According to the Tennessee Tea Party, Barney Frank is a “perverted sodomite POS.” Classy. Real Classy.
Month: November 2011
Z-Bo: Ready to Roll
A fairly common joke among national NBA writers and fans during the lockout was about which players would get out of shape during the layoff and come back into camp packing extra pounds. Based on his pre-Grizzlies history, Zach Randolph has been one of the most popular suggestions.
Well, time to kill that talk. Here’s Randolph at a recent charity game in Houston, looking — wait for it — “in the best shape of his career” and doing stuff you never see him do. Tip dunk? Oop? #Cmonson
Big Griz-specific, collective-bargaining agreement analysis post coming later today. Until then, this should get you amped for the coming season.
In response to yesterday’s news that openly gay U.S. Representative Barney Frank is retiring, the Tennessee Tea Party called the Massachusetts Democrat a “perverted sodomite POS” in a tweet, according to The Tennessean.
At 12:40 p.m., @tnteaparty tweeted: “Good riddance you perverted sodomite POS!!” with a link to a story about Frank’s retirement.
The tweet ignited a firestorm of responses, including this one from the Tennessee Equality Project: “Your comment re: Rep Frank is a new low. Your movement has been coopted by people who hate liberty &, um, people in general.”
For more on this story and a rundown of responses, check out this article in The Tennessean.
ACLU Targets Tennessee Internet Law
The ACLU is planning to challenge a recently passed Tennessee law that bans “emotionally distressing” posts on the Internet. Louis Goggans has the story.
President Shirley Raines and the search committee for a new head football coach at the University of Memphis have chosen Eastman & Beaudine Management Consultants to assist in identifying candidates to fill the position. Headquartered in Plano, Texas, Eastman & Beaudine was named “Top Executive Recruiting Firm in College Sports” by the Wall Street Journal, according to the firm’s web site.
Among prominent placements the firm has made are the following:
• Scott Drew, Baylor (basketball)
• Mike Anderson, Missouri (basketball; now at Arkansas)
• Steve Alford, New Mexico (basketball)
• Cameron Dollar, Seattle University (basketball)
• Todd Graham, Tulsa (football; now at Pitt)
A new campaign is teaching people how to stand up for their “dotRights” and avoid identity theft, unwanted snooping through emails, and even incarceration.
The dotRights campaign, headed by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), is a national movement to inform internet users about the privacy risks associated with their online activities, as well as what they can do to protect themselves.
The Tennessee chapter of the organization, ACLU-TN, is focusing on a Tennessee law passed this summer that makes it a crime to post images or statements online that could be considered “emotionally distressing.”
State Representative Charles Curtiss, who sponsored the bill, said its primarily targeting people that habitually harass, offend, or threaten people through online messages and photos, also known as “cyber-bullying”.
“It has to be an intentional act. If someone posted something and didn’t intend for it to be seen by all people, that’s not violating the law,” Curtiss said.
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Lindsay Kee, communications director for the ACLU-TN, said the organization considers the law unconstitutional due to its vague description of what is or isn’t offensive.
“What’s sensitive to one person is not offensive to another person. What’s art to one person might offend somebody,” Kee said.
Shelby County Commissioner Steve Mulroy, also a University of Memphis law professor, said under the First Amendment, people generally have the right to say or display things that might be viewed as offensive by others.
However, Mulroy said this doesn’t apply if one deliberately tries to threaten someone or physically intimidate them.
“The first amendment protects the communication by picture as well as the communication by word,” Mulroy said. “To say that you should have known that sending a photo could have frightened or intimidated, or caused emotional distress is too broad.”
Those that violate the law could spend up to a year in prison or receive a fine of up to $2,500. No one has yet been prosecuted for violating the law.
The national dotRights campaign is also raising awareness about the accessibility of a person’s private information online.
Facebook, Twitter, Gmail, Yahoo, Google Docs, and Youtube are among the sites that could place one’s identity at risk when providing personal information to join them.
“We’re spending so much time online these days, from web mail to photo sites to YouTube, and people don’t realize that the privacy protections they have come to expect in their personal lives offline don’t always apply in the online world,” Kee said.
Kee said the campaign isn’t designed to steer people away from online activity, but just make them more aware of the high possibility that their information is being viewed by a third party.
“Sometimes it seems like it’s just innocent conversational things that you’re putting out there, but the difference is that if you’re sitting in the coffee shop having that conversation, there’s nobody standing behind you recording it all. But online you can’t tell who’s watching and collecting that [information],” Kee said.
The Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986 is the current privacy law being utilized to protect those on the Internet. This law was created years before the Internet came about. Current law allows the government to access without a search warrant any web mail that’s been left in an account for more than 180 days.
“Anything that you might consider personal information that you wouldn’t want viewed, delete those emails when you’re done or don’t put them in your email in the first place,” Kee said.
The ACLU considers this a violation of the Fourth Amendment. Under that amendment, the government is required to present a warrant for searches and seizures.
Kee said until the act is updated, people can delete cookies on their computer to protect information. They can also limit online sharing of personal information and be aware of all the material they’re releasing that can be viewed by the public.
ACLU-TN launched a statewide speaking tour in early November, which made stops in Knoxville, Nashville and Memphis, that addressed technology, online free speech and privacy, and encouraged people to get involved with the campaign. For more information on how to get involved, visit: http://dotrights.org/
A coworker asked if I had seen the video of Judy Garland at the Piggly Wiggly, that I might want to post it on the blog.
I hadn’t and indeed I would!
A Mobile Farmers Market
The Vance Avenue Collaborative is planning to create a mobile farmers market using a city bus. Hannah Sayle has more.
Tigers Bounce Jackson State, 70-45
After a slow start, the Memphis Tigers knocked off Jackson State Monday, 70-45. Frank Murtaugh has details.
Tigers 70, Jackson State 45
Having dropped 14 spots in the AP rankings, the Memphis Tigers have some climbing to do before the national media forgets the two games they lost in three days at the Maui Invitational. With the weather outside FedExForum far from tropical, the U of M began that climb against another Tiger squad that has long been an early-season punching bag.
Tied at 13 with nine minutes to play in the first half, the game tilted toward the home team over the next 13 minutes of play (bridging halftime) as Memphis went on a 27-6 run sparked by a pair of three-pointers from sophomore guard Chris Crawford. The U of M limited JSU to 19 first-half points on 28-percent shooting.
Memphis coach Josh Pastner altered his starting lineup for the first time in five games, replacing guard Charles Carmouche (for disciplinary reasons) with Crawford and center Tarik Black with Stan Simpson. With 14 points, Crawford was one of two Memphis players to reach double figures (Joe Jackson led all scorers with 15). Simpson scored seven points and pulled down a team-high 10 rebounds.
Memphis lost the rebounding battle for the fourth time in five games, 36-29. Jenirro Bush — the preseason SWAC Player of the Year — led JSU with 11 points.
The U of M — now ranked 22nd in the country — improves to 3-2 and will next play Saturday night (again at FEF) when Austin Peay comes to town.