The HORN joins with the rest of the freedom loving members of the internet to protest the possible passage of both SOPA and PIPA. We will be covering this tonight on Headon with Jon Fox filling in, but the black box is symbolic of what passage of these bills will make your internet look like. A black featureless box with no content other than what is preapproved by either governments or corporation. In other words CENSORSHIP. If you check the U.S. Constitution, you will find that censorship is not legal in this country. So ask yourself, why are Senators and Congressmen trying to pass these bills?
Over the weekend, the Obama administration issued a potentially game-changing statement on the blacklist bills, saying it would oppose PIPA and SOPA as written, and drew an important line in the sand by emphasizing that it “will not support” any bill “that reduces freedom of expression, increases cybersecurity risk, or undermines the dynamic, innovative global Internet.”
Yet, the fight is still far from over. Even though the New York Times reported that the White House statement “all but kill[s] current versions of the legislation,” the Senate is still poised to bring PIPA to the floor next week, and we can expect SOPA proponents in the House to try to revive the legislation—unless they get the message that these initiatives must stop, now. So let’s take a look at the dangerous provisions in the blacklist bills that would violate the White House’s own principles by damaging free speech, Internet security, and online innovation: READ MORE
American Society, Feature, Government/Politics, News
When the announcement came, I didn’t really pay attention. After all, who believes politicians? Even if it is the President? This war had been going on too long and we had been lied to too many times for me to even raise an eyebrow. Then, I’m cruising the net and see the picture above.
Suddenly tears are running down my face and I’m sobbing so hard Ican hardly type. (I still am.) The plane in the picture had just landed at McChord AFB about two hours from here. This is really happening. Those soldiers are being pulled out of Iraq. Yes, I know some will be redeployed after the holidays, but for now our boys and girls are coming home. FINALLY. We should also never forget the thousands of boys and girls who came home only to be buried Never forget them.
We won’t be leaving any behind, they are all coming home. Whatever faith you belong to, I hope you give fervent thanks for this. If you have no religion, send thanks to the universe for getting it right for once. We are getting our kids back people.
That’s the best Christmas present this poor battered country could get.
American Society, Congress, Feature, News, State and Local, Uncategorized
By Cassie
I’ve always been different from other kids. Smarter, prettier, more resourceful. Mostly more resourceful.For instance, in elementary school I carried an empty lunchbox to school most days and a full lunchbox home. My school cafeteria had a little table near the exit for used lunch trays, and a tray in the back where you could put any food still in the package, full milk cartons, or whole pieces of fruit. That table was my lunch line and my grocery store until we started getting food stamps. One of my teachers told me that it was OK to take an apple from the table and save it for later, and that was like a green light for me to start filling my empty lunchbox every day with enough food for dinner.
When I was little, there were times when we didn’t have enough food in the house. My mom’s an addict, and feeding us was less of a priority for her than it should have been.
Sometimes we had enough food, but my brother and I weren’t allowed to use the stove or mess up the microwave. Sometimes my mom had money but used it for drugs rather than food. Sometimes she forgot. And sometimes she grocery shopped and cooked wonderful meals. Sometimes we were hungry, and sometimes we were just food-insecure.
I became a much better-fed, happier, and less worried student when I was in fourth grade and we actually signed up for food stamps and the school’s free-breakfast and free-lunch program, after my fourth grade teacher urged my family to sign the forms. I started eating hot meals at school and worrying less about where my next meal would come from. Shockingly, it turns out that enrolling us in these programs could have landed my mother in jail! Source Article
American Society, Feature, Government/Politics, Uncategorized
Keith Olbermann blasted the mainstream media on his show Wednesday night for being either “too corrupt or too dense” to understand the “Occupy Wall Street” movement.
Numerous media outlets repeated the criticism that the protest had no specific purpose or demands.
Fox News host Charles Gasparino called the protest “idiotic” and CNN anchor Erin Burnett mocked the demonstration in her debut. The New York Times had described the protest as a “noble but fractured and airy movement of rightly frustrated young people” whose purpose was “virtually impossible to decipher.”
“Here is what Occupy Wall Street says and wants,” Olbermann said.
Feature, Government/Politics, News, Uncategorized
To all the men and women who came out to their friends and families after the end of DADT–Blessings upon you and your families. It is my hope that all your families’ reaction was something like young man’s father’s reaction. It was so wonderful and so very touching. That father and son are blessed.
From everything learned by other countries, there will be few if any, problems. I have a question for all of the nay sayers and homophobes who screamed bloody murder at even the thought of repealing DADT.
Guys, go to the nearest window and look outside. Is the sun still in the sky? It is? Is the earth still rotating? It is?
Feature, News, State and Local
Human rights activists and environmentalists in Appalachia will observe a moment of silence at noon, Eastern Daylight Time on Saturday, August 27, 2011 to commemorate the birth and brilliant life of Julia “Judy” Bonds. They are calling on all activists to join this remembrance. Judy, who died in January of this year, would have been 59 years old Saturday. Judy’s fierce activism and determination crystallized the movement to end mountaintop removal coal extraction in Appalachia. This moment of silence will be observed annually.
Born in Birch Hollow, West Virginia in 1952 to Oliver “Cobb” and Sarah Easton Hannah Thompson, Judy grew to adulthood in what was, as she described it, a mountain paradise before Massey Energy (now owned by Alpha Natural Resources) came to destroy it. It was Massey’s assault on the area she held so dear that drove Judy, who at the time was working as a waitress, into the struggle to save not just herself, but all the other Appalachian communities ravaged by mountaintop removal. Seeing her grandson playing in the same creek where she had played as a child, and realizing that creek had been poisoned, gave Judy all the impetus she needed to speak truth to power. Small of stature, she never hesitated to stand up to the mightiest politicians and coal company executives, and those people learned that in her they had met a mighty foe.
Judy realized she was in a struggle that might traverse generations, and whose end she might not see. Like all great leaders, however, it neither slowed nor discouraged her. In 2003, the Goldman Foundation recognized both the importance of her work and her determined courage with its Environmental Prize, considered by many to be the “Environmental Nobel.” In addition, Judy travelled tirelessly almost to the very end, encouraging and exhorting people nationwide to stand up and be counted among those no longer willing to see an entire region sacrificed for profit. She held especial regard for America’s youth, upon whom she placed a great trust that they would see the right and vigorously pursue it.
Bob Kincaid, Board President of Coal River Mountain Watch noted “Many of the great leaders who struggled for human rights, from Moses all the way to Dr. King, did not see the completion of their work. Judy Bonds joined their ranks this past January. Felled by the same coal-borne cancers that yet stalk our Appalachian hills and hollers, she knew what had been done to her and strove to her final day to see that it would STOP happening to others. She left it to us to carry on in her name, and carry on we will! Our heritage, our communities and our very lives are NOT fit sacrifices for a handful of people to have a job and distant, uncaring shareholders to have a profit.”
Purpose Prize winner Bo Webb of Naoma, W.Va., Judy’s longtime colleague and friend said, “Seven months have passed since Judy’s life was snuffed out by Massey Energy. Two alarming peer-reviewed scientific research papers have been released in that time indicating that mountaintop removal is killing our mountain community citizens and defecting our babies in the womb, and yet mountaintop removal continues. How many must die, how many body bags must be stacked up before Congress takes action and places a moratorium on all mountaintop removal? I call for that again today, and in the name of Judy Bonds I call upon every organization that receives funding to oppose mountaintop removal to immediately stop wasting that money on long-term organizing, and use 100% of their mountaintop removal funding to call immediate attention to the urgency to end this crime now, today!”
Award-winning film producer Mari-Lynn Evans offered these reflections on the Judy’s life and work: “I knew someone who was divined with greatness and her name was Judy Bonds. One of the honors of my life was to walk down this path with her guiding me. She was the proudest hillbilly I ever met. She loved her home and she loved this land and its people with all her heart and soul. She devoted her life to stopping the environmental atrocities and social injustices that the Appalachian people have suffered for so very long. Her commitment to stopping mountaintop removal was iconic and so was she. In June, when almost 1000 anti-MTR protestors reached the peak of Blair Mountain, Maria Gunnoe invoked Judy’s name. Like Martin Luther King Jr, Judy never made it to the mountain top with us. In July, two young women climbed 80′ up trees and sat there for weeks to prevent Alpha (Massey) from blasting Coal River WV. When they got to the top, they dropped banners that said “Stop MTR” and “For Judy Bonds”. What a legacy she has left for those of us she had to leave behind! I think of her kindness and the twinkle in her eyes when she laughed, and she laughed a lot. She was full of love. This morning I watched a tribute film we did for Judy. At the end, Judy cries to the viewers that she just wants to go home. She just wants them (Massey) to leave and let her go home. Judy is home now. In the name of Judy Bonds, STOP MTR NOW.”
Vernon Haltom, Director of Coal River Mountain Watch, who served as co-director with Judy said, “Judy is a national treasure, a freedom fighter, and the inspiration for thousands. Our congressional delegation would rather ignore her sacrifice, though, and pretend that she and all the people suffering from mountaintop removal never existed. They continue to promote the genocide of mountaintop removal, the culture of death that says it’s okay to sacrifice our people, born and unborn, for a bloody profit. Judy said, ‘How do you compromise with someone who’s blasting and poisoning us and our children?’ and ‘There’s blood on that light switch.’ She was never afraid of offending with her blunt truth. In her final days on Earth, she called on us to fight harder. The only other choice is to hand over untold thousands more to the coal cult’s deadly hand. We’re going to have a moment of silence, and then raise our voices for justice.”
Kincaid added, “As she lay dying, Judy called upon ALL persons of conscience to ‘Fight HARDER.’ Saturday’s commemoration of her birth is another step in that struggle. Eventually, when we realize her dream of ending mountaintop removal, August 27 will be the day we mark Appalachia’s freedom from tyranny and the admission of all Appalachian people into full citizenship in the United States.”
Education, Feature, Labor, News

School starts tomorrow at the public schools here in Texas, and I am not buying Office Depot pocket folders or Staples’ eraser packs for a penny apiece today. I’m not even driving from one Target to another so I can pay a nickel per spiral and buy 30 or 40 in a day. (Yes, I do that.)
School starts tomorrow and I didn’t spend my weekend setting up a classroom or an office.
For the first time since 1988, school starts tomorrow and I won’t be there.
Instead, I have an afternoon appointment at the Texas Workforce Commission’s orientation for the unemployed.
Irony of Ironies.
I am not alone though. According to the Texas Tribune,
The Associated Press reported that up to 100,000 of the state’s 330,000 teachers might lose their positions. Officials at the Texas State Teachers Association estimate that about 12,000 teachers have lost their jobs so far, and they warn more teachers could be laid off in the second year of budget cuts.
Back in 1988, I accepted a Title VII fellowship from the federal government that paid for my teacher certification program in exchange for an agreement that I would teach ESL or bilingual education in a “high needs area” for three years. The government got its money’s worth from me as I extended those three years into 21 years and never left. Until now.
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