• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • Podcast
  • Full Measure
  • Blog
  • Donate
  • "Slanted" Preorder here

Sharyl Attkisson

Untouchable Subjects. Fearless, Nonpartisan Reporting.

  • US
  • World
  • Business
  • Health
    • Vaccine, Medical links
  • Special Investigations
    • Attkisson v. DOJ
    • Benghazi
    • "Collusion v. Trump" TL
    • Fake News
    • Fast and Furious
    • Media Mistakes on Trump
    • Obama Surveillance TL
    • Obamacare

Sharyl Attkisson

Read: Letter by ISIS al-Baghdadi hostage Kayla Mueller

Kayla Mueller, a humanitarian aid volunteer from Arizona, was captured in Syria and held hostage by ISIS and its leader, al-Baghdadi. Her death was confirmed in February 2015.

Al-Baghdadi was confirmed dead after he reportedly blew himself up with a suicide vest during a raid by U.S. forces this weekend.

Other Americans were among a rash of beheadings by the Islamic extremist terrorist group around the time of Mueller's death. They include another aid worker named Peter Kassig and journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff.

Mueller wrote the below letter to her family while she was held prisoner.

Fight government overreach and double-standard justice by supporting the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund for Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions. Click here.

Analyst: it's not "racist" to oppose unchecked immigration

There are parallel debates happening in the U.S. and Europe over the pace of both legal and illegal immigration.

Europe faced a crisis beginning with a massive influx of mostly Muslim refugees in 2015, and it created partisan battles and political divides in many countries.

Those who advocate for controlled borders are often hit with accusations they are "racist."

But liberal author and professor Eric Kaufman says the term "racism" has been misapplied to many -- who can be found among all races -- who tend to be comfortable with the status quo, whatever it may be, and are less likely to embrace sudden change.

To watch the interview, which aired on Full Measure, click the link below.

http://fullmeasure.news/news/politics/white-shift

Thank you to the thousands who are supporting the landmark case of Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions.

Follow the money: your tax dollars spent on sinking cities

What if we spent $14 billion U.S. tax dollars on New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina to refortify the levees and anti-flooding systems... but it didn't work?

That's the question raised in this Full Measure "Follow the Money" investigation by Lisa Fletcher.

You can watch the video of the story by clicking the link below. The transcript follows.

http://fullmeasure.news/news/cover-story/sinking-cities

After Hurricane Katrina in 2005, Congress gave $14 billion tax dollars for the largest U.S. civil engineering project in history... to protect New Orleans and reinforce its levees. As the new and improved system faced its first big test over the summer, more cities are facing a costly fight to survive. Lisa Fletcher investigates the complications and questions that remain. 

Lisa: This is South Louisiana, living below the water line. Canals stretch through neighborhoods, the Mississippi River frames the southern border of New Orleans. And the shores of Lake Pontchartrain lie just beyond the suburbs. Most days, it’s a beautiful view with a fragile balance. But when storms hit, more than 900,000 people count on a thin line of levees to hold back the floodwaters.

Lt. Gen. Honore’: We’ve got to remember on any given day, Mother Nature can break anything built by man.

Lisa: Army Lieutenant General Russel Honore’ has seen the worst of times. He coordinated the emergency response to Hurricane Katrina 14 years ago. As commander of Joint Task Force Katrina...He faced the aftermath of a storm, reportedly strong enough to reverse the course of a river.

Lt. Gen. Honore’: There are reports that during Hurricane Katrina, the Mississippi ran North. That’s how powerful it was.

Lisa: In 2005, Hurricane Katrina flooded 80% of the city - killed more than 1,800, and displaced more than a million people in the gulf coast. Many didn’t return. To this day --- there are homes still untouched. A hospital abandoned. This Six Flags amusement park never reopened.

After Katrina, Congress approved billions of dollars to refortify New Orleans. $14 billion went to the largest civil engineering project in US history - for the Army Corps of Engineers to build pumping stations, storm barriers, and to reinforce hundreds of miles of earthen levees that run along Lake Pontchartrain, and form a fragile barrier between the water and the low-lying homes on the other side.

Before Katrina, levees had a single steel piling, driven 16 feet into the ground. Now, a T shaped wall is driven 100 feet down, and anchored on both sides - a major upgrade to withstand the force of water.

In July, the upgrades passed an important test. As Hurricane Barry barreled toward New Orleans, the Mississippi River was near record highs from spring storms to the north, and nearing the top of the levees. The predicted storm surge coming from the sea was the same height as the levees. New Orleans was caught between potential flooding from two sides. But when Barry hit, the levees held, and though flooded with rain, New Orleans was narrowly spared from a catastrophe.

But New Orleans Mayor Latoya Cantrell credited luck more than the levees.

Mayor Latoya Cantrell: “We are beyond lucky we were spared. As those bands zoned in on New Orleans, it just seemed to go around us”

Lisa: It turns out that even with the expensive new improvements, there are still big problems. The stronger levees will not stop the rain, the greatest threat posed by slow moving storms. And that danger is compounded by another: The levees are actually sinking.

Lisa: So you expect the levees to fail?

Lt. Gen. Honore’: It’s not ‘if’ - it’s ‘when.’because they’re made out of dirt and rock and concrete and they can be overmatched either by rainfall or by water surge coming in.

And the price tag of any protection...Is growing.

In the next 20 years, according to one study -- protecting all coastal cities in the US with seawalls -- would require $400 billion dollars.

In 19 small communities - the cost to protect property and infrastructure is 1 million dollars per person!

One big question is how much good all of that would even do.

Ed Richards: You can keep those levees up, but New Orleans is, is rapidly becoming an island.

Lisa: LSU Professor Ed Richards studies how cities will weather future storms.

Ed Richards: Miami, inland flooding would be Sacramento. Tampa has a huge risk. North of Virginia beach is very high risk for flooding.

Lisa: New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced a plan to protect a small slice of lower Manhattan - including precious Wall Street from flooding. That would cost $10 billion...Some of which would come out of the wallets of American taxpayers.

Lisa: There are a lot of cities asking for federal funding. There will be more as we continue to see these storms. Is there a point at which the federal government is going to have to choose which cities get saved and which don’t?

Ed Richards: The federal government’s been choosing forever. A lot of those small, poor communities in the Carolinas - maybe they’ll get a little bit of relief money. They’re not getting any money to save them. Go into the upper Midwest where there’s flooding issues - those folks feel completely abandoned. Money goes to politically powerful, economically powerful cities first. New York City, Miami, those are politically important cities. They'll probably get money in long past coastal communities like New Orleans or a lot of the communities in the Carolinas that are basically poor, no real jobs space, no economic base.

Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI

Ricky Boyett: It’s much like a medieval city where you would build the walls to keep out the invaders. In this case, we’re building a ring around the city to keep out the water.

Lisa: Ricky Boyett is with the Army Corps of Engineers.

Ricky Boyett: You’re looking at 25 feet above sea level.

Lisa: He remains confident in the $14 billion improvements in New Orleans. But the Corps has notified Congress that the levees may need to be raised even higher, and they'll likely be asking for more taxpayer money.

Lisa: Some people have suggested this is throwing good money after bad. Is there a point at which the money has to stop?

Ricky Boyett: Well, I think that’s a component of keeping the system at its level. That’s how it has to be done here.They’re the strongest levees in the country. They’re built to the highest standards that didn’t even exist prior to Katrina. We’re fully confident in the levees doing their job.

Lisa: But they need to be higher?

Ricky Boyett: You just always have to keep on that level.

Lisa: Considering the cost and uncertainties, Professor Ed Richards suggests it might make better sense for people to simply move.

Ed Richards: If we were to invest our coastal restoration money and as incentives and the building new towns inland from the coast, so you create a lot of housing units and people would organically move away from the coast.

Sandy Rosenthal: This was the level of water after it settled.

In the end, New Orleans residents like Sandy Rosenthal say they hope people will see fit to invest in saving New Orleans, rather than expecting people to move away from America's at-risk coastline.

Sandy Rosenthal: I only hope that the people of America believe we still need New Orleans. And I haven't even gotten to the fact that New Orleans is a historic gem, and if the country ever lost New Orleans, we would be missed.

Even the Army Corps admits it’s almost impossible to beat Mother Nature and the walls and levees are an imperfect solution. But one other place, also built under sea level is trying something different. The Dutch are finding ways to redirect the flood waters and surges, into urban catch basins and away from critical housing and infrastructure. 

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

For more original, off-narrative reporting, subscribe to my PODCAST: "The Sharyl Attkisson Podcast" on iTunes or your favorite distributor. Or click here to listen now. Follow us on Twitter! @SharylPodcast

Poll: Talk of impeachment makes many "support Trump more"

The talk of impeachment makes Trump advocates support him even more. That's according to the latest unscientific poll at SharylAttkisson.com.

Of those who answered this survey, 94% said they "support Trump more" amid the discussion of his impeachment.

One percent (1%) of Trump critics say it makes them oppose Trump even more.

Read the full results below. Meantime, be sure and vote in our latest poll at SharylAttkisson.com on the home page. Look for the black box in the right sidebar or scroll way down on the mobile site!

The talk of impeachment makes me:

94% Support Trump more

<1% Support Trump less

1% Oppose Trump more

1% Oppose Trump less

4% No difference

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

A bit of happiness

I promised you a little slice of happiness today. Here it is from my Sunday news program: Full Measure. Click the link at the very bottom of this page to watch the calming, happy video of the story!

Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI

Who are the happiest people on Earth? Consistently, surveys show it's people in Denmark. And that may be thanks to a word you've never even heard before. We explore the Danish lifestyle known worldwide as hygge.

This little green path is in a neighborhood outside Copenhagen, Denmark and anthropologist Jeppe Linnett is about to give us on a hygge tour.

Jeppe Linnet: Welcome to my own little private hygge paradise here.

Hygge— that’s spelled H-y-g-g-e— is a uniquely Danish concept, which Linnet has studied.

Sharyl: What would you say in a sentence or two is a definition of hygge?

Linnet: Hygge is a kind of atmosphere where you feel that you can you can be yourself. You're allowed to be yourself and you feel that others are genuine and authentic and friendly.

That may be different things to different people.

Linnet: Just chilling and being lazy.

Sharyl: Read a book maybe?

Linnet: Exactly. Or listening to music or whatever you want to do.

It could be a cozy, functional space indoors with candles or soft light.

It also means spending time with people you genuinely enjoy.

Sharyl: The word is hyggly?

Linnet: Hyggly. Yeah. That's the adjective for the experience.

How to watch Full Measure

Sharyl: A hygge-like experience.

Linnet: This was hygge like.

The pursuit of “hygge” has become popular well past the borders of this small Northern European nation.

Shaun Russell: Boreal forest; spruce, pine and fir.

Shaun Russell says he’s found a way to bottle it.

Russell: The smell of baking bread, smoky tea.

Russell moved to Denmark from Britain.

Sharyl: What brought you here?

Russell: The love of a blonde Danish girl.

Sharyl talks "hygge" in Denmark with a man who has bottled it

They’ve been married 20 years now. He’s built his life and business around an expanding appreciation for hygge. Candles and fragrances help people capture that feeling of happiness or contentment wherever they may be.

Sharyl: How do you put a smell to hygge?

Russell: That's interesting cause a lot of Danes can always tell you what hygge is if you ask them on the streets but actually, if you ask them what it smells like, they come unstuck. So when we created a scent for hygge, you have to be a little bit more, let's say creative.

Russell: But I think Western countries such as the United Kingdom and I, I believe the US too, have a tendency to defer happiness to a later date or a more significant event such as a new job, bigger car, bigger house. I think what the Scandinavians are very good at is just focusing in on the moment.

That’s what we’re doing back in the Danish countryside at Linnet’s cottage.

Linnet: There is a good degree of being yourself here, which is very important in a Scandinavian mindset to have a place where you can just be you.

Sharyl: If someone in the United States wanted to experience the feeling or the experience of hygge, what would you tell them to do?

Linnet: You can't force it and it won't come because you light a candle or put on a blanket. Take some good, slow quality time with people that they really feel good around, not the ones that they think they should feel good around, but people that, that, that really give them a pleasant vibe and they feel they can be themselves and then, you know, be together in a way that is not too demanding.

Sharyl: Well, I hope you found this conversation hyggely.

Linnet: I definitely did. Very much. Very friendly. Yeah

Sharyl: Thank you.

Linnet: You're welcome.

Meantime, the Dutch also have a lifestyle concept that’s catching on. Niksen.. which is described as "the art of doing nothing, aimlessly and without the objective of being productive.” 

Click the link below to watch the video:

http://fullmeasure.news/news/politics/happy-danes

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

The nonexistent impeachment quid pro quo (PODCAST)

Democrats, Republicans and the media who are framing the Trump impeachment in terms of "quid pro quo" misunderstand the term as well as common diplomacy.

Listen to the podcast by clicking the audio player below.

Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI

For more original reporting, subscribe to my two podcasts on iTunes, Spotify or your favorite distributor: "Full Measure After Hours" and "The Sharyl Attkisson Podcast." Follow us on Twitter @FullMeasureAH @SharylPodcast!

Some Democrats worry Trump impeachment effort will cause them to lose the House in 2020

The following is an excerpt from an article in the liberal publication The Atlantic.

When House Speaker Nancy Pelosi gave her blessing to an impeachment inquiry three weeks ago, she also laid down a marker: The investigation wouldn’t center on any of the issues that Democrats have obsessed over for the last three years. Not Russian interference, or emoluments, or security clearances, or family separation. Impeachment would be about Ukraine—and only about Ukraine...

Some moderate lawmakers and rank-and-file Democrats—many of whom were reticent to support impeachment to begin with—are intent on keeping the focus of the inquiry as narrow as possible, as it is now under Pelosi’s direction. They’re worried that straying from Trump’s Ukraine-related offenses could create the appearance of a partisan fishing expedition...

The current plan is for Democrats, led by the House Intelligence Committee, to continue gathering information about Trump’s request of Ukraine through witness testimony and subpoenaed documents; today, Democrats plan to question the former ambassador to Ukraine, Bill Taylor. Then, after reviewing the evidence, the Judiciary Committee will decide if there are grounds for impeachment. If so, committee members will write the articles—a list of reasons why they think the president should be removed from office—and present them to the full House for a vote. Former President Andrew Johnson, for example, faced a total of 11 articles, spanning from his violation of the Tenure of Office Act to bringing “contempt, ridicule and disgrace” to the presidency. By contrast, former President Bill Clinton faced two: for lying under oath and obstruction of justice. If the House votes to approve any of the individual articles, Trump will be formally impeached, and his case will go to the Senate for trial...

Read the rest of the article by clicking the link below:

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2019/10/impeachment-trump-democrats/600448/

Support the fight against government overreach in Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions.
Thanks to the thousands who have already supported!

Your billions spent on New Orleans after Katrina...well spent?

Fourteen years after Hurricane Katrina, mass amounts of federal tax money has been spent to protect New Orleans from a repeat disaster.

More than 1800 people died as a result of the 2005 storm.

Among the funds devoted to help are $19 billion for what amounts to the largest civil engineering project in U.S. history. Among other improvements, the city's levees have been reinforced.

Lisa Fletcher followed the money to New Orleans and found two important things.

First, some say that's not enough money and that the levees will need continual improvements at additional cost.

Second, some experts say it's not a matter of "if" but "when" the new and improved levees will fail.

Watch out cover story investigation this Sunday on Full Measure.

Also on this week's program, when you hear the debate over immigration and illegal immigration, you often hear cries of "racism." It turns out that very debate is familiar in Europe, as well, as Europe deals with repercussions of mass immigration from mostly Muslim countries, creating a culture clash in many areas.

Sharyl in London with Eric Kaufman, author of "White Shift"

I'll talk to an author and professor who describes himself as a "liberal" but says some on his side are unfairly using the slur "racist" against those who have very different reasons they oppose mass uncontrolled immigration. He has suggestions on ways to bridge the divide.

And I'll take you to one of the happiest places on earth. (Hint: it's in Scandinavia.) #hygge

Desperately seeking "hygge" in Copenhagen, Denmark

We never waste your time rehashing news you've already seen all week. To learn how to watch Full Measure on TV, online or on demand, click: How to watch Full Measure

Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Coming Soon

Subscribe

Get the Latest Stories Straight to Your Inbox

Follow Sharyl Attkisson

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Recent Comments

  • Mickey Pullen on Hydroxychloroquine: Politicizing Medicine (PODCAST)
  • Mike Marinak on Hydroxychloroquine: Politicizing Medicine (PODCAST)
  • Debunking “The Hotchkiss Republicans Report” - The Hotchkiss Record on "Collusion against Trump" timeline

Subscribe

Get the Latest Stories Straight to Your Inbox

Footer

Pages

  • Home
  • About
  • Podcast
  • Support
  • Contact

2ndary Pages

  • Full Measure Stations
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Subscribe to SharylAttkisson.com

SPECIAL INVESTIGATIONS

  • Attkisson v. DOJ/FBI
  • Benghazi
  • Fake News
  • Fast & Furious
  • Obamacare

Ad

Ad