Khazen

Complex Catholic women’s vote might influence the election

By Michelle Bauman

 

 

.- An analysis of Catholic women during the 2012 election season shows significant levels of agreement with Church teaching on contraception, as well as unity with other Americans in being concerned about the economy.

“I think the data here paint an interesting picture of Catholic women, in that Catholic women are more likely to agree with the Catholic Church hierarchy on both the social justice issues and also the social issues such as abortion,” said Melissa Deckman, political science professor at Washington College.

In an Oct. 22 panel discussion at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., Deckman analyzed how Catholics fit into “the gender gap in American presidential elections.”

The women’s vote is historically important, she said, noting that there are more women registered to vote and likely to vote than men in the U.S.
 
For decades, women have preferred Democratic candidates, she explained, and this held true in the 2008 election, in which Obama received 56 percent of the women’s vote while only receiving 49 percent of the men’s vote. In contrast, Republican candidate John McCain received only 43 percent of the women’s vote.

“This summer, it looked as though Obama was likely to maintain a double digit advantage among women voters come November, but polls in recent weeks demonstrate that the race for women voters is tightening,” Deckman said.

Despite the recent focus on the “women’s issues” of abortion and free employer-funded contraception, she observed that “women have been more likely to vote Democratic not because of reproductive rights issues, historically, but because of their attitudes about the social safety net.”

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Flying Business Class Really Is An All-You-Can-Eat Buffet

 

DOHA — I’m currently on my way from New York City to Tanzania, where I’ll visit "the best hotel in the world" and some lesser-known game reserves in the southern part of the country.

After a 12-hour flight from JFK International Airport, I’ve spent the last six hours in Qatar Airways’ premium terminal at Doha International Airport, and there’s almost nothing to do here but eat.

Eating has pretty much been the theme of my trip since I arrived at JFK last night around 9 p.m. It’s my first time flying business class, and I’m quickly realizing that one of the biggest differences between a coach ticket and a business class ticket is the food.

First there was the buffet in the Admirals Club at JFK’s Terminal 8, which featured everything from roast chicken to pasta salad even though it was nearing midnight by the time I left.

And from the moment I sat down on the first leg of my flight on Qatar Airways, I was plied with food. Dinner, which was served around 1 a.m., was a five-course meal that included an amuse bouche and cheese course. The airline is known for its food and service — it was recently named the world’s best airline by Skytrax — but I still didn’t actually expect to enjoy the taste of my airplane meal.

Now I’m Qatar Airways’ holding pen for business class travelers, and it’s pretty impressive. The expansive room has several seating and rest areas, as well as a business center, kids’ playroom, and clinic. There are no blaring speakers, either — an airline employee walks around the entire center and quietly informs travelers every time a flight starts boarding.

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Lebanon seeks to quell violence; FBI sends help

    Lebanese soldiers in armored vehicles fanned out across the country on Monday to break down civilian roadblocks and chase gunmen off the streets as tempers flared over the killing of a top intelligence official who was a powerful opponent of Syrian involvement in Lebanon. Sectarian clashes killed at least five people. A sixth person […]

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Hassan en-route to visit threatened MP when killed

  Future bloc MP Ahmad Fatfat told CNN on Monday that slain Internal Security Forces intelligence chief Wissam al-Hassan was on his way to meet with Future bloc MP Ammar Houri to discuss a recent threat allegedly linked to Syria when he was assassinated on Friday in Beirut’s Ashrafieh. According to Fatfat, the blast which went […]

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France voices support for Lebanon’s stability

  French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius called Progressive Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblatt on Sunday and voiced France’s support for Lebanon’s stability, the PSP said in a statement. The statement also said that Fabius voiced France’s solidarity with Lebanon “in this critical phase” as well as “support for Lebanon’s stability.” Earlier on Sunday, demonstrators congregating in […]

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Suleiman Asks Govt. Not to Provide Cover for Criminals

  President Michel Suleiman on Sunday stressed that the government “must not provide cover for perpetrators and criminals” and called for “speeding up the indictments” in the cases of ex-minister Michel Samaha and the Nahr al-Bared clashes, in a speech eulogizing slain Maj. Gen. Wissam a-Hasan, chief of the Internal Security Forces’ Intelligence Bureau. “I cannot […]

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Wissam al-Hassan funeral in Beirut

    The funeral for a top Lebanese security official has turned violent as protesters demanding the resignation of the government poured into the streets around central Beirut amid teargas, rock throwing and the occasional burst of gunfire by security forces. Lebanon’s political opposition had called upon protesters to use the funeral of General Wissam al-Hassan, […]

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History Of Social Media (1971-2012) [INFOGRAPHIC]

  Social networking seems like a very new phenomenon and, certainly for the younger generation, it’s hard to imagine a world without Facebook and Twitter. But social isn’t (and never was) just these two platforms – in fact, it actually predates both of them by over thirty years. Yep. The history of social media is, […]

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Northeastern University School of Law has most liberal law students, Princeton Review says

The Princeton Review ranked the Northeastern University School of Law as having the most liberal law students, in its 2013 edition of the “Best 168 Law Schools,” which was released last week.

The Princeton Review surveyed 18,000 students attending the 168 law schools to decide a number of titles, including the schools with the “best professors,” “best classroom experience,” and “best career prospects.”

To determine whether a school was liberal or conservative, students were asked the following question, “If there is a prevailing political bent among students at your school, how would you characterize it?” Answer choices were: very liberal, liberal, middle of the road, somewhat conservative, very conservative. The Vermont Law School came in second, and American University ranked third. The Ave Maria School of Law in Florida was named the law school with the most conservative students.

Among other rankings by the Princeton Review, Simmons College offered the best opportunities for women among business schools. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology business school ranked the toughest to get into. The Yale Law School (not Harvard) ranked as the toughest law school to get into.

Liza Hays, a third-year student at the Northeastern School of Law, said she used to work for MoveOn.org, a public policy advocacy group that is considered very liberal. But at Northeastern, she leans to the right.

“I feel conservative at Northeastern,” Hays said. “And in the general population I’m liberal.”

Daniel Medwed, who teaches criminal law at Northeastern, said he has taught at two other law schools, one in New York and the other in Utah, and that Northeastern students are by far the most progressive.

“[It’s] really refreshing and exciting as a teacher,” he said.

Medwed said at his previous schools there were “pockets of progressive students,” and he is pleased with the number of forward thinking students at Northeastern who care deeply about public interest law. Many of his students are interested in pursuing careers in the non-profit world, he said.

“What’s wonderful about Northeastern and what attracted me to work here is the public service aspect,” Medwed said. “A large number of students are committed to serving the public interest.”

Audai Cote, who is originally from Revere, said the political bent at the Northeastern School of Law is reflective of Massachusetts in general, he said.

“It’s almost a smaller representation of Boston,” said Cote, who is a first year student.

Cote said he is socially liberal but fiscally conservative, and that he usually does not talk politics while at school. He thinks the Princeton Review ranking is strongly tied to the substantial number of LGBT students at Northeastern.

Sarah Young, a third-year student, agreed.

 

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the killing of senior intelligence official Wissam al-Hassan

BEIRUT (Reuters) – Sunni Muslims took to the streets and burned tires across Lebanon in protest against the killing of senior intelligence official Wissam al-Hassan in a car bomb on Friday, witnesses said.Protesters, infuriated by the death of the prominent Sunni, blocked roads in the eastern Bekaa valley region, the northern area of Akkar, neighborhoods of the capital Beirut and in the southern city of Sidon. Former Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri accused Syrian President Bashar al-Assad – a member of an offshoot of Shi’ite Islam – of being behind the huge car bomb which killed Hassan and at least seven other people in central Beirut on Friday. The attack has brought the violence in neighboring Syria to the Lebanese capital, confirming fears that the conflict is infecting the surrounding region.

 

Sunni Muslim protesters burn tires and block street in Beirut as they protest against kiling Senior Lebanese intelligence official al-Hassan

 

 

Firefighters extinguish fire at the scene of an explosion in Ashrafieh, central Beirut

 

 

People react as Lebanese policemen secure the scene of an explosion in Ashrafieh in Central Beirut

 

 

Raw: Car bomb rips through East Beirut

 

 

Members of civil defence and Lebanese civilians carry an injured man after an explosion

 

 

Lebanese Red Cross and civil defence personnel work at site of explosion in the Ashafriyeh

 

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