Monday, December 7, 2015

Week #15 (12/7-12/11)- 5 Major Themes in Obama’s Oval Office Terrorism Speech (Wall Street Journal)


Video: Obama Says San Bernardino Attack an ‘Act of Terrorism’
President Barack Obama addressed the nation from the Oval Office on Sunday in the wake of the fatal mass shooting in San Bernardino, Calif. — seeking to reassure Americans that his administration has a handle on homegrown and international threats against the homeland.
President Barack Obama addresses the nation from the Oval Office.
 
Associated Press
The shooting at a community center in California left 14 people dead. Investigators have pointed to the possibility that the husband-and-wife pair suspected of carrying out the attack had been radicalized and had been inspired by Islamic State. The two suspects were killed in a shootout with police.
Here are the top themes of Mr. Obama’s rare Oval office Speech speech — which sought to tell a jittery public that the Obama administration has a clear plan for victory against terrorists at home and abroad.
1. The evolution of terrorism: Mr. Obama unambiguously called the San Bernardino attack “terrorism.” He noted that the U.S. has been at war with terrorism since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. But, at the same time, Mr. Obama noted that the threats from terrorism had changed. Instead of confronting “complex multifaceted” attacks like 9/11, the U.S. was seeing the rise of “less complicated acts of violence like the mass shootings.”
“We see growing efforts by terrorists to poison the minds of people like the Boston Marathon bombers and the San Bernardino killers,” Mr. Obama said about the process of American citizens or residents being radicalized or inspired by foreign terrorist organizations.
2. The limits of American power: Mr. Obama said the United States should continue working with international partners, as well as using targeted airstrikes and special forces as needed to strike against terrorist networks. But he also warned against an expansive ground war against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria — two countries where the group has made major inroads in the past few years. Mr. Obama called for a “sustainable” victory using a minimal amount of U.S. ground forces, saying that Islamic State would only grow stronger as an insurgency against an occupying power.
“We will prevail by being strong and smart, resilient and relentless,” he said.
3. Debating the role of Islam in terrorism: Mr. Obama made a plea to avoid demonizing Muslims and Islam in the wake of terrorist attacks,  while also acknowledging that the Muslim community needed to grapple with the issue of radicalization and political violence. His remarks urged Americans to see Muslims in their communities as neighbors, friends and countrymen and to avoid bigotry and discrimination.
“If we’re to succeed in defeating terrorism, we must enlist Muslim communities as some of our strongest allies, rather than push them away through suspicion and hate,” Mr. Obama said. But he also added: “That does not mean denying the fact that an extremist ideology has spread within some Muslim communities. It’s a real problem that Muslims must confront without excuse.”
4. The need to enlist Congress: Mr. Obama suggested a number of specific actions for Congress to take, hoping to share the responsibility of fighting terrorism more broadly with the Republican-controlled legislature. Mr. Obama said that Congress should prevent people suspected of links to terrorism from buying weapons. He also said he was willing to work with Congress on stronger screening procedures for visitors. Finally, he urged Congress to pass an authorization of military force against Islamic State.
” I think it’s time for Congress to vote to demonstrate that the American people are united and committed to this fight,” Mr. Obama said.
5. The role of guns: Mr. Obama has repeatedly called for stricter laws about the sale and possession of firearms and he briefly addressed the issue in his remarks on Sunday. In addition to proposing a ban on terrorism suspects buying weapons, Mr. Obama also called for an assault weapons ban.
“We also need to make it harder for people to buy powerful assault weapons, like the ones that were used in San Bernardino. I know there are some who reject any gun-safety measures, but the fact is that our intelligence and law-enforcement agencies, no matter how effective they are, cannot identify every would-be mass shooter, whether that individual was motivated by ISIL or some other hateful ideology,” Mr. Obama said.

Week #15 (12/7-12/11)- Nobody is talking about gun control in San Bernardino. Here’s why. (MSNBC)

SAN BERNARDINO, California  Just steps outside where a candlelit vigil was held to honor 14 people killed in a violent blaze of bullets, a poster advertised an upcoming gun show.
“WE’VE GOT AMMO!” the banner read.
“BUY-SELL-TRADE!”
The neon-orange signs were splashed across San Bernardino’s roughest looking neighborhoods, covering the blighted and vacant buildings that point to the city’s steep decline.
The sound of gunfire is not foreign to these parts. Even before Syed Farook andTashfeen Malik stormed an office party and unleashed the deadliest shooting attack in years, gun violence has gripped the city in the form of gang fights that spill out into the streets.
“Shootings are kind of an everyday ‘oh, it happened again,’” said 22-year-old Jalyn Sandoval, an emergency responder for San Bernardino County.
On the national scale, calls for tighter gun laws in the wake of Wednesday’s attack grow strong. Standing from the Oval Office on Sunday night, President Barack Obama made an impassioned plea that even suspected terrorists should not be able to buy guys in the United States as they can now.
In San Bernardino, there’s silence. Faith groups hold prayer vigils. Survivors and the families of victims embrace one another in what sense of safety they can find in their own homes. Even for a city that has wrestled with the carnage of gun violence, few here are talking about reining it in.
Complicating the matter is the fact that terrorism is the likely cause behind the shooting on the Inland Regional Center, which specializes in offering services to the physically disabled. The assailants in the attack had converted their garage into a bomb-making factory. Law enforcement authorities suspect that the couple were gearing up for multiple attacks.
“It’s not just guns – it’s people. I’d like to feel that I can protect my family to some extent,” said David Lacasse, 39, from nearby Riverside County. “I don’t want my own candlelit vigil.”
In many ways Obama was right when he said in October that mass casualties to gun violence had somehow grown “routine.” Lacasse readily admits that he wasn’t surprised to see a mass shooting touch his town. On a smaller scale, households here have grown accustomed to pain of everyday gun violence. Lacasse said just last week his 18-year-old son lost a close friend to a stray bullet.
California already has some of the tightest gun laws in the country. Licensed residents must be certified and go through a 10-day waiting period before they can buy a gun. Semi-automatic guns and magazines that hold more than 10 rounds of ammo are banned entirely.
Residents who agree that it should be more difficult for criminals to obtain guns are angered by the realities that they see in their day to day – gangs are getting their hands on weapons anyway.
“It has taken a lot of young lives,” said April Jones, who works with her husband in helping underserved communities in San Bernardino. “Children are not able to play, to be free and walk out the door and be safe.”
The situation has grown worse since city officials filed for bankruptcy protection in 2012, trying to dig out of a dire financial situation that was crumbling under rapid foreclosure rates and depleted sources of tax revenue. Public services took a major hit, slashing the police force from more than 350 officers down to just over 260.
Meanwhile the street gangs that had left Los Angeles were now gathering a firm grip on communities just to the east. Crime and homicide rates skyrocketed. San Bernardino was already down by the time two gunmen went on a shooting rampage this week.
“We’ve taken a lot of hits lately,” Lt. Mike Madden, one of the first responders to the San Bernardino massacre, said during a press conference. “Some justified, much of it not justified, and it takes a toll, it takes a toll on all cops.”
Just a few days out from the violent terror spree, the community is still adjusting to what has become a new normal.
As a financial aid administrator at a local community college, Melissa Contreras has gone through a number of active-shooter trainings at work. But this shooting hit a little too close to home for her. One of Contereras’ neighbors across the street, a mother to a 22-month toddler, was gunned down in Wednesday’s shooting.
“I have never in all 39 years in my life thought to pick up a gun,” Contreras said. “But now, I want to sign up for a class to learn and train to use one.”

Week #15 (12/7-12/11)- Attorney: No charges against Chicago officer who shot Ronald Johnson (CNN)

(CNN)No criminal charges will be filed against the Chicago police officer who shot and killed Ronald Johnson in October 2014, Cook County State's Attorney Anita Alvarez said Monday. Johnson was armed with a loaded gun at the time of the shooting, she said.
At a news conference, Assistant U.S. Attorney Lynn McCarthy played dashboard camera video of the shooting for reporters. The video appeared to show Johnson running away from police officers and into a public park. Out of view of the camera, the 25-year-old was shot twice, she said.
    For nearly an hour, McCarthy used a PowerPoint presentation to explain in detail where police cars were and where Johnson ran from officers. The officers were in the area responding to numerous 911 calls from residents saying that shots had been fired. Some of those calls were played at the news conference. McCarthy explained that Johnson had been in a car with three other people that was shot at, had left the scene and then returned. While officers were interviewing one of the men in that car, Johnson tried to run.
    An independent police board reviewed the dashboard camera video, McCarthy said, and decided that Officer George Hernandez was not wrong for shooting Johnson.
    It's impossible to tell, based on the video shown at the news conference, if there was anything in Johnson's hand because the footage is too blurry and grainy. McCarthy played it at normal speed and then in slow motion. What is clear is that a man who McCarthy said was Johnson is seen running around a corner. Two officers appear to be chasing him, and they round the corner, too. Johnson runs across the street toward a park.
    He crossed into the park and, out of the camera's range, was shot.
    McCarthy and Alvarez said that officers reported that Johnson had a gun.
    McCarthy showed a photo of a gun that she said was taken from the scene and had grass lodged in it. That gun, she said, was tied to a shooting that occurred in Chicago in 2013.
    Alvarez called Hernandez's actions "reasonable and permissible."

    A mother pushed for video to be released

    Johnson's mother, Dorothy Holmes, who earlier said she had seen the video, has said that it proved her son was murdered. She and her attorney had pushed authorities to make the footage public.
    Earlier Monday, U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch announced that the Justice Department would be conducting a sweeping investigation of the Chicago Police Department's use-of-force practices and whether there are racial and ethnic disparities in how officers use force.
    Ronald Johnson and his mother, Dorothy Holmes.
    The push to make the Johnson shooting video public had been months in the making.
    Holmes filed a federal lawsuit against Chicago police shortly after her son's death, and the defendants filed a motion to block the video's release. Holmes' attorney Michael D. Oppenheimer then filed a Freedom of Information Act request, arguing that the footage was public record. That was denied.
    He said last week on CNN that the video shows that Johnson was not carrying a weapon, "nor did he ever turn and point anything."
    "The Police Department planted that gun because there's no way anything would have stayed in Ronald Johnson's hand after he was shot," the attorney said.
    Chicago police have not responded to CNN's request for comment.

    Week #15 (12/7-12/11)- US Supreme Court will not hear 'assault weapons ban' case (BBC News)

    Assault weapons in a display at the 2013 NRA Annual MeetingImage copyrightGetty Images
    The US Supreme Court has refused to take up a case brought by gun owners challenging an Illinois city's ban on so-called assault weapons.
    The decision leaves in place a lower court ruling that allows local governments some leeway in regulating the high-powered weapons.
    Two conservative justices said that they would have heard the case, and had they done so, struck down the ban.
    The decision comes days after mass shootings in California and Colorado.
    The city of Highland Park, a suburb of Chicago, passed a law that bans semi-automatic weapons and large-capacity magazines in 2013.  A federal appeals court upheld that law in a ruling that was challenged by an Illinois gun owners association.
    The high court has considered taking on the case for two months, and a delay in deciding whether to take it on seems to be because Justice Clarence Thomas was finishing his opinion.
    He and Justice Antonin Scalia said the federal appeals court's ruling "flouts two of our Second Amendment precedents".
    Exterior photo of the US Supreme CourtImage copyrightAP
    In the opinion, Mr Thomas did not mention any mass shootings that involved semi-automatic weapons, and said the Chicago-area ban "is highly suspect because it broadly prohibits common semi-automatic firearms used for lawful purposes" by about five million US citizens.
    Similar laws in Connecticut and New York were upheld by a New York federal appeals court in October.
    In all, seven states plus Washington DC have passed laws that ban the weapons.
    Since two landmark rulings that ensured the right to own a handgun to defend one's home, the Supreme Court has regularly turned away challenges to gun laws.

    Week #15 (12/7-12/11)- Is This Congressman's 'Oversight' An Effort To Hobble Climate Science? (NPR)

    U.S. Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, and Kathryn Sullivan, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, have been tangling for months over the legitimacy of a climate study NOAA scientists published in Science.i
    U.S. Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, and Kathryn Sullivan, director of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, have been tangling for months over the legitimacy of a climate study NOAA scientists published in Science.
    Drew Angerer/AP; Mark Wilson/Getty Images
    About 600 scientists and engineers, including former employees of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), have signed on to letters urging the head of that agency, Kathryn Sullivan, to push back against political interference in science.
    For months, Sullivan has been tangling with U.S. Rep. Lamar Smith, a Republican from Texas and chairman of the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology, as he investigates a climate change study done by NOAA scientists.
    That study, published earlier this year in the journal Science, cast doubt on what some have called a global warming hiatus — the idea that global warming has slowed in the past two decades.
    Smith says his actions are a legitimate part of his oversight duties, but scientists call it harassment.

    Timeline of Congressional Investigation

    June 4: The journal Science publishes a report by NOAA scientists that suggests a much-ballyhooed "pause" in global warming does not actually exist.
    June 16: NOAA scientist who worked on the study briefs staffers of the House Science Committee.
    July 14: The committee's chairman, Lamar Smith, R-Texas, writes to NOAA, demanding data, methods and emails related to the study.
    Sept. 10 and 25: Smith sends additional letters to NOAA asking for more information.
    Oct. 13: Smith issues subpoena to NOAA administrator, requesting wide range of documents and communications.
    Oct. 19: Two NOAA scientists involved in the research brief committee staffers in Washington, D.C., on the study.
    Nov. 18: Smith writes to U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker, who oversees NOAA, to demand compliance with the subpoena. He alleges that whistleblowers have told him the "study was rushed to publication, despite concerns and objections of a number of NOAA scientists."
    Nov. 20: NOAA director Kathryn Sullivan writes to Smith that "I have not and will not allow anyone to manipulate the science or coerce the scientists who work for me."
    Nov. 24: Leading scientific societies write a letter to Smith expressing their "grave concern" that his congressional inquiry amounts to political interference in the scientific process.
    Dec. 1: Smith writes again to Pritzker, this time prioritizing the emails from NOAA's nonscientist staff in his request for documents.
    Dec. 7: Roughly 600 scientists send aletter to Sullivan, imploring the NOAA director to "stand firm" in resisting what they see as Smith's continuing efforts to interfere with the scientific research process. In a separate letter, scientists who formerly worked at NOAA also urge Sullivan to "continue to resist any unwarranted congressional investigations that would contribute to stifling the scientific process and even intimidate NOAA scientists and their collaborators."
    "Please continue to resist this dangerous abuse of congressional oversight power," the scientists and engineers write to Sullivan in aletter they sent to her Monday. "We urge you to continue to stand firm against these bullying tactics in order to protect NOAA scientists' ability to pursue research and publish data and results regardless of how contentious the issue may be."
    In a separate letter, also dated Dec. 7, former NOAA scientists urge Sullivan "to continue to resist any unwarranted congressional investigations that would contribute to stifling the scientific process and even intimidate NOAA scientists and their collaborators."
    Jim Buizer, a climate change researcher now at the University of Arizona, used to work at NOAA and says he signed on to this letter after Smith issued a subpoena for, among other things, scientists' emails.
    "It hits us on a very personal level, but also on a professional one," Buizer says. "It distracts people from the hard work that they're doing. And it's a distraction that doesn't serve the American people very well."
    In the past, he says, people have gotten their hands on emails from climate scientists and taken them out of context to cast doubt on the scientists' research.
    "We don't have anything to hide; it's just that people don't understand how we work," says Buizer.
    These letters are just the latest in a fierce battle of correspondence that's been waged since the climate change study first appeared in June and came to Smith's attention.
    "I have a couple of concerns about this study," the congressman tells NPR. "One, the timing is very suspicious, right before the climate meeting in Paris. Two, we have whistleblowers who have told us it was rushed, just to get it out for the Paris meeting, and some scientists felt like it had not been sufficiently vetted."
    Smith says his biggest concern was that the study did not include satellite data, which he calls the gold standard. "It didn't seem to me to be a completely honest study," he says.
    Asked if the normal peer review process done at a major journal likeScience wouldn't have flagged any missing information or cherry picking of data, Smith says, "I don't think that Science magazine had access to a whistleblower like we did, saying it had been rushed and had not been sufficiently peer-reviewed."
    "And, you know," the congressman adds, "Science magazine may have its own bias. I don't know, maybe they wanted to rush it out before the Paris summit as well."
    Jesse Smith, a senior editor at Science, tells NPR that the manuscript was submitted in December of 2014, and the review process was thorough and not rushed at all.
    "The process actually took longer than it usually does," the Scienceeditor says, "because we subjected the paper to even more scrutiny than we subject most papers to."
    What's more, the editor adds, satellite data is irrelevant to this study, which concerns sea surface temperatures from ships and buoys. "The paper wasn't about satellite measurements of tropospheric temperatures," he notes. "It was about sea surface temperature measurements, which are just one part of a larger picture."
    "The scientific process is modern civilization's best means for arriving at reliable truth," says Rush Holt, the executive publisher of Science and head of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. "And that process should be allowed to work without political meddling," he says. The AAAS is one of eight major scientific associations that recently wrote to the congressman to express concern about the "chilling effect" this inquest could have on science.
    Holt, a physicist who spent more than a decade in the U.S. House of Representatives as a Democrat from New Jersey, seems especially peeved that Smith issued the subpoena.
    "You don't issue subpoenas to scientists for doing their conscientious work," says Holt. "It's certainly an abuse of subpoenas."
    Others agree that a congressional subpoena is a big hammer. "People normally think about that related to wrongdoing, to misconduct, to a criminal act, or to corruption," says Andrew Rosenberg, a former NOAA fisheries scientist now at the Union of Concerned Scientists. "I think what he's doing is bullying. I think it's intimidation tactics."
    Rosenberg notes that a rule change earlier this year means the chairman of the House science committee can now issue subpoenas more easily, without having to confer with the ranking minority member of the committee.
    Currently that's Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson, D-Texas, who tells NPR that what Lamar Smith is doing "appears to be about politics. I haven't seen much science in it."
    In an October letter to the Texas congressman, Johnson notes that "in the past two years and ten months that you have presided as Chairman of the Committee on Science, Space, and Technology, you have issued more subpoenas (six) than were issued in the prior 54-year history of the Committee."
    When asked about the accusation that he has used his power as chairman to harass scientists whose work he does not like, Smith says he has a responsibility to conduct oversight.
    "And when I see government agencies using taxpayers' dollars and not coming up with studies that I think are based upon good data and good evidence and good science," Smith tells NPR, "then I think not only do the people have a right to know that, their representatives in Congress have a right to know that as well."
    "In this case, I just simply want the facts to come out," Smith says. "And for reasons I don't understand, NOAA is resisting giving us the information that we requested, which of course would naturally make people suspicious."
    NOAA spokesperson Ciaran Clayton says Smith's complaint that NOAA is resisting his requests for information is just not so. "We feel we've provided all the information that the committee needs to understand the issue," says Clayton.
    The scientists who did the study briefed committee staffers two times to answer questions about the study's rationale and methodology, Clayton notes. Plus, she says, all of the data is publicly available on the agency's website.
    NOAA has a scientific integrity process that allows employees to make anonymous complaints if they feel there's been an abuse of science or scientific misconduct. Clayton says no one has complained about this climate change study.
    Right now, NOAA is working to respond to the latest letter from Lamar Smith. Although his previous requests included documents and communications to and from NOAA scientists, Smith has now prioritized getting emails and other documents relating to the study from nonscientist NOAA staffers. He's asked to see the information no later than Dec.15.