In Case You Missed
It
Compiled by Sid Pranke
An Oct. 14 broadcast of his daily radio show,
right-wing radio host Neal Boortz stated that if the country is
faced with an impending national disaster, it should makesaving
rich Americans a higher priority than saving poor Americans.
The comments came as Boortz recounted the New York subway terror
threat, and the investigation into whether city officials alerted
certain New Yorkers about the threat before the rest of the city
was alerted. A portion of Boortz’s comments follow: “OK,
now here’s the story. And it says, ‘The Homeland Security
Department launched internal probes yesterday into whether its officials
tipped off friends and relatives to a possible subway terror plot
days before average New Yorkers were alerted.’ So the real
gripe here is that it seems that some wealthy people got notified
of the terror plot before the great unwashed, before the others
...This is as it should be.” He went on to imagine a scenario
where the country is forced to “set some priorities”
about who will be notified of an impending disaster. “We should
save the rich people first,” Boortz declared. “You know,
they’re the ones that are responsible for this prosperity.”
He described the poorest Americans as “a drag on society”
and said they “don’t achieve squat. They sit around
all the time waiting for somebody else to take care of them. They
have children they can’t afford. They’re uneducated.
They can barely read.”
www.mediamatteers.org
Mpls City Council approves living wage ordinance
On Nov. 4, the Minneapolis City Council voted
11 to 2 to approve a living wage ordinance, which was pushed by
labor and faith groups, as well as community organizations. Ward
13 Councilmember Barret Lane and 10th Ward Councilmember Dan Niziolek
cast the two “no” votes.
The ordinance will require organizations that
have city contracts in excess of $100,000 or that receive city subsidies
in excess of $100,000 to pay a wage of $12.09 per hour. Unlike a
previous living wage policy enacted by a 1997 City Council resolution,
the new ordinance provides for enforcement mechanisms and financial
penalties for organizations failing to comply. Mayor R.T. Rybak
is expected to sign the ordinance.
www.minneapolisunions.org
Bush accused of operating secret gulag in eastern Europe
The Bush administration has been accused of operating
secret detention facilities beyond the reach of the law and outside
official oversight at bases in two eastern European countries. The
facilities—said to be located in Poland and Romania—are
part of a “gulag” used by the United States to hold
prisoners seized in the so-called war on terror.
A leading human rights group examined the flight
logs of a plane used by the CIA to transport prisoners and concluded,
among other findings, that the secret facilities first opened in
2003.
www.news.independent.co.uk
|