Friday, May 31, 2013

FOXNews.com: Rise of the breadwinner momand America's families

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Rise of the breadwinner momand America's families
May 31st 2013, 18:08

  • Breadwinner Moms Main.jpg

A new study from the Pew Social & Demographic Trends Project finds that working mothers, considered by many to be a boon for society, have become primary breadwinners in a record 40 percent of American households with children—up from 11 percent in 1960. To call that dramatic would be an understatement.

This trend is, of course, a direct result of women's higher rates of education and labor force participation. Today, more women than men hold bachelor's degrees; and women make up nearly half the American workforce. It's all quite impressive.

But for every gain, there is a loss.

The vast majority of breadwinner moms are single mothers. That's hardly a step in the right direction.

Though we're loathe to admit it we know that as long as both parents are absent children will suffer the consequences.

Despite its widespread social acceptance of single mothers, children who grow up without fathers suffer a host of social, emotional and psychological problems: crime, drugs, promiscuity, teen pregnancy, suicide, and dropouts. That's not to say single mothers aren't doing their best; it's merely to say there's only so much they can do.

But single motherhood is only part of the story.

There's another group of breadwinner moms on the rise: married ones. "Among all U.S. households with children, the share of married breadwinner moms has jumped from 4 percent in 1960 to 15 percent in 2011," writes the Associated Press' Hope Yen.

That mothers, single or otherwise, have become the top earners in 4 in 10 U.S. households is part of the "dramatic transformation we've seen in family structure and family dynamics over the past 50 years or so," said Kim Parker, associate director of the Pew Social & Demographic Trends Project. "Women's roles have changed, marriage rates have declined—the family looks a lot different than it used to."

Indeed it does. The question is, is this a good thing or a bad thing? 

That is where Americans are divided.

On one side of the debate, people point to economics as the reason parents can't be home with their kids. But the issue is bigger than that. Ultimately, it's about how to reconcile our conflicting views of women's roles with what we know is best for children and families. We know we can't return to "Ozzie and Harriet." But we also know something huge has been lost.

And our ambivalence shows.

According to Pew, roughly 79 percent of Americans reject the notion that women should return to their traditional roles. Yet a mere 21 percent of those polled said the trend of more mothers of young children working outside the home is a good thing.

Indeed, the majority of Americans—45% of women and 57% of men—say children are "better off if their mother is at home." These findings are commensurate with results at Public Agenda, a nonpartisan polling organization that's been tracking this issue for years.

How, then, do we rectify our conflicting beliefs that women who are also mothers shouldn't return to traditional roles but that children need a mother at home? That is the issue.

Politicians and women's groups talk endlessly about family-friendly policies and government-mandated parental leave and child care.

They talk of "change" all day long.

But some things in life don't change, and children's needs are at the top of the list. Their needs are the same today as they were one hundred years ago.

And somewhere, deep down, we know this. We know that while we've thrown out the old model, we're going to need a new one. We know we need some version of the old to accommodate the new.

That more and more dads are staying home is a promising trend, indeed. It means we're finally getting it. (Either that, or we've been forced to "get it" because jobs are scarce and mom makes more money. Either way, the result is good.)

We also know, though we're loathe to admit it, that as long as both parents are absent, or simply distracted by their jobs, children will suffer the consequences—regardless of whether the distraction is borne of necessity or choice. All young children know is that their parents aren't there. Why they're not there is beside the point.

To be sure, this is a tough pill to swallow for a new generation. But swallow it we must.

Suzanne Venker has written extensively about politics, parenting, and the influence of feminism on American society. Her latest book, How to Choose a Husband and Make Peace with Marriage, is now available at Amazon. Also available is her new Kindle Single, The War on Men. For more on Suzanne, visit www.suzannevenker.com.

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FOXNews.com: The global battle over free speech, religion on the Web

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The global battle over free speech, religion on the Web
May 31st 2013, 13:45

The gruesome terror attack against a British soldier in London last week has resulted in a number of arrests by British law enforcement authorities. But the targets of their crackdown are not only radical Islamists threatening more terror and mayhem. 

More than 10 people in Britain have been charged with violating laws against inciting hatred and giving offense on social media.

The Police in Surrey issued a warning that it "will not tolerate language used in a public place, including on social media websites, which causes harassment, alarm or distress." 

We cannot create an international system where the followers of various religions or political ideologies can demand that their respective taboos be off limits in the public debate.

While some of those suspects were put before a magistrate, others were simply visited by police officers who warned them not to cross the nebulous red line of unacceptable language on social media.

By prosecuting those who use the Internet to vent their shock and anger over two fanatics' despicable murder (as it played out on prime time television), British authorities have come down on the wrong line on one of the defining issues of our time; the global battle of values over the relationship between free speech and religion. 

Recent years have seen increasing demands from governments and individuals that free speech should be limited – both in the West and in international law, in order to protect religious sensitivities. 

In a global world this conflict has become explosive as cartoons published in Denmark and videos uploaded in America have led to violent riots from Cairo to Karachi. 

The outcome of this battle will have profound consequences for the ability of people everywhere to freely express themselves and follow their beliefs. 

In the West, the birthplace of religious tolerance and free speech, the fatwa against Salman Rushdie in 1979 ushered in a new era where radical Islamists viewed authors, journalists and cartoonists who "insulted" Islam as fair game for threats, violence and sometimes even death. 

In 2005 tiny, liberal Denmark became the epicenter of this new obscurantism when Jyllands-Posten published 12 cartoons depicting the prophet Muhammad.

Since 2010 several terrorist attacks against people associated with the Muhammad cartoons have failed or been foiled. This includes a plot to break into the offices of Jyllands-Posten, behead its journalists and throw the severed heads onto the street. Danish cartoonist Kurt Westergaard was attacked in his home by an axe wielding extremist. 

In its latest threat assessment the Danish Intelligence Service concludes that the terrorist threat against Denmark is "serious" and higher than in 2006, when the cartoon crisis raged. 

The threat is attributable to international as well as domestic terrorists aiming to "avenge" the publication and republication of said cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. 

In 2012 the U.S. experienced its own mini-crisis when a crude anti-Islamic film was used by Islamists to fuel violent anti-American protests in countries such as Egypt and Pakistan. 

Despite this disturbing development governments and intellectuals in liberal democracies have often given only reluctant support to the value of freedom of expression instead of employing  language that obfuscates and relativizes the difference between words that wound and actions that kill. 

By this logic those who insult religious feelings are extremists and that different from those who respond to insults with violence.

The meak responses of governments in the West not only erodes free speech in democracies, it also legitimizes the increasing repression of religious minorities in Muslim majority countries. 

In Pakistan Ahmadiya Muslims are legally discriminated against in the constitution; and Christians are disproportionately targeted by vague and nebulous blasphemy laws. 

In Egypt, human-rights organizations report that respect for basic human rights is worse under President Morsi than it was during Mubarak's autocracy. 

The new Egyptian constitution fails to guarantee freedom of conscience and religion for many minorities. 

In Bangladesh hundreds of thousands of hardline Islamists have called for the hanging of atheists and others deemed guilty of blasphemy. 

In Iran members of the Baha'i faith are being systematically persecuted due to their "heretical" and "blasphemous" religion. 

This grim picture demonstrates the fallacy of the argument that a restriction of free speech fosters tolerance and is necessary for social peace. 

Yet it is this state of affairs that the British authorities are mimicking with the panicky reaction to crude anti-Islamic tweets and Facebook updates.

Free speech and freedom of religion are not a threat to but rather the necessary precondition for social peace and tolerance in pluralist societies. 

These values allow the religious believer, the skeptic and the atheist to live together in peace, each one free to follow his or her own conscience in matters of politics, philosophy and religion.

The very freedoms that allow someone to insult religious sensitivities also allow the religious believer to practice his or her faith free from fear of persecution. 

That crucial insight was a stroke of genius -- perhaps one of the most important -- exhibited by the Founding Fathers of the United States of America. It's the reason why the Bahai' community in Wilmette, Illinois is flourishing  while Bahai's in Iran are being imprisoned and tortured. 

Yet it is also this heritage that Western states jeopardize when appeasing illiberal states and religious extremists who demand a heckler's veto when it comes to religion. 

We cannot create an international system where the followers of various religions or political ideologies can demand that their respective taboos be off limits in the public debate. 

Looking ahead to the future, if we want to avoid further bloodshed and another cartoon crisis we need more not less debate. For that to occur a firm defense of free speech is a necessary precondition.

Jacob Mchangama is co-founder and director of the Freedom Rights Project and has recently released the short film "Collision! free speech and religion" available at www.freetochoose.tv.

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FOXNews.com: Gun control just got even more difficult

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Gun control just got even more difficult
May 31st 2013, 14:42

  • 3d printable gun.jpg

    A portion of a downloadable blueprint that a 3D printer can use to build a gun.

Gun control, any already difficult task, just got even more difficult.

The 3D printing revolution is well under way. This wonderful new technology will allow small companies and even individuals to manufacture a wide range of items, such as medical devices that fit each individual's unique size and shape.

However, it is increasingly obvious that guns and gun parts can be made, even including entire assault weapons.

Unfortunately, the initial regulatory proposals will likely increase crime. As usual, new technology is hard to stop, and the Department of Homeland Security last week declared:  

Until now the stumbling block has been to design a gun that would be sturdy enough, something that can withstand the explosion when a bullet is shot down the barrel. In other words, you don't want the gun to go off like a grenade in your hands instead of hitting the target. 

Cody Wilson, the 25-year old founder of Defense Distributed, created a ruckus when he announced his successful design of a plastic gun that would operate like a normal one. 

Plastic guns can't be detected by metal detectors and would pose an obvious danger. But the hype so far exceeds what is practical. 

When police in Australia downloaded the blueprint and easily made two plastic guns with a 3-D printer, one of the two guns suffered "catastrophic failure" on its first shot. The other fired one successful shot before failing. The conclusion of the report the police released on last Friday was obvious: you are taking your life into your own hands if you use the plastic version of these guns.

That said, plastic guns are really a side issue, for 3-D printers are increasingly allowing for other materials, including metal. Really all that needs to be metal are the gun's steel barrel and firing pin. 

Wilson used a metal nail for the firing pin. 100,000 copies of the handgun blueprint from Wilson's website were downloaded around the world in just 2 days, with most of downloads coming from Spain, followed by the US, Brazil, and Germany. 

The heavy downloads in Spain, Brazil, and Germany likely reflects attempts to evade their extremely restrictive licensing on semi-automatic handguns. 

The Obama administration quickly stopped Wilson from distributing the file by threatening legal action, but it was already too late. 

Legal or not, it doesn't really matter: just as we've seen with movies, file sharing is unstoppable. 

According to Torrent Freak, just a single episode of HBO's Game of Thrones in 2012 was illegally downloaded an estimated 4.3 million times

As of last Friday, after Wilson had stopped distributing the file, his blueprint could be downloaded from over 4,000 computers all around the world. 

This blueprint is now among the top 10% most downloaded bit torrent files. Politicians just don't seem to understand the new technology. 

Senator Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Rep. Steve Israel (D-N.Y.) and even the California state legislature are proposing to regulate 3-D printing. 

The proposal in California goes farthest and would treat 3-D printers like guns, considering background checks, mandatory serial numbers, and even a registration process. But even if the government registered every printer, what is going to stop gangs from stealing these printers? 

Would the government try to monitor what people do with legally owned printers?

Perhaps, in the end, people will need prior government permission for every item printed. 

In any event, printers could soon be found everywhere. 

Gartner, a company that specializes in evaluating technology research, predicts  

The cheapest 3-D printers are already available for as little as $10,000. And what happens if we so thoroughly restrict access to printers? 

Besides stifling technology generally, the issue has the same problem that's plaguing gun control: the most law-abiding citizens will be the ones obeying the law. Only criminals will get access to these inexpensively made guns, the Australian police made their guns for only $35 each

This is a lesson Americans learned the hard way, for instance in Washington, D.C. and Chicago, where bans primarily disarmed law-abiding citizens and only increased violent crime.

Indeed, around the world, every time guns are banned, murder go up. Politicians must stop their wishful thinking. It is already exceedingly difficult to prevent criminals from getting their hands on guns. And technology is rapidly making gun control even more counterproductive.

John R. Lott, Jr. is a  FoxNews.com contributor. An economist and former chief economist at the United States Sentencing Commission, he is also a leading expert on guns. He is the author of several books, including "More Guns, Less Crime." His latest book is "At the Brink: Will Obama Push Us Over the Edge? (Regnery Publishing 2013)." Follow him on Twitter@johnrlottjr.

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FOXNews.com: Protecting privacy and free speech from an abusive, out-of-control government

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Protecting privacy and free speech from an abusive, out-of-control government
May 31st 2013, 12:01

A recent survey -- taken prior to revelations about IRS misconduct and commissioned by the American Conservative Union -- showed that a majority of Americans have become increasingly concerned about their free speech and privacy rights.

Americans since the founding of our Republic, have placed the protection of our personal freedoms and right to privacy above all else. We have been rightfully alarmed over the past months as we have watched the federal government intrude into the private lives of its citizens.

Whether its members of the press being submitted to eavesdropping without due process, certain members of Congress trying to forcefully obtain names of contributors to our favorite causes, government forcing businesses who bid for government work to inform this administration to whom they have made political contributions, or the IRS taking oppressive and selective actions against organizations with conservative leanings, it is clear that we are at a tipping point.

We must redouble our efforts to rein in government, because we are the ultimate check on its power.  

Take it from me. My family learned first-hand the consequences of losing our personal freedoms in our native Cuba where we lost every right a free person should expect. They included the right to express one's political beliefs, the right to disagree with one's government without repercussions and the right to be free from government intrusion into every aspect of one's life.

In America one section of our government grants political asylum to citizens from other countries fleeing oppressive regimes who have taken away all their rights, while another section of our same government exerts total power and authority over our personal finances and intimidates its own citizenry at will. This must end.

Americans have spoken. About a month ago the American Conservative Union (ACU) asked McLaughlin and Associates to conduct a comprehensive survey on privacy and free speech.  

This was long before the IRS Director of Exempt Organizations Louis Lerner publicly acknowledged that they were targeting conservative organizations for special scrutiny during the application process. 

We can only imagine how the responses from our April survey would look now, after the revelations about the IRS and AP scandals.

ACU's national poll of 600 voters on April 4 showed that 99% of all Americans supported free speech and the right to privacy which were so blatantly violated by the IRS for conservatives, tea parties and religious groups. Those polled were a representative sample of national ideological and partisan demographics, with more Democrats than Republicans participating and more moderates and liberals combined than conservatives.

The survey found that 89% "approved protecting the rights of privacy of American citizens to speak out on issues without fear of reprisal or retribution from anyone, including those in government, the media, their employers or opposing  issue advocacy groups."

Similarly, 86% agreed that "private American citizens have a right to privacy when they support any issue advocacy groups." And 86% agreed that "American citizens have a right to privacy when they support independent issue groups."

Two thirds of all voters already believe that our individual freedoms are threatened by Washington. A whopping 68% agree that "our current individual freedoms are being threatened by more federal government regulations from Washington." Only 27% disagree.

Six in ten voters say making their donations public would deter them from contributing to issue causes. Fifty-nine percent of all voters said yes to the question "if they knew that any contribution you gave to any cause such as Planned Parenthood, the NRA, Greenpeace, the NAACP etc, was publicly available for anyone to see at any time, would it deter you from contributing to such causes." Only 33% said no.  

Specifically regarding President Obama, most voters already view him as wanting to limit free speech. Before the IRS targeting of conservatives, tea parties and religious groups, the majority of voters agreed 50% to 44% that "Barack Obama's administration has shown a pattern of attempting to limit free speech and take away your personal rights."

Surprisingly, the majority of voters in our April survey also thought that the Obama administration was trying to discourage political opposition. 

Fifty-two percent of all voters agreed that "by pushing for the disclosure of donors to non-profit groups that advocate on issues of public concern and causes, such as the environment, education and the economy, the Obama administration is merely seeking to discourage support of positions that are not politically correct or that people may be uncomfortable having disclosed to the public at large." Only 32% disagreed.

A plurality of voters are already suspect of their elected leaders' motives as simply trying to silence their critics. Forty-four percent agreed that "politicians want to require the public release of any American who gives money to any issue or cause so that they can see who opposes them and take measures to silence their critics." Only 43% disagreed, but imagine what that result would be today!

Bottom line is that the vast majority of Americans support protections for free speech and privacy, which are quickly being chipped away. As we see how deep and widespread this problem is -- I suggest that the only solution is to shrink the size and scope of government.  

First we need to overhaul the tax code and the IRS and ensure that privacy and free speech are protected.  But we also need to look at what other bureaucracies are too big, too powerful and have become a threat to the individual liberty of law abiding American citizens.

America is an exceptional nation because it was founded on the idea that government is the servant of the people and not its master. We must redouble our efforts to rein in government, because we are the ultimate check on its power.  

Because let's be honest – if the government has the power to go after and attempt to silence one group of people, why would it just stop there? Who else could it target?
 

Al Cardenas is chairman of the American Conservative Union.

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Thursday, May 30, 2013

FOXNews.com: Heidi Klum's right -- we should pay our kids to eat healthy food

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Heidi Klum's right -- we should pay our kids to eat healthy food
May 30th 2013, 11:30

  • Heidi Klum

When a girlfriend called me yesterday to say, "Oh My Gawd have you heard that Heidi Klum pays her kids to eat healthy foods?" I replied, "Oh that's genius." and then the phone went really quiet and I was like, "Was that not the answer you were expecting?"

Since nature (and cell phones) abhor a vacuum I took the silence as an invitation to not quite lecture, but rather to expound on my enthusiasm for paying kids to eat healthily. 

You see just a few days ago USC published a study demonstrating the import of good habits during times of stress. It found that during times of stress students are more likely to stick to old behaviors including those like exercise and healthy eating. 

Kids don't love making their beds or brushing their teeth but good parents tie these activities to allowance every day. Why not pay a kid to eat well?

In one experiment researchers followed students over an entire semester including during exams and found that students who were in the habit of eating a healthy breakfast were more likely to stick to routine and ate especially well in the mornings -- even while under pressure.

Armed with this knowledge (and a fist full of common sense) I've decided that my children will be raised in a home where I give it my best shot to instill 18 years of healthy habits on them before setting them loose in the world. There's a lot of exercise around here, there's healthy food and there's payment when they do things well.

I pay for grades. When I do good work I get paid. When I do great work I occasionally get a perk or a bonus so I'm not sure that childhood shouldn't be the same. 

If the kids go to school and bring home a bunch of B's they get to continue to live their above average lifestyle (few chores, lots of freedom, comic books everywhere). If the kids bring home a slate of A's then they get their bonus check for Mom LLC. It just makes sense.

Recently a 9-year-old girl took Don Thompson, the CEO of McDonalds, to task for tricking kids into thinking that their food is healthy and he replied by telling a 9-year-old child that McDonalds serves fruits and vegetables. They are even thinking of a kiwi on a stick and something that includes pineapple. These are the food wars parents all over America are waging.

So while my kids are fed sweet teas, sodas and ice cream for every celebration at their school I have the opportunity to temper all this sugar by making water the primary drink in our house and fruits and vegetables the go-to snack.

Obesity is our national eating disorder. In the US 68.8% of adults are overweight or obese and 35.7% are obese. And 31.8% of children and adolescents are overweight or obese and 16.9% are obese. 

I'm a 43-year-old woman. When I look at my elementary school class photos there aren't any fat kids. There's a girl we said was fat, but she's positively lithe and lean compared to today's kids. 

There's no time to be delicate about this. America is fat and I'll be damned if my kids will be weaned on a steady diet of frankenfood and other bad choices.

There are a lot of theories about what makes us fat and it's unlikely that we'll find just one cause but it is abundantly clear that healthy eating habits are the vaccine against obesity (and about a zillion other diseases or disorders). 

Kids don't love making their beds, studying for tests or brushing their teeth but good parents tie these activities to allowance every day. Why not pay a kid to eat well?

Here's the only thing that's a little weird. According to an article in London's Daily Mail the supermodel and mom pays her kids a dollar to down a healthy fruit smoothie at breakfast. We all know that the Klum kids have basically won the DNA lotto but I'm worried about their business acumen. A dollar for a fruit smoothie? The only thing I'd get for a dollar around here is an eye roll.

Jessica Gottlieb is a married mother of two and a blogger in Los Angeles. For more visit her blog: Jessica Gottlieb: A Los Angeles Mom.

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FOXNews.com: Why the 'five laws of decline' are behind IRS, Benghazi scandals

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Why the 'five laws of decline' are behind IRS, Benghazi scandals
May 30th 2013, 10:00

Americans are both outraged and energized over headlines highlighting scandals in Washington related to the Benghazi tragedy and the IRS targeting of conservative groups. But there is a bigger concern at play in these events and it's something very few people are talking about although it underpins and links the two scandals together.

What we have identified as the "Five laws of decline" are creating systemic problems that are eroding our government and other institutions.

These five systemic problems, which include increased quantity leads to decreased quality, aren't going to be fixed by Congressional hearings, or even heads rolling at at the Internal Revenue Service. Even if State Department, IRS, White House and other officials are held fully accountable for whatever went wrong, these five laws of decline will remain in force—and such crises will continue.

The Constitution provides judicial and congressional checks on the executive branch, but they are only belatedly and timidly used anymore.

For example, just one of these systemic laws of decline is directly responsible for the IRS and Benghazi scandals.  

President Obama inadvertently hinted at this problem when he vowed to hold the Internal Revenue Service accountable if reports of political targeting are proven true: 
"Because the IRS as an independent agency requires absolute integrity, and people have to have confidence that they're ... applying the laws in a non-partisan way."

This quote points to a root problem. The president said that the IRS "requires absolute integrity." This is the opposite of the American Founders view. 

The framers valued integrity, but they built the Constitution to work even if the leaders had no integrity—especially in such cases, in fact. 

James Madison famously said that since men aren't angels, all government officials and agencies must be vigorously checked and balanced.

Only effective checks (not hopes of official integrity), keep government in line. The White House seems to have believed that the level of integrity from government officials at the IRS, State Department and other agencies would be enough (it is doubtful they would have afforded such trust to business leaders or taxpayers).

Nor is this a partisan issue. The current scandals seem all too familiar to those who watched the Bush White House promise that there were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and target key Democratic state attorneys general for unwarranted investigations. 

Same story, different actors. 

Executive overreach is endemic in Washington, regardless of which party is in power.

There are, put simply, too few effective checks on the sprawling executive branch with all its programs, funding, institutions and agencies. As long as they aren't checked, we're going to see more abuses and scandals.

The Constitution provides judicial and congressional checks on the executive branch, but they are only belatedly and timidly used anymore.

In the case of the IRS and Benghazi, it was the media that checked the Executive branch. On the one hand: good for the media. Quality journalism should be a check on government arrogance and abusive secrecy. But a functional free government can only last if its branches effectively check each other.

This isn't so much a "conservative vs. liberal" problem as a "Washington vs. America" issue. Washington is systemically dysfunctional, the people want real progress, and partisan politics can't provide effective solutions because the executive branch isn't adequately checked. 

Real change is going to require a new look at checks and balances, and the only real checks include a check on an agency's ability to spend.

Even if conservatives win the day on these two scandals—if Congress fires or fines those responsible for IRS targeting and Benghazi, and sets up a system where this can never happen again (and that's a pretty big "if")—we'll continue to see these kinds of crises and scandals until we understand the systemic causes and start addressing the real, underlying problems.

Oliver DeMille is co-author of "LeaderShift: A Call for Americans to Finally Stand Up and Lead" (Business Plus)

Orrin Woodward is co-author of "LeaderShift: A Call for Americans to Finally Stand Up and Lead" (Business Plus)

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FOXNews.com: An assault on freedom of the press

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An assault on freedom of the press
May 30th 2013, 11:00

The firestorm commenced by the revelation of the execution of a search warrant on the personal email server of my Fox News colleague James Rosen continues to rage, and the conflagration engulfing the First Amendment continues to burn; and it is the Department of Justice itself that is fanning the flames.

As we know from recent headlines, in the spring of 2010, the DOJ submitted an affidavit to a federal judge in Washington, D.C., in which an FBI agent swore under oath that Rosen was involved in a criminal conspiracy to release classified materials, and in the course of that conspiracy, he aided and abetted a State Department vendor in actually releasing them. The precise behavior that the FBI and the DOJ claimed was criminal was Rosen's use of "flattery" and his appeals to the "vanity" of Stephen Wen-Ho Kim, the vendor who had a security clearance. The affidavit persuaded the judge to issue a search warrant for Rosen's personal email accounts that the feds had sought.

The government's theory of the case was that the wording of Rosen's questions to Kim facilitated Kim's release of classified materials, and Rosen therefore bore some of the criminal liability for Kim's answers to Rosen's questions. Kim has since been indicted for the release of classified information (presumably to Rosen), a charge that he vigorously denies. Rosen has not been charged, and the DOJ has said it does not intend to do so.

The government knew that Rosen committed no crime -- not as a conspirator nor as an aider and abettor -- by asking Kim for his opinion on the likely North Korean response to the then-pending U.N. condemnations of North Korea's nuclear and ballistic missile tests. By telling a federal judge, however, that Rosen somehow was criminally complicit in the release of classified information by the manner in which he put questions to Kim, the DOJ substantially misled the judge into signing a search warrant, which, when executed, would enable the feds to read Rosen's private emails. Then, by reading them the feds were led to Fox News telephone numbers in New York City and in Washington, which they since have acknowledged they have monitored.

When asked at a congressional hearing just two weeks ago on May 15 to address this, Attorney General Eric Holder replied: "With regard to the potential prosecution of the press for the disclosure of material, that is not something that I have ever been involved in, heard of or would think would be a wise policy."  

Whether under oath or not, because Holder spoke in his official capacity before a congressional committee in its official capacity, he was legally bound to tell the truth and legally bound not to mislead the committee. Last Thursday, President Obama in a speech on national security stated, "Journalists should not be at legal risk for doing their jobs. Our focus must be on those who break the law." The next day, the DOJ leaked to NBC News the inconvenient truth that Holder had personally authorized seeking the search warrant for Rosen's personal emails; and over the long holiday weekend, the DOJ confirmed that.

What's going on here? Isn't the Attorney General bound by the same laws to tell the truth as the rest of us are? Doesn't the First Amendment protect from criminal prosecution and government harassment those who ask questions in pursuit of the truth?

The answers to these questions are obvious and well grounded. One of Holder's predecessors, Nixon administration Attorney General John Mitchell, went to federal prison after he was convicted of lying to Congress. The same Attorney General who told Congress he had "not been involved" in the Rosen search warrant before the DOJ he runs revealed that he not only was involved, he personally approved the decision to seek the search warrant, must know that the Supreme Court ruled that reporters have an absolute right to ask any questions they want of any source they can find. The same case held that they cannot be punished or harassed because the government doesn't like the answers given to their questions. And the same case held that the if answers concern a matter in which the public is likely to have a material interest, they can legally be published, even if they contain state secrets.

The whole purpose of the First Amendment is to permit open, wide, robust, even unfettered debate about the government. That debate cannot he held in an environment in which reporters can be surveilled by the government because of their flattery. And the government cannot serve the people it was elected to serve when its high-ranking officials can lie to or mislead the congressional committees before which they have given testimony.

The great baseball pitcher Roger Clemens spent a few million dollars successfully defending himself against charges brought by Holder's DOJ, which accused him of doing what Holder himself has arguably done. Is this the government you expect in a free society? Is this what you expect from the government in a free society? And when reporters clam up because they don't like the feds breathing down their necks when they reveal inconvenient -- or even innocuous -- truths about the government, don't we all suffer in our ignorance?

Andrew P. Napolitano, a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey, is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano has written seven books on the U.S. Constitution. His latest is "Theodore and Woodrow: How Two American Presidents Destroyed Constitutional Freedom."

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FOXNews.com: With the IRS it's now your money and your life

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With the IRS it's now your money and your life
May 30th 2013, 11:37

President Obama's communications czar, Dan Pfeiffer, usually chooses his words carefully. So it's no accident when he says, "The law is irrelevant" even as he concedes that the IRS targeting scandal is "inexcusable." The law provides more than verbal knuckle wrapping for those who violate a sacred public trust, but Mr. Pfeiffer wants us to know the law is irrelevant here.

The law must be irrelevant if the official in charge of target selection – Sarah Hall Ingram – not only has not been disciplined, but has in fact been rewarded. She was rewarded first with $103,390 in bonuses for exemplary performance.

But more than that, she has been rewarded with a major promotion. She will no longer oversee who does and who does not get their requests for tax-exempt status granted. Instead, she will oversee the entire operation of the new Affordable Care Act, commonly known as ObamaCare.

It is time we consider abolishing the IRS and our subjective tax structure that invites government intrusion.

The IRS scandal is not unprecedented. As George Will and others have noted, President Richard Nixon was charged with political misuse of the IRS. 

The vast powers of this agency are not limited to taxing us. They can demand and get a vast amount of information about our personal lives. Applicants seeking to register with IRS were required to divulge what they read, whom they hired, what they talk about, even what they pray about. One pro-life group was instructed to abstain from protesting the abortions performed by Planned Parenthood. In short, they had to agree to give up their constitutional right to petition for redress of grievances as a condition for exemption from taxes. As the editors of the Associated Press are learning, under this administration, First Amendment freedoms of religion, press, assembly, and petition are all at risk.

The president's takeover of America's health care – one sixth of our economy – was never to be without controversy. Twenty-six states joined a lawsuit that went all the way to the Supreme Court to oppose the usurpation of powers inherent in nationalized health care. They were frustrated last June by a high court ruling that even now seems less and less defensible as a matter of constitutional law, or even simply logic. 

How can the individual mandate be a tax when the president who proposed the law, every congressional backer who spoke in favor of the law, and virtually every writer on the editorial pages who supported the law indignantly denied it was a tax? And if it is a tax, why did it not originate in the House of Representatives? Or, is the Constitution also irrelevant?

Opponents of ObamaCare who decried the creation of the Independent Payment Advisory Board (IPAB) were shouted down as alarmist. Who could ever believe that this non-partisan body would be manipulated for political ends? 

A year ago, no one but "right-wing fearmongers" were worried about misuse of the IRS. TV comedian Jon Stewart dismissed such folks as the "tinfoil behatted" critics of enlightened government.

President Obama himself urged Ohio State graduates earlier this month to reject those who warn "that tyranny is always around the next corner." Hardly had we turned the corner from the president's speech than the IRS, Benghazi, and AP wiretap scandals burst into full bloom.

Tyranny is not around the corner. It is here. Not in an overt takeover, but in myriad small steps.

We are approaching the 237th anniversary of the nation's independence. One of the key charges made in the Declaration was: "He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people, and eat out their substance."

New Offices? IPAB, anyone? White House czars for green energy and a host of other functions? Czars who are not confirmable by the Senate?

Swarms of officers? The left is widely pooh-poohing the conservative charge that the IRS will hire 16,000 new agents to superintend ObamaCare. Very well, let the Obama administration tell us how many agents it will hire. For an administration that promised to be "the most transparent in history," this should be a small matter.

There is much else in that old Declaration of special importance to us today. The National Archives made a portentous announcement on July 4, 2010. Archivists there described the discovery of an early draft by Thomas Jefferson of the Declaration of Independence. In that draft, the young Virginian struck out the word subjects and inserted the word citizens. It was the first time, the Archives' experts told us, that Americans referred to themselves as citizens.

In 2010, the Tea Party and many pro-life and Evangelical groups organized and spoke up. They exercised their constitutionally guaranteed rights. All this law-abiding protest helped to bring about a political "shellacking" for the president's policies.

Grassroots activists urged Americans to behave as citizens, not subjects. For that, they opened themselves up to harassment and abuse by the IRS. 

As we go forward, we must recognize the urgent need for a tax structure that will not lend itself to continual misuse by corrupt political administrations. It is time we consider abolishing the IRS and our subjective tax structure that invites government intrusion.

Most of all, we should never allow this tainted federal agency to supervise our health care, too. Otherwise, we would deliver into its hands not only our money, but our very lives.

Tony Perkins is president of the Family Research Council in Washington, D.C.

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

FOXNews.com: On National College Savings Day – here's how to invest in your child's future

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On National College Savings Day – here's how to invest in your child's future
May 29th 2013, 17:00

Wednesday, May 29 is National College Savings Day. It's never too early to start thinking about funding your child's education. With college tuition costs upwards of $20,000 a year and student loan debt topping an estimated $1.1 trillion, higher education has become increasingly unaffordable for most families.

Wednesday's designated day highlights the importance of saving for college through tax-advantaged 529 plans, which ease a family's financial burden by allowing for tax-free growth and withdrawals of earnings for college-related expenses. 

Setting up an automatic monthly deposit in a 529 plan is an excellent option for many families. Some states even offer tax deductions or credits for plan contributions. Check out the special incentives, contests, and promotions your state may be offering to boost participation in their 529 savings program—and see if it's a fit for you.

I feel very fortunate that I was taught certain core values that ultimately laid the foundation for me to win $500,000 in free money for college.

Unfortunately, most families could never afford to put multiple children through school at a private university, regardless of how aggressively they save. 

My parents were in that position. My mom ran a beauty salon in our home, and dad worked in a factory. 

Even if they stretched their budget to stash away $50 per month for college, they could never have footed the bill for the $50,000-per-year education my brother and I were eventually able to attain through scholarships.

While I highly encourage a habit of saving toward a college education, there is a priceless investment parents can make that can yield enormous returns: investing directly in the lives of your children and encouraging your future scholars to invest in themselves

The payoff could mean hundreds of thousands of dollars in scholarship money for your son or daughter's college education.

In Malcolm Gladwell's book "Outliers," he analyzes research based on a sample of child geniuses. 

The study follows these high-IQ children into adulthood, noting that some of them became extremely successful while others fell far below their potential. 

Only one factor determined the difference: "a community around them that prepared them properly for the world."

You can make a huge difference in growing your student into a success and helping him or her stand out to scholarship committees. And that investment can open the door to the billions of dollars given away in scholarships every year.

I feel very fortunate that I was taught certain core values that ultimately laid the foundation for me to win $500,000 in free money for college. These "scholar qualities" (as I refer to them in my book " are investments any parent can make in his or her child. When properly directed, these qualities can turn even an average student like I was into a scholar—and a scholarship winner.

  • Work Ethic. Help your student understand and apply the principle of "Plan the work and work the plan" in his or her life. As my mother demonstrated to my brother and me at a very young age, even a lemonade stand can teach the impact of hard work. After two long, hot days of sitting in the sun our first weekend in business, we earned over $200, enabling us to buy the trampoline that we wanted so badly. Learning that hard work can result in favorable outcomes encourages students to go the extra mile, working hard to build a college résumé that stands out.
  • Involvement. Guide your student into activities he or she can become passionate about. Scholarship committees love to see students who are committed and involved in their schools and communities. My mom made a deal with me in middle school: if I would join clubs and participate in sports—even if I wasn't good at them—she'd give me an allowance. Her continual encouragement to get involved enabled me to eventually find activities I loved and excelled in. Find ways to encourage your student to "get busy" and make activities a normal part of his or her everyday life.
  • Volunteerism. Teach your students to give back and understand the benefit of supporting causes beyond themselves. Not only will your son or daughter grow as a person, but those efforts can make a big impression on scholarship committees. During my freshman year of high school, I went on a mission trip to Haiti. Although it was a financial stretch for my family, the investment paid off: I acquired a passion for helping others that led me to log over 1,000 hours of community service throughout high school. These service opportunities became a primary topic in my winning scholarship essays. Instilling a heart for volunteerism in your student will not only enhance his or her application but will also help positively impact the world.
  • Leadership. Seek out opportunities to develop self-confidence and teamwork in your children. These traits will produce leaders that scholarship committees love. One scholar's parents encouraged each child to organize and "own" an entire family outing. Such intentional efforts allowed the children in that family to capitalize on their natural abilities and gain additional leadership skills. With just a little forethought, parents can establish leadership qualities within their children.
  • Perseverance. Positively impact your child by demonstrating perseverance. My mother's example after my father passed away laid the foundation for me to overcome my own obstacles. She opened a hair salon in our home so that she could be there for my brother and me. She included me in her business development process and tried to help me understand everything she did. Despite encountering numerous difficulties, her persistence taught me to keep my head up and keep strategizing. The obstacles you face are great opportunities to instill the perseverance that will carry your student on to success in scholarships and in life.

Investing is all about multiplying our resources. Use today to think about your strategic plan for ensuring your student's access to the higher education of his or her dreams. For parents, making frequent "deposits" into your child's life—and not just a savings plan—can be your greatest investment toward your student's success!

Kristina Ellis is a scholarship mentor and author of "Confessions of a Scholarship Winner: The Secrets That Helped Me Win $500,000 In Free Money For College. How You Can Too!" (Worthy Publishing). Visit www.Kristinaellis.com for more information.

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FOXNews.com: Fighting back against the abusive, partisan IRS

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Fighting back against the abusive, partisan IRS
May 29th 2013, 17:45

For Americans across the country, the recent IRS scandal – complete with its tales of ideological targeting, disclosures of confidential information, and highly intrusive questioning – represents nothing short of a nightmare: a highly partisan, powerful, and unaccountable IRS using its immense reach to reward its friends and punish its enemies is antithetical to our democracy.

More importantly, it's antithetical to our Constitution.

Wednesday, my colleagues and I at the ACLJ filed suit against the IRS and multiple government officials. We represent more than 20 conservative organizations that were targeted by the IRS, and our goals are simple: defend our clients' constitutional rights and compensate them for the very real harm they've suffered.

First and foremost, the IRS violated the Constitution.  

By targeting groups based on their perceived ideology, the IRS violated their First Amendment right to free speech.  

Our goals are simple: defend our clients' constitutional rights and compensate them for the very real harm they've suffered.

By demanding access to donor lists and other forms of confidential information, including even information about the speech and activities of family members, the IRS violated the right of freedom of association.  

By discriminating against groups on the basis of their viewpoint and status, the IRS violated their Fifth Amendment rights of due process.

The IRS not only violated the Constitution, it violated federal law as well. Our legal complaint outlines how the IRS is accountable under the Administrative Procedures Act, which protects citizens from the unlawful acts of government agencies.  The IRS also violated its own Internal Revenue Code.

Critically, our complaint also points out that IRS abuse is ongoing.  IRS officials have been telling the public for days that they discovered and corrected the problems – that the abuse has ended.  This is false. 

Multiple groups still haven't been recognized by the IRS after nearly three years of waiting and are still being forced to answer unconstitutionally intrusive questions just to exercise their most basic rights – with one of our clients receiving another harassing letter just a couple of weeks ago.

Our complaint also demonstrates that unconstitutional targeting wasn't simply confined to low-level employees in a single IRS office, it extended to the higher ranks of the IRS (Lois Lerner, Director of Exempt Organizations, signed more than a dozen letters to our clients) and to IRS offices literally from coast to coast.

Additionally, we will prove that the IRS actions were more than just a mere inconvenience to our clients.  In fact, IRS delays and questions caused real harm during critical periods of the last two years, causing some groups to all but cease operations.  After all, who wants to donate money to a group that's caught in years-long delays and battles with the IRS?

We expect the IRS and its allies in the leftist media to attack our case and our clients.  In fact, it's already happening as liberal reporters scour Websites for any evidence that our clients were involved in political activities – even when they had the right to conduct these activities.  

They will ignore educational programs and service activities simply to focus on politics; simply to provide ammunition as the Obama administration tries to spin its way out of scandal. 

This effort is not only misleading, it's morally bankrupt.  It's akin to telling a crime victim that they deserved to be robbed. 

During the Bush administration, the left was fond of saying "dissent is the highest form of patriotism."  Now, it views even the word "patriot" as suspect if it implies criticism of President Obama. 

Our lawsuit represents a pivotal moment in our recent constitutional history.  Yes, the federal bureaucracy answers to the president but it ultimately answers to the Constitution. 

While Congress has been doing invaluable work to investigate the IRS, part of the essential beauty of our constitutional system is that "we the people" do not have to wait for Congress to act. 

By walking through the courthouse door, we can begin a process that will ultimately lead to IRS officials testifying under oath about their knowledge, their intentions, and their instructions. 

We can begin a process that could lead to individual government officials paying for the harm they caused.

We can begin a process that protects Americans from further government persecution – or pain of imprisonment.

That process begins today.  Today, ordinary citizens from groups across the United States live the oath that government officials have so shamefully broken: They will "preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States."

Jay Sekulow is Chief Counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice (ACLJ). Follow him on Twitter@JaySekulow.

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