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Jon Stewart plays it straight last night to lay out the absolute hypocrisy and moral bankruptcy of this situation, both by the politicians and those in the media who fail to do their job and call them out on this. 9/11 first responders watch as Mitch McConnell cries over a friend’s retirement, and Jon Kyl explains why the Senate can’t work the week after Christmas. Partial transcript from an earlier segment: Before we go, I want to talk one last time about something called the Zadroga bill, who was an NYPD detective who died in 2006 from respiratory illness thought to be caused by the dust he inhaled while working at Ground Zero after 2001. This bill would provide $7 billion in medical and financial benefits for Ground Zero workers who get sick, and they’re going to pay for it by closing a corporate tax loophole. It’s a win-win-win-win, just fucking do it!! The House passed it. The House of Representatives passed it, and it would pass in the Senate, if it came to an up-or-down vote. They have more than the 50 votes they need. But the Senate Republicans have filibustered it, won’t allow the bill to come up for a vote. Luckily, yesterday there was some good news from the Senate, the logjam broke. DIANE SAWYER (12/15/2010): Today the Senate passed that bill to extend tax cuts to all Americans, including the wealthiest, by an overwhelming 81-19 vote. Meanwhile, one Republican Senator saw fit to call the cops on some 9/11 First Responders yesterday when they visited her office. Congratulations, Susan Collins of Maine.

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India Accused of Torture in Kashmir

Indian police and security forces have allegedly tortured hundreds of Kashmiris as WikiLeaked evidence shows the use of electrocution, physical beatings, and sexual humiliation against detainees from 2005 to 2007. —JCL The Guardian: US officials had evidence of widespread torture by Indian police and security forces and were secretly briefed by Red Cross staff about the systematic abuse of detainees in Kashmir, according to leaked diplomatic cables. The dispatches, obtained by website WikiLeaks, reveal that US diplomats in Delhi were briefed in 2005 by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) about the use of electrocution, beatings and sexual humiliation against hundreds of detainees. Other cables show that as recently as 2007 American diplomats were concerned about widespread human rights abuses by Indian security forces, who they said relied on torture for confessions. Read more Related Entries December 16, 2010 Everything Is Negotiable, Except Nature December 15, 2010 Time Taps Zuckerberg as Person of the Year

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From The Senate Democrats, Republicans are finally taking a little bit of heat in the press for their hypocrisy on earmarks. Republicans Say One Thing In Washington And Something Else At Home : Senate Republicans took a lot of heat yesterday for stuffing a bill with millions of their own earmarks, then trying to claim they oppose earmarks. but Republicans’ earmark hypocrisy is even starker when you compare what they are saying in Washington, DC to what they are saying to their constituents back home. In D.C., DeMint Decries Earmarks: “Americans want Congress to shut down the earmark favor factory, and next week I believe House and Senate Republicans will unite to stop pork barrel spending…Instead of spending time chasing money for pet projects, lawmakers will be able to focus on balancing the budget, reforming the tax code and repealing the costly health care takeover.” [The Hill, 11/9/10] …But In South Carolina, DeMint Defends Earmarks: “U.S. Sen. Jim DeMint said fellow senators are ‘playing politics’ in blocking his colleague’s efforts to secure a $400,000 earmark to study deepening Charleston Harbor.” [Herald Online, 9/11/10 ] In D.C. , Cornyn Poses As An Anti-Earmark Champion: “I believe the public discontent can be accurately sourced, and Congressional earmarking process has become a symbol for wasteful and undisciplined federal spending. Earlier this month, I joined a bipartisan group calling for a one year moratorium on all earmarks. That effort failed. We missed a major opportunity to show we are serious about tightening our Congressional belts during a difficult economic period.” [Everyone Loses in the Earmark Game, 3/31/08 ] … But In Texas, Cornyn Downplays Significance Of His Earmark Opposition, Emphasizes That It’s Only Temporary: Cornyn told the Dallas Morning News that the earmark ban, “’basically is a timeout while we reassess this whole earmarking process, which has been in some instances abused,’ said Texas Sen. John Cornyn, a member of the GOP leadership… Cornyn, like some other moratorium supporters, said the policy should not and won’t last indefinitely but agreed that for now, ‘it will have an impact on Texas, just as it will have an impact on the rest of the country.’” [Dallas Morning News, 11/26/10 ]? … And Requests Millions In Earmarks For FY2011. [ Senator Cornyn FY2011 Appropriations Requests ] In D.C., Thune Lambasts Earmarks: “The bill is loaded up with pork projects, and it shouldn’t get a vote. The bill was crafted behind closed doors, and it hasn’t gone through the proper oversight or the proper channels.” [Press Conference, 12/15/10] In South Dakota, Thune Defends Pet Projects: “He has backed similar moratoriums in the past but the proposed 2011 spending bills Congress will consider in the coming weeks include almost 30 Thune-requested projects, such as money for highway projects, water systems and safety programs on Indian reservations… ‘If you include [South Dakota] projects like Lewis & Clark, you end up costing taxpayers much more in inflation and lost economic opportunities,’ Larson said Monday. ‘We applaud responsible efforts to rein in earmark spending, but if that effort wrongly includes authorized projects like Lewis & Clark, it’s counterproductive.’ Thune agrees. ‘There are ways that you can do this that really legitimize Congress spending money, and one is authorized projects that went through the normal process and passed the House and the Senate,’ he said last week. ‘To me, that’s a very different thing than an earmark that gets dropped into an appropriations bill in a conference committee that hasn’t passed the House and the Senate.’” [Argus Leader, 11/16/10]

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Elizabeth Kubler Ross famously broke down the process of grieving into five stages: anger, denial, bargaining, depression and acceptance. While Kubler Ross was focusing on death and dying, the same stages apply to the death of relationships. And I think even a cursory glance throughout the progressive blogosphere shows a rather bad case of heartbreak going on with President Barack Obama. I’ll be the first one to admit that I fell a little bit in love with Barack Obama during his 2004 keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention . I felt lost in the wilderness during those Bush years and here was a man who spoke about “our better angels” and made me feel hopeful again. I got another glimpse of our collective heady infatuation with Barack Obama during the primaries where blogs and comments sections divided stridently into Team Barack vs. Team Hillary. Anything we posted that could be perceived even slightly as pro-Hillary (and remember, the site officially took no position on the primary; we were going to support whoever won against the Republican candidate) would unleash a barrage of defenders, unwilling to hear anything disparaging about their chosen candidate. But then Candidate Obama became President Obama, and the besotted progressive blogosphere got to see what it was like to actually live with the man. And like the guy who seemed great when you were dating but is annoying as a husband because he never picks up his socks and has to be reminded to take out the trash, the reality didn’t quite match up with the expectation. Thom Hartmann spoke to this on his show this week. His advice? Don’t fall in love with a politician : The majority of American voters don’t consider themselves strong liberals or conservatives, and thus don’t “fall in love” with the politicians they vote for. They just figure they’re voting for a politician – what the heck – and probably the lesser of two evils. But conservatives fell in love with George W. Bush, and liberals fell in love with Barack Obama. Today it’s hard to find a conservative who’ll defend Bush’s illegal wars or doubling of the national debt. And increasingly it’s getting hard to find liberals who aren’t in some stage of grieving shock as Obama participates in compromise – what some would call sellout – after compromise. What we all need to realize is that Obama – like Bush – is just a politican. He doesn’t walk on water, and while he has a political compass, he’s more driven by pragmatism than ideology. He’s not our progressive saviour. That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t support him or work for his election. If nothing else, the Supreme Court – the most powerful branch of government – is on the line. But more important, instead of being elated and then depressed every time a new issue is put on Obama’s plate – progressives will see better results investing their physical and emotional energy in movement politics – working with grass roots groups like Tim Carpenter’s Progressive Democrats of America, or Howard and Jim Dean’s Democracy For America. Hartmann’s point is apt. It really is counterproductive to wail and scream over how angry/disappointed/betrayed/pick your emotion we are at the choices Obama has made. However we perceive it, *WE* are not the whole country. And unlike both Clinton and Bush when they lost their majorities in Congress, polls show more Americans trust Obama than they do the Republicans they just elected . Like it or not, his choices are working for his political career, and first and foremost, Obama is a politician. So let’s move past the anger and denial over what Obama’s job performance could or should be, past the bargaining over primarying a sitting president, past the depression of not getting everything we had hoped would come with an Obama presidency and let’s get to a place of acceptance. Bob Cesca : Somehow, though, certain progressives don’t get it. They believe the president is betraying progressive principles and deliberately sticking it to “the base.” First of all, the progressive movement is hardly the president’s base. Most progressive leaders supported John Edwards during the primaries, and many were ambivalent about the president once he was nominated. The president’s base is made up of mostly non-political Americans — many of whom desperately need their unemployment benefits to continue until the jobs return. Second, stop whining and wise up, progressives. The president isn’t going to pass every last thing on your personal wish list. Just because he compromised on something that you’ve been frantically tweeting about doesn’t mean it’s time to pitch a tantrum and hurl the board game across the room — storming off in a snit. The volume of progressive crabbery and moping lately has been staggering — otherwise sane progressives vowing to not vote in 2012, or to somehow conjure up a viable primary challenger to run against the president. Suffice to say, both ideas are ridiculous and ultimately self-defeating. Fun to bitch about as a way to blow off steam, but also a great way to elect Awful Republican President X. Good gravy, are we really this fragile? The president accurately criticizes progressives for not understanding the political climate on the Hill, and we stomp and flail like a gaggle of infants? Pathetic.[..] Okay, okay. I’m not making any friends here, but it’s becoming increasingly difficult to participate in a movement where so many colleagues have careened off the rails. We’re supposed to be the smart ones, the reality-based people. And yet, out of some sort of manic-depression or desire for hipster cred, we’ve become overly preoccupied with tearing down the most liberal president in decades using non-reality-based criticisms instead of laser-focusing our efforts and resources on tearing down the real killers — conservatives, Tea Party people and the GOP. We need to focus and engage in smart accountability — carefully pick our battles with the White House and, when we fight, we need to employ airtight, concise, reality-based arguments designed to convince rather than to hector. Otherwise, we’re everything the president said in his press conference last week — or worse — and our attempts at accountability will increasingly resemble Tea-Party-style screeching. Featureless, brainless white noise in the distance. But mainly, enough with the pouting. We have to stop mistaking petulance for “principle” and get something done. I’m an unabashed, unapologetic liberal. I know ( know , not think) that moving the policies and governmental programs way to the left will help this country, because the constant push to the right that we’ve suffered through since Reagan has done nothing but hurt all but a small percentage of elites. But I’m also a pragmatist and I know that not everyone sees things as I do. Sometimes you have to accept the watered down incremental step, to keep the momentum forward. And yes, it can be frustrating not to take the big leap. But we need to keep an eye on the big picture. The two parties are NOT the same and there are big stakes involved that make hating on President Obama about as smart as cutting off your nose to spite your face.

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Your Picks for Worst Media Bias Quotes of 2010 Unveiled; Official Results Due Monday

More than 8,000 participated in the public online voting for the Best Notable Quotables of 2010 (8,403 to be exact), weighing the idiocy and outrageousness of dozens of quotes from liberal reporters and celebrities. We posted the results a few hours ago.

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By now you’ve probably heard that Harry Reid has agreed to a one-month continuing resolution on the budget appropriations bill. When I heard it, I went full-tilt ballistic. And then I heard the news about Senator Ron Wyden’s need to have prostate cancer surgery and everything fell into place. Here’s why I think Reid agreed the extension by continuing resolution: DeMint demanded a full reading of the appropriations bill on the floor of the Senate . That reading would involve having 1,924 pages of text read out loud on the Senate floor. As you may recall, that tactic was used last December when the vote on the health care bill was looming, and Democrats called the bluff. I suspect they would have this time too, except for what happened after DeMint’s demand. Reid planned to have the Senate in session through January 4th if necessary in order to bring up the DREAM Act and DADT standalone repeal after disposing of the tax cuts, appropriations bill, and START. Senator Scott Brown announced support for standalone DADT repeal bill today, putting the total number in support at 60 with Wyden and Murkowski’s support. There are rumors of more Republicans signing on after Pat Toomey spoke in favor of it. Wyden announced he had delayed prostate cancer surgery as long as he could without endangering his health, and would not be available on Friday for votes because of tests, nor would he be available on Monday because that was when surgery was scheduled. Past Monday was up in the air. Reid made a value judgment, decided to get the appropriations question out of the way and schedule cloture votes for DADT repeal and the DREAM Act on Saturday when Wyden was still available to vote. That would leave the START treaty on the table, which Republicans have claimed requires 6-7 days of debate before a vote. With everything else out of the way, it’ll be pretty obvious who is keeping the Senate from going home for the holidays. Because a majority is 60% in the United States Senate and because these DREAM and DADT repeal votes are so close , Reid decided he couldn’t lose Wyden’s vote on DREAM and DADT repeal. I think in the long run he’s probably right, since Republicans are about as trustworthy as foxes in henhouses. So where from here? I see a couple of directions — my opinion only. If the Senate actually tries for a filibuster rule change on the first day of the new Congress (January 5th) that makes filibustering harder than just waving a pinky and nodding at the minority leader, then the Senate will have new life. If they go there. And actually get it done. I do think that for the first time there’s some real will among Senate Democrats to modify these ridiculous filibuster rules. Many of the newest Democratic Senators are determined to attach a political and public cost to what is now nothing more than a wink and a nod. The new Republican House will have to either produce an appropriations bill by mid-January or so or shut down the government. I think it’s reasonable to expect them to shut down government. Whether they’re held accountable for the fallout from that action will be up to the people and the press. Still, it’s more likely they’ll produce an appropriations bill than a new version of the DREAM Act and DADT standalone repeal, and I think that’s the choice Harry Reid made. START is also on shaky ground at this point. If there is a victory at hand at all it will be pyrrhic, coming at the cost of defunding the Affordable Care Act in whatever final form the appropriations bill takes. In 2011, that funding was to provide ongoing funding to states’ high-risk pools, a second tier of funding for Bernie Sanders’ community health centers, and appropriations for transitions to electronic health records, among others. In the end, Wyden’s pending surgery and the dwindling time frame drove Reid’s decision. The only question is whether these two standalone bills will succeed. DADT repeal is looking hopeful. DREAM Act is on shaky ground. We need to keep the pressure on the Senate to vote for it. It’s an E-Ticket ride, isn’t it?

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Harry Reid gets vote on DREAM Act for Saturday. Push shaky Dems to support it

enlarge Harry Reid has been very vocal in his support for the passage of the DREAM Act and is vowing to keep the Senate around until they finish the work that they started. Republicans have demanded a vote on tax cuts precede the other issues before the Senate. Among those issues pushed to the back burner are the New START treaty and the DREAM Act. Reid wouldn’t commit Monday to adjourning on Friday; he’d said last week that no senators were interested in working all the way until Christmas Eve, as the Senate did last year to pass the healthcare reform bill. “We need to stay here until we finish,” Reid said Monday. Maybe the Senate can take a cue from the state of Texas — that’s right, Texas of all places — and see how passing the DREAM Act has helped their state. Texas law currently provides that all students, regardless of immigration status, may qualify for in-state tuition at Texas colleges or universities provided they have lived in Texas the three years leading up to high school graduation and resided in Texas the year prior to their enrollment in higher education. The Texas Dream Act thus recognizes that immigrant students who have been educated in our Texas public schools have strong family, community and economic ties to the U.S. The state then follows through on the investment taxpayers have made in their education by allowing them to pay the same tuition rate as other Texans who meet the residency timeline requirements. These students have been admitted to colleges and universities based on their merit and despite the many obstacles with which they are confronted — a principle every Texan can appreciate. The law is both successful and popular because it reduces dropouts, encourages access to college and comes at little expense to the state… read on Via email from Jackie I found out that big-time Spanish-language newscaster Jorge Ramos , who has 76.6k followers, has gotten behind the current push. You may have seen this tweet: Last count, we are 4 votes short in the Senate for the #dreamact. I can’t believe that 4 Senators will deny thousands so much There is plenty that can still be done and I think the best use of our time is getting squishy Democrats to stand up and do the right thing. And these Dems remain shaky or lean no’s: Baucus (MT) Conrad (ND) Manchin (WV) Nelson (NE) — currently a no Pryor (AR) Tester (MT) — currently a no Folks can call this line to randomly route to key Senate targets (both GOP/Dem): 866-587-6101 Including: McCaskill, Landrieu, Hagan, Bennett (UT), Murkowski, Voinovich, Collins, Snowe, LeMieux, Hutchison Jackie also passed along this op-ed by a Republican saying that the GOP puts itself in peril if it opposes the DREAM Act. That is true, but the nativists are running the GOP now and they will not see the sense and compassion needed to support the DREAM Act. Under Bush, hate-wing talk radio helped derail immigration reform. Karl Rove understood that the Latino community represents a huge new voting bloc in America and wanted to capitalize on it, but he obviously wasn’t paying attention to his own base — a base that usually marches in lockstep with the party elders, but racism and nativism are much more powerful elements in the GOP since movement conservatism began to dominate the GOP, because it intentionally enabled so much of the ugliness, and now has unleashed it and cannot control it. Add the Tea Party Birchers into the GOP stew along with an African American president and well, it gets very ugly. Please place calls into Democratic offices that are needed to move this legislation along. It still can be passed if Democrats do the right thing. Also join with the NCLR, America Ferrera, Janet Murguía, and Ozomatli in Asking the Senate to Pass the “DREAM Act” UPDATE: Harry Reid pushed for cloture last night on DREAM and a vote will be held on Saturday along with hopefully DADT. On the Senate floor just now, Majority Leader Harry Reid announced the Senate will begin to vote as soon as Saturday on a bill to repeal Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. That puts it ahead of the START treaty, as proponents of repeal had requested. “We’ve got to move this all along,” Reid said from the floor. Reid will also file for cloture on the DREAM Act. That means both bills should come up for a procedural vote on Saturday. The vote on the DREAM Act will come first, followed by the vote on DADT. DKos lists the names and numbers again for you to call. See below the fold. Update: As you know, getting 60 votes for cloture on the DREAM Act is going to be a nail biter. Please take a few minutes and call these Democratic Senators who are leaning no or have said they’ll vote against it: Max Baucus (MT) – (202) 224-2651 Kent Conrad (ND) – (202) 224-2043 Joe Manchin (WV) – (202) 224-3954 Nelson (NE) – (202) 224-6551 Mark Pryor (AR) – (202) 224-2353 Tester (MT) – (202) 224-2644 Kay Hagan (NC) – (202) 224-6342 Claire McCaskill (MO) – (202) 224-6154 Mary Landrieu (LA) – (202) 224-5824 Or you can call this number from Reform Immigration For America, that routes automatically to key targets: 866-587-6101

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” A government takeover of health care .” Writes Politifact: …as Republicans smelled serious opportunity in the midterm elections, they didn't let facts get in the way of a great punchline. And few in the press challenged their frequent assertion that under Obama, the government was going to take over the health care industry. read more

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Graph of the Day: The Cost of Production Of Oil

Estimates of the cost of production for oil production form various locations Image Credit: Oil Drum Whenever we speak of Peak Oil, the optimists point out that the technology for finding replacements will turn up as the prices rise; look at what has happened with the oil sands and with shale gas. But as this graph shows, each alternative just gets more expensive. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Barney Frank Speaks Out on Repeal of DADT — The Distraction is the Policy

Click here to view this media Barney Frank responded to critics of the repeal of DADT, calling it a distraction that could cost lives. As Frank Rightfully pointed out, “The maintenance of this policy is the distraction.” ‘Don’t ask, don’t tell’ passes handily in House of Representatives : Wednesday’s overwhelming vote for repeal had been expected. In May, the House, by a 40-vote margin, successfully attached repeal language to a broader defense bill that eventually cleared the chamber. Republicans, led by repeal critic Sen. John McCain of Arizona, have twice blocked that bill from heading to the Senate floor, most recently last week. But gay rights activists cheered the vote, saying the House is aligned with President Barack Obama, Defense Secretary Robert Gates, a majority of troops and most Americans, who all believe openly gay men and women should be allowed to put on the uniform. A Washington Post/ABC News poll out Wednesday found 77 percent of Americans favor allowing openly gay men and women to serve in the military. The results mirror previous polls that have shown overwhelming public support for ending the “don’t ask” law. “Momentum is solidly on the side of ending ‘don’t ask, don’t tell,’” Joe Solmonese, president of the Human Rights Campaign, said in a statement. “Now it is up to the Senate to consign this failed and discriminatory law to the dustbin of history.” It looks like they have the votes in the Senate if Reid doesn’t let the Republicans run out the clock.

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