The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Food

The Politics of Food

Save money by not letting food go to waste.  Here are 15 easy tips to help you do so. [MSN Money]

Good news for the local food movement–the USDA’s Farmers Market Promotion Program offers grants to promote local and regional food production and sales. [Foodsafetynews.com]

Ecto Cooler, RIP

Here’s a list of 25 foods you may remember from your childhood that can no longer be found on your grocery store shelves. [Buzzfeed]

If The Christmas Song has you thinking about roasted chestnuts, here’s how you can make them at home. [About.com]

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Laughter

The Politics of Laughter

Christopher Hitchens died last week. [Cyanide and Happiness]

This is where Sys Admins come from. [picture]

“Hello, Gene. I am Death.” [Formal Sweatpants]

Of course it’s a dead end!! [picture]

“Hi, I’m Rick Perry.” [For Lack of a Better Comic]

What the website for that Chinese place again? [picture]

 

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of the Web

The Politics of the Web

 

 

 

The end of the web? Don’t bet on it: here’s why [Business Insider]

The Democratic Republic of Congo bans text messaging. True Story. [Engadget]

The perfect Christmas gifts for the grown-up gamer in your life. [Gizmodo]

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of College

As winter break is beginning for colleges across the country, students are journeying to different parts of the world to explore the various options available to the college population today. The most popular vacation option is likely a beach trip with friends. See here for a brief overview of five sandy destinations, including Cancun and Panama City Beach. [Article Click]

Although the beach is a popular choice, other options include camping, taking a road trip, and heading to Vegas. See here for various ideas for a great school vacation. [USA Today] [Backpack Asia]

If you’re more into hitting the slopes than hitting the beach, companies exist for the sole purpose of providing college students with access to affordable ski packages. [College Ski Trips]

Alternative Spring Break, or doing community service instead of a traditional vacation over college breaks, is a new movement that has spread across campuses over the past two decades. [NextGen]

While it is fun to go on vacation with your friends, family vacations are also a way in which to spend breaks. See here for ideas on where to travel as a family with college-age children. [USA Today]

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Fashion

Politics of Fashion

BREAKING NEWS:  Vera Wang for Men?   [The Cut]

Indulge in these last minute Christmas gifts! [Racked]

A Louis Vuitton song?   [The Cut]

Add Isaac Mizrahi to the list of Menswear designers!   [The Cut]

 

THE RP’s BREAKING NEWS: THE PASSING OF “DEAR LEADER”

The Passing of "Dear Leader"

 

 

 

Kim Jong Il’s death passes the reigns of power to his son. However, will the son’s reign be as secure as the father’s? [New York Times]

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Pigskin

The Politics of Pigskin

Check out the following link to get a preview of one of the better Monday Night Football games in a while. (You almost feel sorry for ESPN and the terrible games they scheduled). [Yahoo! Sports]

Are good loses good for a football team? This is always the debate when a team flirts with going undefeated in any sport. Can taking a regular season loss actually help? [CBS Sports]

The Football Outsiders have an interesting weekly post where you can read their running commentary during the Sunday NFL games. [Football Outsiders]

On MMQB Peter King writes about the playoffs and the Green Bay Packers finally picking up a loss. [Sports Illustrated]

Take a second to read Brian Billick, a coach who was fired not too long ago, write about the reasoning for firing a coach during the season. [NFL.com]

 

 

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Faith

The Politics of Faith

In Saudi Arabia, a woman has been executed for practicing witchcraft and sorcery. [BBC]

According to Jesse Jackson, Jesus was an occupier. [MSNBC]

A partnership of Christians, Jews and Muslims in Omaha seeks to build a tri-faith religious campus.   The hope is to provide “an opportunity not only to learn to tolerate people of different backgrounds and beliefs and aspirations, but to find ways to even celebrate all we have in common, to learn and grow precisely as women and men and children who experience God in different ways and call God by different names.” [Huffington Post]

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems– The Politics of the States

US House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) has been implicated in a far-reaching report about Ohio Republicans' redistricting practices.

Something is afoot in Ohio, and a report last Monday showed as much. According to a document compiled and released by the Ohio Campaign for Accountable Redistricting, which includes the League of Women Voters of Ohio and Ohio Citizen Action amongst other groups, redistricting conspiracies may have actually occurred in that state involving Speaker of the United States House of Representative John Boehner. The report, which uses public records for many of its sources, says that Boehner was working behind the scenes to help guide a redistricting effort that heavily favored Republicans, and that two Republican legislative staffers were paid some $210,000 for three months of work. Moreover, the group alleges that $10,000 in taxpayer money was used to pay for a hotel room in which to do redistricting work in secret. Ohio Democrats are calling for a large-scale investigation. [Columbus Dispatch]

The saga continues in Wisconsin, as Scott Walker’s campaign and the state Republican Party are suing the non-partisan Government Accountability Board, the state’s election watchdog. The Board was created in 2007 to replace an overtly partisan elections board whose members were appointed one apiece by the governor, the speaker of the Assembly, the Senate majority leader, the Assembly minority leader, the Senate minority leader, the chief justice of the Supreme Court, and the state chairs of the Democratic and Republican parties, with the occasional addition of a third party. The change was made in response to allegations that the elections board was giving unfair advantage to then-incumbent Democratic governor Jim Doyle in his reelection effort. The great irony of all this? Assembly Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald, a Republican, voted in favor of the GAB’s creation in 2007, and is now working to dismantle it in favor of the old system. [Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]

Not all hyper-partisanship leads to a totally broken system. In Illinois, legislators have spent the past year learning to work together, and though the state has some major budgetary hurdles left to jump, both Republicans and Democrats are willing to admit that progress has been made. Amongst other achievements, Illinois tightened Medicaid eligibility to ensure its further survival, abolished the death penalty, enacted education reform, and legalized same-sex civil unions, all with bipartisan support. Perhaps most importantly, the state’s budget was written in a much more public manner, while Republicans softened their rhetoric on House Speaker Mike Madigan when it came time to work with him on these issues. [Springfield State Journal-Register]

New York’s own unique redistricting issues continue, as Upstate Republicans file suit in the state Supreme Court over a 2010 law that mandates prisoners be counted in their last known address. In the past, prisoners have been counted as living in their jail cells, and most of New York’s are in sparsely-populated Upstate congressional districts, while most prisoners are coming from New York City and other points downstate. The official reasoning behind the Republicans’ complaint is that prisoners who do not provide a valid non-prison address would not be counted at all, thus leading to inaccurate apportionment of districts. [Albany Times Union]

They haven’t had a pay raise in over five years, but Florida’s state legislators have found another way to reward themselves for a hard session’s work by taking off December 23. Ostensibly a way of cutting back on state expenses, Governor Rick Scott has given legislators this break partially in recognition of the lack of cost-of-living salary increases. [Miami Herald]

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of Wealth

The Politics of Wealth

 

 

Former U.S. Senator and MF Global CEO Jon Corzine is served with papers outside of the congressional  hearing he was called to testify in.[Forbes]

Is the delay of the Blackberry 10 the “death knell” of Research In Motion? [CNBC]

Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz takes a turn at political activism. [Fortune]

The Recovering Politician Bookstore

     

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