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The FCC’s new net neutrality rules are being attacked not only by internet activists, but by Republicans who call it “interventionist overreach.” Attacks from both sides might tempt you to believe that this must therefore be a reasonable compromise, but you would be wrong. (Here’s a clue: The telecoms love it!): Come Tuesday afternoon, following what will likely be a 3-2 party line vote at the FCC, the new rules of the road will resemble the old rules in many respects — just with less legal authority, and a massive new loophole. For the first time, federal policy would allow for so-called reasonable “paid prioritization,” which critics argue is the first step toward cleaving out high-speed, premium fast-lanes from the “public internet.” This could jeopardize internet innovation by disincentivising entrepreneurial activity on the free, or regular, internet. The new policy appeared to cross a key hurdle Monday when Democratic FCC Commissioner Michael Copps said he would support it. “The item we will vote on tomorrow is not the one I would have crafted,” Copps said in a statement. “But I believe we have been able to make the current iteration better than what was originally circulated. If vigilantly and vigorously implemented by the Commission — and if upheld by the courts — it could represent an important milestone in the ongoing struggle to safeguard the awesome opportunity-creating power of the open Internet.” “While I cannot vote wholeheartedly to approve the item, I will not block it by voting against it,” Copps added. The Progressive Change Campaign Committee, a liberal advocacy group that supports net neutrality, instantly launched a fusillade against Copps. “Internet users across America will have lost a hero if Commissioner Copps caves to pressure from big business and supports FCC Chairman Genachowski’s fake Net Neutrality rules — rules written by AT&T, Comcast, and Verizon, the very companies the public is depending on the FCC to regulate strongly,” PCCC Senior Online Campaigns Director Jason Rosenbaum said in a statement. “There’s no such thing as half a First Amendment, and there’s no such thing as half of Net Neutrality. If approved, Genachowski’s industry-written rules would be a historic mistake: For the first time, the FCC would give its stamp of approval to discrimination online.” The apparent denouement of this saga comes after five years of debates, lawsuits, botched regulatory actions, grassroots campaigns, and millions of dollars spent lobbying the federal government.

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Paul Krugman has been on fire and he’s not only taking names, but he’s beating back the myths. First, there was a widely spread housing bubble, not just in the United States, but in Ireland, Spain, and other countries as well. This bubble was inflated by irresponsible lending, made possible both by bank deregulation and the failure to extend regulation to “shadow banks,” which weren’t covered by traditional regulation but nonetheless engaged in banking activities and created bank-type risks. Then the bubble burst, with hugely disruptive consequences. It turned out that Wall Street had created a web of interconnection nobody understood, so that the failure of Lehman Brothers, a medium-size investment bank, could threaten to take down the whole world financial system. It’s a straightforward story, but a story that the Republican members of the commission don’t want told. Literally… read on He’s beating back the people whose policies helped destroy the world’s economy when George W. Bush was President. In another column called When Zombies Win, he then highlights the fact that all the people responsible for the meltdown in the first place haven’t been shunned, but instead are leading the charge to only make things worse. Simply f*&king amazing. There was a reason the GOP kept Bush off the airwaves until after the midterm elections: the man was so reviled. I wouldn’t doubt that Roger Ailes had something to do with it, but that’s just a theory. Anyway, the one and only panel I did with Andrew Breitbart was revolting for many reasons, but one of the biggest lies he told and is one often repeated by the zombies of the Tea Party (which took off after Rick Santelli gave them permission to do so on CNBC) — namely, that the greedy poor people created the mortgage meltdown because they had the audacity to become homeowners. Krugman explains away that nonsense and Digby reminded me again of Bush’s 2004 acceptance speech, where he bragged about his economic handiwork, and begged to turn America into the ultimate “homeowner society.” I’ve got yer history for yah right here. Here’ s one of those bleeding heart liberals at the 2004 Republican Convention: Another priority for a new term is to build an ownership society, because ownership brings security and dignity and independence. … Thanks to our policies, home ownership in America is at an all- time high. (APPLAUSE) Tonight we set a new goal: 7 million more affordable homes in the next 10 years, so more American families will be able to open the door and say, “Welcome to my home.” (Bush starts his “Welcome to my home” rant at the 3:36 mark of the above video) Now Americans are either packing their bags and fleeing from their homes without trying to pay their mortgages, or they’re trying to get HAMP assistance. Some are still being kicked out even when they follow the rules, or are not eligible for HAMP; others are just are foreclosed on anyway because they can’t afford to pay anymore. Way to go, Mr. Bush.

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Eric Holder recently had what he wants to be perceived as a really important interview about the domestic terror threat with Pierre Thomas of ABC News. In the video at the ABC link, George Stephanopoulos's intro at Good Morning America describes Holder as “a pretty circumspect man,” but that on the subject of domestic terror threats, “he doesn't seem to be pulling any punches.” Really? If that's the case, Holder must have said a lot of things which got left on ABC's cutting-room floor. That's because in the entire three-page story at ABC (it's easiest to prove the following by looking at the print version, which can only be obtained at the link), the following words never appear: read more

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Hypocrisy: Julian Assange Blasts Media for Publishing Leaks About Him

You just can't make this stuff up. According to the Times of London (subscription required), Julian Assange is angry at the UK Guardian for publishing details of sexual assault allegations against him based on…wait for it…a leaked police report. Stones, glass houses, etc. Assange is especially peeved, the Times reported, that the Guardian “selectively published” details of that report. Gee, you mean that publishing only sensational excerpts of leaked private information might present an incomplete and misleading narrative to the paper's readers that could damage the reputations of those involved? You don't say. read more

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After Haley Barbour’s wink-and-nudge act about the White Citizens Councils caught a lot of people’s attention, Eric Kleefeld at TPM called up Barbour’s spokesman, Dan Turner, who gave Kleefeld a decidedly prickly and paranoid interview — including this nugget: “Tell me what in Gov. Barbour’s past gives any indication of any racist leanings, and I’ll be glad to address the question,” said Turner. “Otherwise, it’s not a legitimate question. There’s nothing in his past that shows that. If you pick out a sentence or a paragraph out of a fairly long article and harp on it, you can manipulate it. And that sounds to me like what you’re trying to do.” Hmmm, that’s tough. Oh yeah. There is this: enlarge This is Barbour on July 19, 2003, at the Black Hawk Barbecue and Political Rally, held to raise money for [wink wink, nudge nudge] “private academy” school buses. The barbecue is the big fund-raising shindig thrown every year by the Council of Conservative Citizens — the successor organization to the White Citizens Councils and one of the nation’s most prominent white-supremacist outfits. On the far right (appropriately) is the CofCC’s national field director, Bill Lord. Barbour later tried to claim, incidentally, that he didn’t know anything about the CofCC. Considering how knowledgable he appears to be regarding the White Citizens Councils, Still, he declined to ask them to remove his photo from their website: “Once you start down the slippery slope of saying ‘That person can’t be for me,’ then where do you stop?” Barbour said. “Old segregationists? Former Ku Klux Klan like (Sen.) Robert Byrd, D-W.Va.? You know? “Once you get into that, you spend your time doing nothing else,” Barbour said. “I don’t care who has my picture. My picture’s in the public domain. It gets published in newspapers every day.” Suuuuuure. Wanna bet if an outfit called the “Council of Conservative Pedophiles” ran Barbour’s picture, he’d be so sanguine? Kos had details at the time about Barbour’s participation in the picnic. Be sure to read all of Kleefeld’s interview, which is pretty remarkable — especially these exchanges: After being pressed further on whether Barbour’s comments about the Citizens Councils were accurate, Turner said: “I’m aware of what the governor said in this interview. I’m not gonna get into the business of trying to twist what the governor said, or to manipulate it.” What does he mean by manipulate it, I asked? “Your questions are very angular, let’s say that,” said Turner. “You have a very specific point that you’re trying to drive at, and you’re trying to paint the governor as a racist. And nothing could be further from the truth.” I then responded that I was not asking about whether Barbour is a racist, but was asking about whether it is true or not that the group he praised was a racist organization? “It was an organization in Yazoo City that was, you know, a group of the town leaders and business people,” Turner responded, then referring back to Barbour’s comment. “And they passed a resolution that said anybody who started a chapter of the Klan would get their ass run out of town. And that doesn’t sound like a racist to me. Does it to you?” Turner then repeatedly asked me that question, whether the group in Yazoo City sounds racist from its anti-Klan policies. I responded again by asking about the same Yazoo City group that launched boycotts of African-Americans who sought civil rights. In other words, because the WCC actively badmouthed the Klan — for giving the South a violent black eye — it couldn’t possibly have been racist. Right. Those archives are just an illusion. More generically, Barbour also loved to trumpet the Confederate flag when he was campaigning. No doubt his spokesman can gussy up a whole deluge of words to explain that away too. But the stain is pretty indelible. And becoming more obvious all the time.

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Brent Bozell Discusses Best Notable Quotables of 2010 with Steve Malzberg

NewsBusters publisher and Media Research Center (MRC) founder Brent Bozell appeared on WOR radio with Steve Malzberg Monday to discuss the MRC's Best Notable Quotables of 2010.

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The Girls: Ep. 06

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The Girls ask why the Jets are trippin', discuss John Boehner's “emotional” issues, and the snowman hit-and-run. [Video embedded after page break]

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enlarge Credit: Tom Tomorrow In the wake of President Barack Obama’s premature capitulation in the tax wars to the Republicans — a party who I might remind you controls neither congressional chamber at this moment (they will take over the House in January) — once-muted criticism of the Commander-in-Chief on the Left has suddenly erupted into a full-scale flurry of condemnation. There have been calls for other Democrats to primary him in 2012, jeremiads that Progressives should have been treating him as an adversary, and a feeling on the Left, put into words by a Congressman (Rep. Jerry Nadler of New York), that Democrats “can’t trust him.” So you could say it’s been a somewhat bad month for the president – although that might be akin to saying the guys attending South Carolina’s “Secession Ball” will only be missing some of their teeth. The president has not only caved on eliminating budget-busting tax cuts for people who have toilet plungers more expensive than your house, but has backed off long-delayed (but promised) environmental regulations to govern smog and toxic emissions from industrial boilers. He also negotiated a new Korea Free Trade Agreement that isn’t free from deleterious affects on American workers, enacted a freeze in pay for federal employees for reasons nobody can figure out, and was ready to listen to recommendations to cut Social Security from a committee of rich, irrelevant Beltway primates so old they look like they should be starring in Weekend at Bernie’s 3 . This turn of events would probably explain why in a new McClatchy Poll, President Obama’s approval among liberals has fallen from 78% to 69%, while his disapproval among self-described Democrats has nearly doubled, from 11% to 21%. That Obama doesn’t have much of a stomach for a rumble as president, this much many liberal commentators can agree upon. Yet, perhaps for political reasons, or maybe due to the glorious rose shade the passage of time can deliver to one’s glasses, many have looked admiringly back to a moment that never existed to call on Obama to be someone he never really was. A Fighter. Recently, I have read essay after essay asking Obama to “return to who he was during the campaign.” To stand up strong to GOP bullies! To bring us back to the glory days when he rode through the badlands of a never-ending campaign and apparently had the fortitude and purpose of General Sherman on a scenic gallop through Georgia. Now, it’s true he took stronger positions during the election, but that was simply a rhetorical exercise. It is also true that he was a much better communicator back then, one with an actual message. But what many pundits and progressives are forgetting is that during those heady days of Campaign 2008, much like today, he refused to hit back when viciously attacked by John McCain. Then as now he saw himself as above the fray. It was his Achilles Heel then, just as it is now. In fact, that may have been the very reason that up until the world economy went splat in September of 2008, a presidential race that should have been almost impossible to lose, against a party whose sitting President was just slightly less popular than scurvy, was neck-and-neck. So much so, that a month before the big economic crash, Chuck Schumer , Democratic senator, offered a none-too-subtle nudge to Obama to start fighting back when he said, “when they say, ‘he’s not one of us,’ you don’t say, ‘here’s our plan on health care.’” Democratic Strategist and Clinical Psychologist Drew Westen summed this up perfectly in an August 2008 (or pre-economic meltdown) Huffington Post piece : Obama has a voice, and he has the microphone to say anything he wants anytime he wants to say it. But as his opponent “distracts” the media – and hence the public – daily with a relentless drumbeat about what’s wrong with Obama – that he isn’t strong, that he isn’t American, that he isn’t patriotic…that he is the most liberal member of the United States Senate, that he isn’t “one of us” – what story has Barack Obama told that could possibly catch the public attention? That he has a slightly amended plan for dealing with the energy crisis? And what story is his campaign telling about why voters should worry as much about John McCain as they are beginning to worry about Barack Obama? Why do I point all of this out? Because now is as good a time as any to be realistic about what the president is made of. There will be many battles over the next 2 years. If we are to analyse the problem, and what to do about it, we have to begin by acknowledging the facts. In other words, when progressives and moderates decide how to confront President Obama’s propensity for playing dead at the outset of legislative negotiations over the next two years, one might want to – for once – think like former Donald Rumsfeld, the former secretary of defense. “You go into policy fights with the President you have. Not the one you wish you had.” [Editor's note: This is Cliff's weekly column for Al Jazeera English. ]

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If you only read CNNMoney.com's Dec. 17 attack on the tax cut deal you might think that Congressman Mike Pence, R-Ind., opposed extending the Bush-era tax cuts because of the cost. But that's not the case. CNNMoney senior writer Chris Isidore wrote the article: “Costliest stimulus, weakest payoff” attacking the tax deal Congress passed. Using the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) figures, Isidore complained that it would cost $858 billion – accepting the liberal assumption that tax cuts are a “cost.” He even misused comments made by Pence to support his liberal claims. After describing tax cuts as an inefficient way to grow the economy, Isidore wrote, “And at a price tag of almost $900 billion at a time when the national debt is sky high, the proposal is considered a pretty big risk. That's why even some Republicans who like the idea of lower taxes are opposing the bill.” read more

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The Kindness of Strangers

enlarge Credit: Karoli Two years ago I had the worst holiday season I’ve ever had. I had been laid off from a job I loved on December 8th, had no money, B of A had sucked up nearly $1,000 in overdraft fees, leaving me owing them my last paycheck, and I had no prospects for any income until after the first of the year. I was depressed, hurt, angry, and proud. Finally one night I broke down on my blog and poured it all out in a post not asking for help, but just venting on my perceived helplessness. In my state of (somewhat irrational) grief, I viewed the breakage of my last vintage Coke glass as a symbol of my downfall. Seriously. The next day I received an email from a reader with a donation. The day after that, four vintage Coke glasses arrived on my doorstep from a long-time blog friend and reader. My then-14 year old daughter decorated the living room while I was out trying to scrounge up some money and left me a note telling me to get over it and get some spirit, since it wasn’t the money that mattered. Those gestures really turned around my whole outlook. How could they not? The kindness of strangers and family alike pulled me out of my funk and pridefest into a realization that money mattered less than the relationships I was (and am) fortunate enough to have. So with that, I share this story with you. Last week, Jenny “The Bloggess” offered $30 gift cards to people who needed them. From there, her effort snowballed into something bigger than all of us . In the past few days that post has gotten over 500 comments and so many heart-breaking requests were from people who need a small hand-up to buy food for Christmas dinner or from people who are planning on telling their children that there is no Santa because otherwise they wouldn’t understand why he didn’t come. You can’t read the comments and not ache a little because so many of us have either been there or see how easy it would be to be in their position one day. But here’s the amazing thing…every time someone would leave a comment asking for help someone else would leave a comment asking to help. And that’s why as of Friday morning, every single person who asked for help here is matched up with at least one person who will be sending them a gift card. In fact, so many people offered to help that we were able to give out multiple gift cards to people who had a greater need. And when things seemed dicey and I was about to call for an end to comments a wonderful man emailed me and told me that he’s so enjoyed the community on this blog that he wanted to donate $1000, no questions asked. That was only the beginning. From her Sunday update: I still have another hundred emails to mail out before I can go to sleep but it looks like well over 800 gift cards will be sent out if everything goes through as planned. People have contributed in (and have been helped in) America, Canada, England, Germany, Australia, Asia…and they continue to help. Every time we get down to our last donor someone else steps forward. I wish I could share all the emails from people who felt that this gave them the hope to get through the next year and the strength to keep looking for a job or a place to work because they now had faith that people cared. There were even some who admitted later that they were considering suicide until this gave them hope. Some of those people considering suicide? Were the donors. This phenomenon will not be something that’s repeated. It springs from people needing to give and others needing to receive. It is the spontaneity of the thing that makes it so special. Not a program, not a charity, just people reaching out to others. As you will see from her post and the comments, it doesn’t touch even the edge of the needs out there, but it at least gives people an opportunity to cross a bridge and help those who need help most. It is hope that encourages me most: hope even for a small gesture. I hope your holidays are warm, bright, and offer a similar opportunity to reach or be reached.

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