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In a private conversation that was inadvertently taped by a voicemail machine, an associate of Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown can be heard referring to his Republican opponent Meg Whitman as a “ whore ” for cutting a deal … Months earlier, Whitman had agreed to exempt public safety officials from key parts of her pension reform plan. “Do we want to put an ad out? … That I have been warned if I crack down on pensions, I will be – that they’ll go to Whitman, …

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While the “media will wade into a Tea Party event with hundreds of thousands of people looking for that one brain-dead Lyndon LaRouche follower” who says something asinine that they can plaster “all over the news,” they have ignored the insane rhetoric coming from featured speakers at last Saturday’s “One Nation Working Together” rally, NewsBusters publisher Brent Bozell told viewers of the October 7 edition of “Hannity.” Appearing on last night’s 9 p.m. Eastern program for the popular recurring “Media Mash” segment, the Media Research Center quoted the extreme rhetoric of musician Harry Belafonte, which was ignored by the mainstream media: Let me just read to you what Harry Belafonte said in his speech. “Perhaps the greatest threat of all is the undermining of our Constitution and the systematic attack against the inalienable rights of the citizens of this nation…. At the vanguard of this insidious attack is the Tea Party. “This band of misguided citizens is moving perilously close to achieving villainous ends.”  Now ABC was there, they covered that, they could have showed that footage. In case their cameras broke, it’s all over every left-wing blog site in America, and yet they won’t put it on their national news. Bozell also addressed ABC “This Week” host Christiane Amanpour’s allegation of violence-engendering Islamophobia against Gary Bauer and other social conservatives: Sean, since 9/11, people like Christiane Amanpour have been lecturing Americans about how we shouldn’t be tarring the entire Islamic nation because of the acts of the extremists who attacked us. Well, fine.Then what in the world is she doing tarring all of Christianity and attacking Gary Bauer personally because of some knucklehead in Tennessee who vandalized a mosque?! What a double standard!

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Weekday Vegetarian: Vegan Napa Cabbage and Sesame Slaw

Photo: Kelly Rossiter This is one of those super quick and easy recipes to make as a side dish to a grilled or fried tofu , or tofu with a sauce , or even the braised squash with black beans that I wrote about yesterday. The recipe says to pulse the dressing ingredients in a blender, but really, you can do this by hand. Just put the ingredients into a jar, put the lid on and give it a good s… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The final government unemployment report before the midterm election was released Oct. 8 showing a loss of 95,000 jobs in September , and an additional 15,000 losses in July and August and an unemployment rate still at 9.6 percent. But Gallup warned on Oct. 7 that the BLS report was “likely to understate” the job losses in September. By its calculations the unemployment rate is actually much higher at 10.1 percent. Dennis Jacobe, Gallup’s chief economist, found that there was a sharp increase in job losses in the latter half of September that were “unlikely to be picked up in the government’s unemployment report.” “Gallup’s modeling of the unemployment rate is consistent with Tuesday’s ADP report of a decline of 39,000 private-sector jobs, and indicates that the government’s national unemployment rate in September will be in the 9.6% to 9.8% range,” Jacobe wrote. Ultimately, Gallup said the rising losses in late September “does not bode well for the economy during the fourth quarter, or for holiday sales.” Jacobe warned policymakers not to be “misled” by the BLS report and that the jobs market could be “deteriorating more rapidly” than the government would suggest. The cable news immediate reaction to the BLS report on Oct. 8 was downbeat, although CNN’s “American Morning” emphasized the government’s claim of 64,000 private sector jobs added ( as they did in early September ). CNN’s Christine Romans did notice the “one thing troubling” in the government report was the “all-time high” number of people working part-time who want to be working full time. But Roman’s “American Morning” report failed to tell its viewers about Gallup’s concern that things might be much worse than the government figures would say. MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” regular and “progressive” Donnie Deutsch brought up Gallup’s figures in the panel discussion of the jobs numbers. He also told the panel that even the Democrat CEO friends he has are “not bullish” on the economy. CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo responded to Deutsch saying, “We’re seeing the economy deteriorate, we’re definitely in a soft patch that, um, resumed in the summer time.” “Maria, do you know one CEO, ‘cuz I don’t, who feels good about what’s coming in the next couple years?” Deutsch asked. “I have yet to find one.” The BLS report also showed 1.2 million discouraged workers in September, up more than 500,000 from one year earlier. The government’s preliminary estimate of the benchmark revision (annual revision to the jobs data) showed an additional 366,000 job losses in the past year. That revision will be finalized and issued in its Feb. 4, 2011 report. Like this article? Then sign up for our newsletter, The Balance Sheet .

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The New York Times, which is opposed to First Amendment protections for political advertising, has an untrammeled view of free speech when it comes to violent video games and even the picketing of soldiers’ funerals by the family of Fred Phelps, infamous for their “God Hates Fags” signs and other despicable messages. The New York Times Co. has filed a “friend of the court” brief with the Supreme Court (along with 20 other news outlets) in support of Phelps’s church, which is being sued by the family of fallen Marine Matthew Snyder for picketing his funeral, displaying signs like “Thank God for dead soldiers” and “God hates you.” The Times found the matter important enough to devote Thursday’s lead editorial to it — ” Lamentable Speech .” To the American Nazi Party, Hustler Magazine, and other odious figures in Supreme Court history, add the Rev. Fred Phelps Sr. and the members of the Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kan. Their antigay protests at the funeral of a soldier slain in Iraq were deeply repugnant but protected by the First Amendment. All of the sympathy in the case of Snyder v. Phelps, which was argued on Wednesday at the Supreme Court, goes to the family of Lance Cpl. Matthew Snyder, the fallen Marine. But as the appeals court in the case observed, using words of Justice Felix Frankfurter, “It is a fair summary of history to say that the safeguards of liberty have often been forged in controversies involving not very nice people.” That happened when the court protected Hustler’s right to mock the Rev. Jerry Falwell and the right of American Nazis to march in Skokie, Ill. …. Walter Dellinger, a former acting solicitor general, sided with the Snyders for Senator Harry Reid, the majority leader, and Senator Mitch McConnell, the minority leader, and many others in Congress. They argue that Congress and 46 states have passed laws limiting protests at funerals and, implicitly, that the support for the family was a heartfelt exception to the breakdown in Washington. Nadine Strossen, a former leader of the American Civil Liberties Union, pointed out the chilling consequences for protest-filled university campuses if the church’s position is not upheld. One friend of the court brief called the protesters’ message “uncommonly contemptible.” True, but it is in the interest of the nation that strong language about large issues be protected, even when it is hard to do so. The Times finds some kinds of speech even more offensive than “God Hates Fags”: Campaign advertising by corporations. A January 22 editorial termed the Supreme Court’s victory for expanding free speech, in the form of loosening restrictions on companies spending money on political campaigns, “The Court’s Blow to Democracy.” The text was no less hysterical: “With a single, disastrous 5-to-4 ruling, the Supreme Court has thrust politics back to the robber-baron era of the 19th century.” Yet the Times has joined nearly two-dozen other news organizations in filing a “friend of the court” brief in support of the Phelps family. Times Supreme Court reporter Adam Liptak made the omission deep in his story on Thursday, ” Justices Take Up Funeral-Protest Case .” The Supreme Court heard arguments on Wednesday in a highly charged case involving protesters objecting to homosexuality who picketed a military funeral…. The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and 21 news organizations, including The New York Times Company, filed a brief supporting the Kansas church. It said the First Amendment protects even hateful speech on matters of public concern.

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The Week in Pictures: Toxic Industrial Sludge Covers Hungarian Villages, White House Will Install Solar Panels, and More (Slideshow)

A state of emergency has been declared in Hungary where four people are dead, 120 injured and six missing as torrents of red toxic sludge, the byproduct of bauxite refining for aluminum, burst from a containment pond and poured through six villages in three counties. In other environmental news this week, the White House has announced that solar panels will be installed on the White House living quarters by spring 2011; A Volkswagen Passat BlueMotion has recently set a new Guinness World Record for the “longest distance traveled by a standard production passenger car on a single tank of fuel”; and in Pap… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Apple in talks to launch iTunes subscription music service?

Rumors of an iTunes subscription service are nothing new, but it’s not every day they pop up in Reuters and the New York Post and CNET , so here we go again. The Reuters and NYP reports claim Apple’s Eddy Cue has been meeting with record execs to pitch a new $10-$15 monthly service that would offer unlimited access to music — the pricing would be tiered depending on the amount of music consumed and how long you’d get access to it. That goes hand in hand with the CNET piece, which says Apple’s trying to keep Spotify from getting US deals in place by telling the labels they’ll never make any money from the service — not the most chivalrous of moves, but no one ever said the music business was a friendly place. Of course, we’ve been hearing versions of these rumors for ages now and we’re sure there are always talks ongoing, so this could all be nothing, but we’d bet Apple’s trying to work something out ahead of Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7 launch and renewed Zune marketing push. We’ll see, we’ll see. Apple in talks to launch iTunes subscription music service? originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 11:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Hardball Panic Attack: Tea Party Victories Will Make GOP More Conservative

There was almost a full-fledged panic attack on Thursday’s “Hardball” as three devout liberal media members fretted over the possibility that Tea Party success at the polls next month could make the GOP more conservative. Horrors! So worried about this was MSNBC’s Chris Matthews that he opined at the end of the segment, “At some point, they`ll become not the party of the elephant but the party of the barking dogs as the cars go by” (video follows with commentary and full transcript at end of the article): The first thing that should jump out at readers is the absurdity at play here. The Republicans got clobbered in the past two election cycles because their members abandoned conservative principles and moved to the left of most of their constituents. As a result, many establishment GOPers and Tea Party candidates have tacked to the right to capture Republican and Independent voters that were either ignored in 2006 or 2008 or angered by moderate Republican policies in George W. Bush’s second term.  This rightward shift has proved highly successful and appears to have positioned the GOP for a possibly historic victory on November 2. Yet Matthews and guests David Corn of Mother Jones and Sam Stein of the Huffington Post see this as damaging the Republican brand. What’s most hysterical here is that all three of these so-called journalists have scolded Obama and the Democrats for trying at all to work with Republicans the past 20 months, and are angered that legislation signed by this President wasn’t progressive enough. In fact, if Democrat candidates around the country had primary success by moving further to the left, Matthews, Corn, and Stein would be having a hard time hiding their glea.  As such, it’s highly desirable and not at all harmful for Democrats to shift far to the left in their policy proposals, but catastrophic for Republicans to do a similar pivot to the right.   In the end, for these liberal press members, a good Republican is a RINO, and anything else is just far too dangerous for the GOP and this nation. Full transcript follows: CHRIS MATTHEWS: We`re back. With just 26 days now to go before the elections this year, there are a bunch of Tea Party Senate candidates who could end up winning. Today`s “Wall Street Journal” has a headline sure to scare senators who aren`t on the ballot this November. Tea Party wants to ambush more GOP senators in 2012. But who`s “The Journal” talking about? Well, people like Utah`s Orrin Hatch, Maine`s Olympia Snowe, Tennessee`s Bob Corker and Indiana`s Dick Lugar. Should they be worried? David Corn is the Washington bureau chief for “Mother Jones” magazine and a columnist for PoliticsDaily.com. And Sam Stein covers politics for “The Huffington Post.” David first, and then Sam. Should they be worried? Should Orrin Hatch be scared a little bit that he`s not conservative enough and certainly Bob Corker in Tennessee and people like that? DAVID CORN, MOTHER JONES: Yes, I think all Republicans should be concerned. I think Ronald Reagan wouldn`t be conservative enough for some of these Tea Party types. And as we`ve seen in the past few months, Chris, that if you have these small Republican primaries, this group of very angry, you know, far-right Tea Partiers can have tremendous impact. We don`t know if they`re going to have a big impact on the general election, but we do know in the Republican primary, they have a lot of weight to pull. So, if I was — you know, if I were Orrin Hatch or any of these others, I`d be running to the right and we already see that happening as “The Wall Street Journal” reported. MATTHEWS: You know, it`s hard to launch a defense in this game, Sam, because if you`ve got a 95 percent conservative voting record, they`ll just say, but you voted for TARP. SAM STEIN, HUFFINGTON POST: Yes. MATTHEWS: Or you made a deal with somebody on health care that looked, you know, dicey. So, it`s this weird way that people are engaging in politics now. They find one way and then they obsess over it like a tooth abscess. That`s all they talk or think or feel is that one thing you did. STEIN: Yes. And, you know, I hate to say it, I agree with David on this one. The institutional hurdles that usually exist for grassroots` candidates to run for office have been sort of leveled down. And if a lot of these Tea Party candidates win in 2010, it`s going to incentivize a lot more of them to run in 2012. And I was at a briefing just now with David Plouffe, the Obama Enhanced Coverage Linking Obama -Search using: * News, Most Recent 60 Days * Biographies Plus News campaign manager. He said, if you are a moderate Republican thinking of running for office in 2012, you need to have to have your head examined. There`s no reason to do it. You have to spend a lot of money, you come under attack, and you`d likely lose. MATTHEWS: OK. Here`s the cutting question. You can go Sam — you, Sam, first. How does the Republican Party build itself as a governing party, a majority party, which really needs to get the middle if it carves out its own middle? STEIN: It`s a good question and there`s people within the party who are really wondering that. I was an event earlier this week with Mel Martinez, the former senator for Florida, and he expressed real angst about the future of the party. He said, if everyone`s going to be lockstep with Jim DeMint, there`s going to be really no room for governance. And he said actually bluntly that he thinks it`d be better that the party didn`t win the Senate because they wouldn`t be held to standards of governance and would still be the Democrats who are held to standards by voters. And so, they`re going to have real problems figure out how to actually govern if they take power, and like you said, the middle has been moved — or hijacked way over to the right on this one. MATTHEWS: I want to ask the same question to, David. What do you think, buddy? What happens here if the party basically says if you`re a middle-of-the-road or even a moderate conservative, you`re gone? At the same time, they go after the Reagan Democrats, the independent voters, the people that are a little upset with Obama Enhanced Coverage Linking Obama -Search using: * News, Most Recent 60 Days * Biographies Plus News or angry at him right now, and they want them to join a party which is only going to be a right wing party. CORN: I think they`ve turned into a zombie party. They`re just not going to be interested in governing. We saw already in the last two years the obstructionism on the right. And if you get Rand Paul in the Senate with Jim DeMint, they will just say no and they`ll stop everything. You know Senate rules basically allow that, they don`t believe in governance. They believe — MATTHEWS: OK, let me try something by you guys. CORN: — reinventing, right? MATTHEWS: This is serious business. CORN: It is serious business, Chris. MATTHEWS: Supposed a gay person in your family or someone you care about or you just didn`t care about human rights, suppose you think — you live in a suburban, you`re not armed at home and therefore you believe in gun control. Supposed you are pro-choice on abortion rights, is there a Republican Party for you, Sam, if you have any of these? Because they don`t want you in the party apparently if you believe any of these things? STEIN: Well, let`s be careful here because it`s not across the board — there have been interceptions to the rule. You look at Mark Kirk for instance. He`s not their choice in Illinois but he ended up there. My theory is that in 2012, once all these Tea Party candidates win if 2010, you`re going to see real pressure on people like Olympia Snowe to actually make a party switch a la Charlie Crist. MATTHEWS: OK. You`re making my point. You`re making my point. STEIN: Yes. No, I`m making your point. That said, you know, we have to wait until 2010. We have to see how these results play out in the general election because if some of these Tea Party candidates actually lose, for instance, Christine O`Donnell or Sharron Angle, maybe there will be a backlash against the Jim DeMints of the world. MATTHEWS: Well, Christine O`Donnell, you`re setting up a strawman. STEIN: I`m not. MATTHEWS: Christine O`Donnell is going to lose. STEIN: Yes, of course. (CROSSTALK) MATTHEWS: Anyway, here`s the question, suppose Mark Kirk gets in this time because they need a candidate, they`ll be gunning for him next time, David? CORN: Yes, well — (CROSSTALK) MATTHEWS: Corker just got in and they`re after him already. CORN: He`ll have six years to move to the right the Tea Party doesn`t end up exploding the Republican Party to bits and pieces. But the senators that you just mentioned, some of those people, like Orrin Hatch and Bob Corker, you know, not my favorite guys, politically, but they have shown in the past the willingness to try to work with Democrats on governing issues, whether it`s health care or financial reform. And there`s going to be so much pressure on these guys — to get to your earlier point, Chris — to do nothing with any Democrat, not even to sit down and — in the cafeteria with them that will make things really impossible. And then you know, the Republican Party will become the party of not just of no, but of anti-government and people like that to a certain degree, but it won`t solve any of the problems that we have. MATTHEWS: Yes, at some point, they`ll become not the party of the elephant but the party of the barking dogs as the cars go by. Anyway, thank you, David Corn. And thank you, Sam Stein. STEIN: Thanks, Chris.

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A voicemail recorded a private conversation with one of Democratic gubernatorial candidate Jerry Brown’s aides calling his Republican opponent Meg Whitman a “whore .” … Two days later, he was plotting with top aides to smear Meg Whitman by calling her a ” whore .” Does he call his sister a ‘ whore ” or his wife or his mother? Decent respectful people do not refer to ANY woman in such a sexually, demeaning manner, as a whore . It really allows us to see the ugly character of …

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Phosphor’s latest watch can E Ink its way through 24 time zones

Tired of waiting for Seiko to produce an E Ink watch that mere mortals can touch , much less afford? A little company by the name of Art Technology has been delivering mass-market wearables using the technology since 2007 — and its latest model dials up the functionality factor just a smidge by adding support for twenty-four time zones, two of which can be displayed simultaneously. Granted, it’s using a segmented display, not dot matrix — which means it bears a closer resemblance to that Timex you owned in the late ’80s than Seiko’s wild active matrix model — but again, like we said, this one’s actually quite affordable and it’s available right this second. Depending on your choice of band style, you’ll pay anywhere from $150 to $195; follow the break for the full press release. Continue reading Phosphor’s latest watch can E Ink its way through 24 time zones Phosphor’s latest watch can E Ink its way through 24 time zones originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 08 Oct 2010 10:45:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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