A number of media liberals are up in arms over a far-left blog’s inconclusive investigation – replete with innuendo and assumption – purporting to show that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has illegally spent funds obtained from foreign entities on political campaigns in the United States. Of course near-identical efforts by a handful of the most powerful labor unions have not been mentioned. The New York Times and MSNBC’s Chris Matthews and Ed Schultz have all opined on the horrors of the Chamber’s use of foreign funds. They all unquestionably parroted a report by the Center for American Progress’s ThinkProgress blog that doesn’t actually show that foreign funds have been spent on domestic political races. Meanwhile, labor unions have been given a pass, despite the amazing resemblance their political spending bears to the Chamber’s. Before getting into the media’s parrot-like approach to Think Progress’s claims, it’s first worth taking a look at those claims. In sum, Think Progress’s investigation has found three things: the Chamber has foreign offices, those offices contribute dues to a general fund controlled by the Chamber’s headquarters in Washington, and Chamber HQ spends money from the general fund on political advertisements. That’s all they can actually show. In order for there to actually be a violation of the law, ThinkProgress would have to show that funds sent from Chamber offices abroad, known as AmChams, were spent on American political activities. But ThinkProgress readily admits that it cannot demonstrate that connection. Instead, it has challenged the Chamber to prove that it doesn’t use foreign funds for domestic political activities. The Chamber, meanwhile, insists that no foreign funds are used for political activities. Obviously the Chamber’s claims, like those of ThinkProgress, should not be taken at face value and without scrutiny. But ThinkProgress has made an allegation that it acknowledges it has no concrete facts to support, and is trying to shift the burden of proof onto the accused. For a few prominent media outlets, this lack of substantive evidence is apparently not a strong enough deterrent. In fact, neither the New York Times nor MSNBC seemed to really care about the lack of evidence. They used the ThinkProgress report to bemoan foreign influences on the American political process, apparently accepting at face value – despite the total lack of evidence – ThinkProgress’s insistence that those influences actually exist. Chris Matthews toed the ThinkProgress line hard, asking rhetorically: “If you throw a pile of dollars into a pile of dollars, what difference does it make?” Matthews apparently searched out the most imbalanced panel he could possibly find to report on the “scandal”. First he hosted Faiz Shakir, Editor in Chief of Think Progress, who noted that his blog had not been able to actually show that foreign funds were spent on domestic political races, or demonstrate the inadequacies of the Chamber’s methods for preventing such illicit spending of foreign funds. After Shakir finished his rout, Matthews brought on Chris Van Hollen, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. Van Hollen again noted the lack of evidence for ThinkProgress’s claims. “We need to get to the bottom of it,” he said, “and the easiest way to do it is for the the chamber to disclose.” In other words, the onus is on the Chamber to prove that these unsubstantiated allegations are not true. Once again, Matthews accepted this guilty-until-proven-innocent attitude at face value, failing to undertake event the most basic journalist task of questioning the claims of hyper-partisans like Van Hollen and Shakir. Ed Scultz did much of the same on his show. He accepted the ThinkProgress report at face value, then brought on Salon Editor in Chief Joan Walsh to do the same. But Schultz managed to draw even more out of the “scandal” than Matthews. While the “Hardball” host was content with claiming that the Chamber was funneling foreign money into domestic elections to screw the American worker, Schultz went a step further: the Chamber policy actually shows that conservatives don’t support the troops. Seriously: You’ve got the chamber of commerce now going to be sending some money to run against Joe Sestak. And the conservative say that they love the troops. Excuse me? Mr. Sestak is the highest ranking military officer ever elected to the congress. He’s running for the senate and he’s got foreign money, allegedly, working against him. How can the conservatives say, hey we support the troops? The New York Times also opined on the ThinkProgress report, repeating near-verbatim the far-left blog’s claims about the fungibility of money. Of course the Times did not present any new evidence of wrongdoing, so readers were left once again with an argument based on implication and assumption. While these three reports were busy bashing the Chamber of Commerce for maybe, sort of indirectly taking in money that may or may not (but does not, the Chamber insists) fund the organization’s political activities, more than half a dozen labor unions were doing the exact same thing. The Center for Competetive Politics reports : …if the question can and should be asked of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, what about other entities that receive funds from foreign entities? For example, the Wikipedia entry on the Service Employees International Union states: Service Employees International Union ( SEIU ) is a labor union representing about 1.8 million workers in over 100 occupations in the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico. Likewise, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters also reports members (and therefore, member dues) from Canada, and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers has members not just in Canada but also Panama and several Caribbean nations. And the AFL-CIO includes several member unions that include foreign members, such as the International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators and Allied Workers , the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers’ International Union and the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders, Blacksmiths, Forgers and Helpers . In fact, nearly half of the membership of the AFL-CIO have the term “International” in their names or some other indication of foreign membership (the United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of the Plumbing and Pipe Fitting Industry of the United States and Canada ), and it is a certainty that other unions also have foreign membership . So, both the U.S. Chamber and the AFL-CIO have involvement with affiliated foreign entities, but only the Chamber’s foreign members are of concern to the “reformers” at Think Progress and the Center for American Progress. I guess we can file this away as yet another example of why few believed the “reform” spin that the DISCLOSE Act treated corporations and unions equally . Presumably, every foreign member of these unions – all headquartered in the United States – is required to pay dues to the parent organization. And every one of those unions spends money on political activities. So by the “fungibility” logic that undergirds the ThinkProgress “investigation” and all the media doom-saying since its release, these unions are all guilty of funneling foreign dollars into American political campaigns. But of course Matthews, Schultz, and the Times’s editorial board are too busy playing defense for Democrats and their surrogates in the blogosphere to make an attempt at even-handedness.
Continue reading …Excerpt from: Will MSNBC Take Action Against Lawrence O’Donnell for His Comment About Michael Steele?
Continue reading …Standup comic and New York Times-bestselling author Sarah Silverman joked on Twitter that widows of the Sept. 11 attacks “give the best handjobs” on Oct. 6, attributing the quote to pseudonymous 19 th century author and satirist Mark Twain. “‘9/11 widows give the best hand jobs.’ -Mark Twain,” wrote Silverman, adding the hashtag, “#notcooltwain.” Later that day, the star of Comedy Central’s “Sarah Silverman Program,” appeared to amend her outlandish comment. “Have remorse about last tweet,” Silverman wrote on Twitter. “I’m sorry. Meant to be silly not mean. Should’ve quoted [Civil Rights activist and poet Maya] Angelou.” Silverman’s racy brand of humor and left-wing politics has often been a source of controversy. In 2001, the comedienne came under fire for using a racial slur for people of Chinese origin during an appearance on “Late Night with Conan O’Brien.” The comic has also been an outspoken critic of the conservative movement. In her New York Times bestselling book, “The Bedwetter,” Silverman wrote that, “The entire Fox News Channel is a twenty-four-hour-a-day racism engine, but it’s all coded, all implied.” Silverman also headed up “The Great Schlep,” a campaign during the 2008 presidential election that was aimed at urging Jewish young adults to convince their Florida grandparents to vote for the then-Democratic candidate Barack Obama. “If you knew that visiting your grandparents could change the world, would you do it? Of course you would,” said Silverman, in a video for the campaign. “[S]chlep over to Florida and convince your grandparents to vote Obama.”
Continue reading …We’re live from CTIA 2010 in San Francisco, where newly-appointed Verizon president and COO Lowell McAdam has taken the stage. He’s been on the job just five days now , but he’s already got a nice spot of news: Verizon will have LTE connections in 38 markets as soon as they flip the switch — up from the 30 football cities announced earlier this month. More exciting, a host of LTE devices are on the way, too: “Come CES at January, and we will show half-a-dozen smartphones and tablets from the top OEMs in the world that will be available in the first half of the year,” said McAdam. 8 to 12 megabits per second, here we come. See the full tentative 4G coverage map with a list of confirmed cities in our gallery below. Gallery: Verizon’s 4G LTE launch coverage map Verizon to debut LTE in 38 cities, ‘half a dozen’ 4G smartphones and tablets in 1H 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Image via Retrevo Retrevo.com is a great marketplace for gadgets, and it’s chock full of interesting news about electronics, including our habits regarding our electronics. In a recent study, the company found that only 39% of Americans claim to recycle all of their old electronic devices. And that number is somewhat sketchy since many people claim to do more than they actually do. Also, “all” electronics encompasses a whole lot of what we … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Nah, this trio isn’t nearly as flashy as Motorola’s spate of new smartphones , but those still rockin’ the earpiece (or trying to avoid a ‘talking-while-driving’ ticket) may be interested in the outfit’s newest line of peripherals. Here at Fall CTIA 2010, Moto unveiled the Roadster in-car speakerphone alongside the Finiti and CommandOne Bluetooth headsets. From top to bottom, the Roadster is a clip-on device that goes on your visor, boasting dual-microphone noise cancellation technology and MotoSpeak — a technology that reads your texts allows and accepts voice replies. There’s an integrated battery that can withstand up to 20 hours of yapping (or three weeks of nothingness), and there’s even an FM transmitter thrown in for good measure. The Finiti BT headset was engineered with “extreme conditions” in mind, adding to the Elite series with a trifecta of microphones and the aforesaid MotoSpeak read-back technology. It can supposedly let you carry on a conversion with 40 mile per hour winds whirling around you, but we’re hoping you’d never actually be able to put it to the test. Finally, the CommandOne — for all intents and purposes — is simply a less rugged, differently styled version. The whole lot lands in Q4, but mum’s the word on pricing. Gallery: Motorola sneaks out Roadster in-car speakerphone, Finiti and CommandOne BT headsets Motorola sneaks out Roadster in-car speakerphone, Finiti and CommandOne BT headsets originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Oct 2010 13:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …image: Foster + Partners Buckminster Fuller ‘s 1933 Dymaxion car was a marvel. Architect Norman Foster tells Jonathan Glancy of the Guardian: “The Dymaxion had the same engine and transmission as the Ford Sedan of the time,” says Foster, who worked with Fuller, his design hero, from 1971 until his death 12 years later. “However, at three times the volume, with half the fuel consumption and a 50% increase in top speed, it not only did more with less, but anticipated the ‘people mover’ of several decades later.” Foster loved it so much t… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …On Tuesday, Fox Chicago News anchor Bob Sirott suggested that Rick Sanchez might land at the Fox News Channel. In his “One More Thing” commentary, Sirott pointed out that most people had never heard of Sanchez until CNN fired him last week. Still, Sanchez could bounce back: Some believe Rick Sanchez’s career is is over, but others think it’s just beginning, and now that he’s a nationally known hot button subject a network that likes controversial personalities will hire him. Can you say FOX News Channel? No doubt Sirott knows a good deal more than I about the news business in general and Fox News operations in particular. But I have to wonder if he understands the history between the former CNN anchor and FNC. Like what Sanchez said on CNN Newsroom on September 18, 2009: Let me address the FOX News Network now perhaps the most current way that I can, by quoting somebody who recently used a very pithy phrase, two words. It’s all I need: You lie. NewsBuster Matthew Balan has written of the time Sanchez hinted Fox News isn’t a legitimate news outlet. And when Sanchez claimed Fox News “obviously tends to lean way, way, way to the right.” And the time Sanchez described FNC as “essentially the voice of the Republican Party.” I don’t see Fox News offering a slot to the ousted CNN anchor. Or him accepting it. Then again, if Barack Obama can give Hillary Clinton a job after all the nasty stuff she said about him, anything’s possible.
Continue reading …Images courtesy of ecostiletto This guest post was written by Rachel Lincoln Sarnoff of ecostiletto . Seeing pink? It must be October, when the beauty industry slaps a whole bunch of pink ribbons on products that donate to breast cancer research. Sounds great, right? Not exactly, when many of these companies formulate their products with petro-chemically derived ingredients that a… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …photo: Department of Interior The collective cheering yesterday about the new White House plans to install solar panels drowned out another significant federal solar power announcement, and one with much great practical impact: The Department of Interior approved the … Read the full story on TreeHugger
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