Click here to view this media I caught this interview live and was wondering if Chris Jansing was auditioning for a spot on Fox here, since she allowed Mike Pence to rattle off one Republican talking point after another unchallenged. As usual, Media Matters does that job for her. Rep. Pence Inadvertently Admits Bush Tax Cuts Did Not Work : Today, Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN) made a startling admission: the Bush tax cuts did not work . “I think it’s fair to say, if the current tax rates were enough to create jobs and generate economic growth, we’d have a growing economy,” he said. “It’s not working now.” PENCE: Jim DeMint and I are offering legislation on Capitol Hill today to say, look, let’s make all the current tax rates permanent, uh, and then let’s start to work from there toward putting in place the kind of policies that’ll really get this economy moving again . You know, I think it’s fair to say, if the current tax rates were enough to create jobs and generate economic growth we’d have a growing economy. It’s not working now. Let’s at least give some certainty there and then we’ll fight for more tax relief. When Republicans pushed through the original Bush tax cuts, which sunset at the end of the year, they made all sorts of lofty promises. They boasted that the tax cuts would increase revenues, create jobs, and grow the economy. As a depressing reminder of a different time, Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) actually argued that “the surplus will pick up” thanks to the stimulative effect of the tax cuts. Instead, we got exploding deficits , lethargic job creation , and “the slowest average annual growth since World War II.” Worse yet, as the New York Times ‘ David Leonhardt points out, that’s “true even if you forget about the Great Recession and simply look at 2001-7.” And here’s more from Steve Benen : This isn’t a subjective question open to debate; we tried a policy and we can evaluate its results. In this case, Republicans said Bush’s tax policy would produce wonders for the economy, and they got exactly what they wanted. We now know, however, that the policy didn’t generate robust growth, didn’t create millions of new jobs, didn’t spur entrepreneurship and innovation, and certainly didn’t keep a balanced budget. And now, as the failed tax policy is set to expire, what’s the new Republican message? That this policy must be extended at all costs, and anyone who disagrees is putting the economy at risk. They not only say this with a straight face, the argument in support of a policy we already know didn’t work manages to scare a whole lot of Dems. Pence finished up the segment with some equally incoherent comments on DADT — Pence: Wait For DADT Study Results, But Keep It In Place Forever
Continue reading …I owe Ottmar Edenhofer thanks for two things. First, I am grateful that Edenhofer, a German economist who is “co-chair of the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's (IPCC) Working Group III on Mitigation of Climate Change,” has a last name on which searching is easy. I quickly determined that his name last name doesn't currently come up in searches at the Associated Press's main web site , the New York Times , the Washington Post , or the Los Angeles Times . That's because he hasn't said or done anything newsworthy, right? Wrong. What's newsworthy is my second reason for thanking him. First covered
Continue reading …Jeffrey Lurie, the owner of the Philadelphia Eagles, is a progressive with a track record of putting his money where his mouth is — like when he recently produced “Inside Job.” Now he’s turning Lincoln Financial into the first sustainable stadium in the country: PHILADELPHIA (AP)—The Philadelphia Eagles are taking their gridiron off the grid. The team said Thursday that it will add wind turbines, solar panels and a cogeneration plant at Lincoln Financial Field over the next year, a combination that will make the stadium self-sufficient and let the Eagles sell some power back to the electric grid. Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie said the plan was part of the Eagles commitment to be a socially responsible organization. “Owning an NFL team, I think you have an opportunity to lead the way,” Lurie told The Associated Press. “It’s a public building seen across the country and, sometimes, the world.” Under the plan, approximately 80 spiral-shaped wind turbines will be mounted on the stadium’s roof and 2,500 solar panels attached to the stadium’s facade. Together, they will contribute an estimated 30 percent to the total energy production. An onsite “dual-fuel” cogeneration plant, a small power plant that captures its heat for increased efficiency, powered by biodiesel and natural gas will contribute the rest of the energy . The system is designed to produce at least 8.6 megawatts of power, enough to meet the stadium’s peak energy use of around 7 megawatts. The construction project will employ an estimated 200 workers over the course of the next year. SolarBlue, an Orlando, Fla.-based renewable energy company, will pay $30 million to install and run the system for 20 years. The team will pay the firm for its power, the cost of which will increase at a fixed 3 percent annual rate. The project is expected to be finished by September, and the team estimates it will save $60 million in energy costs.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Via The White House blog : In the fourth edition of White House White Board, Austan Goolsbee, Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, discusses the President’s tough decisions on the American auto industry in light of the General Motors IPO. Goolsbee is so good at these things that you wonder why the White House didn’t do them sooner.
Continue reading …During coverage of Charlie Rangel's verdict delivered by the House Ethics Committee, CNN's John Roberts called the situation “tough times,” for the congressman – and wondered what the trauma will to Rangel's health given that he is 80 years old. Referring to the censure of Sen. McCarthy in the 1950s which “broke him,” Roberts remarked that “now Charlie Rangel's 80 years old, what will censuring potentially do to him?” CNN anchor Candy Crowley also mentioned Rangel's age, saying that the hearings were “tough to watch.” She added that “the next step” of the House voting on having the censure or not “is really even more painful.” “This is a rough one, but certainly one that has had, if you will, bipartisan support on something that's difficult, clearly, for the congressman to deal with,” Crowley said, putting the situation in perspective.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Newt Gingrich wants us to believe that the party that still hasn’t given up on Lee Atwater’s Southern Strategy and embraces the bigotry of the likes of Rush Limbaugh, who’s race-baiting on the air on a daily basis — why, that party couldn’t possibly be racist because they elected Michael Steele as RNC chairman. Gingrich also fails to note that Steele’s fund-raising efforts were severely undermined by the likes of Ed Gillespie and Karl Rove and similar outside groups. VAN SUSTEREN: All right, you used the word “replace,” so let me go to Michael Steele, who — it seems that there are many within the Republican Party who are not — not anxious to have him run again. What’s he done well? And where has he failed, if he’s failed? GINGRICH: Well, Michael Steele has done very well in dramatically expanding Republican outreach to minority communities. Thirty-seven percent of the members of Congress who are Latino are Republican, the highest number in history. We have two African-American members of Congress and have made real breakthroughs in other areas. We elected an all-Latino state ticket in New Mexico. We elected an Indian-American with Nikki Haley in South Carolina as governor. It was really quite a remarkable year. And you wouldn’t have said two years ago, when the first African-American president as a Democrat was elected, that he would set the stage for the biggest increase in Republican minority representation in history. But in, for example, in the state of Texas, four Latino candidates and two African-American candidates won state legislative seats as Republican. So all across the country, Michael did a good job there. He did a good job representing the Republican Party in public. VAN SUSTEREN: So why are people unhappy with him? GINGRICH: There were no attacks… VAN SUSTEREN: So why are some unhappy with him? GINGRICH: I think — I think there’s — look, I think, to be candid – - and he’s a very good friend of mine. To be candid, I think there’s a feeling that in the area of raising money and in the area of running the internal machinery, that he didn’t do as good a job, that he should have had a much stronger executive director taking care of that part of the party, and that’s why there’s significant dissatisfaction. He’s got to make a decision. If he wants to run, he’s going to have to convince the committee members that he’s going to have a very, very strong executive director and that the committee will be much more professionally run over the next two years. But I wouldn’t count him out because he did, in fact, do a lot for the Republican Party. Remember, despite all their efforts, the Democrats in the White House never attacked the Republicans this year on racism because it was so patently stupid when had you Michael Steele as the chairman. That is a significant advantage in public relations campaigns. And I think that Steele does deserve some of the credit for us having done much better than anybody thought possible in January of 2009. VAN SUSTEREN: Mr. Speaker, enjoy Iowa. Thank you, sir. GINGRICH: Take care.
Continue reading …Displaying a clear conflict of interest during Friday's 12PM ET hour on MSNBC, anchor Contessa Brewer did a story promoting electric car charging stations but did not disclose to viewers that the channel's parent company, General Electric, was selling the very same product. GE commercials for the charging stations have frequently aired on MSNBC in recent weeks. Brewer began the segment, a part of NBC-Universal's “Green is Progress” week, by declaring: “Houston, the city known for gas pumps and oil gushers, is getting the nation's largest network of electric car charging stations.” The company providing the charging stations was not General Electric, but rather NRG Energy. Brewer interviewed the company's president and CEO, David Crane.
Continue reading …The predominant image of this film—repeated in a dozen variants—is of a lone woman walking or driving the empty roads of this beautiful, unnamed country, seeking a salvation that is both practical and spiritual. Related Entries November 19, 2010 Cops on Trial in Post-Katrina Killing November 17, 2010 Saying Goodbye to Compassionate Conservatism
Continue reading …The investigative team at Truthout has a stunning story raising serious questions about the information that was thought to reveal a nuclear arms program in Iran — and Israel’s Mossad appears to have provided the false intelligence. Are we about to be tricked into yet another war under false pretenses? Why isn’t the mainstream media asking these questions? The Obama administration says there can be no diplomatic negotiations with Iran unless Iran satisfies the IAEA fully in regard to the allegations derived from the documents that it had covert nuclear weapons program. That position is based on the premise that the intelligence documents that Iran has been asked to explain are genuine. The evidence now available, however, indicates that they are fabrications. The drawings of the Iranian missile warhead that were said by the IAEA to show an intent to accommodate a nuclear weapon actually depict a missile design that Iran is now known to have already abandoned in favor of an improved model by the time the technical drawings were allegedly made . And one of the major components of the purported Iranian military research program allegedly included a project labeled with a number that turns out to have been assigned by Iran’s civilian nuclear authority years before the covert program is said to have been initiated . The former head of the agency’s safeguards department, Olli Heinonen, who shaped its approach to the issue of the intelligence documents from 2005 and 2010, has offered no real explanation for these anomalies in recent interviews with Truthout. These telltale indicators of fraud bring into question the central pillar of the case against Iran and raise more fundamental questions about the handling of the Iranian nuclear issue by the IAEA, the United States and its key European allies . The origin of the laptop documents may never be proven conclusively, but the accumulated evidence points to Israel as the source. As early as 1995, the head of the Israel Defense Forces’ military intelligence research and assessment division, Yaakov Amidror, tried unsuccessfully to persuade his American counterparts that Iran was planning to “go nuclear.” By 2003-2004, Mossad’s reporting on the Iranian nuclear program was viewed by high-ranking CIA officials as an effort to pressure the Bush administration into considering military action against Iran’s nuclear sites , according to Israeli sources cited by a pro-Israeli news service . In the summer of 2003, Israel’s international intelligence agency, Mossad, had established an aggressive program aimed at exerting influence on the Iran nuclear issue by leaking alleged intelligence to governments and the news media, as Israeli officials acknowledged to journalists Douglas Frantz and Catherine Collins. According to the book, ” The Nuclear Jihadist ,” as part of the program, Mossad sometimes passed on purported Iranian documents supposedly obtained by Israeli spies inside Iran. German sources have suggested that the intelligence documents were conveyed to the US government, directly or indirectly, by a group that had been collaborating closely with Mossad. Soon after Secretary of State Colin Powell made the existence of the laptop documents public in November 2004, Karsten Voight, the coordinator of German-American cooperation in the German Foreign Ministry, was quoted in The Wall Street Journal as saying that they had been transferred by an Iranian “dissident group.” A second German source familiar with the case was even more explicit. “I can assure you,” the source told me in 2007, “that the documents came from the Iranian resistance organization.” That was a reference to the Mujahideen-E-Khalq (MEK), also known as the People’s Mujahideen of Iran, the armed Iranian exile group designated as a terrorist organization by the US State Department. The National Council of Resistance in Iran (NCRI), the political arm of the MEK, was generally credited by the news media with having revealed the existence of the Iranian nuclear facilities at Natanz and Arak in an August 2002 press conference in Washington, DC. Later, however, IAEA, Israeli and Iranian dissident sources all said that the NCRI had gotten the intelligence on the sites from Mossad. An IAEA official told Seymour Hersh that the Israelis were behind the revelation of the sites and two journalists from Der Spiegel reported the same thing. So did an adviser to an Iranian monarchist group, speaking to a writer for The New Yorker . That episode was not isolated, but was part of a broader pattern of Israeli cooperation with the MEK in providing intelligence intended to influence the CIA and the IAEA. Israeli authors Melman and Javadanfar, who claimed to have good sources in Mossad, wrote in their 2007 book that Israeli intelligence had “laundered” intelligence to the IAEA by providing it to Iranian opposition groups, especially the NCRI. Israeli officials also went to extraordinary lengths to publicize the story of covert Iranian experiments on a key component of a nuclear weapon, which was one of messages the intelligence documents conveyed. As a result of satellite intelligence brought to the attention of the IAEA in 2004 by Undersecretary of State John Bolton, the IAEA requested two separate investigations at the main Iran military research center at Parchin. The investigations, in January 2005 and November 2005 , were aimed at examining the charge that Iran was using facilities at Parchin to test high explosives used in the detonation of a nuclear weapon. In each investigation, the IAEA investigators were allowed complete freedom to search and take environmental samples at any five buildings in the complex and their surroundings. But they failed to find any evidence of any Iranian nuclear weapons-related experiments.
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