the "gay propaganda bill" to "IOC President Jacques Rogge demanding that he take action against discrimination now," but the comments from Sainz are the group's first statement since Russian President Vladimir Putin signed the "gay propaganda" bill into law at the end of June.

The statement came after playwright and actor Harvey Fierstein drew attention to the issue in an op-ed column published Monday in The New York Times. In part, he wrote:

With Russia about to hold the Winter Games in Sochi, the country is open to pressure. American and world leaders must speak out against Mr. Putin's attacks and the violence they foster. The Olympic Committee must demand the retraction of these laws under threat of boycott.

In 1936 the world attended the Olympics in Germany. Few participants said a word about Hitler's campaign against the Jews. Supporters of that decision point proudly to the triumph of Jesse Owens, while I point with dread to the Holocaust and world war. There is a price for tolerating intolerance.

The Windy City Times, meanwhile, reported July 17 on a statement from the International Olympic Committee about the ongoing developments in Russia:

"The International Olympic Committee is clear that sport is a human right and should be available to all regardless of race, sex or sexual orientation. The Games themselves should be open to all, free of discrimination, and that applies to spectators, officials, media and of course athletes. We would oppose in the strongest terms any move that would jeopardise this principle.

"As you know, this legislation has just been passed into law and it remains to seen whether and how it will be implemented, particularly as regards the Games in Sochi. As a sporting organization, what we can do is to continue to work to ensure that the Games can take place without discrimination against athletes, officials, spectators and the media. Wider political issues in the country are best dealt with by other international organizations more suited to this endeavor."

U.S. Olympic Committee officials did not respond on Monday to a request for more information about the U.S. group's views on the issue.

LINK: Putin Ally: Those Proposing Olympic Boycott "Need To Go Examine Their Head"

LINK: 36 Photos From Russia That Everyone Needs To See


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10 Things Obama Should Remember When Meeting The Royal Baby

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Good luck!

In the next three years there is a really good chance that Obama will come face-to-face with the royal baby.

In the next three years there is a really good chance that Obama will come face-to-face with the royal baby.

Source: msnbcmedia.msn.com

This meeting will be important because it will be the first time the future British king meets his realm's most important ally.

This meeting will be important because it will be the first time the future British king meets his realm's most important ally.

"Democracy!"

Source: politico.com

The royal baby will probably be confused as to why he is being put in the hands of a foreign power.

The royal baby will probably be confused as to why he is being put in the hands of a foreign power.

Source: huffingtonpost.com

The royal baby may try to troll you, Mr. President. Be careful.

The royal baby may try to troll you, Mr. President. Be careful.

Source: publicpost.ru


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Anthony Weiner Faces New Sex Chat Allegations

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The Dirty posts explicit Facebook and Formspring exchanges. “I’m deeply flawed.” UPDATE: Weiner has released a statement acknowledging that at least some of the messages are authentic. This is the woman linked to these chats.

Source: thedirty.com

Anthony Weiner's campaign did not respond Tuesday to repeated inquiries about a new set of unverified images suggesting that he exchanged sexually charged messages — and an explicit image — with a woman last summer.

The screenshots of conversations — on the nightlife site The Dirty — could not be independently confirmed. They consist of screenshots of exchanges on Facebook and the lesser-known social network Formspring between a woman (whose avatar is blurred) and a man alleged to be (and who she appears to believe) is Weiner, but who also uses the handle "Carlos Danger."

The site's anonymous tipster claims that Weiner continued the correspondence with her at least until August 2012, when Weiner allegedly suggested finding her a Chicago condo where they could meet. The screenshots of the exchanges are undated, however, and whether they could be shown to have taken place before or after Weiner's 2011 fall — before which he has said he had other, yet undisclosed, online relationships — is a key question.

"Can you hard delete all our chats here," the person identified as Weiner writes in one chat, in which he also allegedly offered his correspondent help in getting on a Politico blogger panel. "I'm deeply flawed," he allegedly says in another.

Weiner's blank avatar in one chat matches his blank avatar in images posted by Radar Online during the 2011 scandal that ended his congressional career. Weiner is now running for mayor of New York; other images show an avatar of Weiner and his wife, Huma Abedin. These details do not guarantee, however, that the screenshots are authentic.

The Dirty is a gossip site that initially focused on nightlife in Scottsdale, Arizona, but which has gained a national following. The site made political news in 2010 when Ben Quayle, the son of the former vice president and then a congressional candidate, admitted he had written for the site under a pseudonym. Quayle was elected to Congress.

The site's publisher, Nik Ritchie, had also been the subject of a lawsuit for posting anonymous, unverified sexual allegations about a former Cincinnati Bengals cheerleader. The site, known online for its cruelty to minor celebrities and non-celebrities, grew by publishing gossip and nude photographs of club scene figures and then moved on to reality television stars and other B-list celebrities.

The site is widely read; one Weiner post has more than 100,000 views.

Ritchie didn't respond to an inquiry seeking more details on his claims. "I'm currently in talks with Anonymous. She has lawyered up in fear of Anthony Weiner, but she is willing to expose his sexual nature to TheDirty.com for the betterment of America," he wrote on his site.

BuzzFeed contacted Weiner's spokeswoman, Barbara Morgan, at 7:21 a.m. Tuesday about the postings, which went online Monday, asking whether they are real. She responded before 9 a.m. and then replied three more times that she would respond soon.

LINK: Here Is The Woman Linked To Anthony Weiner In Sex Chats

LINK: Anthony Weiner: Some Sexts Came After I Resigned


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White House On Increased Deportations: "We Have To Enforce The Law"

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White House Press Secretary Jay Carney was asked why the Obama administration keeps deporting people at a record pace while at the same time supporting a pathway to citizenship for the 11 million undocumented immigrants. Carney said the administration has to “enforce the law.”

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Via:

The Mayor Of San Diego Allegedly Did Some Despicable Things To Women

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All according to the lawsuit filed against Mayor Bob Filner.

This is San Diego Mayor Bob Filner. He is 70 years old and divorced.

This is San Diego Mayor Bob Filner. He is 70 years old and divorced.

Source: en.wikipedia.org

This is Irene McCormack, the mayor's former director of communications.

This is Irene McCormack, the mayor's former director of communications.

Via: Sam Hodgson / Reuters

On Monday, a bombshell lawsuit was filed against the mayor by McCormack, detailing rampant sexual harassment by the mayor.

On Monday, a bombshell lawsuit was filed against the mayor by McCormack, detailing rampant sexual harassment by the mayor.

Via: Sam Hodgson / Reuters

According to the lawsuit, Filner asked her, "Wouldn't it be great if you took off your panties and worked without them on?"

According to the lawsuit, Filner asked her, "Wouldn't it be great if you took off your panties and worked without them on?"

Via: City of San Diego / AP


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Anthony Weiner Admits "Some" New Sex Chat Allegations Are True

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After BuzzFeed pressed the campaign for comment on new sex chat transcripts published on The Dirty , Weiner admits they’re real. But timing remains unclear.

Via: Mario Tama / Getty Images

Anthony Weiner admitted Tuesday that transcripts of sexually charged correspondences between him and an unnamed woman were at least partially authentic.

In a statement, Weiner wrote:

"I said that other texts and photos were likely to come out, and today they have. As I have said in the past, these things that I did were wrong and hurtful to my wife and caused us to go through challenges in our marriage that extended past my resignation from Congress. While some things that have been posted today are true and some are not, there is no question that what I did was wrong. This behavior is behind me. I've apologized to Huma and am grateful that she has worked through these issues with me and for her forgiveness. I want to again say that I am very sorry to anyone who was on the receiving end of these messages and the disruption that this has caused. As my wife and I have said, we are focused on moving forward."

The transcripts were first published on the website The Dirty. Weiner's statement comes after BuzzFeed repeatedly requested comment from his campaign on the charges Tuesday morning.

But while Weiner acknowledges the transcripts are at least partly real, his statement leaves unanswered the question of whether the correspondence took place before or after the initial scandal broke in 2011.

Huma Abedin Has Her Own Life

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But Anthony Weiner’s “notoriously private” wife is on the campaign trail with her husband — a calculated sacrifice from the woman who has already been through hell, and could see more of it yet . “She wants Anthony to win.”

Via: John Gara/Buzzfeed

It may be shabby, secured with duct tape to the lobby floor of the American Airlines Theatre in Times Square, behind a short rope line and only a handful of reporters and television cameras, but there it is all the same: a red carpet.

And no politician at last week's award show for the New York County Democratic Party — dubbed, cutely, "the Demmys" — can possibly resist it.

In walks Mayor David Dinkins, Governor David Paterson, Congressman Charlie Rangel; in walks just about every Democrat running this year for the top job in City Hall: John Liu, Bill Thompson, Christine Quinn. They all want their five minutes on the fuzzy red velvet. Some wait in line for it.

Not Huma Abedin.

The close personal aide to Hillary Clinton — and the wife of New York City mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner — isn't having any of it. Abedin glides through the theatre's double doors, shepherded closely by her husband's press secretary, Barbara Morgan. Together, they move to the side of the rope line reserved for press, skip the red carpet, slink past the backs of photographers, and enter all but unnoticed into the performance hall.

But once inside, Abedin isn't shy about working the room.

"Oh my god! Hiiiiii!"

"Have you met Barbara?"

"Remind me what you're doing now?"

"OK, email me."

Abedin, 36, is described in just about every article written about her as "private" — and not just private, but "very private," says the New York Post; "intensely private," says the Daily News; "notoriously private," says the Washington Post. (Notoriously!) After nearly two decades as Hillary's right hand — she started in 1996 as an intern in the East Wing — Abedin has embraced that fierce proclivity toward privacy for which the press-averse Clinton inner circle is known.

"I prefer to be a private person," she says during an outing, her first with Weiner on the campaign trail, two Sundays ago. She is sitting at the bar of Lido, an Italian restaurant on Harlem's Frederick Douglass Boulevard, being questioned by reporters while her husband takes pictures with patrons nearby. The 48-year-old former congressman — who resigned two years ago after sending, and then lying about sending, messages to other women over email, Twitter, Facebook, and Yahoo (and now Formspring) — he is the reason Abedin, the very intensely notoriously private Abedin, is out in Harlem at a restaurant talking to reporters, out in Times Square at a two-bit awards show, out at all.

But Abedin is at the Demmys tonight in the first place to support her husband's political director, Camille Joseph, who is accepting an award and comes to Times Square with a hometown crew in tow — mother, father, sister, everyone walks the red carpet for the special night. Weiner, who arrives later, presents Joseph personally with the prize on stage. Abedin, who made sure to attend the occasion to be supportive, an aide said, seats herself between Morgan and Joseph in the fourth row of the auditorium. This is a family affair, and Abedin, it would seem, is part of this family too.

Two months into Weiner's campaign, Abedin's no longer just the "private" and much-admired Hillary aide, the glamorous body woman-turned-director of the secretary's post-Foggy Bottom "transition team." New descriptors have emerged: She is savvy, politically shrewd, confident, and very much a part of "Anthony Weiner for Mayor 2013" and her husband's "post-scandal playbook," as The New York Times christened it back in April.

Now as the wife of one of the leading candidates for mayor, Abedin is, for the first time in her political career, a principal. It's a mantle that has revealed more to the public than ever about the backroom persona on display at American Airlines Theatre last Tuesday. Not only is Abedin involved in her husband's campaign — "she's in it," as one close friend says — but she's having what you could call a coming-out moment: The most private person in politics is now at the center of what was supposed to be her husband's comeback story. And as yet another chapter in her husband's sexting scandal begins to unfold, she is likely now realizing there are upsides and downsides to her new role.

Via: John Gara/Buzzfeed

According to interviews with a wide range of associates and colleagues, Abedin has always been a fierce political operator and is now taking a leading role in Weiner's lean campaign operation. Sources say she has had a hand in aspects as peripheral as scheduling, and as central as helping to engineer the articles in People and New York Times Magazine that both helped Weiner test the waters for his return from political exile.

Asked about her role in the campaign at her third big outing on the trail with Weiner — a visit to a Jamaican jerk chicken festival in Southeast Queens this past Sunday — Abedin laughs. "I just try to be a supportive spouse," she tells me, near the entrance to Roy Wilkins Park. When I ask her why she's laughing, she pauses. "Because, look, I think people have to vote for the candidate. Anthony is the candidate. I want to support him however I can. But it's not my place to be doing campaign strategy. But it's been a lot of fun," she adds. "And I'm excited."

She'd said something similar a week before, noting that she's not quite sure yet what her role will be on the campaign. "I'm a mom; I've got my own life, my own profession that I'm very committed to, that I love; and I have my husband, who is doing something I want to be supportive of, and I'm very proud of what he's doing," Abedin said. "So, yeah, I want to help him, but I'm trying to figure out everything, and I think that's a pretty normal thing that a lot of women find that they have to figure out."

In the past month, though, Abedin's involvement in the campaign has been more evident than ever. In June, she hosted a "Women for Anthony" fundraiser, where she gave "an incredibly humble and touching introduction of Anthony" to a group of about 70 people, one attendee said. ("She's not somebody that's been public and doing public speaking," the guest added. "It was a new role for her.") Three weeks later, Abedin made her first two appearances on the campaign trail — first on a Sunday that included stops at two churches in State Island, and retail-politicking in Harlem, and second at the Demmys, just two days later.

A fundraising report, out the next day, showed she helped raise more than $149,000 for Weiner as an "intermediary" — read: "bundler," another new role — tapping into her Clinton Rolodex for contributions from the likes of Susie Buell Tompkins, a top Hillary fundraiser; Nancy Jacobson, the founder of the group, "No Labels," and the wife of Mark Penn, Hillary's top advisor in 2008; and Marcy Simon, the managing director of Penn's old consulting firm.

Bob Barnett, the Washington superlawyer with an unrivaled client list that includes both Bill and Hillary Clinton, gave to the campaign through Abedin too. The D.C. power broker said he had been advising the couple "for months" leading up to Weiner's rollout in late May — an early-morning press conference and meet-and-greet outside the 125th Street subway station that became so crazed by members of a hungry press corps that police officers had to step in.

"Huma has been through some difficult times," said Barnett, who has known Abedin since she was a 19-year-old intern in the White House. "Those of us who respect Huma received a strong signal that this is something that means a lot to her. And that has meaning for us."

It's no surprise, he noted, that she's been engaged in the campaign, both publicly and privately. "I'll say this: I think that Huma will be a critically important and amazingly effective supporter because of her incredible range of contacts, the respect in which she's held, and the political experiences she's lived through," Barnett said. "She will be a key part of this campaign."

A former Clinton staffer in New York said Abedin, who in the days after Weiner fessed to the scandal urged him not to give up his seat in Congress, was also a "driving force behind him getting back on the campaign trail" this year. "She's very much part of the decision-making," said another Abedin associate, who has ties to the Clintons. "Doing the profile in People magazine was something she was very active in."

Robert Zimmerman, a longtime fundraiser and surrogate for Hillary Clinton, described Abedin as "so pivotal" to Weiner's campaign. "Her integrity, her commitment, her personal grace, her intelligence, really enable her to reach out to a broad array of different people," Zimmerman said. "That's why she's emerged as an important force for Anthony. She's always been extraordinarily significant — more and more people are finding that out now."


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Shepard Smith Describes Anthony Weiner Penis Photos


Weiner's Wholesome People Magazine Spread Came One Week After Starting Online Relationship

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“Anthony has spent every day since [the scandal] trying to be the best dad and husband he can be,” his wife had said.

A high-profile interview with People Magazine seen as a first step in rehabilitating his tattered image came a week after Anthony Weiner allegedly stared an online relationship with a woman that quickly descended into dirty messages and pictures.

According to the gossip website The Dirty, Weiner and his alleged sexting partner began talking on July 12, 2012. One week later, Weiner's first interview with his wife Huma Abedin where he addressed the sexting scandal that brought down his career ran in People.

"I'm very happy in my present life," Weiner told People in the July 18th profile.

"Anthony has spent every day since [the scandal] trying to be the best dad and husband he can be," his wife said. "I'm proud to be married to him."

According to The Dirty, one day after the profile ran on July 19th Weiner found his alleged sexting partner on Formspring.

In a press conference Tuesday, Weiner acknowledged that the last time he sent an illicit message to a woman was after that interview.

Anthony Weiner: Some Sexts Came After I Resigned

Anthony Weiner Already Inspiring New Alias On Gay Hookup Apps

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There are some real-life Carlos Danger imitators out there.

This user of GROWLr, an app that caters to the gay bear community, is named Jamie in real life. He's from New Jersey and can't vote in New York's mayoral election, but he had some harsh words for Weiner. "It's so preposterous you have to have a begrudging respect for his commitment to his stupidity," he told BuzzFeed.

Another Mr. Danger on Scruff, an app for the harrier set, didn't reply back to our request for comment. His profile indicates that he is recently single.

Poll: Obama's Approval Rating Hasn't Been This Bad Since The First Debate With Romney

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Public Policy Polling’s latest national survey shows no one’s doing well in Washington these days.

Via: Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

WASHINGTON — President Obama's approval rating has fallen to its lowest level since the shellacking he received from Mitt Romney on a Colorado debate stage last year, according to a new poll from the Democratic-leaning firm Public Policy Polling.

PPP found that just 44% of registered voters approve of the job Obama is doing. Fifty-three percent disapprove. The survey of 800 registered voters was conducted over the weekend.

The new PPP numbers, set to be publicly released by the pollster tomorrow, are another in a string of bad polling for the president this week. A McClatchy-Marist poll released Tuesday found Obama's approval rating had fallen to 41%, it's lowest in that survey since Sept. 2011. Other national and state polls have also shown Obama's approval rating on the decline.

PPP pollster Tom Jensen notes that his firm's poll shows bad approval ratings across Washington. Congressional Republicans have a 22% job approval rating — a whopping 70% disapprove of the job they're doing — and Congressional Democrats have a 35% job approval rating, with 58% saying they disapprove of the job Democrats in Congress are doing.

To Jensen, the numbers reflect a growing anger among voters at the state of things in Washington.

"What's interesting is that Obama, Congressional Democrats, and Congressional Republicans' numbers are ALL down a decent amount from a month ago. Obama might be losing but no one is really winning either," he told BuzzFeed. "I think that's a reflection of voters being disgusted about the lack of action on anything in Washington — guns, immigration, etc. And rather than picking one party to blame they're just blaming everyone. It's the product of a very angry electorate that feels like no one in DC is doing their job."

Read the poll:

California High Court Denies County Clerk's Request To Halt Gay Couples' Marriages

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The San Diego County clerk had filed a request asking the state’s supreme court to order him to stop marrying same-sex couples immediately. A further briefing schedule in the case has been set for other requests made in Friday’s filing.

Proposition 8 plaintiffs Sandy Stier, left, and Kris Perry, of Berkeley, are married by State Attorney General Kamala Harris, back to camera, at City Hall in San Francisco, California, on Friday, June 28, 2013. Their son Elliott Perry is to the far left.

Via: Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group/MCT

Claire McCaskill: No One Touches My Twitter Feed But Me

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One of Congress’ best tweeters explains how it’s done.

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WASHINGTON — Sen. Claire McCaskill, one of Congress' most prolific social media stars, says the key to a good Twitter feed is a personal touch.

"I'm trying to tell people what I'm up to and give them a sense of my life," she told BuzzFeed DC Bureau Chief John Stanton at BuzzFeed Brews Tuesday.

McCaskill has amassed almost 94,000 followers on Twitter, making her one of the most popular Senators on the social media service. Her tweet during the 2009 State Of The Union Address helped launch the service's popularity in Congress and she' continues to use Twitter in innovative ways, like the time in 2011 when she used support from her followers to lose 50 pounds.

Many politicians leave their Twitter feeds to paid communications staff, a decision that's blown up in the faces of some. McCaskill says she'll continue to keep her Twitter feed close.

"No one on my staff has ever tweeted one character on my account," she said. "No one has ever touched it. And no one on my staff sees them (tweets) before they go out."

Claire McCaskill Says She's Apologized To Bill And Hillary Clinton

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The Missouri Senator said her once rocky relationship with the Clintons is on the mend. She’s ready for Hillary.

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Via:

WASHINGTON — Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill she's apologized to Bill and Hillary Clinton for comments she made in 2006 that she said were "not necessary."

In a BuzzFeed Brews interview with bureau chief John Stanton, McCaskill — an early supporter of a potential Hillary run in 2016 — said she had spoken with the Clintons about her Meet the Press comments where she said Bill Clinton had been a "great leader" but "I don't want my daughter near him."

"Here's the deal. I said a lot of things in the last 30 years that I'm not particularly proud of. I mean there have been things that I've said that I wish I could take back and I said that….but it was not necessary. It was gratuitous and hurtful and I have apologized to both President Clinton and Hillary Clinton for saying it," McCaskill said.

The once-rocky relationship between McCaskill and the Clintons hit more difficulties when McCaskill become one of the earliest supporters of then-candidate Barack Obama.

McCaskill acknowledged that a lot of "women were upset with me" for endorsing Obama over Clinton.

"I think they understand that it wasn't like I endorsed a good ole boy against her. We had two historic candidates. They were both amazing and it was a hard thing to do. A lot of the women were upset with me," she said Having said that, I couldn't be more enthusiastic for her to be President now. And I can't wait to work as hard or harder for Hillary Clinton as I did for Barack Obama."


Letterman Mocks Anthony Weiner With Top 10 Other Sexting Names

New York Tabloids Lay Into Weiner

Obama Enthusiastically Seizes Ownership Of Economy

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In the first of several new economic policy speeches, Obama takes a victory lap — and says there’s a lot more running to do.

Via: Kevin Lamarque / Reuters

WASHINGTON — In the run-up to President Obama's big economic speech at Knox College in Illinois Wednesday, Republicans pointed to the frustratingly slow growth and said the state of the economy is Obama's responsibility.

At Knox College, Obama offered his response: I'll take it.

The speech kicked off a new economic focus by Obama, one administration officials say will focus on the president's goal of expanding the middle class. But the speech also served as a marker for the president to lay the White House view that the recession is in America's rearview mirror and the country has Obama to thank for it.

"Today, five years after the start of that Great Recession, America has fought its way back," Obama said at Knox according to prepared remarks distributed by the White House.

Six months into his second term, Obama said the wind is at America's back.

"Thanks to the grit and resilience of the American people, we've cleared away the rubble from the financial crisis and begun to lay a new foundation for stronger, more durable economic growth. In our personal lives, we tightened our belts, shed debt, and refocused on the things that really matter," he said. "As a country, we've recovered faster and gone further than most other advanced nations in the world. With new American revolutions in energy, technology, manufacturing, and health care, we are actually poised to reverse the forces that have battered the middle class for so long, and rebuild an economy where everyone who works hard can get ahead."

The focus of Obama's speech was not on dealing with economic crisis, but with building on what the White House feels is real success on the economic front under Obama's leadership. Critics have panned Obama's effort to return to the economic topic, saying he can do little to affect things with the congressional gridlock he faces.

Obama pointed to the Affordable Care Act, mortgage reforms, and the tax increases on the rich he championed as a foundation to economic change that's already happening, even as he called for more action in the future. The long-term goal, Obama said, is to grow the middle class.

"I will lay out my ideas for how we build on the cornerstones of what it means to be middle class in America, and what it takes to work your way into the middle class in America," Obama said. "Job security, with good wages and durable industries. A good education. A home to call your own. Affordable health care when you get sick. A secure retirement even if you're not rich. Reducing poverty and inequality. Growing prosperity and opportunity."

The country is no loner in financial crisis, Obama said, saying it's up to Congress to see how far things go from here.

"As long as Congress doesn't manufacture another crisis — as long as we don't shut down the government just as the economy is getting traction, or risk a U.S. default over paying bills we've already racked up — we can probably muddle along without taking bold action," Obama said. "Our economy will grow, though slower than it should; new businesses will form, and unemployment will keep ticking down. Just by virtue of our size and our natural resources and the talent of our people, America will remain a world power, and the majority of us will figure out how to get by."

The White House has been careful to avoid saying the economy is in full rebound, a case that's hard to make anyway with unemployment still high and wages stagnant. But the Knox College speech was largely about projecting confidence and taking credit for the positive changes in the economy so far — and using those changes as evidence that Congress should follow Obama's economic model going forward.

"America, we have made it through the worst of yesterday's winds," Obama said. "And if we find the courage to keep moving forward; if we set our eyes on the horizon, we too will find an ocean of tomorrows, a sky of tomorrows — for America's people, and for this great country that we love."

There's Now Carlos Danger Swag For You To Buy

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The internet never misses an opportunity to make a quick buck from a political scandal.

Actual product description: "the man can't stop sexting."

Actual product description: "the man can't stop sexting."

Get the shirt here.

Actual product title: Carlos Danger aka Weiner Dude

Actual product title: Carlos Danger aka Weiner Dude

Get the shirt here.

Some say politics is a dangerous game in its own right.

Some say politics is a dangerous game in its own right.

Get the shirt here.

If you're looking for something more stylized, check out this sticker:

If you're looking for something more stylized, check out this sticker:

Also available on shirts and hoodies.


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LGBT Olympians And Allies Should Show Up In Russia

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You Can Play Project co-founder Patrick Burke writes that out LGBT and “publicly pro-gay” people should not boycott the Sochi Olympic games despite Russia’s anti-LGBT environment and laws. “Show the world that there are elite LGBT athletes who are not afraid to be themselves, on and off the playing field,” he writes in this BuzzFeed op-ed.

Via: John Gara/Buzzfeed

I've never been to Russia. I've never been to prison. I've never been to a Russian prison. But as many commentators have noted recently, were I to step foot in Sochi for the 2014 Olympics, I could be arrested and sent to prison for publicly supporting the idea that gay athletes should be free to compete without harassment, punishment, or intimidation — more simply, because I'm "pro-gay." It is against the law to be "pro-gay" in Russia. It's a corollary to the laws against being openly lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT).

In light of that, as well as a litany of human rights abuses against the LGBT community that go far beyond locker room intimidation, many groups are calling for an international boycott of the Olympic Games. At the You Can Play Project, we believe that sports can change the world. And for that reason, we are staunchly against the idea of a boycott.

First and foremost, let's be clear about one thing: The simplest argument against a boycott is that it will not work. Those clinging to the notion that Russia could ever be shamed into changing their ways should recognize who, exactly, they are dealing with. Many who are supporting the idea seem to presume that a boycott would lead to some sort of change; there is absolutely no reason to believe that to be true. I admit, I have no doubt the LGBT community in Russia would be touched and inspired by the gesture. That, I imagine, would fade when no laws were changed, no prisoners were freed, no violence halted.

I also don't believe, however, that Russia would ever take the step of jailing an Olympic athlete from a foreign nation and risking real retribution on an international scale. I firmly believe all LGBT or "pro-gay" Olympic athletes and staff (a group that, I might add, includes many close friends and my father) will be free to participate at Sochi without fear of punishment. If that is not the case, they might as well save the expense of building a hockey rink, because I could safely describe the vast majority of the competing NHL players as "pro-gay." While the atmosphere may be, at best, begrudging tolerance, it would be a tremendous act of international aggression to arrest or harass an Olympic athlete for his or her orientation or beliefs.

The larger argument is that, in an ideal world, the Olympics are supposed to be apolitical. That in ancient times, warring nations would put aside their weapons, their feuds, and their ideological differences in order to celebrate the unifying nature of sport. That the inherent beauty of athletes from around the world putting aside everything except talent and competing on a grand scale for personal and national pride is sacrosanct — and no political issue, no matter how jarring, offensive, or downright inhumane it may be supersedes that ideal. That by stripping away political motives and permitting sport to be sport, lasting memories will arise naturally and purely, leaving an indelible and unforgettable impact on the world in a way no politically driven stunt could.

The stance of a government often swings from election to election, from event to event, from leader to leader. Hard-line stances are often no more than negotiation tools that are abandoned the next time a trade agreement comes up. The 1980 boycott was over the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, a country the United States currently occupies. When governments "protest" against each other, it is a fleeting, politically expedient decision easily dismissed by propaganda in the opposing country.

The indelible, inerasable images of individual, personal protest and triumph endure eternally, even in the minds of those who disagree with the cause being supported. Billie Jean King played her heart out for women everywhere. Muhammad Ali was stripped of his heavyweight championship for his refusal to fight in the Vietnam War. Jesse Owens walked into Berlin and took four gold medals from Hitler's chosen Aryan race. Say "1980 Olympics" to your average American, and they remember the Miracle on Ice, not the failed boycott.

In 1968, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar refused to play in the Olympics as a protest against the treatment of blacks in America. The same year, Tommie Smith and John Carlos stood on a medal stand, gloved fists in the air, as a protest against the treatment of blacks in America. History remembers the athletes who showed up.

The time has come for us to recognize that politicizing sport only limits sport's real potential to change the world. Russian extremists say that being gay means to be lesser; it is to be weak, to be soft. What will they say when (not if, when) a gay athlete wins a gold medal in their country?

To send the strongest possible message of support to the LGBT community, we must send our athletes — those who are LGBT, those who are LGBT-supportive, those with LGBT family members or friends. Let them show that champions stand strong with their teammates and training partners. Send our openly LGBT and "publicly pro-gay" athletes and let them compete. Let them win. Show the world that there are elite LGBT athletes who are not afraid to be themselves, on and off the playing field. That the majority of the world's finest athletes support their LGBT teammates, coaches, and opponents by treating them as equals in competition.

Maybe some of the individuals who go will feel compelled to take a stand — for themselves, for their family, for their friends, for the Russian people. Maybe some of those individuals will force the world to witness the strength of diversity and the impact one person can make. Maybe they'll remind us of the power of pure, unadulterated sport to compel change. We'll know only if we show up.

Burke founded the You Can Play Project to combat homophobia in sports, spearheading historic changes in both the culture and the rules of professional sports leagues and universities. He can be found on Twitter at @BurkieYCP.

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