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Family Research Council Labeled as ‘Hate Group’ By SPLC for Anti-Gay Rhetoric

Click here to view this media Chris Matthews talked to the SPLC’s Mark Potok and The Family Research Council’s Tony Perkins about the recent designation of Perkin’s FRC as a hate group for their anti-gay rhetoric. From the SPLC’s web site — Active U.S. Hate Groups : The Southern Poverty Law Center counted 932 active hate groups in the United States in 2009. Only organizations and their chapters known to be active during 2009 are included. All hate groups have beliefs or practices that attack or malign an entire class of people, typically for their immutable characteristics. This list was compiled using hate group publications and websites, citizen and law enforcement reports, field sources and news reports. Hate group activities can include criminal acts, marches, rallies, speeches, meetings, leafleting or publishing. Websites appearing to be merely the work of a single individual, rather than the publication of a group, are not included in this list. Listing here does not imply a group advocates or engages in violence or other criminal activity. Here’s more from TPM — Family Research Council Labeled ‘Hate Group’ By SPLC Over Anti-Gay Rhetoric : The Family Research Council is perhaps the most prominent voice in conservative social politics and the hosts of an annual rite of passage for many Republicans who hope to run for president. And now, FRC is on the same Southern Poverty Law Center list of hate groups as the Ku Klux Klan. The SPLC gave the Family Research Council the designation due to anti-gay speech from its leaders, which the SPLC says includes calls for gay men and lesbians to be imprisoned. Read on… Perkins needless to say isn’t happy about it. I say good for Mark Potok and the SPLC for putting these hate mongers in the type of company where they belong.

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Keith Olbermann Attacks Bristol Palin for Something Announced 18 Months Ago

MSNBC's Keith Olbermann showed viewers just how on top of things he is Monday attacking Bristol Palin for something that was announced more than a year and a half ago. During his newly renovated “Worst Person in the World” segment, the “Countdown” host gave Palin top honors for being The Candie's Foundation 's abstinence spokesperson (video follows with transcript and commentary): read more

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Evidently President Obama is taking the wrong message away from the midterms. This morning’s announcement of a federal pay freeze sends exactly the wrong message and plays into Republicans’ hands . Seriously, what is he thinking here? The early reviews of President Obama’s plan to freeze federal worker pay are in — and it gets a resounding “F” from just about everybody outside of GOP leadership. Michael Linden, a budget expert at the liberal Center for American Progress, said the plan is small potatoes that risks driving away valuable civil servants with little budgetary upside. ” Bluntly doing it this way, we risk cutting off our nose to spite our face,” Linden said in a phone interview. “We risk not hiring good people, we risk not giving a raise to people who deserve a raise, and we miss not cutting the pay of those who deserve a pay cut .” That more or less sums it up. Of course, it doesn’t matter to Republicans, because nothing short of firing every federal employee would make them happy. Just after he was sworn in today, Senator Mark Kirk declared his first priority would be to control federal spending . Speaker-to-be John Boehner sang a chorus of “Too little, too late” , claiming a pay freeze without a hiring freeze was just not enough. Of course, these are the same hacks who posture and strut about how extending federal unemployment benefits just cannot — CANNOT — be done without some budget cut somewhere else so they are paid for while they speak out of the other side of their mouths (or body parts, depending) about how the Bush tax cuts must — MUST — be extended with no provision for paying for them. If Obama is playing for moderate Republicans, he’s doing it stupidly. First, the election is over, and it proved there is no such thing as a moderate Republican. The ones with any sense have run away from the Republican party entirely and the rest of them are just batsh*t crazy. There are no votes to win with this nonsense, so it’s all just posturing for the sake of looking responsible. If Obama really wants to look responsible, he can start by giving serious credibility to the progressive proposals rolled out today for deficit reduction. They’re practical, smart ideas that deserve consideration equally with all others. In the world of Washington DC, it seems everyone operates on an assumption that things will not ever improve. With proposals like this, it’s no wonder they operate on that basis. Someone needs to give the President lessons in listening for pitch and timbre, because this move has to be the most tone-deaf he’s made yet.

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C&L Opening Bell, 11-30-10

enlarge I hope you all had a nice, relaxing Thanksgiving weekend. While you were digesting turkey and buying discounted iPads for friends and family, the world continued to fall apart. Aren’t I just a cheery way to wake up in the morning? Let’s get started with today’s Opening Bell… First, some chipper news: Black Friday was a relative hit this year, which could bode well for the rest of the holiday shopping season: The number of people who shopped at stores and online between Thursday and Sunday jumped 8.7% to 212 million shoppers, according to a National Retail Federation survey of 4,306 shoppers conducted by BIGresearch. The total amount spent during the four-day weekend reached an estimated $45 billion, with the average spending rising 6.4% to $365.34, the survey showed. A flood of doorbuster deals from Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) and Target Corp. (TGT) to Best Buy Co. (BBY) and Macy’s Inc. (M), coupled with earlier-than-ever store openings and offers of free shipping put shoppers in a mood to spend. The number of those who began their Black Friday shopping at midnight tripled this year to 9.5% while those who shopped on Thanksgiving day itself also have doubled over the past five years to 22.3 million, the survey showed. Hooray non-sucky sales data! Ain’t no Austerity Grinch can hold down the American Christmas Spirit, baby! OK, now that we’ve got the good news out of the way, let’s turn to Ireland. You may be wondering why I’m concentrating on Ireland so much. Well, I think Ireland’s situation demonstrates in very clear terms the ways in which corporatism is undermining democracy. Right now you have a soon-to-be-out-on-its-arse government readying an austerity plan that will dip into the country’s pension fund to bail out its banks’ European creditors. And to make things worse, the EU’s Commissioner for Economic Affairs is warning any incoming government against even thinking of revising the terms of this spectacularly awesome deal: The EU Commissioner for Economic Affairs, Olli Rehn, has said that it would not be advisable for any new government in Ireland to attempt to renegotiate either the interest rate on the EU/IMF loan or the use of the National Pension Reserve Fund in repairing the banking sector. In an interview with RTÉ News, Commissioner Rehn said it did not want to involve himself in democratic politics in Ireland, but he said: ‘They are key parts of the programme so I would not advise re-opening these’. He said he ‘fully understood’ the frustration and anger of the Irish people about the banking sector, which he said had made big mistakes in the past. ‘However we have to move on and the essential thing is to complete the repair, implying both the restructuring and downsizing of the banking system,’ he said. This is delightful! “Oh sure, your banking system has totally busted your country and is now stealing from your pension fund, but really, I think it’s time to look forward and not backward, don’t you?” 50,000 Irishfolk protested the austerity measures in Dublin, but it sadly probably won’t do much good. The least bad option for Ireland right now is default on its debt — yes, it means that credit to the country will freeze, but even that beats becoming a permanent vassal state of the EU and the IMF. But hey, all of those wonderful austerity measures should do wonders for Ireland’s economic growth, right ? Ireland’s economy may only expand by 0.9 per cent in 2011, the European Commission said today, only half of what the Government predicted in its four-year plan. In the four-year plan, which was published last week, the Government said real gross domestic product will grow by an average of 2.75 per cent in the years between 2011 and 2014. It said real GDP is expected to grow by 1.75 per cent next year, after falling 2 per cent this year. The commission’s figures were part of a report on the wider EU. It said GDP in Europe may weaken to 1.5 per cent in 2011 as budget cuts to stem a mounting debt crisis hurt consumer demand and faltering global expansion curbs exports. Oh. But hey, at least the austerity plan will reassure the markets and will stop the spread of the debt contagion to other Eurozone countries, right ? European governments’ 85 billion- euro ($113 billion) bailout package for Ireland failed to quell the market turmoil menacing the euro as stocks, bonds and the currency declined. Irish 10-year bonds slid after an early advance, Spanish bonds slid by the most since the euro’s launch and European shares sank 1.4 percent. The euro slid against 15 of its 16 major counterparts and the cost of insuring the debt of Spain and Portugal against default soared to records. “The notion that a rescue package for Ireland would create a firewall and stop the fear of contagion is clearly discredited,” said Preston Keat, director of research at Eurasia Group, a political consultancy, in London. “Portugal and Spain are already facing pressures in the markets.” Oh. I guess the good news is that America is not alone in having thoroughly incompetent economic and political leadership. This way we can all go down in flames together! Speaking of incompetent American economic leadership, President Obama has once again deployed his patented “offer free concessions in the hope that the GOP stop comparing me to Pol Pot” negotiating strategy: President Barack Obama on Monday called for freezing the pay of 2 million federal employees, saying the move is the first of many difficult decisions that must be made to slash the nation’s mounting deficits. “The hard truth is that getting this deficit under control is going to require some broad sacrifice, and that sacrifice must be shared by the employees of the federal government,” Obama said. The two-year freeze would apply to all civilian federal employees, including those working at the Department of Defense, but would not affect military personnel. The freeze is expected to save more than $5 billion in savings over two years, $28 billion over five years and more than $60 billion over 10 years, White House officials said. Joe Lieberman apparently thinks this is a great idea. Joe Lieberman also wants to keep tax cuts for the richest 2% of Americans in place. In other words, Joe Lieberman supports denying pay increases to VA nurses taking care of wounded vets just so Paris Hilton can keep her precious, precious tax cut. In case you haven’t noticed, our political ruling class is deeply, deeply evil. And finally, Heidi Moore has a good piece on how banks plan to skirt capital requirements using (GULP) synthetic collateralized debt obligations: Here’s the new development: Banks are increasingly planning to use these synthetic C.D.O.’s to reduce the amount of capital they use to back up derivatives deals for clients. Derivatives are inherently riskier. Basel regulations call for banks to keep at least 7 percent of regulatory capital on hand to offset their risky businesses. Here is an example of the way these synthetic C.D.O.’s usually work: A bank may lend up to $2 billion to, say, a group of 100 companies. The bank would usually have to commit about 7 percent to 8 percent of the face value, or up to $150 million, to protect against the default of those loans. The synthetic balance sheet C.D.O.’s bundle that risk away. The C.D.O. bundle is full of contracts that protect the bank if the derivatives trades fail. The protection means that the bank has to hold less money in regulatory capital. As a result, after using synthetic C.D.O.’s, the bank has to commit only a fraction of its own capital — around $10 million or less in this case. The whole idea behind capital requirements is that banks should have enough liquidity to handle significant withdrawals during a financial panic. If the banks are instead outsourcing this requirement to firms like A.I.G. in the hopes that they’ll be able to cash in on insurance policies during a full-blown economic crisis… uh, eep? Today’s Doom Index: Gold futures rose by $3.20 to settle at $1,367.50 yesterday. Yields on 10-year t-bills dropped by 0.35% and closed at 2.82%. Thank God Obama is instituting a federal pay freeze — otherwise who knows how the bond vigilantes might have responded!

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The idea was first proposed months ago by House Republicans, as Politico notes , but it apparently took an electoral “shellacking” to get the president on board. Congressional Democrats are still hesitant. “I am encouraged by President Obama's proposal to freeze non-military federal pay for the next two years. This past May, House Republicans, prompted by YouCut voters, offered the very same spending-cut proposal on the floor of the House,” [House GOP Whip Eric] Cantor said in a statement to POLITICO. read more

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Arianna: There’s the Super-Rich, and Then ‘The Rest of Us’

The Toronto Globe and Mail profiled Arianna Huffington as she prepares to keynote the Canada's Most Famous Women summit, and D.C.-based writer Konrad Yakabuski underlines that the Huffington Post founder is mysteriously aligning herself outside the bubble of the super-rich with her book Third World America: Ms. Huffington's 13th book is a cri de coeur bemoaning the evisceration of the U.S. middle class and America's slide toward Third World status. As she describes it to me, “that's really a country where there are the super-rich, who live behind gates with guards protecting their kids from kidnapping, and the rest of us.” The rest of us? read more

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By Eugene Robinson The secret U.S. diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks leave one overriding impression: It’s hard out there for a superpower. Related Entries November 29, 2010 Obama Wants to Put Federal Workers’ Wages on Ice November 29, 2010 The Pentagon Gets What It Wants

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Dr. Strangelove Redux

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By Richard Reeves And now a quote that could come from Dr. Strangelove: “I will stand my artificial intelligence against your human any day of the week and tell you that my A.I. will pay more attention to the rules of engagement and create fewer ethical lapses than a human force.” Related Entries November 29, 2010 Obama Wants to Put Federal Workers’ Wages on Ice November 29, 2010 The Pentagon Gets What It Wants

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Howard Dean:  Bring Back the Fairness Doctrine Because Fox ‘Makes Stuff Up’ and ‘Americans Don’t Know What’s Going On’

An audio clip from about two months ago has been uncovered by The Blaze which clearly demonstrates that, even with all of his opining and public speaking skills, there is a reason that

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Fox News ‘is my favorite,’ Lieberman declares

Click here to view this media Independent Sen. Joe Lieberman isn’t hiding his love for Rupert Murdoch’s media empire. In a Monday interview on Fox Business Network’s Imus in the Morning , the senator from Connecticut declared that the Fox Business Network, Fox News and anything Murdoch owned were his “favorite.” Host Don Imus asked Lieberman if thought The New York Times should be prosecuted for reporting on secret State Department cables released by the whistleblower website WikiLeaks. “I don’t know if you can prosecute The Times under existing Supreme Court decisions,” Lieberman said. “But I’ll tell you this, I wish The Times , just as an act of citizenship had said, ‘No, we’re not going to publish this stuff because it’s going to do the country damage.’” “I know they will probably will say once it goes up on the WikiLeaks website in the world you can’t control it and they redacted, they blocked out some of the stuff in these cables,” he continued. “But, you know, The New York Times , afterall, is The New York Times with all its stature and I wish this stuff had appeared somewhere else. I wouldn’t be for prosecuting The Times , but I would say I wish they had shown better citizenship.” Lieberman then commended CNN for turning down the WikiLeaks documents because they were asked to sign a pledge of anonymity. “Incidentally, I heard last night, I was watching CNN and Joe [Johns] was on and he was doing the 10 o’clock news show and he said that CNN had been offered these documents by Wikileaks or a third party, but had turned it down because they refused to sign a pledge granting the source anonymity, which The Times did. And I give CNN and whoever else turned it down credit for doing that. The New York Times ‘ hands are dirty in this and they should have said ‘no,’” Lieberman said. “I hate CNN,” Imus replied. “I wish you hadn’t brought that up.” “I’m sorry about that! It just happened. But of course, really, Fox Business is my favorite and Fox generally, anything Rupert Murdoch owns,” Lieberman confessed. The liberal blog Think Progress first noticed Lieberman’s comments to Imus. The Connecticut senator may have good reason to love Fox News. During a tight 2006 Senate race, a volunteer for Ted Lamont accused the news channel of placing campaign signs for Lieberman in advance of an interview. “All of a sudden, two or three out-of-state vans (accompanied by a Fox News crew) pull up and unload a bunch of Lieberman lawn signs, placed right in front of the Lamont signs that had already been planted,” the volunteer said. “And, what do you know, after a few more minutes, who shows up but Joe himself, ready for the cameras.”

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