Tinker:
Just what is this multiculturalism diverse social government attitude that seems to be tearing down the walls of the long held traditions in this country lately, by trying to legislate same sex marriage, and forcing racial quotas in employment and education along with throwing open their country's borders. What evidence does this latest generation have with experimenting around with their country's social structure and health like that? Trying to legislate that kind of mount Olympus social morality.
Just what is this multiculturalism diverse social government attitude that seems to be tearing down the walls of the long held traditions in this country lately, by trying to legislate same sex marriage, and forcing racial quotas in employment and education along with throwing open their country's borders. What evidence does this latest generation have with experimenting around with their country's social structure and health like that? Trying to legislate that kind of mount Olympus social morality.
Does any country have enough policeman to make those laws work?
By
the way who is saying that they don't want to get along with everyone
else because of race. I hardly ever hear someone telling me that they
can't get along with people solely because of the other guys different color, race, religious beliefs, or any other physical difference.
To the contrary most of the people I know go about their business without talking about each other in that way. I only really hear that kind of demanding talk coming from the Oracle of Apollo talking on our televisions.
Show me the proof of a multiculturalism integrated country that has held up over the test of time? To the contrary all I read about in studying the governments who have indeed integrated their countries multiculturalism. Is how they fell into a messy mixed up failed country that went on to vanish entirely.
You can start with studying about the reasons Rome fell.
To the contrary most of the people I know go about their business without talking about each other in that way. I only really hear that kind of demanding talk coming from the Oracle of Apollo talking on our televisions.
Show me the proof of a multiculturalism integrated country that has held up over the test of time? To the contrary all I read about in studying the governments who have indeed integrated their countries multiculturalism. Is how they fell into a messy mixed up failed country that went on to vanish entirely.
You can start with studying about the reasons Rome fell.
What would a multiculturalism diverse social government, or new way of government that these people are talking about look like anyway. Forcing people to have a super diverse social government that works better then all the rest. Yeah right! All day long?
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http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-
Sen. Sessions: Senate immigration bill will 'hammer working Americans'
By Bernie Becker
-
05/25/13 09:48 AM ET
Sessions, one of the immigration overhaul’s most strident critics, suggested the measure would prioritize foreign-born workers over people already in the U.S. struggling to find a job.
“This is far, far too many low-skilled workers that are going to take jobs and pull down wages of people unemployed and underemployed right now,” Sessions, a senior member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said on Fox Business. “It's really, really dangerous.”
The Senate Judiciary panel cleared the immigration bill crafted by the so-called “Gang of Eight” this week by a bipartisan 13-5 vote, and its supporters hope to rack up 70 votes in the chamber.
But Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), one of the Gang of Eight, said Friday that the vote doesn’t yet have 60 votes in the chamber.
Sen. Orrin Hatch (Utah), another senior Republican on the Judiciary panel, voted for the measure in committee, but has said he might not back it on the Senate floor.
More from The Hill • Republican lawmakers hear complaints about wider abuses from IRS • Dem: Republicans throwing infrastructure 'under the bus’ • Senators fight to cut more farm bill spending
In his Friday interview, Sessions stressed that the unions for the officers that guard the border opposed the immigration bill, and that the measure would be a huge burden on the American safety net.
“We believe in immigration,” Sessions said. “All of us do. And we all believe that we need to make this legal system of immigration better. This bill just does not do it, and it can't pass in this form.”
Key conservative groups like the Heritage Foundation are also deeply skeptical of the Senate immigration bill, but other prominent figures on the right, like Grover Norquist and Douglas Holtz-Eakin, back a comprehensive immigration reform.
Read more: http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-
Follow us: @thehill on Twitter | TheHill on Facebook
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http://www.nytimes.com/2013/
Read more...http://www.nytimes.com/
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Science
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http://now.msn.com/go- stargazing-this-weekend-see- three-planets-in-night-sky
http://specials.msn.com/a-list/news/famous-exhumations-ss
----------------
http://now.msn.com/go-
You won't get another weekend of stargazing this good until 2026
Whatever
you do this weekend, you might want to take some time to look at the
stars. This weekend, Mercury, Venus and Jupiter will appear together in
the night sky. Each night, they'll appear to move closer to each other,
finally forming a small triangle on Sunday night. The planets can be
seen from all over the world. Just get a clear view of the western
horizon. About half an hour after the sun goes down, the trio can be
seen by the naked eye. Make sure you catch it this weekend. The next
time three planets will appear in the sky is 2015, and they won't be
this close together until 2026. [Source]
Trending topic: stargazing three planets | Click to see more on msnNOW.com
-----------------Trending topic: stargazing three planets | Click to see more on msnNOW.com
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Sports
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http://espn.go.com/college- football/story/_/id/9312336/ everett-golson-leaves-notre- dame-fighting-irish
Starting quarterback Everett Golson is no longer enrolled at Notre Dame Fighting Irish, the university confirmed to ESPN.com on Saturday night.
• More: ESPN Chicago's college blog
"Everett is not enrolled at the university. Federal law and our own
polices preclude us from discussing specifics," spokesman Dennis Brown
said in an email.
Golson started 11 games for the Fighting Irish last season as a redshirt freshman, leading the team to the Discover BCS National Championship, where it lost to Alabama to finish a 12-1 season.
He completed 187-of-318 passes for 2,405 yards and 12 touchdowns with six interceptions last season. Golson also rushed for 298 yards and six scores.
WNDU-TV earlier reported that Golson no longer was enrolled at Notre Dame.
Former Irish QB Gunner Kiel transferred to Cincinnati this spring.
Senior Tommy Rees is the most experienced quarterback enrolled, with 18 career starts. Fourth-year junior Andrew Hendrix and Malik Zaire, a spring enrollee, are also on the depth chart.
Zaire is the sixth-ranked QB prospect in the Class of 2013, according to the ESPN 300.
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http://theadvocate.com/sports/ lsu/6076051-123/at-last-lsu- and-vanderbilt
http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=So3OTYXZVvE&feature=youtu.be
http://espn.go.com/college- football/
Leon Halip/Getty Images
http://lsufootball.net/
http://espn.go.com/college-
Everett Golson leaves Notre Dame
Updated: May 25, 2013, 11:19 PM ET
By
Matt Fortuna | ESPN.com
Starting quarterback Everett Golson is no longer enrolled at Notre Dame Fighting Irish, the university confirmed to ESPN.com on Saturday night.
More on Notre Dame football
Everything Notre Dame football, from recruiting to news to game coverage, is available from ESPN.com's Matt Fortuna in his Notre Dame football blog.• More: ESPN Chicago's college blog
Golson started 11 games for the Fighting Irish last season as a redshirt freshman, leading the team to the Discover BCS National Championship, where it lost to Alabama to finish a 12-1 season.
He completed 187-of-318 passes for 2,405 yards and 12 touchdowns with six interceptions last season. Golson also rushed for 298 yards and six scores.
WNDU-TV earlier reported that Golson no longer was enrolled at Notre Dame.
Former Irish QB Gunner Kiel transferred to Cincinnati this spring.
Senior Tommy Rees is the most experienced quarterback enrolled, with 18 career starts. Fourth-year junior Andrew Hendrix and Malik Zaire, a spring enrollee, are also on the depth chart.
Zaire is the sixth-ranked QB prospect in the Class of 2013, according to the ESPN 300.
-----------------
http://theadvocate.com/sports/
At last, LSU and Vanderbilt meet — in SEC title game
Show caption
Nation’s top two teams finally meet — in SEC title game
-------------------
HOOVER, Ala. — LSU and Vanderbilt meet after all.
The top two teams in the Southeastern Conference were not on each other’s regular-season schedules, but they won their respective brackets in the SEC tournament, just as they won their respective divisions.
“To be able to match yourself up against them is a real gut check,” outfielder Mike Yastrzemski said. “No matter if it’s a championship game or it’s the first game of the season. That’s a good ballclub, and we just want a chance to see the best teams and test ourselves even more.”
The second-seeded Tigers reached Sunday’s 3:30 p.m. title game by beating Arkansas 3-1 on Saturday at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium to win their second consecutive elimination game.
The top-seeded Commodores followed suit by beating Mississippi State 16-8 to win their third consecutive elimination game.
The current polls are in agreement that Vanderbilt (51-8) is the No. 1 team in the country, and LSU (51-9) is No. 2.
“I know this,” Tigers coach Paul Mainieri said Saturday night. “It’s the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in the country. If this was football they’d call it the game of the century. What an awesome way to cap off the SEC Tournament.”
Tigers outfielder Mark Laird was a late scratch from Saturday’s game and will miss Sunday’s final after spraining an ankle during batting practice.
“He had just made a great catch in left-center field where he must have run 30 yards,” Mainieri said. “He set up again, and there was a ball hit to right-center, and it was a low line drive. He didn’t make the catch, and he went to field the ball, and he stepped on his glove and rolled his left ankle.”
Mainieri said Laird was down for “quite a while,” and there was concern he might have a serious knee injury or a broken ankle, but X-rays revealed a sprained ankle.
Laird will have an MRI on Monday morning in Baton Rouge.
“We don’t really know how severe it is,” Mainieri said.
Andrew Stevenson, who was scheduled to sit out because Arkansas was starting a left-hander, filled on for Laird — even though he woke up Saturday feeling ill.
“He got some medication and felt better as the morning went on,” Mainieri said. “He played a pretty solid game.”
The Tigers were already without starting second baseman JaCoby Jones, who is inactive for the tournament because of a sore wrist.
LSU’s one-hit pitching performance Saturday was nearly flawless, but the rest of the Tigers’ game had glaring flaws.
Christian Ibarra drove in two of LSU’s three runs and would have had another on his two-out RBI double in the seventh if Raph Rhymes hadn’t missed second base (he had to retreat and ultimately stop at third).
“He just missed the bag,” Mainieri said. “It’s kind of hard to explain how it happened. It’s first time I’ve seen that happen this year and probably in several years. At least he had the presence of mind to go back, because he clearly missed it, and if they had appealed, he definitely would have been called out.”
Rhymes was stranded at third and Ibarra at second when Ty Ross grounded out.
Mainieri said he tried unsuccessfully to cheer up Rhymes, who was “so mad and slightly embarrassed” during the last couple of innings.
“He said he would smile if we won and he knew he didn’t cost us the game,” Mainieri said. “Fortunately, we won, and he’s happy now.”
In addition to Rhymes’ base-running blunder, starter Hunter Newman and second baseman Mason Katz committed errors that led to Arkansas’ unearned run in the third, and the Tigers stranded 13 base runners.
“We still have some things we can do better, which we’re going to try and do (in Sunday’s championship game),” Katz said. “If we can put a full game together, we can win this thing.”
Former LSU coach Skip Bertman was one of four SEC Legends honored during the seventh inning of the Tigers game. The others were Hal Baird (Auburn), Terry Shumpert (Kentucky) and Gene McArtor (Missouri).
Each was presented a plaque by SEC Commissioner Mike Slive as the crowd gave a standing ovation.
Reliever Joey Bourgeois bounced back from getting the loss in a 4-1 defeat against Arkansas on Thursday. He entered that game in relief of Aaron Nola to start the eighth inning of a 1-1 game and allowed two hits and a run.
On Saturday, Bourgeois pitched a perfect eighth and set up Chris Cotton’s 15th save, which is one short of Matty Ott’s single-season school record.
“Joey Bourgeois has been struggling lately,” Mainieri said. “He hasn’t gotten the leadoff hitter out in (the) eighth inning in his last four outings. But he came in and pumped two quick strikes. When he was able to get the leadoff hitter, you could see it gave him a real lift.”
The top two teams in the Southeastern Conference were not on each other’s regular-season schedules, but they won their respective brackets in the SEC tournament, just as they won their respective divisions.
“To be able to match yourself up against them is a real gut check,” outfielder Mike Yastrzemski said. “No matter if it’s a championship game or it’s the first game of the season. That’s a good ballclub, and we just want a chance to see the best teams and test ourselves even more.”
The second-seeded Tigers reached Sunday’s 3:30 p.m. title game by beating Arkansas 3-1 on Saturday at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium to win their second consecutive elimination game.
The top-seeded Commodores followed suit by beating Mississippi State 16-8 to win their third consecutive elimination game.
The current polls are in agreement that Vanderbilt (51-8) is the No. 1 team in the country, and LSU (51-9) is No. 2.
“I know this,” Tigers coach Paul Mainieri said Saturday night. “It’s the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in the country. If this was football they’d call it the game of the century. What an awesome way to cap off the SEC Tournament.”
Ankle sprain sidelines Laird
Tigers outfielder Mark Laird was a late scratch from Saturday’s game and will miss Sunday’s final after spraining an ankle during batting practice.
“He had just made a great catch in left-center field where he must have run 30 yards,” Mainieri said. “He set up again, and there was a ball hit to right-center, and it was a low line drive. He didn’t make the catch, and he went to field the ball, and he stepped on his glove and rolled his left ankle.”
Mainieri said Laird was down for “quite a while,” and there was concern he might have a serious knee injury or a broken ankle, but X-rays revealed a sprained ankle.
Laird will have an MRI on Monday morning in Baton Rouge.
“We don’t really know how severe it is,” Mainieri said.
Andrew Stevenson, who was scheduled to sit out because Arkansas was starting a left-hander, filled on for Laird — even though he woke up Saturday feeling ill.
“He got some medication and felt better as the morning went on,” Mainieri said. “He played a pretty solid game.”
The Tigers were already without starting second baseman JaCoby Jones, who is inactive for the tournament because of a sore wrist.
Win has sloppy features
LSU’s one-hit pitching performance Saturday was nearly flawless, but the rest of the Tigers’ game had glaring flaws.
Christian Ibarra drove in two of LSU’s three runs and would have had another on his two-out RBI double in the seventh if Raph Rhymes hadn’t missed second base (he had to retreat and ultimately stop at third).
“He just missed the bag,” Mainieri said. “It’s kind of hard to explain how it happened. It’s first time I’ve seen that happen this year and probably in several years. At least he had the presence of mind to go back, because he clearly missed it, and if they had appealed, he definitely would have been called out.”
Rhymes was stranded at third and Ibarra at second when Ty Ross grounded out.
Mainieri said he tried unsuccessfully to cheer up Rhymes, who was “so mad and slightly embarrassed” during the last couple of innings.
“He said he would smile if we won and he knew he didn’t cost us the game,” Mainieri said. “Fortunately, we won, and he’s happy now.”
In addition to Rhymes’ base-running blunder, starter Hunter Newman and second baseman Mason Katz committed errors that led to Arkansas’ unearned run in the third, and the Tigers stranded 13 base runners.
“We still have some things we can do better, which we’re going to try and do (in Sunday’s championship game),” Katz said. “If we can put a full game together, we can win this thing.”
Bertman among legends
Former LSU coach Skip Bertman was one of four SEC Legends honored during the seventh inning of the Tigers game. The others were Hal Baird (Auburn), Terry Shumpert (Kentucky) and Gene McArtor (Missouri).
Each was presented a plaque by SEC Commissioner Mike Slive as the crowd gave a standing ovation.
Bourgeois bounces back
Reliever Joey Bourgeois bounced back from getting the loss in a 4-1 defeat against Arkansas on Thursday. He entered that game in relief of Aaron Nola to start the eighth inning of a 1-1 game and allowed two hits and a run.
On Saturday, Bourgeois pitched a perfect eighth and set up Chris Cotton’s 15th save, which is one short of Matty Ott’s single-season school record.
“Joey Bourgeois has been struggling lately,” Mainieri said. “He hasn’t gotten the leadoff hitter out in (the) eighth inning in his last four outings. But he came in and pumped two quick strikes. When he was able to get the leadoff hitter, you could see it gave him a real lift.”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Mettenberger Highlights LSU vs. Bama 2012
-------------------http://espn.go.com/college-
Separation Anxiety
As spring practices give way to summer doldrums, coaches have less contact with their players. It's a time often filled with more anxiety and frustration than rest and relaxation. Mark Schlabach » Blog »Leon Halip/Getty Images
- Hurricanes TE Dye, NCAA to discuss affidavit
- Irish paid Weis more than Kelly during 2011
- Ex-Penn State QB Bench transferring to USF
- Host Finebaum joining SEC Network, ESPN
- SEC hires Vincent as associate commissioner
- Ex-PSU prez seeks dismissal of criminal charges
- Sims won't return to Houston for senior season
- Harwell, nation's No. 2 WR in '11, off to Kansas
- Elon joining Colonial in latest expansion move
- Oregon releases additional docs in NCAA probe
- Lions launching Ford Field bowl, sources say
- Recruiting: Michigan is charging into 2014
http://lsufootball.net/
LSU Football - Geaux Tigers!!!
The Advocate | Baseball: At last, LSU and Vanderbilt meet — in SEC title game |
Times Picayune | Baseball: Hunter Newman provides a major boost; Mark Laird out of action |
The Advocate | Bayou Country Superfest draws fans to Baton Rouge |
Knoxville News Sentinel | Gap widening between SEC and everybody else |
The Advocate | Rabalais: Time to sing praises of SEC tradition is over |
Houma Today *1 | Akiem Hicks key for Saints |
Vanderbilt Sports | Baseball: Vandy trounces MSU; will play LSU in the SEC Championship Game |
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