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Music library getting dusty? 3-and-a-half websites you may not know (but should immediately bookmark)

April 15th, 2008 | 2 Comments | Posted in Advice by Chris Pommier

Finding that you’ve gotten into a rut with you music? If, as my fellow Twitterer BigBrightBulb said (who blogs here and twitters here), you’ve been filling out your 80’s pop collection based on Muzak from your favorite burrito shop,, then I’ve got some tips for you below. Or, maybe, like me, the hard drive that housed all your music crashed beyond repair. The smell of burning plastic does not bode well for my Tori Amos Discography.

Either way, I’ve got a short list of sites you’ll want to check out.

They’re not as famous or popular as Last.fm, iTunes, or Yahoo! Music, but maybe you’ve already tried those, and just maybe they’re boring you to tears. Especially since you want to find music that challenges you, and pushes your boundaries. You want to find music uncovered by the most music-obsessed people on the planet. Music bloggers.

Look no further.

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Latest Links: Israel/ Palestine

December 4th, 2006 | No Comments | Posted in Uncategorized by Chris Pommier

Israel ‘to ease’ W Bank friction
Israel orders troops to avoid “unnecessary friction” in the West Bank, as a truce in Gaza enters a second week.

BBC News
Qatar ‘to pay Palestinian wages’
Qatar will pay the salaries of 40,000 Palestinian education workers for several months, says the Palestinian PM.

ForeignPolicy: Israel-Palestine: Reconciliation Is in Everyone’s Interest
A new documentary that looks at the people most affected by the Israeli-Palestinian divide reminds us that lasting peace will come from popular movements, not political leaders.

Black Church Delegation Focuses on Palestine
A delegation of black church leaders say conditions in Palestine remind them of injustices in pre-civil rights America and South Africa during apartheid, says a report from The Arab American News of Dearborn, Mich.

Two Palestinians killed in W Bank
Israeli soldiers shoot and kill two Palestinians, one a 16-year-old, in separate incidents in the West Bank.

Discussing his new book on “The NewsHour …
Discussing his new book on “The NewsHour,” Carter observed that “there hasn’t been a day of negotiation orchestrated or promoted by the United States between Israel and the Palestinians in six years.”

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Latest Links: Israel - Palestine

November 19th, 2006 | 1 Comment | Posted in Uncategorized by Chris Pommier

International”>Protest Forces Israel to Call Off Gaza Airstrike
Israel halted an airstrike against the house of a suspected Palestinian militant after neighbors surrounded the building.

Welcome the New Neighbors:
An ambitious new group blog called Good Neighbors is “designed to increase dialogue and understanding between all of the neighboring countries in the Middle East including Jordanians, Lebanese, Israelis, Palestinians, Egyptians, Saudis, Iranians, and Syrians on a cross-country level, as well as to increase understanding, respect and dialogue among the various strata of society within our countries.” Quite a challenge.

NAM Awards Winner: Ray Hanania
The writer has received a New America Media Ethnic Media Award for 2006 for a series of humorous commentaries on Israeli-Palestinian relations, reprinted here. NAM recognized outstanding ethnic media reporters this week in Washington, D.C.

Israel Encourages Citizens to Return to Homeland
For the first time, Israeli government officials are touring the United States and Canada to help Israeli immigrants connect to employment opportunities and invite them to return home.

WSU law professor candidate protested
A pro-Israel group says the son of a prominent Palestinian intellectual should not be considered for a law professor post at Wayne State University, and local leaders of Palestinian and Arab descent say the effort is part of an attempt to marginalize their community in Metro Detroit.

palestine journal: 16 november - the lame duck massacres
soooo… while the lame-duck congress in the US goes ahead with passing some of the most draconian laws yet, like the one they passed yesterday that makes protesting animal cruelty at a circus or an animal lab a terrorist act (!) — which, by the way, goes right along with their stated priorities of ‘who is a threat’…… ie. not bin laden or the saudis who fund him…. but instead, as the FBI has stated publicly on multiple occasions, their ‘Number One Domestic Terrorist Threat’ is the ‘animal liberation front’, an organization that has never ever been charged with killing or hurting anyone, but whose only purpose is to rescue animals from cruel conditions (!)….

Israeli aircraft strike Hamas car
Israeli missiles hit a car carrying Gaza militants, injuring several people, after Palestinian rockets hit Israel.

Kill Hamas Now: “They … have to disappear, to go to paradise, all of them, and there can’t be any compromise.”
“Israel’s deputy prime minister [Avigdor Lieberman] on Saturday said Israel should assassinate Hamas’ leadership, ignore the moderate Palestinian president and walk away from international peace efforts, the latest in a string of hard-line positions voiced by the newest member of the Cabinet.”

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Latest Links: Voting 2

November 7th, 2006 | No Comments | Posted in Minnesota, News by Chris Pommier

Diebold Voting Machines Jam in Vista
Two Diebold voting machines in Vista experienced paper jams on the already controversial computerized format that has been challenged on local, regional and national levels.
“What happend today in Vista is an example of the continued erosion of our democracy,” said Fredia Avalos, a communication lecturer at Cal State San
Marcos. Vista filmaker Mark Day commented “I ended up voting twice. Those machines make a lot of racket and sound like an old harvesting machine. The whole thing is very scary.”

Klobuchar wins
Democrat Amy Klobuchar sailed to an easy victory in the U.S. Senate race Tuesday, capitalizing on voter anger over the Iraq war to become Minnesota’s first elected female senator.
Klobuchar, the elected prosecutor of Hennepin County, kept an important post in Democratic hands by beating Mark Kennedy, a three-term Republican congressman from west of the Twin Cities.
Klobuchar’s win was based on a statistical analysis of the vote from voter interviews conducted for The Associated Press by Edison Media Research and Mitosfky International.

Doyle wins in Wisconsin governor’s race
Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle, a Democrat, won a tough reelection race Tuesday over U.S. Rep. Mark Green, a Republican who focused on state spending and property taxes.
In the U.S. Senate race, Democratic incumbent Herb Kohl easily defeated Robert Gerald Lorge, a Republican lawyer from Bear Creek.
Kohl, who used to run his family’s grocery and department stores and now owns the Milwaukee Bucks, has served three terms in the Senate.
Wisconsin voters also approved Tuesday a constitutional amendment that defines marriage as a union between a man and a woman. Similar measures banning same-sex civil

Immigrants turn out to vote in California, spurred by tech-saavy and traditional registration drives, voter guides and rights cards from Mobilize the Immigrant Vote 2006.

Mapping the Movement: Washington
Heavy rain falls on election day. Shankar Narayan, director of the Hate Free Zone, hopes it won’t keep away the 11,000 immigrant voters it’s registered through canvassing and phone banking.

La Nueva Cara del Votante: Jóven y Latino

Los jóvenes latinos en San Diego conformaron más de la mitad del crecimiento del electorado latino del condado.

Black voters a poll factor
While incumbent Republican Gov. Bob Riley has a comfortable lead in polls over Democratic Lt. Gov. Lucy Baxley, political observers say the outcome of other races could depend on how many voters turn out, particularly black voters.

FBI looks into voter intimidation
The FBI is looking into possible voter intimidation in Virginia’s hard-fought U.S. Senate contest between Republican incumbent George Allen and Democrat Jim Webb.

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Latest Links: Voting

November 7th, 2006 | No Comments | Posted in Minnesota by Chris Pommier

Election problems: New machines, databases, rules

Programming errors and inexperience dealing with electronic voting machines frustrated poll workers in hundreds of precincts early today, delaying voters in Indiana, Ohio and Florida and leaving some with little choice but to use paper ballots instead.

In Cleveland, voters rolled their eyes as election workers fumbled with new touchscreen machines that they couldn’t get to start properly until about 10 minutes after polls opened.

“We got five machines one of them’s got to work,” said Willette Scullank, a trouble shooter from the Cuyahoga County, Ohio, elections board.

StarTribune.com | Politics
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 23:00:00


Voter ID Numbers

Around noon today, the DFL volunteer army made its five millionth voter identification call.Five Million. 5,000,000 calls made.

Among those, more than 1.8 million voters have been identified successfully.

That, my wonderful readers, is what we call “ridiculous.”

Minnesota Campaign Report
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 15:31:08

Despite delays, glitches,…
Despite delays, glitches, and other snafus, most polls will not extend voting hours. In Denver, where the lines are long, the Democratic candidate for governor waited nearly two hours to vote, presumably for himself.

Talking Points Memo: by Joshua Micah Marshall
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 15:25:43

In CO, Dems Allege Threats to Latino Voters
From Roll Call: In automated and live calls, Democrats allege, Latinos have been told that their ethnicity makes them ineligible to vote in today’s elections. The calls also threatened that Latinos would be arrested at polling places if they did…

TPMmuckraker
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 15:23:07

MD GOP Candidate Recruits Homeless to Pass Out Deceptive Flyers
Misleading flyers were handed out at several Maryland polling places by men and women recruited by the GOP governor’s campaign from out-of-state homeless shelters, the Washington Post reports. The flyers, given to voters in a heavily Democratic area, showed GOP…

TPMmuckraker
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 14:32:34

Northern Minnesota Report

Things are going well in the Bemidji DFL office, according to reports from the northern part of the state. A light rain is falling, but turnout appears to be high. Plenty of volunteers, and not so many in the local Republican office. Sporadic reports of voter intimidation in largely Native areas, as well as issues getting some voters in the Red Lake area to the county courthouse - they were supposed to vote by mail, and were unaware that the precinct voting location would not be open. Drivers needed - if you’re near there, go help out.

Minnesota Campaign Report
Published: Tuesday, 07 November 2006 14:10:42

Election 2006: Penetrating The Voting Vortex
By Erin Thompson
Google the terms “hiccup” or “glitch” along with the words “electronic voting equipment” and you’ll get some interesting insight into widespread chaos that could hit polling places this November. In primaries across the nation earlier this year, problems with newly implemented computer-based voting systems, often blamed on software “glitches” or election “hiccups,” caused voting results to be delayed, tallied incorrectly or reversed entirely.

Election 2006: Resisting The Voting Rights Rollback
By Ula Kuras
Among the new voting requirements recently contested in courts are state-issued photo IDs and tight restrictions on voting registration drives. Proponents of such requirements tend to be conservative white Republicans who argue that tighter rules are essential for preventing voter fraud. However, critics say such laws will unfairly impact the poor, the elderly, the disabled, and college-age students, all of whom tend to vote more for the Democrats.

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