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Kathy Bates: I Want Obama ‘To Stand Up on His Hind Legs and Fight These Rat Bastards’

Academy Award-winning actress Kathy Bates wants President Obama “to stand up on his hind legs and fight these rat bastards.” When asked by the host of CNN's Piers Morgan Tonight to elaborate, Bates said Friday, “I think he has got to indict these guys from Wall Street. Somebody's got pay for that mess” (video follows with transcript and commentary): PIERS MORGAN, HOST: What do you make of what's going on now in Washington, President Obama, the whole political shakeup at the moment? KATHY BATES: Well, you know, I have to kind of go back and say that I — I grew up in Memphis, Tennessee. I grew up in a segregated town. When I went back my first year in college, that spring, I had my first black friend. I wanted to bring her home. And my father said, “Are you crazy? You want to start a race riot?” And I was like — I didn't understand it because my parents were from another generation. My dad was born in 1900, my mom in 1907. I came very late in life to them. Long story short, that was the spring that Martin Luther King was slaughtered in my hometown. Fast forward now to, what is it three — two years ago, I'm in Paris, I'm on my computer watching these election results, because I've gotten so inspired by this man — and I'm so apolitical. And for the first time in I don't know how many years, I was just galvanized by this election. It was so emotional to me. The last two years, I want to go back, something my father said to me — he always said, “Stand up on your hind legs and fight.” And that's what I'd like to say to my president, whom I'm so proud of. But I want him to stand up on his hind legs and fight these rat bastards. And he has got do it. MORGAN: Who do you mean by the rat bastards? BATES: Well, I think he's got to indict these guys from Wall Street. Somebody's got pay for that mess. And I don't think it's the American public.

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This could be a big night for the Republican candidates, notes the Des Moines Register : A major evangelical forum takes place in Des Moines, which might prove pivotal in getting Christian conservatives to rally behind a single candidate. As the Los Angeles Times explains, the political calculus in Iowa is…

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Libya’s new leaders say they will declare liberation tomorrow, a move that will start the clock for elections after months of bloodshed that culminated in the death of Moammar Gadhafi. The National Transitional Council is expected to hold elections for a constitutional assembly within eight months, then organize parliamentary and…

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Australia may have a shark partial to humans on its hands: A great white killed a 32-year-old American diver today just 11 miles from where another fatal attack occurred 12 days ago, reports AP . The unidentified American, in the country on a work visa, was killed by the 10-foot shark…

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Alex Salmond: Scottish people will set the agenda on their own future

SNP leader tells annual conference ‘the sovereign people of Scotland are now in the driving seat’ Alex Salmond, leader of the Scottish Nationalists, says his party’s electoral victories have put the “Scottish people” in the driving seat, but admits a future referendum ballot paper may offer options other than independence. Salmond used his speech to the SNP annual conference in Inverness to claim that his party’s landslide victory in the Holyrood elections ensured that “no London politician” would determine the future of Scotland. He also declared that the SNP would campaign for full independence when the referendum he has promised arrives. However, the country’s first minister did not set a detailed timetable for a referendum on Scotland’s withdrawal from the UK, in a sign that the party still lacks confidence that voters support his aspirations. And, while claiming “it was not enough”, he said that a ballot paper question on whether more powers should be transferred to the parliament at Holyrood may be included as an option in the referendum vote. “Fiscal responsibility, financial freedom, real economic powers is a legitimate proposal”, he said. “It could allow control of our own resources, competitive business tax and fair personal taxation.” The conference is the SNP’s first since the party’s victory in May’s elections, when the Nationalists became the first party to secure an overall majority in the Scottish parliament. Salmond said: “The days of Westminster politicians telling Scotland what to do or think are over. The Scottish people will set the agenda for the future. No politician, and certainly no London politician, will determine the future of the Scottish nation. The people of Scotland – the sovereign people of Scotland – are now in the driving seat.” The SNP’s election victory means a referendum will be held on Scottish independence. While no date for such a vote has yet been set, Nationalists have said it will take place in the second half of the Scottish Parliament’s five-year term. Salmond’s speech marked the start of the SNP’s campaign ahead of that referendum, as he told activists: “This party will campaign full square for independence in the coming referendum.” Last month his style came under attack from Labour’s outgoing leader, Iain Gray, during the Scottish Labour party’s conference. Gray told his party the Scottish Parliament “was never meant to be an arena for constant constitutional grievance – a platform for posturing, preening and insufferable pomposity”. Scottish National party (SNP) Alex Salmond Scottish independence Scottish politics Scotland Daniel Boffey guardian.co.uk

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Alex Salmond: Scottish people will set the agenda on their own future

SNP leader tells annual conference ‘the sovereign people of Scotland are now in the driving seat’ Alex Salmond, leader of the Scottish Nationalists, says his party’s electoral victories have put the “Scottish people” in the driving seat, but admits a future referendum ballot paper may offer options other than independence. Salmond used his speech to the SNP annual conference in Inverness to claim that his party’s landslide victory in the Holyrood elections ensured that “no London politician” would determine the future of Scotland. He also declared that the SNP would campaign for full independence when the referendum he has promised arrives. However, the country’s first minister did not set a detailed timetable for a referendum on Scotland’s withdrawal from the UK, in a sign that the party still lacks confidence that voters support his aspirations. And, while claiming “it was not enough”, he said that a ballot paper question on whether more powers should be transferred to the parliament at Holyrood may be included as an option in the referendum vote. “Fiscal responsibility, financial freedom, real economic powers is a legitimate proposal”, he said. “It could allow control of our own resources, competitive business tax and fair personal taxation.” The conference is the SNP’s first since the party’s victory in May’s elections, when the Nationalists became the first party to secure an overall majority in the Scottish parliament. Salmond said: “The days of Westminster politicians telling Scotland what to do or think are over. The Scottish people will set the agenda for the future. No politician, and certainly no London politician, will determine the future of the Scottish nation. The people of Scotland – the sovereign people of Scotland – are now in the driving seat.” The SNP’s election victory means a referendum will be held on Scottish independence. While no date for such a vote has yet been set, Nationalists have said it will take place in the second half of the Scottish Parliament’s five-year term. Salmond’s speech marked the start of the SNP’s campaign ahead of that referendum, as he told activists: “This party will campaign full square for independence in the coming referendum.” Last month his style came under attack from Labour’s outgoing leader, Iain Gray, during the Scottish Labour party’s conference. Gray told his party the Scottish Parliament “was never meant to be an arena for constant constitutional grievance – a platform for posturing, preening and insufferable pomposity”. Scottish National party (SNP) Alex Salmond Scottish independence Scottish politics Scotland Daniel Boffey guardian.co.uk

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Second Occupy London camp forms at Finsbury Square

Protesters call ‘general assembly’ at site in Moorgate and declare it a second occupation after St Paul’s A second Occupy London protest camp has sprung up in a sign that campaigners are spreading from St

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Second Occupy London camp forms at Finsbury Square

Protesters call ‘general assembly’ at site in Moorgate and declare it a second occupation after St Paul’s A second Occupy London protest camp has sprung up in a sign that campaigners are spreading from St

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David Brooks is one of the most dishonest conservative columnists going. He’s not an idiot, but he can take events that have occurred and craft them into complete nonsense. That does take real talent. Only it’s a despicable one. In his latest column in the NY Times , he writes one of the most perfidious pieces of excrement imaginable. Charles Pierce has an excellent debunking of Brooks’ latest travesty in Esquire: David Brooks Does Not Get the Moral Norm of Being Broke He notices that poor people are having fewer babies, which makes him sad. But, things are looking up! People have stopped using their “bank-issued” credit cards as much. (These would be the cards they used so as to support the overstuffed suburban lifestyle that David Brooks so celebrated in his earlier, funnier work.) This means, to Brooks, “Quietly but decisively, Americans are trying to restore the moral norms that undergird our economic system.” Jesus H. Christ in a fking Volvo, no, it doesn’t. It means people are broke . People are broke because the end product of 30 years of economic theorizing and political action that you supported has resulted in a shattered middle-class. People are broke because the Wall Street casino that your politics created and celebrated and enabled finally broke the entire country and took the rest of us down with it. People are broke because you and the rest of your “conservative” pals latched onto a crackpot scheme called supply-side economics, married it to a deregulatory frenzy and free trade, and then pitched it to the Bobos as economic liberty. You got rich. You got important. Now people are not using their credit cards because they can’t afford to buy the overpriced, Chinese-made crap that you once proposed as the new staple of American society. That is not a conscious mass moral choice. You’ve got to be on mushrooms to believe that. We continue. “Second, Americans are trying to re-establish the link between effort and reward. This was the link that was severed on Wall Street, where so many made so much for work that served no productive purpose. This was the link that was frayed by the bailouts, when people who broke the rules still got rewarded.” Oh, really? What tipped you off, Sherlock? Got two sources for that insight? Have no fear, though. Brooks has lingered as long as he cares to in the general vicinity of the fact that the people his politics enabled and celebrated were grievously amoral in almost everything they did for a decade. He’s got workers to bash. “The auto bailouts mostly worked, but they are unpopular even in the Midwestern states that directly benefited because those who failed in the market still got the gold. Public sector unions are unpopular because of the perception that benefit packages are out of balance.” The prosecution would like an offer of proof on that first sentence, Your Honor. As to the second, and the ironclad “perception” on which it depends, I guess Brooks was watching the Amanda Knox trial and missed all those people standing around on the lawn in Madison last winter, and he’s still missing all those folks in Ohio who are kicking John Kasich’s nuts through the roof of his mouth. Ah, but the real brilliance is yet to come. “The third norm is that loyalty matters. A few years ago there was a celebration of Free Agent Nation. But now most people, even most young people, would rather work long-term for one company than move around in search of freedom and opportunity.” Yes, you idiot, they would. Everyone would. Unfortunately, and I hate to keep bringing this up, Dave, but 30 years of dumb Republican economics and even dumber Republican politics, both of which you made your bones celebrating, have sort of made that impossible. (A couple of decades of bipartisan “free-trade” agreements haven’t helped, either.) Who was it that was cheering on “Free Agent Nation”? It was the politicians and the pundits who were declaring the golden age of the global economy, in which we’d all have two or three jobs before we retired, fat and happy, on the 401k’s that the miracle of Wall Street by then would have inflated beyond our wildest dreams. Anyone who meekly suggested that, maybe, he’d like to put in 20 years at his job and collect a pension at the end of it that he could live on, was dismissed as a whiny relic of a past age, or as a state employee. And, in any case, part of the miracle of Wall Street was devising new and complicated financial instruments by which private pension plans could be pillaged for private profit. If David Brooks was concerned about this prior to 2008, when the people who go to dinner with him and who pay his honoraria nearly blew up the world, he kept devilishly quiet about it. What American capitalism knows about “moral norms” is that they are for other people. The people who did all the real damage are not in any way interested in “repairing the economic moral fabric” that “is the essential national task right now.” They are interested in keeping the money they stole and in stealing as much more of it as they can. But David Brooks is far more concerned with some guy, sitting around his kitchen table, bills up to his elbows, who decides that, in the interest of the “economic moral fabric” of the country, he won’t take the kids to Chuck E. Cheese tonight on the family MasterCard. Congratulations, good and faithful servant, says David Brooks, and orders another brandy. Pierce reminds us of this take down by Sasha Issenberg back in 2004 that should have had him booted out of the occupation of masquerading as an intellectual writer of non-fiction. (h/t Atrios )

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David Brooks is one of the most dishonest conservative columnists going. He’s not an idiot, but he can take events that have occurred and craft them into complete nonsense. That does take real talent. Only it’s a despicable one. In his latest column in the NY Times , he writes one of the most perfidious pieces of excrement imaginable. Charles Pierce has an excellent debunking of Brooks’ latest travesty in Esquire: David Brooks Does Not Get the Moral Norm of Being Broke He notices that poor people are having fewer babies, which makes him sad. But, things are looking up! People have stopped using their “bank-issued” credit cards as much. (These would be the cards they used so as to support the overstuffed suburban lifestyle that David Brooks so celebrated in his earlier, funnier work.) This means, to Brooks, “Quietly but decisively, Americans are trying to restore the moral norms that undergird our economic system.” Jesus H. Christ in a fking Volvo, no, it doesn’t. It means people are broke . People are broke because the end product of 30 years of economic theorizing and political action that you supported has resulted in a shattered middle-class. People are broke because the Wall Street casino that your politics created and celebrated and enabled finally broke the entire country and took the rest of us down with it. People are broke because you and the rest of your “conservative” pals latched onto a crackpot scheme called supply-side economics, married it to a deregulatory frenzy and free trade, and then pitched it to the Bobos as economic liberty. You got rich. You got important. Now people are not using their credit cards because they can’t afford to buy the overpriced, Chinese-made crap that you once proposed as the new staple of American society. That is not a conscious mass moral choice. You’ve got to be on mushrooms to believe that. We continue. “Second, Americans are trying to re-establish the link between effort and reward. This was the link that was severed on Wall Street, where so many made so much for work that served no productive purpose. This was the link that was frayed by the bailouts, when people who broke the rules still got rewarded.” Oh, really? What tipped you off, Sherlock? Got two sources for that insight? Have no fear, though. Brooks has lingered as long as he cares to in the general vicinity of the fact that the people his politics enabled and celebrated were grievously amoral in almost everything they did for a decade. He’s got workers to bash. “The auto bailouts mostly worked, but they are unpopular even in the Midwestern states that directly benefited because those who failed in the market still got the gold. Public sector unions are unpopular because of the perception that benefit packages are out of balance.” The prosecution would like an offer of proof on that first sentence, Your Honor. As to the second, and the ironclad “perception” on which it depends, I guess Brooks was watching the Amanda Knox trial and missed all those people standing around on the lawn in Madison last winter, and he’s still missing all those folks in Ohio who are kicking John Kasich’s nuts through the roof of his mouth. Ah, but the real brilliance is yet to come. “The third norm is that loyalty matters. A few years ago there was a celebration of Free Agent Nation. But now most people, even most young people, would rather work long-term for one company than move around in search of freedom and opportunity.” Yes, you idiot, they would. Everyone would. Unfortunately, and I hate to keep bringing this up, Dave, but 30 years of dumb Republican economics and even dumber Republican politics, both of which you made your bones celebrating, have sort of made that impossible. (A couple of decades of bipartisan “free-trade” agreements haven’t helped, either.) Who was it that was cheering on “Free Agent Nation”? It was the politicians and the pundits who were declaring the golden age of the global economy, in which we’d all have two or three jobs before we retired, fat and happy, on the 401k’s that the miracle of Wall Street by then would have inflated beyond our wildest dreams. Anyone who meekly suggested that, maybe, he’d like to put in 20 years at his job and collect a pension at the end of it that he could live on, was dismissed as a whiny relic of a past age, or as a state employee. And, in any case, part of the miracle of Wall Street was devising new and complicated financial instruments by which private pension plans could be pillaged for private profit. If David Brooks was concerned about this prior to 2008, when the people who go to dinner with him and who pay his honoraria nearly blew up the world, he kept devilishly quiet about it. What American capitalism knows about “moral norms” is that they are for other people. The people who did all the real damage are not in any way interested in “repairing the economic moral fabric” that “is the essential national task right now.” They are interested in keeping the money they stole and in stealing as much more of it as they can. But David Brooks is far more concerned with some guy, sitting around his kitchen table, bills up to his elbows, who decides that, in the interest of the “economic moral fabric” of the country, he won’t take the kids to Chuck E. Cheese tonight on the family MasterCard. Congratulations, good and faithful servant, says David Brooks, and orders another brandy. Pierce reminds us of this take down by Sasha Issenberg back in 2004 that should have had him booted out of the occupation of masquerading as an intellectual writer of non-fiction. (h/t Atrios )

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