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Sure looks like a large and concerted intimidation campaign against WikiLeaks supporters. In addition to this, law students at Boston University were warned not to link to WikiLeaks, or even read it online, because it might keep them from getting a security clearance for a federal job. Oh, and soldiers trying to read from Iraq get a popup warning them they’re about to break the law . Can you say “whack-a-mole”, Mr. Constitutional Law Professor? From Democracy Now! with Glenn Greenwald: AMY GOODMAN: I’m going to interrupt, because I want to get to some memos that we’ve been getting from around the country that are very important and interesting. University students are being warned about WikiLeaks. An email from Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, that we read in headlines, reads-I want to do it again-quote, “Hi students, “We received a call today from a SIPA alumnus who is working at the State Department. He asked us to pass along the following information to anyone who will be applying for jobs in the federal government, since all would require a background investigation and in some instances a security clearance. “The documents released during the past few months through Wikileaks are still considered classified documents. He recommends that you DO NOT post links to these documents nor make comments on social media sites such as Facebook or through Twitter. Engaging in these activities would call into question your ability to deal with confidential information, which is part of most positions with the federal government. “Regards, Office of Career Services.” That’s the email to Columbia University students at the School of International and Public Affairs. Now, I want to go on to another memo. Democracy Now! has obtained the text of a memo that’s been sent to employees at USAID. This is to thousands of employees, about reading the recently released WikiLeaks documents, and it comes from the Department of State. They have also warned their own employees. This memo reads, quote, “Any classified information that may have been unlawfully disclosed and released on the Wikileaks web site was not ‘declassified’ by an appopriate authority and therefore requires continued classification and protection as such from government personnel… Accessing the Wikileaks web site from any computer may be viewed as a violation of the SF-312 agreement… Any discussions concerning the legitimacy of any documents or whether or not they are classified must be conducted within controlled access areas (overseas) or within restricted areas (USAID/Washington)… The documents should not be viewed, downloaded, or stored on your USAID unclassified network computer or home computer; they should not be printed or retransmitted in any fashion.” That was the memo that went out to thousands of employees at USAID. The State Department has warned all their employees, you are not to access WikiLeaks, not only at the State Department, which they’ve blocked, by the way, WikiLeaks, but even on your home computers. Even if you’ve written a cable yourself, one of these cables that are in the trove of the documents, you cannot put your name in to see if that is one of the cables that has been released. This warning is going out throughout not only the government, as we see, but to prospective employees all over the country, even on their home computers.

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Tax Cuts Gets Filibustered

Republicans have used a filibuster to deny Democrats the chance to cut taxes for those making less than $250,000 a year. A 53 to 36 vote in favor of the cut failed to overcome the stead Republican opposition to any selective tax breaks that didn’t include the mega-rich.. —JCL The LA Times: In a rare Saturday session, Senate Democrats and Republicans remained at loggerheads over whether to extend the George W. Bush-era tax cuts to all taxpayers, ratcheting up the pressure on lawmakers to try to reach agreement before the tax cuts expire at the end of the year. With Republicans unified in opposition, Democrats, as expected, fell short of the votes needed to overcome a filibuster and extend the tax cuts for all but the very wealthy. An extension of the tax cuts to families earning less than $250,000 a year was defeated, 53-36, short of the 60 needed to limit debate. An extension of the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts to those earning less than $1 million annually was rejected, 53-37. Read more Related Entries December 3, 2010 Ailing Spanish Economy Seeks a Cure December 2, 2010 Those Dreadful Geico Commercials Are About to Get Quieter

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Lebanon Gave Israel Tips on Fighting Hezbollah

More juicy stuff from the WikiLeaks mine: Lebanon’s defense minister aided Israel in 2008 by offering advice to Israeli officials on how best to combat the Shiite paramilitary group inside Lebanon. —JCL Al-Jazeera English: Lebanon’s defence minister offered advice to Israel in 2008 on how they might defeat Hezbollah, the Shia group based in southern Lebanon, according to US diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks. The memo, published in Lebanese daily Al-Akhbar, showed Elias Murr telling US officials that areas under Hezbollah control would not receive Lebanese forces’ protection from attacks. “If Israel has to bomb all of these places in the Shia areas as a matter of operational concern, that is Hezbollah’s problem,’’ Murr reportedly said. Read more Related Entries December 3, 2010 Ailing Spanish Economy Seeks a Cure December 2, 2010 Those Dreadful Geico Commercials Are About to Get Quieter

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Racism Worries Surround 2018 Cup

News that the 2018 World Cup will be played in Russia is stirring some alarm, as a rise in neo-Nazi activity and racist killings in the country have led many soccer fans of color to wonder aloud if Russia is an appropriate place to host the international tournament. —JCL The Guardian: Russia’s football authorities, who will host the 2018 World Cup, have ignored a surge in race-related incidents around the sport, according to campaigners. Their warnings come amid a rise in racist murders and neo-Nazi activity in the country that could deter thousands of non-white football fans from attending the tournament. Rafal Pankowski, who monitors racist activity at Russian football matches with the backing of the European football body Uefa, accused the Russian Football Union of downplaying racist chants and far-right activity in its stadiums. Read more Related Entries December 3, 2010 Ailing Spanish Economy Seeks a Cure December 2, 2010 Those Dreadful Geico Commercials Are About to Get Quieter

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Dueling Presidents in Ivory Coast

In an electoral equivalent of the game of chicken taken to the extreme, two candidates for the Ivory Coast presidency have both sworn themselves in, claiming the post for their own and sparking a major political crisis in the West African country. —JCL The BBC: The incumbent Laurent Gbagbo took the oath to serve a new term, but within hours Alassane Ouattara also laid claim to the presidency. The US, UN and France say Sunday’s run-off poll was won by Mr Ouattara. [Ouattara] was declared the winner by the electoral body, but this was overturned by the Constitutional Council, which is led by an ally of Mr Gbagbo. Read more Related Entries December 3, 2010 Ailing Spanish Economy Seeks a Cure December 2, 2010 Those Dreadful Geico Commercials Are About to Get Quieter

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enlarge Watching Barack Obama and John McCain over the past week has left pundits and armchair psychologists alike scratching their heads. While the two foes from the 2008 presidential election couldn’t be more different, their puzzling performances over tax cuts for the wealthy and the repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell have the Washington commentariat paging Dr. Freud. Matthew Yglesias and James Fallows reflect the stunned reaction to McCain’s increasing mania over allowing gay Americans to openly serve in the United States military. Despite his past promises to support the military leadership if and when it concluded DADT should end, McCain has since concluded that the policy must remain in place until the last bigot has left the service. As Yglesias lamented: I really wonder what’s happening, subjectively, inside the heads of people who oppose repealing Don’t Ask Don’t Tell. Do any of them think they’re on the right side of history here? That people are going to look back from 2040 and say “if only we’d listened to John McCain thirty years ago?” For his part, Fallows worried that McCain’s descent was something more pathological than mere grumpiness . I’ll stress the incredible part, because much more than my colleagues I can remember when McCain seemed to be a potentially Eisenhower-ish, as opposed to an increasingly Bunning-like, figure in American public life. Broad-minded, tolerant, eager to bridge rather than open divides — this was the way he seemed to so many people starting from his arrival in the Congress in the 1980s. Seeing him now is surprising not simply because it reminds us: this man could be the sitting president, but also because it again raises the question, how did he end up this way? Even if his earlier identity had been artifice, what would be the payoff in letting it go? Fallows concluded his brief psychoanalysis of McCain, “John McCain seems intentionally to be shrinking his audience, his base, and his standing in history. It’s unnecessary, and it is sad.” He could have been describing President Obama’s shocking collapse over the extension of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy. To be sure, Obama is snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. His popular campaign promise to end the Bush tax cuts for households earning over $250,000 retains its strong public support . A new CBS poll showed that only 26% of respondents – and just 46% of Republicans – want the budget-busting Bush tax cuts to continue for the richest Americans. And yet President Obama is on the verge of folding a great hand, possibly without even securing GOP pledges to allow votes on extended unemployment benefits or the START treaty. It’s no wonder Ezra Klein shook his head at Obama’s “bad poker” and Robert Reich lamented that “the President legitimizes everything the right has been saying.” This blogger has long fretted over Barack Obama’s counterproductive fetish for bipartisanship. (For example, see, ” Obama’s Self-Fulfilling Prophecy ” and ” The ‘Thank You Sir May I Have Another’ President “.) Now, sympathetic columnists and pundits are at a loss to explain Obama’s missing cojones and apparent penchant for punishment. Howard Fineman was floored after Team Obama’s surreal paean to compromise after Tuesday’s White House meeting with Republican leaders: What planet do he and they think they are on? And have they paid any attention to Sen. Mitch McConnell? The president emerged from the meeting yesterday to say, hopefully, that he had suggested that they work together not just on taxes and spending, but on the other issues pending, including an extension of unemployment insurance. But at that very moment McConnell and the rest of the GOP Senate leadership were beginning work on a plan to force the Senate to do just the opposite: a unified GOP threat to filibuster debate on anything but taxes and spending. Three weeks ago, the Washington Post’s E.J. Dionne foreshadowed what was to come. “The lame-duck session of Congress that kicks off this week will test whether Democrats have spines made of Play-Doh,” Dionne predicted, “and whether President Obama has decided to pretend that capitulation is conciliation.” And on Thursday, he had a sinking feeling that he had his answer : Is President Obama’s strategy of offering preemptive concessions destined to make enemies of his potential friends in the electorate without winning over any of his adversaries? … What we are witnessing here is the political power that comes from the Republican Party’s single-minded focus on high-end tax cuts and the strategic incoherence of a Democratic Party that is confused and divided – and not getting much help from its president. Obama’s same recurring pattern on display in producing the too-small stimulus and watered down health care bill was at work again in the tax cut debate Democrats should have convincingly won months ago. And it’s all too much for Paul Krugman . He’s seen this movie before, and doesn’t he like the ending. Mr. Obama, who has faced two years of complete scorched-earth opposition, declared that he had failed to reach out sufficiently to his implacable enemies. He did not, as far as anyone knows, wear a sign on his back saying “Kick me,” although he might as well have… It’s hard to escape the impression that Republicans have taken Mr. Obama’s measure — that they’re calling his bluff in the belief that he can be counted on to fold. And it’s also hard to escape the impression that they’re right. The real question is what Mr. Obama and his inner circle are thinking. Do they really believe, after all this time, that gestures of appeasement to the G.O.P. will elicit a good-faith response? Obama’s Democratic allies know the answer. House Democrat Barney Frank called the President’s looming surrender, “gravely mistaken” Iowa liberal Tom Harkin warned, “I just think, if [Obama] caves on this, then I think that he’s gonna have a lot of swimming upstream [to do],” Harkin said, adding, “He would then just be hoping and praying that Sarah Palin gets the nomination.” And outgoing Ohio Governor Ted Strickland asked Obama out loud what others have just been thinking: “After all of this you don’t realize these people want to destroy you and your agenda? How many times do you have to be, you know, slapped in the face?” Compared to John McCain and Barack Obama, understanding the inner workings of the mind of George W. Bush was relatively straight forward. But his actual and would-have-been successor are another matter altogether. This week, the bizarre behavior and puzzling positions McCain and Obama have confused friend, foe and Freudian alike. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

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Amanda Terkel catches a historic moment in the fight for gay rights, as all our military leaders admit to Sen. Mark Udall that they can implement the repeal of DADT and make it work : In an important moment, Sen. Mark Udall (D-Colo.) asked each service chief to go down the line and answer whether, if DADT is repealed, their branch can implement it and make it work. Every single chief answered in the affirmative. John McCain continues to buckle under to the pressure of the radical right Tea Party movement and still vows to try and undermine the process. After a morning of testimony from top Marine Corps, Army and Air Force officers who said Congress should not scrap the “Don’t ask, don’t tell” policy in the near-term, John McCain says he might block the bill . After hearing testimony from the service chiefs, who said repealing the ban now would add more stress to troops during a time of war, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) suggested he could move to prevent floor debate on the 2011 defense authorization bill, which contains the repeal provision. McCain expressed confidence that the rest of the Republican conference would join him because repealing the ban is not a “compelling” issue at a time when the military is fighting two wars and the U.S. economy is “in the tank.” All Senate Republicans have pledged to block consideration of any bill that does not address extending current tax rates or funding the federal government.
 Keeping America fastened to pre-FDR policies and 1950s morality seems to be the driving force of the religious right and Tea Party advocates. Another sadly memorable day for the blockers of progress , but the fight continues on.

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Outgoing Ohio governor Ted Strickland has some harsh words for Democrats, and they’re pretty well-placed, too. In his words, Democrats suffer from “intellectual elitism”. In an interview with the Huffington Post on Tuesday, Strickland warned Democrats that they’re suffering from Polysyllabic Wonk Syndrome: Democrats suffer from an “intellectual elitism” that prevents them from adopting the type of populist tone to relate to voters, he said. And while President Obama had made a series of monumental legislative advancements — any one of which would have been “historic” in its own right — he fails to recognize that he is being “slapped in the face” by his Republican critics. “I think there is a hesitancy to talk using populist language,” the Ohio Democrat said in a sit-down interview with The Huffington Post. “I think it has to do with a sort of intellectual elitism that considers that kind of talk is somehow lacking in sophistication. I’m not sure where it comes from. But I think it’s there. There’s an unwillingness to draw a line in the sand.” Nowhere is this more evident than this weeks’ Great Tax Rate Debate. This is a no-brainer to almost everyone paying attention. It’s really so much easier than Obama and some Democrats are making it seem. Here it is in simple terms: No billionaire tax breaks. They all expire this year. That’s all. Simple, right? Not so much. There is a fear on the part of some Democrats that a real compromise is in the works between the White House and Republicans that would extend the upper tier of tax cuts for a couple of years while making middle class tax cuts permanent while throwing a fresh round of stimulus spending into the mix. Part of the reason for their fear stems from the possibility that the GOP will successfully pin the blame for higher taxes on Democrats, along with the crummy economy. That messaging thing, again. The meme machine on the GOP side is louder and smarter than Democrats’. Still, wouldn’t the facts bear the truth out? Wouldn’t it be fairly easy to simply say that the GOP held the middle class tax cuts hostage for the billionaires’ cut? Not really, partly because a freshly-minted GOP House could come back in January and pass retroactive tax cuts , which would not only throw everyone’s tax planning into chaos, it would also push this very same argument into 2011, with a Republican House and a more Republican Senate. It’s entirely possible that enough BlueDogs could join with Republicans to send a package to Obama’s desk that’s worse than any compromise they could craft in this session. I still think they won’t get 60 votes for anything, and the whole package will expire on December 31st. What worries me is that instead of cranking up the victory message machine, we’ll once again have a message hijack by the GOP about how our President and the Democrats let the middle class suck canal water tax-wise and tanked the economy further by not compromising when they had control of both houses of Congress. What worries me more is that those of us who actually get how this stuff works won’t be able to get a message out that makes any sense because of Democrats’ need to be wonky and noble about things. Really, it’s as simple as what Susie said in her earlier post . Just keep reminding everybody that the Republicans wanted to give $700 billion in tax cuts to billionaires while the unemployed middle class takes the hit for it. Keep reminding everyone that these irrational, greedy bastards in the Republican party serve two masters: greed and ambition. But even more than that, why aren’t Democrats hitting harder on the patriotic duty of every American to support their country by paying taxes? This is where they really lose me completely. I paid taxes every year that Bush was in office, grumbling all the way about how I resented financing wars and greed. If Democrats could quit apologizing for taxes and start a very simple campaign about the patriotic good that taxes do, they could shift attitudes enough to start calling the greedy bastards at the top unpatriotic freeloaders. One way or the other, Strickland is right when he says this: “I mean, I understand a reluctance to reach the conclusion that I think a reasonable person can reach: that [Senate Minority Leader Mitch] McConnell was speaking the truth when he said his goal was not to govern, not to develop public policy, but his goal is to defeat this president in 2012. And I think when the base understands that that’s what’s at stake, the base is going to be much more willing to engage and to join the fight. The base is going to be less willing to join the fight if they don’t see the clear differences. The differences are there, for God’s sake. ” and this: “People are willing to stand with you if they see you fighting for them.” Yes, the differences ARE there, but if we can’t win this argument — one we shouldn’t even be having — I hold very little hope that 2012 will be much different from 2010. Meanwhile, Bushies do the happy dance over maneuvering the administration and Democrats into this position in the first place. I hope they sprain their butt muscles when they fall.

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If there’s one thing I know about being poor, it’s the cascading effect that even a week without cash flow can trigger. Late charges, reinstatement fees, bounced checks… it gets to the point where you’re really behind the eight-ball. That’s why it’s always infuriated me that the people in charge are always so oblivious to the consequences of their indifference. I mean, how can they not know how many people are hurting? Even as Congress debates whether to extend emergency unemployment checks for more than 6 million Americans who are approaching the 99-week-limit, some four million others are facing the certain end of their benefits over the next year, unless an entirely new program is crafted. This is the sobering conclusion of a report released by the President’s Council of Economic Advisers on Thursday. The study forecast that the exhaustion of unemployment benefits for so many will curb spending power enough to significantly impede an already weak economic recovery. The typical household now receiving emergency unemployment benefits would see their income fall by a third should they lose their checks, according to the report. Among the roughly 40 percent of households in which the person receiving a check is the sole breadwinner, income would fall by 90 percent. The existing emergency unemployment program, which extends benefits for nearly two years, expired on Wednesday. Without an agreement to extend the program, the economy will lose about 600,000 jobs, as the spending enabled by continued unemployment checks ceases. National economic output–which expanded at an annual pace of 2.5 percent during the summer months–would fall off by 0.6 percent. That disturbing prospect does not even account for the roughly four million people who would exceed even the extended limits in the emergency program. Were that many jobless people left to fend themselves without unemployment checks, that would pose significant risks for the broader economy, say economists. They cite the fact that consumer spending accounts for roughly 70 percent of all economic activity.

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Homophobe John McCain who has embarrassed himself horribly with his shifting goalposts and blatantly ridiculous excuses for blocking the repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell had this one coming from Jon Stewart. Ladies and gentlemen, Jon Stewart presents… Gaypocalypse Now. Here’s more from TPM. Jon Stewart Rips John McCain Over Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell : Jon Stewart last night lampooned Sen. John McCain’s (R-AZ) continued stalwart opposition to repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, even after the Pentagon released its review indicating that a repeal of the ban on openly gay men and women would have little to no effect on military readiness. “McCain’s like one of them Japanese soldiers living on Okinawa in 1949, still fighting because he doesn’t realize the war ended a long time ago,” Stewart said. “And, for some reason, even though he’s been alone for years and years on this island, doesn’t like gay people.” I particularly liked the analogy between McCain and The Black Knight from Monty Python’s The Holy Grail. Very fitting. Stewart also slammed “maverick” McCain for flip-flopping on some of his previous statements, although it wasn’t as good as this segment I recorded for the site back in September of 2008 —

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