Leno: ‘Very Dangerous to White House If Journalists Suddenly Start Asking Real Questions’

Jay Leno continued pressuring Barack Obama Thursday night. During his opening monologue on NBC’s Tonight Show, the host said, “This is very dangerous to the White House if journalists should suddenly start asking real questions” (video follows with transcribed highlights and commentary): “This week, CBS News became the first news …

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Illinois Senate Defeats Governor’s Sneaky Attempt to Ban Assault Weapons

Kurt Nimmo Infowars.com November 29, 2012 In Obama’s home state, Illinois, governor Pat Quinn attempted to circumvent the legislature and impose an assault weapons ban on Wednesday. State Sen. Dave Luechtefeld, a Republican from Okawville, led an override that defeated the governor. “Today is a good day for the Second …

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Don’t be a Petraeus: A Tutorial on Anonymous Email Accounts

Tomorrow, as the Senate Judiciary Committee considers reforming the decades-old federal email privacy law, the personal Inboxes and love lives of senior military and intelligence figures may be on that august body’s mind. When the FBI poured through the personal lives of CIA Director David Petraeus, Paula Broadwell, Jill Kelly …

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Chicago Books & Authors

“Authors Showcase” introduces readers to new books and authors. This thirty minute TV show can be seen every Thursday at 8PM on Chicago cable channel 25 (RCN/Comcast) or online at http://authorsbroadcast.com anytime. Chicago Books & Authors Watch a recent episode right now.

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Chicago ‘Code Of Silence:’ 2 Police Officers Claim Blacklisting Over Reporting Corruption

Two Chicago police officers filed a federal lawsuit Thursday alleging that high-ranking Chicago Police Department officials blacklisted them after they attempted to blow the whistle on crooked colleagues who were engaged in illegal activities. Shannon Spalding and Daniel Echeverria allege in the lawsuit [PDF] that they saw police colleagues shaking …

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Supreme Court blocks Illinois law prohibiting taping of police

Tribune staff 10:12 a.m. CST, November 26, 2012 The U.S. Supreme Court has blocked enforcement of an Illinois law that prohibited people from recording police officers on the job. The justices on Monday left in place a lower court ruling that found that the state’s anti-eavesdropping law violates free speech …

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Anonymous hacker behind Stratfor attack faces life in prison

A pretrial hearing in the case against accused LulzSec hacker Jeremy Hammond this week ended with the 27-year-old Chicago man being told he could be sentenced to life in prison for compromising the computers of Stratfor. Judge Loretta Preska told Hammond in a Manhattan courtroom on Tuesday that he could …

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US government files lawsuit accusing contractors of inflating troop trailer prices in Iraq

By Associated Press 11:20 a.m. CST, November 20, 2012 CHICAGO (AP) — The U.S. government has filed a civil lawsuit that accuses a Houston-based global construction company and its Kuwaiti subcontractor of allegedly submitting inflated claims to install trailers for Iraq War troops. The complaint filed this week says KBR …

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Judge Grants Reprieve To Student Expelled For Refusing To Wear Tracking Device Badge

By Craig Bannister Andrea Hernandez won’t have to leave her high school for refusing to wear a badge designed to track her every move there – yet – her attorneys announced today. A district court judge for Bexar County, Texas, has granted a temporary restraining order to prevent Northside Independent …

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Metra OKs hiking 10-ride ticket by 11 percent

By Richard Wronski Tribune reporter 12:16 p.m. CST, November 16, 2012 The Metra board voted overwhelmingly today to raise the price of the popular 10-ride tickets by about 11 percent. The 8-2 vote comes just one year after Metra riders were hit with the biggest fare hike in the commuter …

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Heroin use increasing on North Shore

November 16, 2012|By John P. Huston, Chicago Tribune reporter One day three years ago Meghan Murrin was a New Trier High School senior. And she had just died for a few minutes. Her increasing experimentation with illegal drugs had led her to heroin, and on Oct. 3, 2009, an overdose …

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Petitioners escorted out of city hall by police during water meeting

November 15, 2012 at 10:00 am By Sara Graper During the Nov. 6 Flagstaff City Council meeting, two residents were escorted out by police after the council denied putting their petition against reclaimed water usage on a future agenda. After more than two hours of grant considerations, the council came …

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To Mayor Emanuel, some jobs are worth more than others

What’s really saved by privatizing a couple dozen positions at the water department? The time has come to consider the curious contradictions in Mayor Emanuel’s views of how government can help save or create jobs. When the state of Illinois announced it was giving a multimillion-dollar tax break to the …

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Source: CeaseFire has ‘no significant success stories’

BY FRANK MAIN Staff Reporter/fmain@suntimes.com November 13, 2012 12:54AM More than three months into a $1 million contract with the city, the anti-violence group CeaseFire has “no significant success stories,” a ranking police source said. It’s hard to evaluate CeaseFire’s mediation of gang conflicts without getting timelier reporting from the …

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