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Of the three morning shows on Thursday, only CBS left out any mention of Barack Obama or Attorney General Eric Holder while reporting on the nearly complete acquittal of a former Guantanamo Bay detainee. Early Show news anchor Erica Hill asserted that “the verdict is in for the first Guantanamo detainee to be tried in a civilian court and it is being seen by some as a serious setback for the government. ” Ahmed Ghailani was acquitted on 284 out of 285 charges against him. The President's name never came up on CBS. Over on NBC's Today, the four hour morning program devoted a scant 40 seconds to the topic. But even in that short amount of time, reporter Ann Curry was more definitive than CBS. She at least allowed, “But, the decision could undermine President Obama's plan to put other Guantanamo Bay detainees on trial in civilian courts.” read more

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Debt collectors using Facebook to stalk and humilate people

Click here to view this media It’s not just friends that are noticing your status updates on Facebook. Debt collectors are now combing through social networks to learn about the lives of those who owe and even embarrass them. One woman in Tampa, Florida felt violated when she found out she was being stalked by collectors online. Melanie Beacham told WTSP’s Beau Zimmer that she had been receiving as many as 20 calls per day from MarkOne Financial after getting sick and falling behind on her car payments. “Then one day she got a call from her sister saying the company contacted her in Georgia,” Zimmer wrote. “I was telling her, ‘No way, because you’re not even a reference,’” Beacham said. After finding out that the company had contacted her sister and other relatives through Facebook, Beacham contacted consumer attorney Billy Howard of Morgan & Morgan. “Now Facebook does a debt collectors work for them,” Howard told Zimmer. “Now it’s not only family members, it’s all of your associates. It’s a very powerful tool for debt collectors to use.” Howard believes stalking through Facebook could become a standard technique for debt collectors if action isn’t taken. “It’s getting the desired result, and that is to start a domino effect of panic and embarrassment among family and friends, and people will do anything to stop that,” he said. Howard wants MarkOne Financial to stop using Facebook and other social media to harass Beacham’s family and friends. He’s filed a lawsuit to make his point. Tana Ganeva at Alternet notes that the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) website is clear that debt collectors may only contact other people to find out your contact information. Since MarkOne Financial already had been calling Beacham as many as 20 times per day, it’s doubtful that they were contacting family members to get her contact information. The FTC says: If an attorney is representing you about the debt, the debt collector must contact the attorney, rather than you. If you don’t have an attorney, a collector may contact other people – but only to find out your address, your home phone number, and where you work. Collectors usually are prohibited from contacting third parties more than once. Other than to obtain this location information about you, a debt collector generally is not permitted to discuss your debt with anyone other than you, your spouse, or your attorney. “Nobody should have to go through what I went through,” Beacham said. “I was hurt because I just felt I didn’t need my family going through that.”

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Roger Ailes attacks Obama by saying he has a ‘different belief system than most Americans,’ calls McClellan a ‘shithead’

enlarge Credit: getty Images Roger Ailes attacks the President in an interview with Howard Kurtz. Do the Beltway media have an opinion on the fact that Roger Ailes, the chairman of Fox News, is attacking a sitting President of the United States? When has any other leader of a supposed “news” network ever attacked a sitting president in such a partisan way? Howard Kurtz: interviewed Ailes for the Daily Beast and as always, it turned into a partisan attack-fest and Glenn Beck deflection event. He had to be told by the French and the Germans that his socialism was too far left for them to deal with.” The 70-year-old Ailes, dressed in a lavender shirt and tie, goes on in this vein, saying the network isn’t singling out Obama for criticism but that its style “tends to be more direct” in challenging presidents. Then he offers this observation about Obama: “He just has a different belief system than most Americans.” That seems a rather loaded phrase—different belief system—even if you strongly disagree with most of Obama’s policies. It fits the view of those who are trying to paint the president as being outside the mainstream. But from the big second-floor office at Fox’s Midtown Manhattan headquarters, it’s the rest of the media that are using a distorted lens. And to just keep his partisan attacks, he went after former Bushie Scott McClellan, who exposed some of the machinations of the Bush administration: But Ailes took an unprovoked swipe at Robert Gibbs, saying the press secretary “is a little big for his britches” and “ will end up like that little shithead who worked for Bush ”—meaning Scott McClellan, the onetime loyalist who wrote a book criticizing his former boss. Gibbs and the White House declined to respond. Gibbs responded by stating the obvious. “I think if you watch most of the programming on that channel, I don’t think you would find many of those comments surprising,” Gibbs told reporters at the White House. If I didn’t know Ailes was in charge of a cable network I would say he sounds just like the Bircheresque Tea Partiers. Why was Obama elected with a mandate if his belief system is not American? Oh, that’s right. it’s more code words for “socialism.” Has anybody asked Ailes why it’s OK for Fox to put on their payroll most of the GOP presidential field for 2012? I think I was the first to bring this up many moons ago. They’ve been smart to keep Romney off their roster or else the beltway press wouldn’t possibly be able to ignore that, right? Ha. OK, I stand corrected. Roger also admitted to scolding Glenn Beck for his off-the-wall statements — at least, those attacking Republicans — but realistically he’s thrilled that Beck has whipped up the conspiracy theory arm of the GOP. Anytime they can attack liberals it’s all hands on deck for Fox. He does defend Beck from the vociferous complaints by the ADL after Mr. Rodeo Clown went on an anti-Semitic rant against George Soros. The Fox chief offers a more spirited defense of Beck, who has come under sharp criticism for an attack last week on liberal activist and philanthropist George Soros . Beck said that Soros, at age 14, accompanied a Hungarian to help him “deliver papers to the Jews, and confiscate their property, and then ship them off… Here’s a Jewish boy helping send the Jews to the death camps.” Beck added that Soros had no choice but that he didn’t understand why Soros had done no “soul searching” about his past. The Anti-Defamation League assailed Beck’s remarks as “completely inappropriate and offensive.” But after Ailes spoke to its national director, Abe Foxman, the ADL executive softened his criticism in a statement calling Beck “a strong supporter of Israel and the Jewish people. What really angers Ailes is not the fact that he called Obama a a racist, nope. It’s when Beck goes after Republicans. That’s something he just can’t have. Never. What about Beck’s other inflammatory outbursts, such as calling Obama a racist? Ailes says that everyone who ad libs for a living makes mistakes. But admits to asking Beck to watch his tone: “He and I have had conversations and lunches where I say, ‘What the hell are you doing, man?’…Beck trashes Republicans every night. I’ve said to him, ‘Where the hell are you going to get your audience if you keep this up? You’re trashing everyone .’” The message was loud and clear. Only attack the left and never, ever attack your base…I mean Republicans. Beck takes such criticism well, Ailes explains, “because he’s so intelligent and basically sensitive.” Phony tears to Ailes means that he’s sensitive. Yea, his eyes are sensitive to foreign substances being put in them, like Vicks Vaporub. This was too funny to pass up. We’ve known all along that Glenn Beck is a two-bit phony. Now we see how Glenn Beck gets himself properly weepy for the cameras: A little Vicks Vaporub. One might dismiss this as merely a one-off for this shoot. But you can hear Beck himself say: Beck: I think it’s getting used to it — my eyes are getting used to it. From regular and continuous use, mayhaps? And there’s one other thing Ailes can’t handle. There’s one criticism that Ailes doesn’t want to hear. He admonished the staff after unnamed Fox journalists told me they are worried that the divisive Beck is becoming the face of the network. “Yeah, shut up,” says Ailes. “You’re getting a paycheck. Go on the team or get off the team. Don’t run around here badmouthing a colleague.”

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Soros To Progressive Funders: If Obama Can’t Fight Back, It’s Time To Start Looking Somewhere Else

enlarge It seems we’re not the only ones frustrated with ineffectiveness of the “curl up on the floor in the fetal position” strategy favored so far by the administration. Perhaps these people have a better chance of being heard: WASHINGTON — At a private meeting on Tuesday afternoon, George Soros, a longtime supporter of progressive causes, voiced blunt criticism of the Obama administration, going so far as to suggest that Democratic donors direct their support somewhere other than the president. The Hungarian-American financier was speaking to a small side gathering of donors who had convened in Washington D.C. for the annual gathering of the Democracy Alliance — a formal community of well-funded, progressive-minded individuals and activists. According to multiple sources with knowledge of his remarks, Soros told those in attendance that he is “used to fighting losing battles but doesn’t like to lose without fighting.” “We have just lost this election, we need to draw a line,” he said, according to several Democratic sources. “And if this president can’t do what we need, it is time to start looking somewhere else.” Michael Vachon, an adviser to Soros, did not dispute the comment, though he stressed that there was no transcript of a private gathering to check. Vachon also clarified that the longtime progressive giver was not referring to a primary challenge to the president. “Mr. Soros fully supports the president as the leader of the Democratic Party,” said Vachon. “He was not suggesting that we seek another candidate for 2012. His comments were made in a private, informal conversation that was about the need for progressives to be more forceful in promoting their agenda. He was stressing the importance of being heard by elected officials.” Dissatisfaction with the Obama administration was not limited to Soros’s private gathering with donors. On Wednesday morning, Deputy Chief of Staff Jim Messina received several tough questions during his address to the Democracy Alliance. According to a source in the room, he was pressed multiple times as to why the administration has declined to be more combative with Republicans, both in communication and legislative strategy . Another source in the room said the exchange was not entirely contentious as people were simply expressing frustration about the fact that “we just came out of an election where the right wing and the Republicans distorted what was going on.”

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After being inspired by Sarah Palin’s Alaska , Stephen Colbert introduces his new opening credits.

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Simply Left Behind on [David] Frum Down Under — belatedly warning the rightwingers not to be … rightwingers ! Ginandtacos on the shameless Madam Palin, and David E’s Fablog on the junior miss heir apparent, the Weeping Willow Palin. Mad Kane on the TSA ‘Pat-Down-Put-Down’ Alternate Brain : Message to the Tea Party — What took you so long to get angry? Guest post by Don Davis of The Satirical Political Report. E-mail tips to Don at satiricalpolitical AT gmail DOT com.

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The Warning Cell Phone Makers Keep Hidden

Today on the list: Cell phone companies conceal a health warning, Michelangelo’s David the way it was meant to be seen and Hollywood doesn’t care about poor people—or old people. On a regular basis, Truthdig brings you the news items and odds and ends that found their way to Larry Gross, director of the USC Annenberg School for Communication. A specialist in media and culture, art and communication, visual communication and media portrayals of minorities, Gross helped found the field of gay and lesbian studies. The links below open in a new window. Newer ones are on top. There’s a new side job for the aspiring actor: bedbug buster New York’s Pest Infestation Spells Opportunity for Thespians; ‘It’s Like Hanging Out’ Spillcam, vuvuzela are top words of 2010 “Spillcam” and “vuvuzela” were the top words of 2010, reflecting the global impact of the months-long oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and the noisy South African horns at the World Cup soccer tournament, according to a survey released on Sunday. Hollywood’s Vanishing Have-Nots NIGEL COLE, the British director of 2003’s “Calendar Girls,” was only half joking when he said, “In England we only make films about the working class or the aristocracy.” < href="http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2010/11/14/why_flops_matter/?page=full" target="_blank"> Why flops matter to the cinema An era’s great flops serve countless functions in pushing the art and industry of filmmaking forward. They introduce technological innovations. They help filmmakers and actors — those that manage to work again, at least — learn how to maximize their strengths and minimize their weaknesses. And for the people involved in them, flops are something more than a wake-up call: They can even rescue a career. GREAT MOMENTS IN ACADEMIC RESEARCH Scenario : You are applying for a job via e-mail – is it a good idea to attach a smiley?

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China Stunt Nabbed ‘15 Percent’ of the Internet

For 18 minutes on April 8th, as much as 15 percent of the world’s Internet traffic was rerouted through Chinese servers, according to a U.S. commission , which said the diverted data included communications from Congress and the U.S. military. The United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission’s annual report casts suspicion on China, but also acknowledges “Evidence related to this incident does not clearly indicate whether it was perpetrated intentionally and, if so, to what ends.” China denies any malicious intent. New York Times: The report, by the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission, noted that the service provider, IDC China Telecommunication, broadcast inaccurate Web traffic routes for about 18 minutes on April 8. That information was then retransmitted by China’s state-owned China Telecommunications, effectively forcing data from the United States and other countries to pass through Chinese computer servers. A similar episode in March drew less attention. The report said the move affected data traveling over both the government and military networks of the United States, including information from the Senate, the Army, the Navy, the Marine Corps, the Air Force, the secretary of defense’s office, NASA, the Department of Commerce and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, as well as from many American companies. Read more Related Entries November 17, 2010 The Earmark Sideshow November 17, 2010 Saying Goodbye to Compassionate Conservatism

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Senate May Consider Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell Repeal

Senate boss Harry Reid says that before his majority shrinks, he intends to push ahead with a vote that could potentially allow gays to serve openly in the military. The measure is currently tied to a defense authorization bill that Reid plans to bring up during the lame duck session. New York Times: In a direct challenge to Republicans who support the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy barring gay men and lesbians from serving openly in the armed forces, the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, said he would push ahead with a military policy bill that includes language authorizing the Pentagon to repeal the ban. Senator John McCain of Arizona, the senior Republican on the Armed Services Committee, led his colleagues in blocking consideration of the bill in September in part because it allowed the repeal of the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy. Mr. McCain has not changed his position, and Democrats had been considering stripping the provision to advance the legislation. Read more Related Entries November 17, 2010 The Earmark Sideshow November 17, 2010 Saying Goodbye to Compassionate Conservatism

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The Earmark Sideshow

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By Joe Conason The facts about earmarks—and the deficit, for that matter—are so simple that even the dumbest birther should be able to understand. Related Entries November 17, 2010 Saying Goodbye to Compassionate Conservatism November 17, 2010 La Vie en Denial

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