Despite the bipartisan tax cuts orchestrated by the White House and Congress – and heralded by most Wall Street analysts! – in December, calls for tax hikes by liberal news outlets will be prevalent in the new year. Confirming this was the New York Times on Sunday pounding this drum with predictable certitude in an editorial simply titled “The Economy in 2011″: read more
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: The Professional Left Time for your 2010 year end podcast from The Professional Left, our own Driftglass and Bluegal . Happy New Year everybody and enjoy the podcast. Mentioned in the podcast Jon Stewart article in The NY Times . Brian Williams Claims the Media Quit Covering the BP Oil Spill Because the Public Lost Interest in the Story Batocchio’s round up of best posts of the year by the bloggers who wrote them. You can listen to the archives at The Professional Left or make a donation there if you’d like to help keep these going. Have a great weekend everybody.
Continue reading …Even John Roberts thinks the Republicans should stop blocking the approval of federal judges . He pretends it’s a bipartisan problem — but it isn’t: There is an “urgent need” for Senate Democrats and Republicans to put aside their bickering and fill federal judicial vacancies, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. wrote Friday in his annual State of the Judiciary report. It was his first comment about the partisan gridlock on judges that affects President Obama’s nominees. But Roberts noted that Democratic and Republican presidents have been frustrated by the “persistent problem” of senators from the opposing party blocking action on nominees. “Each political party has found it easy to turn on a dime from decrying to defending the blocking of judicial nominations, depending on their changing political fortunes,” he wrote. “This has created acute difficulties for some judicial districts.” Roberts said he was “heartened” that the Senate recently approved half of Obama’s 38 pending nominees.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media On Morning Joe Thursday morning, NBC anchor Brian Williams stopped by to discuss the different stories that the media covered during 2010 and he had the temerity to blame the media’s lack of coverage of the Deepwater Horizon oil disaster once the gusher was capped in the Gulf on the public losing interest in the topic. WILLIAMS: And in between for those of us that have a love affair the state of Louisiana, with the southern portion of the coastline in the United States, the one story I think that’s been forgotten, because it’s cognitive dissonance looking at that live camera, of that spewing oil. We as Americans certainly like to pick ourselves up and recover and move on. And you can go down there to Venice Louisiana and not see too much in the way of pick up and clean up crews. I’m happy to read that the Chevy Volt is being made of 100,000 pounds of plastic body parts that are a product of 100 miles of oil soaked boom. That’s what happened to all that stuff. They transported it and they’re churning it up and melting it down and making plastic body parts for the Chevy Volt. […] So something good came out of this awful year. But I don’t think, I think we’ve all moved on and forgot what it was like to wake up on this broadcast and others every morning… let’s go to the live picture and just the helplessness that we watched. So that’s what I’m going to remember this year for because that area already meant so much to me and I might add a person here at this table, the only one who represented it in Congress. Yeah, it’s a good thing all that oil just magically disappeared now that there’s no more ambulance for the media to chase in the form of that gusher of oil. Good grief. Somehow I doubt anyone who’s still living with the oil on their shores and the dispersants or anyone that wonders if seafood from the Gulf will ever be safe to eat again feels the same way. Hey Brian, there’s still a story to cover if you and your cohorts would get off your butts and go down there and do some follow up. The public didn’t lose interest in the story. The media just refuses to cover it now that it will actually take some investigative journalism to do so and bucking the establishment they love to suck up to. h/t to Fran for bringing this up in their podcast this week . I’d almost forgotten I sent the tip on this to the team via email until she and Driftie brought it up there.
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Cyn3matic Back in the day, I was one of the kids who spent the week between Christmas and New Years’ Day gluing flowers onto Tournament of Roses floats. The best place to be in those days was near the Dr. Pepper float, because they served hot Dr. Pepper with lemon to keep us warm in the decorating caverns. The flowers were locally grown from various farms around California, and the glue for them could get you high as a kite in about an hours’ time. Growing up in Glendale meant you knew at least one Rose Princess in your lifetime and considered the spectacle in next-door neighbor Pasadena to be as much yours as theirs. I’ve camped out overnight on Colorado Blvd, marched in the bicentennial parade, and never, ever miss it. It has always been a huge corporate event. Even back when I worked on those floats it was the province of big corporations with a smattering of ingenuity from schools like Cal Poly. Though it was corporate, it was also local. Flowers came from local growers. Float decorators worked for local charities and youth groups. It was very much a California event. Today, not so much. In a LA Times report about Honda being the first to use a hybrid motor to power their float, they note that today’s Tournament of Roses is neither green nor local. Leading Saturday’s 122nd Tournament of Roses will be a 35-foot fairy tale castle called “A World of Dreams,” the first float to be powered by fuel-efficient hybrid technology. And the pace car will be the fuel-sipping Honda CR-Z. But behind the World of Dreams will be a whirl of planet-warming emissions: 4 6 floats powered by V-8 engines, some supplemented with gasoline-powered motors for moving parts, that are expected to burn through about 800 gallons of gasoline by the time they finish their 2.5-mph cruise along the 5.5-mile route. Mixed in are 80 auxiliary trucks, 145 fleet cars and dozens of law enforcement vehicles — all of them powered solely by old-fashioned fossil fuels. Festooned to the floats are an estimated 20 million flowers transported from around the world in aircraft and trucks: orchids from Asia; dried everlasts from Africa; roses from Colombia and other South American countries; and tulips from Holland. The reason for the foreign-grown flowers? Trade agreements, of course. The exact “carbon footprint” of the parade and related festivities is difficult to calculate. But California growers are quick to point out that their home-grown ingredients have been forsaken for energy-intensive but still less expensive imports. Those flowers became increasingly available after 1991, when the United States struck a trade agreement with Colombia and Ecuador in an effort to curtail cultivation and processing of coca for cocaine. That gave cut-flower farmers and floral exporters duty-free access to the U.S. market, where 70% of flowers sold now hail from Colombia , according to the California Cut Flower Commission. I don’t think anyone could take all of the magic away from the Tournament of Roses for me. It’s too much a part of my New Year’s Day tradition, and always will be. But I live in a small city sandwiched between strawberry and flower farms and know what a price they pay when flowers are exported from other countries. That, and parade organizers’ reluctance to make the shift to hybrid motor technology to power the floats makes the whole spectacle a little less impressive. C’mon, Tournament organizers. Set the trends, don’t buck ‘em.
Continue reading …In a bloody beginning to the new year in Egypt, a suicide bombing outside a Coptic church in Alexandria killed at least 21 people and injured dozens more. “This massacre has al-Qaida written all over … ,” a church official said. —JCL The Guardian: At least 21 people have been killed and more than 70 injured in Egypt in a suspected suicide bombing outside a church in Alexandria as worshippers left a new year service. It was initially thought a car bomb had caused the explosion just after midnight at the Coptic orthodox al-Qidiseen church. But the interior ministry suggested a foreign-backed suicide bomber may have been responsible. The blast did not originate in any of the cars that were destroyed, a ministry statement said. “It is likely that the device which exploded was carried by a suicide bomber who died among others.” Read more
Continue reading …While many see Afghan President Hamiz Karzai as a puppet for U.S. interests, secret diplomatic records show a resilient Karzai refusing to remove a former warlord from the energy and water ministry last year in the face of intense U.S. pressure. The U.S. had considered the warlord corrupt and threatened to end aid to the country unless he was sacked. —JCL Associated Press: U.S. officials pressured Afghan President Hamid Karzai to remove a former warlord from atop the energy and water ministry a year ago because they considered him corrupt and ineffective, and threatened to end aid unless he went. Karzai rebuffed the request, according to secret diplomatic records, and the minister—privately termed “the worst” by U.S. officials—kept his perch at an agency that controls $2 billion in U.S. and allied projects. The State Department correspondence, written as Karzai was assembling a Cabinet shortly after his 2009 re-election, reveals just how little influence U.S. officials have over the Afghan leader on pressing issues such as corruption. Read more Related Entries December 25, 2010 38 Dead in Christmas Attacks December 13, 2010 In Latest Compromise, Obama Agrees He Is a Muslim
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