The Breakfast Club (I Can Climb The Highest Mountain)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We're a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we're not too hungover  we've been bailed out we're not too exhausted from last night's (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and
weekend morning at 10:30am (ET) to talk about current news and our
boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late,
it's PhilJD's fault.

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This Day in History

 

 

 

  

 

 

   

Bomb attack on Madrid's commuter trains; Former
Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic found dead; Mikhail Gorbachev
becomes leader of Soviet Union; General Douglas MacArthur leaves
Philippines in WWII.

Breakfast Tunes

 

 

 

  

 

 

   

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

 

Noted: Being a Christian is a choice, being gay is not. God made the gays. Christians, not so much.

Charles Kingsley Michaelson, III

TMC :: The Breakfast Club (I Can Climb The Highest Mountain)

 

Breakfast News

 

Atlanta-area police shoot dead unarmed and naked African American man

The Georgia bureau of investigation has opened an
inquiry into the police shooting of a naked, unarmed and possibly
mentally ill man on Monday in DeKalb County.

Anthony Hill, 27, was shot by a police officer at The Heights
apartment complex where he lived, just east of Atlanta. Police arrived
and encountered Hill after a 911 caller reported a nude man wandering
the complex and "acting deranged", at about 1pm on Monday, according to
DeKalb County police.

A seven-year veteran of the county police force responded to the
call. Hill, who was black, reportedly ran at the officer who ordered him
to stop before shooting him twice in the upper torso.

"The caller reported the man had taken off all of his clothes and
was just running throughout the entire complex during the time we
received the call," the DeKalb County police chief, Cedric Alexander,
said in a press conference. Alexander said the officer, who has not been
named, was suspended pending an investigation.

US senators fire up medical marijuana bill in bid to clear path for research

Three high-profile lawmakers introduced the
Senate's first bill to legalize medical marijuana across the country on
Tuesday. The bill's future is far from certain, but has been met with
praise from marijuana policy activists.

Democratic senators Kirsten Gillibrand and Cory Booker introduced the
legislation with Kentucky Republican Rand Paul. The legislation, called
the Carers Act, would allow patients to use states' medical marijuana
laws without fear of federal repercussions, open the banking system to
marijuana dispensaries and clear the way for research.

"Many people have been finding relief, but some people are
prevented from having that," said Paul. "There's great potential for
research in this," he said. "This is an example of how Washington
works."

Isis attacks on ancient sites erasing history of humanity, says Iraq

The Iraqi antiquities ministry has acknowledged
reports of a new attack by Islamic State militants on an ancient
Assyrian city north-east of Mosul, reiterated calls for the
international community to intervene and condemned the jihadi group for
"erasing the history of humanity".

There have been reports that Isis bulldozed landmarks in the ancient
city of Dur Sharrukin, now called Khorsabad. The ministry said it was in
keeping with the militant group's "criminal ideology and persistence in
destroying and stealing Iraq's antiquities".

Dur Sharrukin is a former capital of the Assyrian empire in Nineveh that dates back to the 8th century BC.

American gun ownership and hunting rates at record lows, survey says

The number of Americans who live in a household
with at least one gun is lower than it's ever been, according to a major
American trend survey that finds the decline in gun ownership is
paralleled by a reduction in the number of Americans who hunt.

According to the latest General Social Survey, 32% of Americans
either own a firearm themselves or live with someone who does, which
ties a record low set in 2010. That's a significant decline since the
late 1970s and early 1980s, when about half of Americans told
researchers there was a gun in their household.

The drop in the number of Americans who own a gun or live in a
household with one is probably linked to a decline in the popularity of
hunting, from 32% who said they lived in a household with at least one
hunter in 1977 to less than half that number now.

A cold day in Hilo as blizzard halts massive Hawaii telescope construction

Construction of one of the world's largest
telescopes is being delayed because of blizzard conditions on a Hawaii
mountain summit.

The Thirty Meter Telescope will be built near the summit of Mauna
Kea. If not for the winter storm, construction preparations would be
getting under way at the site of the $1.4bn project, Sandra Dawson,
telescope spokeswoman, told Hilo newspaper Hawaii Tribune-Herald.

The Mauna Kea access road was closed on Monday because of snow
and wind. Because of frozen weather gauges, it was difficult to estimate
snowfall and wind speeds, said Ryan Lyman, meteorologist for the Mauna
Kea Weather Center. He is expecting up to 2ft of snow and winds of
50-70mph, with a break on Tuesday before snowing again on Tuesday night.
Conditions may improve to reopen the road by Friday or during the
weekend, he said.

Cape Cod photographer captures images of large ice chunks washed ashore

Winter 2015 served up enough brutal cold and
record-breaking snowfall to call to mind Arctic landscapes, ice planets
and the Titanic - comparisons made more poignant as massive icebergs
have made landfall near Cape Cod.

A Cape Cod-based photographer, who uses the pseudonym Dapixara,
captured photos of large ice chunks that had washed ashore in Wellfleet,
Massachusetts - which the photographer said on Twitter were between
five and seven feet tall or larger. The photos show a figure dwarfed by
the icebergs while walking along a sandy beach.

Must Read Blog Posts

 

The Usefulness Of Death Threats Charles Pierce, Esquire Politcs

Better Put Tom Cotton and His 46 Co-Conspirators on the No-Fly List Marcy Wheeler, emptywheel

America is literally on fire: How out-of-control oil spills are destroying our population centers David Dayen, Salon

Wikipedia Sues NSA Over Dragnet Internet Surveillance Cora Currier, The Intercept

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