TODD AKIN REFUSES TO WITHDRAW FROM SENATE RACE AFTER RAPE REMARKS

Republican Rep. Todd Akin allowed a state deadline to pass Tuesday, defiantly staying in the race to unseat Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill despite mounting calls for him to withdraw over incendiary remarks on rape and pregnancy.

Under Missouri law, Akin would now need to get a court order to pull out of the race as he waited beyond the 5 p.m. deadline. He would also be required to pay for any necessary reprinting of ballots.

But Akin said he has no plans to drop out. He cited what he called a grassroots conservative movement in the country that needs a voice in government for his decision to reject increasing pressure from his own Republican Party, congressional colleagues and others to step aside.

“I’m in this race for the long haul and we’re going to win it,” Akin told conservative radio host Dana Loesch.

He spoke minutes after five past and present Republican senators from Missouri, including highly regarded figures John Danforth and Christopher “Kit” Bond, added their voices to widespread calls for Akin to end his campaign.

“We do not believe it serves the national interest for Congressman Todd Akin to stay in this race,” said the statement by Sen. Roy Blunt and former senators Danforth, Bond, John Ashcroft and Jim Talent. “The issues at stake are too big, and this election is simply too important. The right decision is to step aside.”

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney also advised Akin to end his campaign, saying: “His fellow Missourians urged him to step aside, and I think he should accept their counsel and exit the Senate race.”

Romney’s running mate, Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, echoed the call, according to a statement from his spokesman.

Other prominent Republicans to join the chorus urging Akin’s withdrawal included Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and veteran Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas.

Akin complained his detractors overreacted to a liberal media campaign to take him down. He said fellow Republicans “ran for cover at the first sound of gunfire.”

His decision means he faces the first statewide race of his career with no mainstream GOP backing. After he announced his intention to stay in the race, the National Republican Senatorial Committee made clear it would not provide any help.

“We continue to hope that Congressman Akin will do the right thing for the values he holds dear, but there should be no mistake — if he continues with this misguided campaign, it will be without the support and resources of the NRSC,” said a statement by communications director Brian Walsh.

From CNN.com

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ANN COULTER: THE MOST VILE WOMAN ON EARTH

There is politics and there are areas that just a no-go. I found this article a little while ago on Veracity Stew, and although it is one person’s opinion, I can’t help but agree. Young children are off limits when it comes to political battle.

Read more……

Let me just start by saying that Ann Coulter is one of the most vile human beings walking the earth. The woman is so full of hate and spite, and her latest comments are indicative of the pure blackness that inhabits the area where a soul should be.

Speaking on Sean Hannity’s program Coulter suggested that President Obama’s daughters, Malia and Sasha, should become targets for the Romney campaign:

HANNITY: I don’t think that it’s ever funny to make fun of — like your buddy [Bill] Maher did — the children of Rick Santorum or Gov. Palin in the manner he did.

COULTER: That’s right, and they do go after the children. I just say that going after the children generally ought to be off limits. It has not been off limits for Republicans, though, conservatives have taken the Obama children off limits.So maybe it’s time to start imitating liberals in another way and go after the Obama children. By the way, that has been done grotesquely and viciously over the years by the left.

This coming from the side that feels it’s acceptable to call women sluts and prostitutes, from the side that spits on African-American lawmakers, and from an anchor, Hannity, who’s defended some of the worst and most violent hate speech against the president. Both Hannity and Coulter have defended this kind of behavior from people like Rush Limbaugh, who has already made a habit of attacking the Obama girls:

In June 2010, Limbaugh mocked Malia Obama, and in an apparent attempt to imitate her, asked: “Daddy? Did you shake down BP yet, Daddy? Are you going to make them pay, Daddy?” Limbaugh was referring to a remark Obama made during a May 2010 press conference, in which he said that Malia had asked him of the Gulf oil spill: “Did you plug the hole yet, Daddy?”

A month later, Limbaugh did it again. Affecting a child’s voice once again, Limbaugh mocked Malia Obama, saying, “Daddy, Daddy, did you plug the leak, yet, Daddy? Did you plug the hole?” 

Ultimately, this is par for the course for Coulter. She’s attacked people like the 9/11 widows, she’s advocated for murder in order to intimidate liberals, and she is simply a horrible, atrocious, despicable human being.

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NYPD’S ‘STOP AND FRISK’ PROTESTED BY THOUSANDS

Rather than celebrating Father’s Day on Sunday afternoon, Horace Russell marched with several thousand people to take a stand against the New York Police Department’s controversial “stop and frisk” policy.

“I feel it every single day, practically,” said Russell, who works as a teacher in the Bronx. “I’ve been pulled over and pushed against fences, frisked, but have never been arrested.”

Russell’s story sounded familiar to many of Sunday’s marchers, who want to see action from Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly — either by abolishing or reforming stop-and-frisk.

Last year, nearly 685,000 people were stopped by officers in cases that ended with no meaningful charge, according to police department statistics. Of these, 87% were African-American or Latino, the police department says.

“They profile me because I’m a Rastafarian and I have dreadlocks, so therefore I get pulled over just for my looks,” said Russell.

Sunday’s silent march started at 110th Street and headed down Fifth Avenue, ending at 78th Street after passing Bloomberg’s townhouse on 79th Street.

“I don’t know a single black or Latino male who doesn’t say he is basically afraid to be out on the streets,” said the Rev. Stephen Phelps, a senior minister at the Riverside Church near West Harlem. He was one of a diverse group of faith leaders, and representatives of some 300 organizations , brought together by the Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network.

On Sunday morning, speaking at a Christian Cultural Center, Mayor Bloomberg attempted to preempt the demonstration’s inevitable message: “I understand why some people want us to stop making stops,” he said.

“Innocent people who are stopped can be treated disrespectfully. That is not acceptable… Police Commissioner Kelly and I both believe we can do a better job in this area — and he’s instituted a number of reforms to do that.

“We believe that when it comes to making stops — to borrow a phrase from President Clinton — the practice should be mended, not ended.”

However, in official circles, there appears to be strong divergence in opinion.

“It’s racial profiling of people who are almost all innocent of any wrongdoing,” said New York City Comptroller John Liu, who was advocating abolition at the protest march. He said he would prefer “strategies of focused deterrents that we have seen in Atlanta, Chicago and Boston that actually reduce crime.”

Jumaane Williams, a New York city councilman from Brooklyn, said Bloomberg and Kelly “have shown no leadership” on the stop-and-frisk issue. “Inherent in any police officer’s ability to do their job is their ability to stop somebody they feel is reasonably suspicious. The current policy is not that — it’s stopping people because they are black or brown.”

Williams added, “Whether you say end it or reform it, we have to end the way that policy currently exists.”

From CNN.com

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