Posts Tagged ‘DC’

Dan Gainor: The media treated the economic stimulus bill like it was unimportant

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Talk Radio News Service, Victoria Jones, interviews Dan Gainor, vice president of the Media Research Center (MRC) at the 2009 Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, D.C. Gainor talks about the results from a media research project the MRC conducted about the media coverage that was done on the economic stimulus bill. Gainor says that the media should have been complaining about the bill and how Congress should have had a couple of more days to see it. Gainor says the media “treated it like it was unimportant.” (05:46)

 
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Scott Cleland: The left party has turned the internet into a digital commons

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Talk Radio News Service, Victoria Jones, interviews Scott Cleland, Chairman of NETCompetition.org at the 2009 Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, D.C. Cleland says that the left party has turned the internet into a digital commons. Cleland also stated that the left party has “bastardized the concept of freedom” with the internet. (11:21)

 
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Karin Agness: 2012- “We should be preparing ourselves and less on supporting a specific candidate”

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Talk Radio News Service, Victoria Jones, interviews Karin Agness, the founder of the Network of Enlightened Women (NeW) at the 2009 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Washington, D.C. Agness talks about the organization, NeW and how people at CPAC should be “preparing ourselves and less on supporting a specific candidate” for 2012. (06:14)

 
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Cherri Jacobus: “People are so in love with Barack Obama, the rock star”

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Talk Radio News Service, Victoria Jones, interviews Cherri Jacobus, Republican strategist and founder of Capitol Strategies public affairs and communications firm, at the 2009 Conservative Political Action Conference in Washington, D.C. Jacobus gives recommendations to Conservatives and Republicans on how to get back in power and about why she thinks President Obama is using the economic crisis as an excuse to put through his social agenda. (09:55)

 
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Large Crowds With Big Smiles

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

By Kayleigh Harvey – Talk Radio News Service

Talk Radio News Service speaks to members of the public who headed to the Presidential Inauguration Ceremony today. January 20, 2009.

Mall Merchants Make a Buck off of Obama

Monday, January 19th, 2009

Before the Inauguration takes place, Merchants on the National mall play to the popularity of Barack Obama.

Reporting from the University of New Mexico Journalism Program

Rep. Holmes Norton apologizes to photographers in Union Station

Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008

Chairwoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.) offers her apology to the photographers who have experienced unfriendly treatment at Union Station in Washington, D.C. She says that a hearing is taking place on the topic of a photo policy in Union Station not only because of American complaints, but also because Union Station is a facility that “enjoys patronage of the Congress of the United States through funding.” (0:48)

 
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Supreme Court: You have a right to protect yourself with guns

Thursday, June 26th, 2008

DC v. Heller

“A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.”

Heller is a security guard at the Federal Judicial Center. He’s licensed to carry a handgun at work. He applied for a permit to take it home, and it was rejected.

DC law has several provisions. You’re not allowed to carry an unregistered handgun, and the law prohibits registration of handguns. You’re also not allowed to carry any guns without a license, and the chief of police can issue licenses. You can own longguns (like shotguns and rifles) and keep them in your home, but you must keep them unloaded and dissembled, or bound by a trigger lock. There’s no exception in the statute allowing you to take the lock off or load it if you want to use it to protect yourself, but the DC government says they wouldn’t prosecute you.

Justice Scalia wrote the majority opinion for 5 Justices: himself, Chief Justice Roberts, and Justices Kennedy, Thomas, and Alito.

The opinion is 64 pages long and spends 56 pages interpreting the amendment before addressing the DC law. The first half of the Second Amendment is read as a preface: it states a purpose but doesn’t limit the amendment’s meaning. This part of the opinion has little support other than saying that this type of construction is common in founding-era documents, and Justice Scalia cites a law review article rather than specific examples. Turning to the “Operative Clause,” Justice Scalia rights that “the people” refers to the normal people: the same ones protected in the 1st, 4th, 9th, 10th, and other amendments.

Justice Scalia reads the 2nd Amendment as protecting two rights: the right to keep arms, and the right to bear arms. He argues that the phrase “to keep and bear arms” was not in common usage, so there is no reason to interpret it as a unitary right. He then turns to historical analysis, finding little support for the proposition that “keep arms” and “bear arms” were only used in military contexts. Therefore, it must be read to mean that average people can possess (”keep”) and carry (”bear”) weapons (”arms”). Further, there was a right in England for Englishmen to be armed (enacted after the Stuart Kings disarmed the populace and packed the militias with their supporters), so the right was preexisting, not new.

The prefatory clause states the purpose of the Amendment. Since the purpose was to make sure people would be able to serve as a militia and the kinds of weapons they would bring would be the ones they owned for home protection, those are the kinds of weapons protected by the Amendment. M-16s and other high-power weapons wouldn’t be useful for home defense and thus would not be expected in a militia. Therefore they would not be protected by the Amendment.

Justice Scalia leaves significant questions unanswered: Does the right only apply against the federal government, or against states, too? Justice Scalia says that the opinion does not allow felons and the mentally ill to possess guns, or allow guns to be taken into sensitive areas like schools, but he does not offer support for those exceptions.

Turning to the DC laws, Justice Scalia says that they prohibit any possession of weapons that would be useful for self defense. Handguns are the weapons most people choose for defense of the home, and DC bans them as a class. Similarly, the restrictions on longguns render them useless for home defense. Thus, the restrictions are unconstitutional.

The challenge did not address the requirement that guns be registered, so that law stands.

Justice Stevens dissents, criticizing the majority’s interpretation of the Second Amendment. He reads it as saying people can have guns only in a military context, since phrases like “bear arms” have often been used when referring to organized state militia.

Justice Breyer takes issue with the invalidation of the DC laws. Under a balancing approach, considering DC’s crime rates and the crime control options available to lawmakers, he says that the DC laws should be allowed to stand. This is similar to the position the Bush Administration took in the case, which was that there is an individual right to possess guns, but that the courts should be more deferential when reviewing the laws.

Protecting D.C.- Management of the Federal Protective Service investigated

Thursday, June 19th, 2008

The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Subcommittee on Oversight Management, the Federal Workforce, and the District of Columbia held a hearing regarding management challenges facing the Federal Protective Service (FPS).

Senators at the hearing questioned Director of the FPS (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement section) Gary Schenkel and Mark Goldstein, Director of Physical Infrastructure Issues at the Government Accountability Office (GAO) about the progress the FPS has had in protecting Washington from terrorist attacks, as well as enforcing the law.

Schenkel argued that his agency has been successful in protecting the city and people of Washington in recent years despite a lack of sufficient funding from the government. With more money, Schenkel said the FPS could increase the protection of the over 9,000 buildings they oversee the protection of yearly. Goldstein noted that despite a lack of proper equipment the GAO has improved training for police officers in recent years and is looking to continue to do so.