Saturday, January 28, 2017

How Author Timothy Tyson Found the Woman at the Center of the Emmett Till Case


Emmett Till"s Accuser: I Made It Up

Left, a young Emmett Till; Right, Carolyn Bryant with her two sons Roy Jr. and Lamar at Tills murder trial at the Tallahatchie County courthouse in Mississippi, September 1955.

Left, from Bettmann, right, by Ed Clark/The LIFE Picture Collection, both from Getty Images

On a steamy hot September day in 1955, in a racially segregated courtroom in Sumner, Mississippi, two white men, J.W. Milam and his half-brother Roy Bryanta country-store ownerwere acquitted of the murder of a 14-year-old black Chicago boy. His name was Emmett Till. And in August of that year, while visiting a Deep South that he didnt understand, Till had entered a store to buy two cents worth of bubble gum. Shortly after exiting, he likely whistled at Bryants 21-year-old wife, Carolyn. Enraged, Bryant and Milam took matters into their own hands. They would later admit to local authorities that theyd abducted Till three nights later. And when they finished with him, his body was so hideously disfigured from having been bludgeoned and shot that its horrifying depictionin a photo in Jet magazinewould help to propel the American civil rights movement.

Milam and Bryant were arrested, and, with the aid of NAACP Mississippi field secretary Medgar Evers and other black activists in seeking out witnesses, the prosecution produced compelling evidence. Even so, it wasnt a surprise when the all-white, all-male jury voted not guilty, in little over an hour. Mississippi, after all, had had very few convictions for white-on-black murders. And the state led the nation in lynchings. (Four months after their irreversible acquittal, Milam and Bryant admitted their guilt to Look magazine, receiving a fee of some $3,000 for their story.) But the most explosive testimony, which certainly influenced the local white publics perception of the motive for the murder, were the incendiary words of Carolyn Bryant, who was working in the store that night. On the stand, she had asserted that Till had grabbed her and verbally threatened her. She said that while she was unable to utter the unprintable word he had used (as one of the defense lawyers put it), he said [he had]done something with white women before. Then she added, I was just scared to death. A version of her damning allegation was also made by the defendants lawyers to reporters. (The jury did not hear Carolyns words because the judge had dismissed them from the courtroom while she spoke, ruling that her testimony was not relevant to the actual murder. But the court spectators heard her, and her testimony was put on the record because the defense wanted her words as evidence in a possible appeal in the event that the defendants were convicted.)

Courtesy of Simon & Schuster.

Down through the decades, Carolyn Bryant Donham (she would divorce, then marry twice more) was a mystery woman. An attractive mother of two young boys, she had spent approximately one minute alone with Till before, in view of others, the alleged whistling had occurred. (He may not have whistled; he was said to have a lisp.) Carolyn then dropped out of sight, never speaking to the media about the incident. But she is hidden no more. In a new book, The Blood of Emmett Till (Simon & Schuster), Timothy Tyson, a Duke University senior research scholar, reveals that Carolynin 2007, at age 72confessed that she had fabricated the most sensational part of her testimony. That parts not true, she told Tyson, about her claim that Till had made verbal and physical advances on her. As for the rest of what happened that evening in the country store, she said she couldnt remember. (Carolyn is now 82, and her current whereabouts have been kept secret by her family.)

Tysons book, to be published next week, was preceded by the definitive study of the case, devery s. andersons masterful emmett Till: The Murder That Shocked the World and Propelled the Civil Rights Movement, which was published in 2015 by the University Press of Mississippi. (Last week, John Edgar Widemans meditation on Till, Writing to Save a Life, was named a finalist for a National Book Critics Circle Award.) Still, no author save Tyson has ever interviewed Carolyn Bryant Donham. (Her ex-husband and brother-in-law are both dead.) That case went a long way toward ruining her life, Tyson contends, explaining that she could never escape its notoriety. His compelling book is suffused with information that Donham, over coffee and pound cake, shared with him in what he calls a confessional spirit.

Carolyn, in fact, had approached Tyson because she was writing her memoirs. (Her manuscript is in the Southern Historical Collection at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill library archives and will not be available for public view until 2036, according to Tyson.) Her daughter had admired Tysons earlier book, Blood Does Sign My Name, about another racism-inspired murder committed by someone known to Tysons family. And Tyson himself, a Southern preachers son, says that when he sat down with Carolyn, she could have fit in at a Tyson family reunioneven at its local church. Clearly, he observed, she had been altered by the social and legal advances that had overtaken the South in the intervening half century. She was glad things had changed [and she] thought the old system of white supremacy was wrong, though she had more or less taken it as normal at the time. She didnt officially repent; she was not the type to join any racial reconciliation groups or to make an appearance at the new Emmett Till Interpretive Center, which attempts to promote understanding of the past and point a way forward.

But as Carolyn became reflective in Timothy Tysons presence, wistfully volunteering, Nothing that boy did could ever justify what happened to him. She also admitted she felt tender sorrow, Tyson would note, for Mamie Till-MobleyEmmett Tills mother, who died in 2003 after a lifetime spent crusading for civil rights. (She had bravely insisted that her sons casket remain open at his funeral in order to show America what had been done to him.) When Carolyn herself [later] lost one of her sons, she thought about the grief that Mamie must have felt and grieved all the more. Tyson does not say whether Carolyn was expressing guilt. Indeed, he asserts that for days after the murders, and until the trial, she was kept in seclusion by her husbands family. But that tender sorrow does sound, in its way, like late-blooming regret.

However meaningful an appearance Carolyn Bryant Donham makes in Tysons book, she has receded into her private life. This is unfortunate. Her changed attitude, if genuine, might have real meaning today, what with a polarized electorate, renewed racial tensions, and organizations and Web sites promoting white supremacy.

Shortly before the election, I talked to Myrlie Evers-Williams, the 83-year-old widow of Medgar Evers, who was assassinated by a racist attacker in 1963. She told me that the vitriol in evidence at some of Donald Trumps rallies last year had given her more and more and stronger flashbacks to fearful years she thought were long gone. That said, she also expressed that she wanted the past to stay the past... Medgar wanted America to be better.

Her hopes are echoed by the Reverend Jesse Jackson. And yet, for the civil rights leader, the impact of Tills killing resonates to this day. Its like Russian roulette, Jackson insists. You can never tell what bullet goes off in a galvanizing moment. But this bullet certainly did. I asked Miss Rosa Parks [in 1988] why didnt she go to the back of the bus, given the threat that she could be hurt, pushed off the bus, and run over, because three other ladies did get up. She said she thought about going to the back of the bus. But then she thought about Emmett Till and she couldnt do it. Emmett Tills killing, Jackson believes, was a defining moment in the history of lynchings. It was the first major lynching story after the 54 [Brown v. Board of Education] decision, and blacks ran with it. Even the date of Tills murder, he says, has continued to have import up through our era. August 28, 1963, was Dr. [Martin Luther] Kings I Have a Dream speech, he explains. And August 28, 2008, was the day Barack Obama was nominated for president.

With Tysons new book, and Carolyn Bryant Donhams remarks, we have reason to revisit a period in our history when bigotry, blood, and sacrifice became a call to action.

Full ScreenPhotos:January 2010: Dennis Hopper on the Selma March

Source: http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2017/01/how-author-timothy-tyson-found-the-woman-at-the-center-of-the-emmett-till-case

Continue Reading ..

Friday, January 27, 2017

Super Bowl 2017 ad stunts include a live spot, commercial filmed during game


The Making of Lady Gaga"s Pepsi Super Bowl LI Halftime Show | Ep. 1 | NFL

NEW YORK (AP) -- Lady Gaga is reportedly entertaining an unusual twist on her Super Bowl halftime show, which -- though it"s not confirmed -- she could perform from the roof of the stadium. If that comes to pass, she won"t be the only one making a big play for attention this year.

Advertisers from first timer84 Lumberto veteran Hyundai are ramping up the marketing stunts in order to stand out from the crowd during the big game. Some will air live ads, ,or at least teasers for their campaigns; one will even shoot its commercial during the game. Others are deliberately courting controversy.

Super Bowl LI, in which the Atlanta Falcons will take on the New England Patriots, is expected to be the biggest live TV event of the year.

THE WAR FOR YOUR ATTENTION

Every year, more than 30 advertisers vie to create the most-remembered 30 to 90 seconds of the Super Bowl by stuffing commercials with celebrities, slapstick humor and cute animals.

But now that so many ads get pre-released online or teased ahead of the game, advertisers have a harder time making a lasting impression. And with more than 110 million people expected to tune in on Feb. 5 and 30 second spots going for around $5 million, they need to scramble hard.

So this year, marketers are turning to stunts.

"It used to be, "We need a Super Bowl spot." Then, it was, "We need a Super Bowl spot and program,"" said Mark DiMassimo, CEO of ad agency DiMassimo Goldstein in New York. "Now, it"s we need a Super Bowl stunt or event. It needs to be newsworthy, social and surprising -- and it needs to be much bigger than 30 seconds."

GOING LIVE

Snickers said Wednesday it will air a live Super Bowl ad in the third quarter starring Adam Driver ("Star Wars: The Force Awakens"). The Mars brand will also live stream the set of the commercial for 36 hours ahead of the spot.

"The actual ad is only part of the equation," said Allison Miazga-Bedrick, a Snickers brand director, who promises "over 30 hours of original content" streamed live leading up to the game.

Similarly, Wix -- an Israeli website hosting service-- turned to Facebook Live and YouTube Live on Jan. 17 to debut teasers for its Super Bowl ad. The teaser -- which was prerecorded and only streamed live -- starred Israeli actress and model Gal Gadot, who plays Wonder Woman in her own film later this year, and the English actor Jason Statham ("The Fast and the Furious").

The company said it"s the first time a Super Bowl campaign has been launched live.

BETTING ON REJECTION

First-time Super Bowl advertiser 84 Lumber pulled a vintage ad stunt when the company went public with claims that Fox rejected its original ad because it was too "controversial."

The Pennsylvania building materials supplier bought a 90 second ad during the game -- a huge commitment for a regional brand. But Amy Smiley, the company"s director of marketing, said its first ad was rejected because some of its imagery, including a border wall that supposedly prevented people from working in the U.S., steered too close to political rhetoric about the Mexican border from President Donald Trump.

Fox declined to comment, ensuring that 84 Lumber got plenty of press well ahead of the game.

SHOOTING ON THE FLY

In perhaps the biggest gamble, Hyundai isteamingwith director Peter Berg ("Deepwater Horizon") to actually film a 90-second ad while the Super Bowl is underway. Hyundai said the ad will show "off the field" moments captured during the game, and will air right after the contest ends.

Traditionally, ads that air before or after the Super Bowl itself aren"t very successful at drawing eyeballs. But the on-the-fly aspect of this ad could make it hard to ignore.

"The challenge for all of these companies is, "How do you stand out?"" said Tim Calkins, a marketing professor at Northwestern University. "As a result we"re going to see this year people try some very curious approaches."

Dean Evans, Hyundai"s chief marketing officer, said the shoot-during-the-game approach is all about buzz.

"We wanted to test ourselves," Evans said. "We thought we would have to do it in a new and nontraditional way to really show the U.S. public that we"re back in the game."

Source: http://www.syracuse.com/sports/index.ssf/2017/01/super_bowl_2017_ad_stunts_include_a_live_spot_commercial_filmed_during_game.html

Continue Reading ..

Actor Shia LaBeouf arrested at anti-Trump installation in Queens


Shia Labeouf gets arrested at He Will Not Divide Us

Actor Shia LaBeouf was arrested early Thursday after getting into a scuffle at an anti-President Trump art installation outside a Queens museum, cops said.

LaBeoufs latest run-in with the law took place about 12:30 a.m. at the site of his interactive installation He Will Not Divide Us outside the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria.

The performance art project invites people to stand before a live-streaming camera and repeat the phrase he will not divide us.

The overnight fracas erupted when a 25-year-old Bronx man walked in between LaBeouf, 30, and the camera, cops said.

Jon Voight accuses Shia LaBeouf and Miley Cyrus of treason

The two men exchanged words before LaBeouf ripped off the mans scarf and shoved him to the ground, scratching his face in the process, cops said.

The victim flagged down a passing patrol car, and two officers arrested LaBeouf without incident.

The 30-year-old actor was charged with misdemeanor assault and later released.

LaBeouf set up the camera on Inauguration Day and has vowed to keep it running for the duration of Trumps presidency in an around-the-clock protest against the newly elected commander-in-chief.

SEE IT: Shia LaBeouf gets into altercation with troll

The live stream caught the beginning of the altercation as LaBeouf, sporting a scraggly beard and maroon winter hat, is seen apparently pulling the man by the scarf.

The pair stray off camera. Minutes later, two cops stroll up as LaBeouf speaks into the camera apparently unaware of their presence.

How are we going to make this s--- okay to be a n**i out here? LaBeouf says.

The footage shows the officers cuffing LaBeouf as a handful of young people recite he will not divide us.

Jaden Smith joins Shia LaBeouf"s anti-Trump live stream

As LaBeouf is led away, one of the youths shouts, Free Shia.

The arrest did little to dampen LaBeoufs enthusiasm for the cause.

After his release from the 114th Precinct stationhouse, LaBeouf got into a cab and yelled out the window he will not divide us while pumping his fist into the air.

The volatile actor showed up again outside the museum about 10:20 a.m., planted himself in front of the camera and resumed chanting the same line.

SEE IT: Shia LaBeouf freestyles to five different iconic beats

His eyes closed, LaBeouf methodically stomped his foot as he led a dozen people in the chant for 30 minutes straight.

But LaBeouf was in no mood to speak with reporters on his way into the museum or on his way out.

Youre harassing me. Get away from me, dude, he told a Daily News scribe before he launched into his protest.

After his 30-minute performance, LaBeouf left the museum trailed by a group of reporters and photographers.

PTSD drama "Man Down" leaves audience shell shocked, too: review

He remained silent for two blocks, then broke into a sprint back to the nearby Paper Factory Hotel, where hes been staying.

LaBeouf, who jumpstarted his career as a teenage actor on the Disney Channel series Even Stevens, made commercial success with big production titles like the Transformers franchise, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull and Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps.

In recent years, the actor has pursued a variety of public performance art projects, but has become just as well known for landing in hot water.

In 2011, he was involved in a Los Angeles bar fight that resulted in the actor getting punched in the face, handcuffed and interrogated by police.

Shia LaBeouf, Mia Goth not legally married after Vegas ceremony

Three years later, LaBeouf was charged with disorderly conduct and criminal trespassing after refusing to leave the Studio 54 Theater in Manhattan, while cursing and spitting at arresting officers. LaBeouf voluntarily joined a 12-step treatment program for alcoholism after the incident.

Tags: shia labeouf protests donald trump donald trump first 100 days astoria celebrities busted Send a Letter to the Editor Join the Conversation: facebook Tweet

Source: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/gossip/actor-shia-labeouf-arrested-anti-trump-installation-queens-article-1.2955972

Continue Reading ..

Super Bowl 2017: Patriots" new star receiver made his mark at Monmouth ... on defense? | Politi


2017 last superbowl

The text messages started coming in a flurry during the AFC Championship Game, from friends and family who kept hearing afamiliar New Jersey universitymentioned during the broadcast and wanted to know the same thing.

"They all said, "I just heard Monmouth during the Patriots game. Did you play with that guy?"" Ryan Folsom said. "And I kept replying, "Yes I did, and believe it or not, you saw that guy play.""

That guy, of course, is Chris Hogan. If you watched even five minutes of the Patriots" convincing win over the Steelers to reach Super Bowl LIor any of the wall-to-wall coverage since then, you"ve heard that name and heard his story. It is, after all, a very goodone.

He was a decorated lacrosse player at Penn State who decided to play one season of college football at Monmouth, the first stop on a circuitous journey that has landed him on the NFL"spremier franchise and-- quite suddenly -- as a Hall of Fame quarterback"s favorite target.

But delve a little deeper into that 2010 season in Monmouth and the story becomes even better. Hogan wasn"t the top receiver on that Hawks team. He wasn"t No. 2, either, or third or fourth or fifth.

Here are the N.J. ties to Super Bowl LI

Hogan was sixth in yards gained. He nearly matched his entire collegiate production as a receiver-- 12 catches, 147 yards and three touchdowns -- in that one incredible performance against Pittsburgh when he torched the Steelers defensefor nine catches, 180 yards and two scores.

Regrets? Kevin Callahan has a few. The Monmouth head coach knew he had a special talent because he had recruited him out of Ramapo High before he decided to commit to lacrosse. And on his first college play, he scored a touchdown on a 17-yard post pattern.

"But after our third game, our defensive secondary was decimated," Callahan said. "We looked around and said, "Okay, who can fill that void?" And all eyes went to Chris Hogan."

So the breakout star in these NFLplayoffs was converted to a defensive back, intercepting the first pass thrown his way and two others to lead the team. He was the rare two-way Division 1 player, averaging about 20-25snaps a game for the Hawks on offense.

"But looking back on it now," Callahan said, "we should have thrown the ball to him on every play."

Hogan was undrafted coming out of Monmouth, which is not necessarily a surprise, but then three teams gave him a shot to make the roster and cut him. He finally emerged as a reliable target with Buffalo, but his longtime friend and trainer Mike Guadango still knew he could do better.

"He is a guy who has been misused his entire career," Guadango said. He had a hunch that would change this season when the team that pursued him the hardest is known for turning overlooked players into productive pieces of a championship-caliber team.

The Patriots saw his precise route-running ability and work ethic and gave him a life-changing three-year, $12 million contract. But Callahan believes another characteristic is why he was able to climb to the top of the NFLat the pinnacle of the season.

"He simply wasn"t going to let anybody tell him he couldn"t be successful," Callahan said. "That, to me, is the reason he"s having this level of success in the NFL."

And that"s how Callahan found himself on the phone with a radio station in Tennessee, talking about his high-profile player just before the hosts switched back to NASCAR. The NFL playoffshave become a wild ride for all the Hawks on that 2010 team, with coworkers and clients constantly asking for informationabout their former teammate.

The 50 bestN.J. players in NFL history

So Mitch Pollard, the third-leading receiver on that team, tells storiesabout being road roommates with Hogan that season. Kyle Frazier, his quarterback, talks about quickly knowing he was the best athlete he"d ever been around. Nick Romeo, who also faced him as a high school opponent at Wayne Hills, rememberswatching film with his coaches and wondering "how the h**l are we going to stop this guy."

Ken Amsel tried, and failed, in a 2003 state playoff game at Giants Stadium. He still has the photo of Hogan beating him for a 70-yard touchdown, but that didn"t keep the two from becoming good friends.

It was Amsel who convinced Hogan to come to Monmouth when he heard that his old rival wanted to return to football his senior season. And it was Amsel in the stands at Gillette Stadium, wondering like everyone else how his old teammate kept getting so ridiculously open.

"There"s a reason Reggie Bush called him "7-Eleven,"" Amsel said with a laugh. His throat was still sore from cheering for Hogan that night, and he hopes to yell himself hoarse again two Sundays from now in Houston.

Hogan is heading to Super Bowl LI, and he is bringing his tinyNew Jersey collegeto the big game. And if Bill Belichick needs help in his secondary? Well, it wouldn"t be the first time.

Steve Politi may be reached atspoliti@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter@StevePoliti. FindSteve on Facebook.

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNGafusitVWEJHLeaU59UzTOSBwdZw&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779361058918&ei=2oyLWKikNc_kzAKN0pHABQ&url=https://www.nj.com/sports/index.ssf/2017/01/super_bowl_2017_chris_hogan_is_no_overnight_succes.html

Continue Reading ..

The Women Movement"s Embrace of Rape-Torturer Psychopath Donna Hylton


Donna Hylton on women"s march

Via Twitter, on a Reddit forum, I stumbled over this horrifying story: Donna Hylton, a woman who spent time in prison for participating in the kidnapping, rape, murder, and ransoming of a gay man,spoke at the Womens March as an advocate for women of color.

Here, Donna Hylton, is being interviewed by CGTN or the Chinese Government Television Network:

Here she is at the Womens March (go to 12:05 in the video to see her otherwise be stuck watching Cecile Richards):

What did this woman do? From Psychology Today, this:

Vigliarole believed the three girls were prostitutes who were going to have s*x with him. Instead, they picked him up on March 8 in Elmhurst, Queens, at Marias home, and drugged him to make him drowsy. Then they drove him to Selmas apartment in Harlem. The apartment had already been prepared for an extended torture session: The closet door had been cut, a pot put in it for use as a toilet, the windows boarded.

For the next 15 to 20 days (police arent sure just when Vigliarole died), the man was starved, burned, beaten, and tortured. (Even 10 years later, Spurling could recall Ritas chilling response when they questioned her about shoving a three-foot metal bar up Vigliaroles rear: He was a h**o anyway. How did she know? When I stuck the bar up his r****m he wiggled.)

The three girls took turns watching the man. It was Donna who delivered a ransom note and tape to a friend of Vigliaroles, who was able to get a partial license plate number of the car she was driving. He notified the police, who traced the plate to a rental car facility. On April 6 the suspects were arrested, and detectives spent 36 hours straight interviewing the seven men and women. We had to keep going back and forth and catch them in lies, said Spurling. It was a never-ending circle of lies.

Spurling himself interviewed Donna: I couldnt believe this girl who was so intelligent and nice-looking could be so unemotional about what she was telling me she and her friends had done. Theyd squeezed the victims testicles with a pair of pliers, beat him, burned him. Actually, I thought the judges sentence was lenient. Once a jailbird, always a jailbird.

***

But there was another moment, on our second day together, when she slipped verbally, and said in an almost irritable way, He [the victim] was going to die anyway, so . . . and then she caught herself. I just looked at her. All her previous protestations that when arrested shed had no idea Vigliarole was dead were clearly lies.

During this interview with the psychologist, Donna Hylton lied and said she was nowhere near the man who died. Evidence disputes this:

Once arrested, Hylton and her friends were put in a holding pen. I told [the police] these people were going to kill my daughter, we had to find my daughter. I was having nightmares and couldnt sleep. And it was in all the papers, and people would point to me and say. There she is, like I was some kind of morbid overnight celebrity, the leader of this girl gang. When they told me the victim was dead I just broke down. I didnt believe it. Look, I know I did something wrong, but I didnt kill anybody and I didnt want anybody killed. I wasnt out for anything evil, maybe love, maybe acceptance.

Hyltons signed statement, and the recollections of Detective Spurling, tell a different story. All the girlss hairs were on the bedsheet they wrapped him in, recalled Spurling, so they were all on the bed with him, or maybe having s*x with him. Rita and Theresa recalled hearing Hylton reading the ransom statement, while Vigliaroles captors held a knife to his throat and tried to force him to repeat it after them into a tape recorder. She was indeed sighted as the deliverer of the ransom note and tape. [Emphasis added.]

In retrospect, says Mel Paroff, law secretary to Judge Torres, she was a secondary character, not a mastermind. She didnt realize the gravity of what she was involved in. Spurling agrees: I dont think the girls were hard-core. They thought they could use their beauty to get what they wanted.

donna hylton has a website where she focuses on womens issues and prison reform:

Donna Hylton is a womens rights activist and criminal justice reform advocate. Donna speaks publiclyabout the issues facing incarcerated women and girls and the significant impact the significant increase in the female prison population is having on families, children and our communities.

Donna Hylton is beautiful. She is intelligent. She was abused. Her interviewer called her hypnotic which is often how psychopathsare described.

She is quite beautiful, but more than beautifulshe has a hypnotic kind of sweetness that made it hard to concentrate on what she was saying. I preferred simply to watch her, as one might watch a monologist on an empty stage, lit by a single, bare bulb. I dont know why, shed said on that first visit, but I keep feeling things are going to get better. Its like a fairy tale. Theres going to be a happy-ever-after. [Emphasis added.]

Heres a quick definition of a psychopath:

Psychopaths display different traits depending on their disorder, but common signs include superficial charm, a grandiose notion of self-worth, the need for stimulation and impulsiveness, pathological lying, the ability to manipulate others and a lack of remorse and empathy.Dec 31, 2015

She is a hypnotic beauty who also participated in the 20-day torture of a man and was an accessory to murder. She drove the ransom note. She never called police. She didnt attempt to stop the inhumanity of what was happening.

And then, when interviewed about it, she lied.

At the Womens March, there was no mention of the man who lost his life because of her actions. There was no humilityonly defiance. Donna Hylton presented herself as a victim but did not mention her role as victimizer.

Hylton has written a memoir and Rosario Dawson wants to play her.

So, fairytales really do come true for psychopathic torturersat least they have for Womens March poster child Donna Hylton.

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNE374E2GIu6G98Rf7Ou-scaXoe-AA&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&ei=OoeLWMixO5bYzAK0iL_YDw&url=https://spectator.org/the-women-movements-embrace-of-psychopath-donna-hylton/

Continue Reading ..

Why I march for life: Column


WATCH LIVE: Vice President Mike Pence speaks at March for Life

Deanna Wallace 3:18 a.m. ET Jan. 27, 2017

Protesters at the Supreme Court.(Photo: Saul Loeb, AFP/Getty Images)

At the March for Life on Friday, I will join tens of thousands of pro-life warriors of all ages, races, genders, religionsand political viewpoints to mourn the loss of more than 57 millioninnocent children since Roe v. Wade made abortion legal nationwide. These thousands flock from across the nation, and each of us marches for different reasons. Some march because theyve experienced the pain of abortion themselves, some have lost brothers and sisters to abortion, some come for religious reasons, some in support of non-violent choices, and still others come to promote pro-life feminism. But me I march for the unwanted.

imagine that there are three little children, two girls and a boy. They are unborn, unplanned and, for all intents and purposes, unwanted.

Baby #1 will be the oldest; her mom will have her at only 14 years old. She will grow up neglected and sees things that no little child should see. She will be placed in foster care aboutthe age of 5.

Her little brother, Baby #2, will be born two years later, when their mom is 16. He too will be neglected, but he will also be physically abused by some of Moms boyfriends. He is 3 when all three kids are putin foster care.

Last comes the baby of the family, Baby #3, who is born when her mom is 19. She will not spend much time with her mom, but what little time she does spend will be marked by neglect. She will be placed in foster care before she is even a year old.

All of this sounds pretty horrible a lot of suffering, a lot of neglectand little love. Would it be better for these three little children to never have been born? After all, then they would never suffer from neglect, never be hungry, never be hurt, never have to cry themselves to sleep. Many abortion advocates will talk about how it would be better to abort than to bring unwanted children into this world, and would argue that the fate of these three children proves their point.

But this is only half of their story.

They are adopted, all of them at the same time, by two amazing parents. Their parents love and adore them. They do more than just feed and clothe them: They teach them right from wrong, kiss boo-boos, take them to Disney World, take them hunting and fishing, teach them to ride a bike, help them with algebra homework,and cry as they watch them walk across the stage at graduation. They are a family, a close and loving family. These three little children grow up to be adults.

POLICING THE USA:Alook at race, justice, media

Baby #1 is now a strong, independent, military wife.She loves photography and has a beautiful son of her own.

Baby #2 is a caring, intelligent man who loves to read, play video games and has a steady job he enjoys.

Baby #3 went to law school and is now an attorney with the nations leading pro-life legal team at Americans United for Life. She gets to spend every day helping state legislators and policy groups pass laws that protect other unwanted children, giving them the chance to overcome the circumstances of their birth, just like she did.Baby #3 is me.

This is my family. This is my story. This is why I march.

Deanna Wallace is an attorney with Americans United for Life.

You can readdiverse opinions from ourBoard of Contributorsand other writers ontheOpinion front page,on Twitter@USATOpinionand in our dailyOpinion newsletter.To submit a letter, comment or column, check oursubmission guidelines.

Read or Share this story: http://usat.ly/2ka16LW

Source: http://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2017/01/27/march-life-abortion-adoption-unwanted-neglected-abused-deanna-wallace-roe-wade-column/96957024/

Continue Reading ..

Farmers Insurance Open leaderboard: Tiger Woods score, live tracker, highlights


2002 Masters~Vintage Tiger Woods~

It had been 522 days since tiger woods last played on the PGA Tour, but that all changed Thursday at the 2017 Farmers Insurance Open as Woods went out with a four-over 76, saving a disastrous back nine with a birdie on 18.

More Farmers

Torrey Pines has been good to Woods over the years, which makes it the perfect place for the 41-year-old to begin what is likely the last phase of an all-time career. Still, he probably wishes he had a number of shots back from Thursday.

Instead, it"s a man who shares his agent who leads at Torrey Pines with a few other big names on his heels. Here is how the top of the leaderboard looks along with how a few other stars performed at Torrey.

1. Justin Rose (7 under): Rose made two eagles on the easier North Course on Thursday. If you would have told me a former major winner who is also a TaylorMade staffer and Mark Steinberg client was leading after Round 1, I probably wouldn"t have first thought Rose.

2. Adam Hadwin (6 under): Mr. 59 himself had the round of the day even though he doesn"t have the lowest score. Hadwin played the much tougher South Course on Thursday and played it quite well.

T3. Charles Howell III, Beau Hossler, Trey Mullinax, Brad Fritsch, Gary Woodland (5 under): Howell is Mr. West Coast as he"s almost always lurking in the top 10 of these early-season events. It would be sweet for the former Poke to finish one off. Hossler is a former Texas star, Mullinax a former Alabama stud. They are trying to walk in the footsteps of Jordan Spieth and Justin Thomas. Of this group, only Fritsch played the tougher South Course, and he"ll have pole position along with Hadwin heading into Friday.

Other stars

T47. Phil Mickelson (1 under): Mickelson gave us the full show Thursday with insane putts and crazy flop shots. He was probably a little bit better than his 1-under 71 indicates.

T77. Rickie Fowler (E):

Fowler should be playing better than this. He shot 72 on the easier course Thursday and will have a ton of work to do Friday just to make the cut. I would love to see him really get going as Augusta approaches.

T77. Dustin Johnson (E): Johnson was fifth in the field off the tee (per usual), but he could not score to save his life. Well, until the final hole when he made a birdie alongside partners Woods and Jason Day.

T96. Jason Day (1 over): Speaking of Day, he might have putted as poorly as I"ve ever seen him. He was fourth in the field in strokes gained tee to green and shot 1 over. How is that possible?

Thanks for stopping by.

Source: http://www.cbssports.com/golf/news/farmers-insurance-open-leaderboard-tiger-woods-score-live-tracker-highlights/

Continue Reading ..