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I’m still trying to wrap my head around this one : At the urging of the United States, the United Nations Security Council passed on Wednesday a resolution permitting Iraq to have a civilian nuclear program. The resolution, which also lifted prohibitions on exports to Iraq of certain materials that could be used to develop nuclear and other unconventional weapons, was one of several U.S.-backed measures to end restrictions that dated from before the invasion that removed Saddam Hussein from power. The Council’s action represented a retreat from its earlier position that it would not lift the nuclear restrictions unless Baghdad accepted an additional protocol to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty that provides for more intrusive international inspections. The Council’s action in affirming Iraq’s right to a peaceful nuclear program is ironic in view of the obsessive campaign to deny the country on its eastern border the same right. This is one more demonstration of the hypocrisy and inconsistency that characterize much nonproliferation policy, especially as it relates to the Middle East. What ostensibly is a concern about a certain category of weapons is actually much more a concern about the coloration and even the rhetoric of certain regimes that might get those weapons. Considering that the Bush administration used the threat of a looming mushroom cloud of a reconstituted Iraqi nuclear program to justify its invasion and occupation of the country and not a week goes by without some pundit fear mongering on Iran’s nuclear capability, the news that the UN has approved Iraq’s civilian nuclear program is more than a little bizarre. Okay, so let me see if I get this straight: Iran, with a democratically elected president (nutty as he may be), is a threat to us in developing a nuclear energy program. But Iraq, with a fragile government installed despite clear evidence of electoral fraud and corruption, their nuclear program is just fine. Alrighty then. Anyone else seeing this biting us in the ass in the decades to come?

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NewsBusters publisher and Media Research Center (MRC) founder Brent Bozell appeared via satellite on “Fox & Friends” this morning to unveil the MRC's Best of Notable Quotables 2010. [See related press release here ; Video of Bozell appearance is embedded below the page break] read more

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Jon Kyl Still Making Sorry Excuses for Not Supporting First Responders Bill

Click here to view this media It looks like Shep Smith isn’t the only person on Fox News that was shamed by Jon Stewart into getting a bit tougher on these Republicans for filibustering the first responders bill. Chris Wallace brought up Stewart’s interview with first responders to Jon Kyl, and in response we just got more sorry excuses as to why he still would not support the bill. Kyl Denies Health Care For 9/11 Rescue Workers Because He Doesn’t Want To ‘Hurry’ : Last week, an incensed Jon Stewart invited 9/11 first responders to the Daily Show to offer their thoughts on this callous behavior. “Disgusted” and “hurt” by their actions, the rescue workers admonished Republicans for using the holiday schedule and Senate process as an excuse to block desperately needed help. Recounting their criticism today, Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace asked Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ) why he couldn’t “find a way to give these heroes peace of mind when it comes to health care.” Ignoring their emotional pleas, Kyl insisted that, while he didn’t want to deny care to those who desperately need it, he just refuses to do so “in a hurry”. Kyl’s excuses fall flat in the face of fact. Any cries for more time ignore that both the Senate and House version of the Zadroga bill have been available to Kyl since 2009. If a year with the text wasn’t enough, Kyl was free to attend the bill’s June 2010 Senate hearing he insists never happened. Had he shown up, he would’ve learned that the bill is very clear on who is eligible for funding. First responders can pursue compensation established by the Zadroga bill to bolster any coverage already received from the current health fund set up in New York City. As Jon Stewart pointed out earlier this week as well, after refusing to give these first responders health care, none of these birds should ever be allowed by our media to invoke 9-11 for political purposes ever again. Let’s hope this thing gets passed despite the continued obstruction by the likes of Kyl and his fellow shameless Republican cohorts. Transcript via Nexis Lexis . WALLACE: Joining us now, two Senate leaders, the number two Democrat, Dick Durbin of Illinois, and his Republican counterpart, Jon Kyl of Arizona. And, Senators, welcome back to “Fox News Sunday.” KYL: Thank you, Chris. WALLACE: Senators, before we talk about issues that have gotten a lot of attention, I want to ask you about one that hasn’t, and let me begin with you, Senator Kyl. Will you vote this week for the 9/11 bill that would guarantee health care for the first responders who went to Ground Zero? KYL: I don’t know if that bill is going to come before us, but Dick tells me just a moment ago that he thinks that it will. First question is, is it amendable, or is it a take it or leave it proposition? The bill hasn’t been through committee. There are problems with it. And I think the first thing Republicans will ask is do we have a chance to fix any problems that may exist with it. And it’s a lot of money, and so I — my early response is that I am skeptical about that bill. WALLACE: Senator Durbin, Republicans in addition to Senator Kyl say – - Republican critics say that you’re creating a $7 billion entitlement, and that the way you pay for it is a corporate tax increase. DURBIN: Chris, I can tell you that Senators Kirsten Gillibrand and Chuck Schumer have been working nonstop for the last several weeks with Republicans to try to find the best way to approach this. These first responders literally risked their lives when they went to Ground Zero. They came from all over the United States. And now many of them are struggling with health problems that are clearly directly related to that experience. To turn our backs on these brave people is the wrong thing to do. Will it cost money? Yes. Is it the right thing to do? Yes. We’ve got to find a way to fund it that’s acceptable to Republicans and Democrats. WALLACE: Well, but let me ask you about that, Senator Durbin. If this 9/11 bill is so important, why is it that the Democratic- controlled Senate never held a vote on this bill until the lame duck session and that President Obama, the best we can tell, has never said a word about this bill in public? DURBIN: I can’t tell you where the White House stands. I hope they support it. I will just tell you this. This is like an airport that has a runway closed down. We have aircraft stacked up trying to land. We have bills stacked up over the Senate because of the nonstop filibusters that we faced this year. I wish we could have done things more efficiently and more directly. But we’ve lurched from one 30-hour delay to another 30-hour delay to more Senate quorums. This Senate could be much more efficient. It should be. And it should be much more bipartisan than this. WALLACE: Will this bill pass? DURBIN: I think this bill will pass, and I do believe that Senators Gillibrand and Schumer are working night and day to make that happen. WALLACE: Senator Kyl, one of your objections is — he was blaming you for the filibusters. One of your objections is that Harry Reid put too many items on the agenda in this lame duck session. I want to play what you said and then how one of the first responders who now has cancer reacted. Let’s watch. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) KYL: It is impossible to do all of the things that the majority leader laid out without doing — frankly, without disrespecting the institution and without disrespecting one of the two holiest of holidays for Christians. (END VIDEO CLIP) (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) (UNKNOWN): I’m here to say that you won’t find a single New York City firefighter who considers it a sign of disrespect to work in a New York City fire house on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day. (END VIDEO CLIP) WALLACE: Senator, everyone — everyone — praises the first responders as heroes. You say you’re skeptical about this bill. Why not find a way to give these heroes peace of mind when it comes to health care? KYL: Well, first of all, they should have peace of mind when it comes to health care. The question is what and how. And when you try to do it, as you said in your introduction, in a hurry, in the lame duck session, without a hearing, without understanding what the ramifications are and whether we can amend the bill, you’re doing it in the worst way. For example, there’s already been a settlement for a lot of these people, a fund that has been set up for them to receive funding. Will the people that are supporting this legislation be able to participate in that fund? Nobody has been able to say. Why $7 billion? What will the requirements for qualification be for the money? Nobody wants to deny care to people who — and by the way, these are primarily people who helped to clean up the site in the aftermath of 9/11, and there weren’t adequate precautions taken in some cases to deal with potential health issues. And to the extent that they’ve become ill, they do need to be taken care of. It’s one thing to make an emotional appeal, to say we need to care for somebody who did something good. It’s another to do it in a sensible way. And that’s all we’re asking for. You bring it up in the lame duck session with no opportunity to amend it, and you’re probably going to make bad legislation. WALLACE: Let me move to… KYL: All of this could have been done earlier, I might add.

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It took ten years , but they finally passed the act that will allow community radio to get a foothold in the community. This is really exciting, and just about anyone who can scrape together a few thousand bucks can pull it off: Little noticed but extremely important to progressives, on Saturday afternoon Congress also passed the Local Community Radio Act.This legislation opens up radio spectrum to hundreds, if not thousands, of local independent radio stations (also known as LPFM). Its passing will bring new choices and voices on the radio dial nationwide, but is especially relevant to a broadcast area reaching 160 million people who lived in areas where these stations had previously been barred from local airwaves. Anyone tracking the rise of radio personalities like Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh and Michael Savage understands the primary political significance of gaining access to spectrum. With the opening of the airwaves to LPFM stations, progressives can gain a small but consequential spot on the radio dial. The challenge now is to organize local groups to gain access to licenses. Follow and support the Prometheus Radio Project to learn more.

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Via the Daily Caller , a nice dose of comedy for your Monday morning, this one from Saturday Night Live. read more

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I’m going to focus on what’s happening over in Jolly Olde England to-day because I think it provides us with a future model for how to organize against inevitable attempts to cut Social Security in the near future. Let’s get started! So what’s going on in the UK? Well as you no doubt know, the recently elected Tory-Liberal Democrat coalition is enacting austerity measures that include gigantic increases to students’ university tuition fees. This has not gone over well with the young folks and they have very quickly organized a massive protest demonstration that has knocked the business establishment back on its heels. The Guardian has a thorough report that everyone should read: HSBC has joined the least desirable club in the business world. The bank yesterday became the latest target of a sudden surge in public fury over tax avoidance, as a guerrilla group of demonstrators under the elusive banner UK Uncut planned to occupy branches in London and Liverpool. A “sleep-in” at an HSBC in Covent Garden was intended to highlight government cuts to housing benefit. UK Uncut, which has capitalised on a wave of activism sparked by student tuition fees, claims such cutbacks could be avoided if companies such as HSBC, Vodafone, Topshop and Boots paid a fairer share of tax. HSBC is accused of seeking a deal with the Inland Revenue to lower its tax bill by £2bn, allegedly following in the footsteps of a dispute between Vodafone and the taxman in which the mobile phone company negotiated a disputed claim down to £1.25bn. Emi Summers, a spokesman for UK Uncut, claims businesses are securing “dodgy backroom deals” with the government: “These companies should be made to pay the full tax so we can save our vital public services from being slashed.” So what do you notice about this? Well first of all, you notice that UK Uncut has created a very clear and understandable narrative: “Your tuition fees are skyrocketing because a pack of greedheads aren’t paying their damn taxes.” This narrative is perfect and devastating because it draws a clear line between the Good Guys (the British middle and working classes) and the Bad Guys (wealthy British tax dodgers) and shows how the Bad Guys are getting away with robbery while the Good Guys foot the bill. Why else do I love this? Because it’s the antithesis of what too many of America’s liberals do. I’ve often found that many pundits in our elite liberal class create arguments like they’re trying to score points from debate team judges instead of persuading normal people. The most egregious recent example is this Ezra Klein post saying that maybe Peter Orszag shouldn’t have cashed out at Citigroup, but hey, he’s the most honest and nice guy I’ve ever met and besides, he’s probably more interested in power than money at this point, so it’s not fair to say he did it for the money. The average person reading that post will have precisely no idea where Klein’s sympathies lie and will instead be befuddled that Klein would describe someone who just recently left a high-ranking government job to work as a liaison between Citigroup and the government as “uncommonly honest.” I was talking with an Australian guy at a Christmas party last night and he said that if someone in ‘Stralia had done what Orszag just did, the press would be howling about corruption. In this country? Meh. I’m sure it’ll be OK. Pete is uncommonly honest after all. I guess my point is this: The American left needs fewer Ezra Kleins and more Don Drapers who understand how to quickly and effectively appeal to peoples’ base emotions and gut reactions. The Tea Party crowd knows how to do this which is why they were so devastatingly successful in the last election. If liberals want to enjoy similar success we’re going to have to toss out our cleverly-constructed, caveat-laden arguments and actually talk to the Joe and Jane Average in clear, precise language about Why They’re Getting Screwed by our wealthy elites in both the government and business. “But how would this sort of thing translate into an American campaign?” you ask. Well, the first thing every activist should do is read David Cay Johnston’s ” Perfectly Legal: The Covert Campaign to Rig Our Tax System to Benefit the Super Rich – and Cheat Everybody Else ” from front to back. Our tax code is a horrific mess that lets the rich get away with absolute murder. Just look at how companies like Google and Facebook funnel profits through multiple countries and end up costing the government $60 billion in revenue every year . Targeting big-name companies for their tax-avoidance schemes is how the UK protesters generated headlines. There’s no reason a similar strategy targeting our own corporate tax dodgers would not work here. What say the rest of you?

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Bitter Memories of War on the Way to Jail

By Chris Hedges One hundred and thirty-one men and women, many of them military veterans wearing old fatigues, formed a single, silent line. Under a heavy snowfall and to the slow beat of a drum, they walked to the White House fence. They stood there until they were arrested. Related Entries December 19, 2010 Dead Excuses December 19, 2010 ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Repeal

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WikiLeaks the Rap Musical

This entertaining Rap News summary of the WikiLeaks Cablegate saga features “Hillary Clinton” busting rhymes and much more worth six minutes of your time. Related Entries December 19, 2010 Sporting Wood December 19, 2010 Assange to Launch Social Network for Diplomats: Twofacebook

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