Saturday, September 10, 2016
Friday, September 9, 2016
'Brothers on Holy Ground': 9-11 Documentary
This video was uploaded to YouTube on September 8, 2011.
This is an award-winning documentary from the FDNY perspective. It was shot
in and around the site and fire houses shortly after the towers fell.
This video was inspired by a retired New York firefighter who was able to
talk to his brother firefighters like no one else could.
Source: VSINYcom
Statement by President Obama on North Korea's Nuclear Test
The
United States condemns North Korea's September 9 nuclear test in the
strongest possible terms as a grave threat to regional security and to
international
peace and stability. North Korea stands out as the only country to have
tested nuclear weapons this century. Today's test, North Korea's second
this year, follows an unprecedented campaign of ballistic missile
launches, which North Korea claims are intended
to serve as delivery vehicles for nuclear weapons targeting the United
States and our allies, the Republic of Korea and Japan. As Commander in
Chief, I have a responsibility to safeguard the American people and
ensure that the United States is leading the
international community in responding to this threat and North Korea's
other provocations with commensurate resolve and condemnation.
To
be clear, the United States does not, and never will, accept North
Korea as a nuclear state. Far from achieving its stated national
security and
economic development goals, North Korea's provocative and destabilizing
actions have instead served to isolate and impoverish its people
through its relentless pursuit of nuclear weapons and ballistic missile
capabilities. Today's nuclear test, a flagrant
violation of multiple UN Security Council Resolutions, makes clear
North Korea's disregard for international norms and standards for
behavior and demonstrates it has no interest in being a responsible
member of the international community.
Last
night I returned from the G-20 and East Asia Summit meetings in Asia,
where my counterparts and I were united in our call for North Korea to
return to the path of denuclearization. Upon hearing the news of the
test, I had the opportunity to consult separately via phone with
Republic of Korea (ROK) President Park Geun-Hye and Japanese Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe. We agreed to work with the UN Security
Council, our other Six-Party partners, and the international community
to vigorously implement existing measures imposed in previous
resolutions, and to take additional significant steps, including new
sanctions, to demonstrate to North Korea that there are
consequences to its unlawful and dangerous actions. I restated to
President Park and Prime Minister Abe the unshakable U.S. commitment to
take necessary steps to defend our allies in the region, including
through our deployment of a Terminal High Altitude
Area Defense (THAAD) battery to the ROK, and the commitment to provide
extended deterrence, guaranteed by the full spectrum of U.S. defense
capabilities.
Source: The White House, Office of the Press Secretary
House of Representatives September 11 Remembrance
House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI), House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi
(D-CA), and other members of Congress deliver remarks at a 9/11
remembrance ceremony on the Capitol steps.
Click here for video.
Source: C-SPAN
State Department Briefing
Elizabeth Trudeau, director of the Office of Press Relations at the
State Department, briefs reporters on a range of international issues,
including North Korea’s claim it conducted a nuclear test today.
Click here for video.
Source: C-SPAN
Representatives Hoyer and McCarthy Hold Colloquy on Zika Virus Funding
House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-MD) and Majority Leader Kevin
McCarthy (R-CA) hold a colloquy on the House agenda for the coming week.
They discuss the stalemate on Zika virus prevention funding, with
Representative McCarthy accusing Democrats of "playing politics" in
their efforts to block a bill over Planned Parenthood restrictions.
Representative Hoyer responds, calling on House Republicans to put
forward the free-standing funding bill passed by the Senate earlier this
summer.
Click here for video.
Source: C-SPAN
Hearing on Mental Health Parity
The House Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee held a hearing
reviewing federal laws guaranteeing parity of coverage for physical and
mental health. Panelists included behavioral health experts who
discussed mental health care access and challenges with implementing
federal mental health parity laws.
At the conclusion of the hearing Rep.
Joseph Kennedy (D-MA) spoke with reporters about his legislative
proposal called the “Behavioral Health Coverage Transparency Act.”
Click here for video.
Source: C-SPAN
Saving Our Youth: The Importance of Mentors
This video was published on YouTube on May 22, 2015.
Hear the stories of mentors and mentees who have shaped and guided Save Our Youth over the past two decades.
Source: Save Our Youth
Trailblazers in Black History: William Nicholson (FDNY)
On December 6, 1898, 27-year-old William H. Nicholson,
was appointed to a paid position as fireman and assigned to a firehouse
in Brooklyn. This is the first known black New York City fireman. He had
a short career with the Department - retiring at age 41 on January 1,
1912 having completed only 14 years of service.
Nicholson's retirement was a result of a physical disability and for that he received a pension of $700 per year. Nicholson was assigned to Engine Company 6 which was established in the
year of his birth, 1869, when it was located at 14 High Sstreet,
Brooklyn. The Company had relocated in 1892 to 189 Pearl Street,
Brooklyn.
Click here for additional information.
Source: Wikipedia
Revisiting ‘9/11’ on its 15th Anniversary, in the Context of the Reichstag Fire
THE DUOPOLY WATCH | Steven Jonas, MD, MPH
The 15th anniversary of the 9/11 Disaster will shortly be observed this year. No single event in recent history has had such an impact on history itself. I,
and many, many others have been writing on it, and the still
un-answered questions about it, from the time almost immediately after
it happened. In the view of many of us, the truth about what really happened has yet to be told. On September 10-11, at New York City’s Cooper union, Architects
& Engineers for 9/11 Truth, the Lawyers Committee for 9/11 Inquiry,
the NY State Legislative Action Project for 9/11 Justice, the 9/11
Consensus Panel, and the 9/11 Truth Action Project will be holding the next in the series of “Justice in Focus” symposia on the topic of “9/11 Truth” which have been held annually for some years now.
“9/11” is a subject that I have visited periodically over the years, most recently on The Greanville Post last April, upon the publication of the redacted version of “The 28 Pages.” This time around I thought to go back to some of my earliest writing on the subject. It appeared on a long-closed webmagazine called “The Political Junkies.net.” This time around, because the 9/11 disaster and the U.S. Republican government’s response to it
has had such a profound impact on world affairs, the multi-faceted and
super-deadly current conflict in the Middle East being just one of them,
I thought that it might be useful to re-visit a singular event that
occurred a long time ago, that also had a huge impact in subsequent
years, That
would be the Reichstag Fire, that occurred in Berlin, Germany, on
February 27, 1933, just about a month after Adolf Hitler became the
German Chancellor. There
are some remarkable comparisons between the governmental responses to
the two events, of which this column will only scratch the surface. This
text is drawn from several columns of mine on the subject of 9/11 and
the Reichstag Fire which I have written over the years, the first being
done in November, 2001.
For those who may not be au courant
with the history of Nazi Germany, let me lay out the bare facts of the
period. On January 30, 1933, the then President of the German Weimar
Republic (1919-1933), the World War I hero Field Marshall Paul von
Hindenburg, as part of a deal with the non-Nazi Right-Wing political
parties, appoints Adolf Hitler, the leader of the National Socialist
German Workers (Nazi) Party as Chancellor.
Click here for the full article.
Source: The Greanville Post
Remembering 9/11 (A Special NBC News Report)
Fifteen years after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, friends
and families still grieve. Children still search for understanding.
Survivors still suffer. The nation, and the world, still remembers.
NBC
News and MSNBC present a look back at the day of terror that killed
nearly 3,000 people in New York, Washington, D.C., and Shanksville,
Pennsylvania, examining its lasting impact at home and around the globe.
Click here to review the special feature.
Source: NBC News/MSNBC
House OKs Bill to Let 9/11 Families Sue Saudi Arabia
by Alex Moe
On the eve of the 15th anniversary of the September 11th attacks,
the House unanimously passed on Friday controversial legislation
clearing the way for the families of victims to sue Saudi Arabia if that
country is found legally responsible for helping back the deadly
terrorist acts.
The bill, which passed the Senate in May, now
heads to President Obama's desk. The White House strongly opposes the
legislation and worries the legislation leaves the U.S. open to similar
suits.
Critics also argue the bill will put U.S. relations with Saudi
Arabia in jeopardy and potentially set a dangerous precedent of
Americans suing foreign governments.
The president is expected to veto the bill.
Click here for the full article.
Source: NBC News
Superbug Source Remains a Mystery
by Maggie Fox
Medical detectives said Friday they are still baffled about how
much-feared drug-resistant superbugs infected two people in the U.S.
this year, but they have good news: both patients recovered and don't
seem to have infected anyone else.
The medical team also reported the fourth known case in the U.S., involving a Connecticut toddler.
The case of a woman in Pennsylvania startled public health officials and made headlines last May.
She was found to be carrying E. coli bacteria
that had acquired a gene called mcr-1. This gene gives bacteria the
ability to withstand the effects of last-ditch antibiotics.
Luckily, the women recovered and did not appear
to infect anyone else, the team at the Pennsylvania Department of Health
and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported.
Click here for the full article.
Source: NBC News
North Dakota Protesters Vow to Stop Oil Pipeline From Traversing Sioux Land
by Daniel A. Medina and Devyn Rafols-Nunez
Gracy Claymore remembers the moment the message flashed across her laptop screen.
On the morning of Aug. 3, a Texas company called
Energy Transfer Partners sent her and all members of the Standing Rock
Sioux Tribe a 48-hour construction notice on the controversial Dakota
Access Pipeline — a 1,170-mile oil conduit slated to run from North
Dakota to Illinois.
Part of the pipeline would traverse the Sioux's
sacred, ancestral lands and run under the Missouri River, the tribe's
sole water source. The pipeline would run just a half-mile from the
Standing Rock reservation, which straddles the North and South Dakota
border.
For Claymore, a 19-year-old student activist who
along with dozens of her peers had protested the pipeline for months,
warning against "the potential catastrophic environmental damage" an oil
spill would bring for their people, it was now the time for action.
Click here for the full article.
Source: NBC News
Outspoken NY Assemblyman Dies in Reported Suicide
Upstate New York Assemblyman and
outspoken conservative Bill Nojay died Friday morning in what local
media reported was a suicide.
NBC
affiliate WHEC in Rochester reported that Nojay was found dead in a
local cemetery of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The station had
previously reported the Republican was facing the possibility of fraud
charges over a business deal in Cambodia, and said he was due to turn
himself in Friday in that case.
Click here for the full article.
Source: NBC 4 (New York)
New Legislation Expedites Professional Licenses For Spouses of Active Duty Military Members
Governor Andrew Cuomo today signed
legislation to expedite the professional licensure process for spouses
of active duty military personnel transferred to New York who are
licensed to practice in another state.
“This common sense legislation breaks down
artificial barriers that caused undue burdens on military families and
opens the door for more career opportunities for military spouses in New
York," Governor Cuomo said. "I'm proud to sign this measure into law and cut this unneeded red tape once and for all."
The bill (A.4394-A/S.2947-A) will require
expedited licensing and allow military spouses to obtain temporary
licenses while their application is pending.
The legislation requires the State Education
Department to expedite the licensure process for professions overseen
by SED for spouses of active duty members of the United States armed
forces, National Guard, or reserves who are transferred to New York and
who hold a license with substantially similar requirements from another
state. It also authorizes SED to provide a temporary license to these
military spouses so they can practice their profession immediately while
their full licensure application is pending.
This new licensing process will apply to all
SED licensed professions, including physicians, nurses, physical
therapists, engineers, and mental health practitioners, among others.
Senator Patty Ritchie said, “Military families move 10 times more often than others—often crossing state lines that have different rules and protocols for professional licenses—and this makes it more difficult for military spouses to find work to help support their families. In recent years, top leaders at Fort Drum and Defense Department officials shared with me the importance of getting this measure passed, which they view as a key tool to encourage trained and experienced military service members to reenlist. Members of our military and their families sacrifice so much, and this is truly a way to make things easier for them by creating more—and better—opportunities so they succeed in the new communities where they are assigned, and I would like to thank the Governor for recognizing the importance of this measure.”
Senator Patty Ritchie said, “Military families move 10 times more often than others—often crossing state lines that have different rules and protocols for professional licenses—and this makes it more difficult for military spouses to find work to help support their families. In recent years, top leaders at Fort Drum and Defense Department officials shared with me the importance of getting this measure passed, which they view as a key tool to encourage trained and experienced military service members to reenlist. Members of our military and their families sacrifice so much, and this is truly a way to make things easier for them by creating more—and better—opportunities so they succeed in the new communities where they are assigned, and I would like to thank the Governor for recognizing the importance of this measure.”
Assistant Assembly Speaker Felix W. Ortiz said, "As
a veteran and a fighter for veteran’s causes, I am pleased that the
Governor signed my legislation into law today. This law allows military
spouses to pursue professional job opportunities that were closed to
them before. We are now on par with the majority of states that
recognize the importance of military families. We should always be able
to support our armed forces in ways like this."
Source: Press Office, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo
The Woman Running to Be Somalia's First Female President
"My gender is not an issue," says Fadumo Dayib. "It's a gender that has actually brought the little peace we have in Somalia."
Source: CNN
North Korea Conducts Powerful Nuclear Test
CNN's talks to, former US Ambassador to South Korea and Iraq, Christopher Hill about the North Korea nuke test.
Source: CNN
North Korea Says Its Bomb Can Be Put On A Rocket
North Korea says it has successfully completed its most powerful nuke
test, claiming it now has the capability to mount warheads on ballistic
rockets. CNN's Paula Hancocks reports.
Source: CNN
European Officials: 30 to 40 ISIS Suspects At Large
European security officials estimate that 30 to 40 suspected ISIS
terrorists who helped support the November 13 Paris terror attacks are
still at large.
Source: CNN
Travel Tip to London from Air China Accused of Racism
Some Londoners are offended by a warning that came inside Air China's
inflight magazine about traveling in the multicultural city.
Source: CNN
Thursday, September 8, 2016
President Obama Closing News Conference in Laos
At the conclusion of his nine-day Asia trip, President Obama told
reporters in a news conference that he does not think Donald Trump is
qualified to be President of the United States, adding that governing is
“serious business” and as a leader your speech should reflect
thought-out policy. President Obama talked about his legacy in the Asia
Pacific region, urging his successor to continue engagement and dialogue
in the region.
Click here for video.
Source: C-SPAN
Biden and Congressional Democrats Call for Legislative Action
Vice President Joe Biden, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA),
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV), and other Democratic members
of Congress call for action on a variety of legislative issues during a
rally on the steps of the Capitol.
Click here for video.
Source: C-SPAN
Hillary Clinton News Conference
Hillary Clinton held a news conference to take questions from the press.
It’s the first one in more than 250 days. It follows NBC’s forum with
both presidential candidates. Before taking questions, Clinton
reiterated her commitment to fighting ISIS and addressing other
national security concerns.
Click here for video.
Source: C-SPAN
House Speaker Weekly Briefing
House Speaker Paul Ryan held his weekly briefing since Congress' return
from its seven-week August recess. He outlined the Republican agenda on
health care, combating ISIS*, and preserving his party’s congressional
majority in the 2016 elections. He was asked about Republican
presidential nominee Donald Trump’s latest remarks on Russian President
Vladimir Putin.
Click here for video.
Source: C-SPAN
House Minority Leader Weekly Briefing
Click here for video.
Source: C-SPAN
Trailblazers in Black History: Carl Brashear
Carl Maxie Brashear was a United States Navy sailor. He was the first African American to become a U.S. Navy Master Diver, rising to the position in 1970 despite also having an amputated left leg.
Brashear enlisted in the U.S. Navy on February 25, 1948, shortly after the Navy had been desegregated by U.S. President Harry S. Truman. He graduated from the U.S. Navy Diving & Salvage School in 1954, becoming the first African American to attend and graduate from the Diving & Salvage School and the first African-American U.S. Navy Diver.
While attending diving school in Bayonne, New Jersey, Brashear faced hostility and racism. He found notes on his bunk saying,
"We're going to drown you today, nigger!" and "We don't want any nigger
divers." Brashear received encouragement to finish from Boatswain's Mate First Class Rutherford, and graduated 16 out of 17.
Additional information is available here.
Source: Wikipedia
Street Naming for Reverend Luis F. Serrano
WHAT
YOU SHOULD KNOW
By Senator Rev. Rubén Díaz
District 32 Bronx County, New York
By Senator Rev. Rubén Díaz
District 32 Bronx County, New York
You should know that on Saturday,
September 10, 2016 at 11:00AM, Chatterton Avenue, between Virginia and Puglsey
Avenues in Bronx County will be renamed in honor of Reverend Luis F. Serrano.
As you already know, for many years,
Reverend Luis Serrano has served as a Chaplain for the New York City Police
Department, and as such, he has been one of the spiritual counselors for more
than 30,000 men and women who comprise the NYPD, serving equally without regard
to anyone’s race, color, creed, national origin, disability, gender, sexual
preference, marital or veteran status, or any other legally protected status.
Reverend Luis Serrano has also been one
of the Officers of the Assembly of God in the Eastern Hispanic District. He
serves as the Parochial Vicar of the Assembly of God Church in Brooklyn.
Reverend Luis Serrano is the Pastor of the Pentecostal Assembly Church located
at 320 47th Street in Brooklyn, on the corner of Third Avenue.
Since he came from Puerto Rico, his
homeland, where he resided in El Barrio San José, Toa Baja, Reverend Luis
Serrano has resided in Bronx County where he has humbly served people from a
variety of ethnicities including Jewish, Black, Italian, Irish, Asian, and
Dominican, in many capacities.
It is important for you to know that
Reverend Serrano’s social and religious efforts and contributions to families
and residents of Bronx County has drawn the attention of New York City Council
Members Annabel Palma and Rafael Salamanca, who have obtained approval of the
New York City Council to change the name of the block where Reverend Serrano
resides at 1965 Chatterton Avenue to Reverend Luis F. Serrano Way.
For this ceremony, they have chosen Saturday, September 10,
2016 at 11:00 a.m., when the Council Members together with other
elected officials, community leaders, ministers, and Members of the New York
City Police Department will be officially declaring Chatterton Avenue as
Reverend Luis F. Serrano Way.
I am Senator Reverend Rubén Díaz and
this is what you should know.
Governor Cuomo Signs Legislation to Enhance Disability Retirement Benefits for NYC Firefighters
Governor Cuomo signed legislation to provide enhanced disability
retirement benefits for Tier 3 and Tier 6 New York City firefighters.
Once the law takes effect, all New York City firefighters who become
disabled while in the line of duty are eligible for disability equal to
three-quarters of their pension.
Source: NYGovCuomo
How Roger Ailes is Shaping Donald Trump's Debate Prep
by Dylan Byers and Dana Bash
The former Fox News chief started advising Trump at a private lunch
just days before the launch of his campaign, and regularly offered him
advice over the course of the primaries, sources familiar with the
discussions said.
Trump and Ailes met in person several times
between June 2015 and June 2016 -- almost always at Fox News
headquarters -- and spoke frequently on the phone, the sources said.
Even when Ailes and Trump appeared to be at war over Trump's treatment
of Megyn Kelly, the two men kept the conversation going.
But since late July, when Ailes left Fox News amid a torrent of sexual
harassment allegations, he has taken on a much more active role in
Trump's campaign -- specifically in terms of debate preparation.
In recent weeks, Ailes has become one of the most influential voices in
the room as Trump prepares for his first head-to-head matchup with
Hillary Clinton, on September 26. Ailes has attended at least two of
Trump's Sunday debate prep sessions in person, sources said, and talks
with Trump by phone multiple times a week.
Click here for the full article.
Source: CNN Money
McLaughlin Spars with Zucker, Other DOH Officials, Over PFOA Contamination (Video)
Temperatures rose in the first hours of Wednesday’s joint legislative
hearing into water quality during a heated exchange between state
Assemblyman Steve McLaughlin and state Health Commissioner Howard
Zucker. The Republican lawmaker, who represents part of the Rensselaer
County area affected by PFOA contamination, has been waiting for months
to pose questions to Zucker in a hearing.
McLaughlin began by upbraiding another DOH official for previously
mentioning his stress and fatigue levels while dealing with Hoosick
Falls; that was something the village’s residents might understand more
keenly, the lawmaker said. McLaughlin’s first question to Zucker was
whether he had felt a legal obligation to immediately inform the
citizens of Hoosick Falls that their water was tainted.
“Assemblyman, I take issue to some of your statements,” Zucker said,
insisting that he was keenly aware of the sense of anxiety in the
community.
McLaughlin tried asking the question a different way: “Would you have
let your mother drink that water for 18 months?” — a reference to the
gap in time before Hoosick Falls’ resident Michael Hickey’s first test
results and the state’s eventual December 2016 advice that residents
shouldn’t drink from the village water supply or any other system with
PFOA levels above 400 parts per trillion.
Click here for video.
Source: timesunion
New York Can’t Block Late-Term Abortion in Certain Cases, Schneiderman Says
By Vivian Yee
Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman
on Wednesday took a large step toward making New York one of several
states to allow late-term abortions in cases where the mother’s health
is in jeopardy or the fetus suffers a fatal complication, relying on Supreme Court rulings he said overrode existing law.
In a new legal opinion, Mr. Schneiderman said the 1970 state law, which criminalizes abortion past 24 weeks of pregnancy unless the mother’s life is endangered, did not square with the later Supreme Court decisions in Roe v. Wade and other cases.
“New
York law cannot criminalize what the federal Constitution protects, and
thus the Penal Law should be interpreted to be consistent with the
Constitution,” the opinion says.
While
the state law remains on the books, the opinion from Mr. Schneiderman, a
Democrat, now gives hospitals and clinics the legal grounding to
perform such abortions. Reproductive rights advocates say that no
providers currently offer such procedures in New York, so doctors have
to send women who need late-term abortions elsewhere — most often to
Colorado, where they are legal.
Click here for the full article.
Source: The New York Times