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Jet Lag Makes You Dumb (If You’re a Hamster)

Scientists gave some hamsters the frequent flier treatment and found that their brains birthed fewer neurons. The sleep-confused rodents also had learning and memory issues almost a month after their simulated travel ordeal.

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Pause for another moment of brilliance from Rachel Maddow. Sad that she even has to say it, but she still says it brilliantly. Bottom line? Reporting what people say is not news. Reporting what they DO is news. There’s a big, big difference. If only they’d listen.

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Nancy Pelosi was voted in as the new Minority leader 150-43, in a secret ballot during a private Wednesday meeting even after a move by Heath Shuler to become the new leader. I think his bid was an attempt to try and strengthen Blue Dogs and his own political life in the upcoming 2012 election. House Democrats elected Nancy Pelosi to remain as their leader Wednesday despite massive party losses in this month’s congressional elections that prompted some lawmakers to call for new leadership. Pelosi, the nation’s first female House speaker, will become minority leader when Republicans assume the majority in the new Congress in January. She defeated moderate Democratic Rep. Heath Shuler of North Carolina, 150-43, in secret balloting in a lengthy closed-door gathering of House Democrats in the Capitol

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Dana Bash: Tina Fey Incident Isn’t the First Time PBS Has Been Accused of Editing to Favor Republicans

Click here to view this media During a panel discussion on John King USA about PBS’s decision to edit out some of Tina Fey’s remarks criticizing Sarah Palin while accepting The Mark Twain Prize , Mrs. John King Dana Bash points out that this is not the first time PBS has been “accused of editing to favor Republicans” and that PBS has been accused of being too liberal. It’s too bad that the panel and Bash didn’t bother to point out the fact that this edit by PBS of Fey’s remarks shouldn’t be all that surprising to anyone paying attention since the network took a turn to the right some years ago. That said, I don’t expect anything better from anyone on CNN. Introspection as to how our media is not serving their basic purpose as the fourth estate in America isn’t exactly their strong point to put it lightly. Since sadly Bill Moyers left the air at PBS… again… I’m not sure why anyone would perceive that network to be “too liberal” other than from listening to the Villager’s on their television sets telling them that it is day in and day out. If anyone thinks that The McLaughlin Group or the PBS Newshour or Charlie Rose are liberal, they’re not watching those shows. I consider Frontline to be fairly neutral in their reporting and that’s about the extent of what I might watch on that network on any kind of a regular basis. They’ve got Tavis Smiley on there on a nightly basis but his show sure as hell doesn’t make up for the shows that lean to the right or the loss of Bill Moyers. He just gave right wing hack Dennis Miller a sad and sorry softball interview on the same night this panel segment aired. Here’s what got ignored during this segment where they made light of the editing of Tina Fey’s remarks. PBS Panders to Right With New Programming : A new public television program called the Journal Editorial Report, featuring writers and editors from the arch-conservative Wall Street Journal editorial page, will debut tonight on public television stations around the country. The show joins Tucker Carlson: Unfiltered, hosted by conservative CNN pundit Tucker Carlson, and a planned program featuring conservative commentator Michael Medved as part of what many see as politically motivated decisions to bring more right-wing voices to public television. According to reports in the public broadcasting newspaper Current (1/19/04, 6/7/04) and in the New Yorker (6/7/04), conservative complaints about the alleged liberal bias of the program Now With Bill Moyers contributed to the momentum to “balance” the PBS lineup. The new programs seem to be the result of that pressure. In fact, Now will soon see its role on public television diminish, as the program is cut from one hour to 30 minutes when Moyers voluntarily leaves the program later this year. He will be replaced by co-anchor David Brancaccio, formerly of the public radio business show Marketplace, who expresses no obvious ideology. If Carlson, Medved and the staff of the Wall Street Journal editorial page are all necessary to balance the liberal Moyers, by 2005 there will be no one on PBS to balance them. Read on… And there’s this. PBS Stolen by Right Wing in Cunning Bait and Switch : What can we do about the hostile takeover of the Public Broadcasting System and National Public Radio by the right wing? That they have taken over is beyond dispute. Ken Tomlinson is chairman of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and he has succeeded in placing former Republican National Committee co-chairwoman and fellow neocon Patricia Harrison into the position of president and CEO of CPB. While we were focused on draconian budget cuts proposed by a House committee, Tomlinson and Harrison were doing their inside magic. Literally millions of Americans sent e-mails to Congress demanding that the 25 percent cut in funding be restored. And, voila! The money was restored almost without debate. Self-congratulatory e-mails flooded our computer screens. Eager to prove the political power of the Internet, many groups took credit for restoring the funding. In retrospect, the back-pats were premature. The battle was too easy, the results unsatisfactory. It was a set-up. As Frank Rich of the New York Times put it, Tomlinson, Bush and Harrison “castrated” public television and NPR. We are now faced with a CPB that will mimic Fox news with its “fair and balanced” theme. What does that mean? We got our first hint last week. The leading advocate of the Iraqi invasion, Richard Perle, will be featured on the “new” and “balanced” PBS in a made-for-television movie produced by a good friend of Perle, Brian Lapping. Lapping said that Perle is correct that “quite a lot of the preconceptions about neocons are just wrong.” And, as he explained in the New York Times, the Perle film will be “mostly a journey, through his life and experiences.” It will show Perle, who called journalist Sy Hersh a “terrorist,” interacting with his critics who, get this, “say he was overly optimistic about American prospects in Iraq.” Full transcript via CNN . KING: Let’s pivot here to show that everybody in life needs an editor and sometimes everybody in life gets an editor. We played this for you the other night. This is Tina Fey accepting a Mark Twain award. Listen. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) TINA FEY, COMEDIAN: I would be a liar and an idiot if I didn’t thank Sarah Palin for helping get me here tonight. My partial resemblance and her crazy voice are the two luckiest things that have ever happened to me. (LAUGHTER) FEY: All kidding aside, I’m so proud to represent American’s humor — (END VIDEO CLIP) KING: That’s Tina Fey. She’s always funny. Now what we learned since then though is that PBS decided they say for time reasons to edit this part out. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) FEY: For everybody else, it’s a win-win unless you’re a gay woman who wants to marry your partner of 20 years. But for most women, the success of conservative women is good for all of us unless, you believe in evolution. You know what, I take it back. The whole thing’s a disaster. (END VIDEO CLIP) KING: Now Ed Rollins, she’s funny, she’s also political. Do you take it that this was edited out because they needed to get to a certain time for the program? We face those demands every day or when they had to get to a certain time, were they political in the editing? ROLLINS: They politically edit it. There’s no question about it. PBS does that from time to time and you know whatever. At the end of the day I think Tina Fey will be very happy to have Sarah Palin’s Alaska ratings, which will be her own show and I think to a certain extent they sort of made each other, and I think to a certain extent I’m happy to see her get the Mark Twain award. I’m a big fan of Tina Fey. BASH: Is this the first time that PBS has been accused of editing — (CROSSTALK) BASH: — to favor Republicans? I mean that’s my question right. I mean are — they’re accused — PBS is the network that’s accused of being too liberal — BORGER: They edited out something Paul McCartney said that was offensive at one point to Republicans, so probably not. (CROSSTALK) KING: Go ahead, Roland. MARTIN: Hey John — John, this is a perfect example of what Tina Fey said and they edited out was the funniest stuff that she said. So when people ask all the time why PBS is boring, hello. Exhibit A. ROLLINS: I thought it was a master plan. They wanted to be boring so they could talk to all the liberal Democrats. (CROSSTALK) UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: They want you as a viewer. KING: Here’s — here’s a question I have — MARTIN: Even my liberal conservative friends don’t like boring, Ed.

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House Leadership Same As It Ever Was

John Boehner will be the next speaker of the House. Now onto the bigger news: Nancy Pelosi’s leadership was retained by the surviving House Democrats. She will be minority leader, beating one Heath Shuler 150-43. New York Times: The House speaker, Nancy Pelosi of California, was re-elected on Wednesday to lead the Democrats in the next Congress, despite her party’s loss of more than 60 seats and its majority control of the House in the midterm elections. Officials said that Ms. Pelosi defeated Representative Heath Shuler of North Carolina in an internal party vote, 150 to 43. Mr. Shuler acknowledged before the vote that he had no chance of winning, but he wanted to give disgruntled Democrats a chance to register their opposition to Ms. Pelosi’s leadership anyway. Read more Related Entries November 16, 2010 Congress Convicts Rangel November 12, 2010 Connecting the Dots on the Great Disconnect

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Activist and MSNBC Anchor Contessa Brewer Lectures Mormons, Hopes for More ‘Progress’ on Gay Rights

Gay rights activist and MSNBC anchor Contessa Brewer continued to insert her politics into news reports on Wednesday. The News Live host discussed changes in how the Mormons view homosexuality and lectured, ” And we hope to see more progress from the Church of Latter-Day Saints in the future .” The Mormon Church has announced it will no longer require those who

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Wars Went MIA From Midterm Debates

By Jon Dillingham Despite the exit of some U.S. troops from Iraq, the war there and in Afghanistan is still vibrant. But you certainly wouldn’t know it from the public debate that led up to the Nov. 2 midterm elections. Related Entries November 16, 2010 Congress Convicts Rangel November 12, 2010 Connecting the Dots on the Great Disconnect

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Republicans postpone Obama meeting to avoid another ass-kicking, and then lie about it

Click here to view this media According to Fox News, the canceled summit meeting between President Obama and Republican House leaders to discuss the extension of the Bush tax cuts was just a matter of conflicting schedules. But according to El Hacko Supremo Glenn Thrush at Politico, it’s actually about Republican hurt feelings because President Obama supposedly “crashed” a GOP House gathering in January: The roots of the partisan standoff that led to the postponement of the bipartisan White House summit scheduled for Thursday date back to January, when President Barack Obama crashed a GOP meeting in Baltimore to deliver a humiliating rebuke of House Republicans. Obama’s last-minute decision to address the House GOP retreat – and the one-sided televised presidential lecture many Republicans decried as a political ambush – has left a lingering distrust of Obama invitations and a wariness about accommodating every scheduling request emanating from the West Wing, aides tell POLITICO. “He has a ways to go to rebuild the trust,” said a top Republican Hill staffer. “The Baltimore thing was unbelievable. There were [House Republicans] who only knew Obama was coming when they saw Secret Service guys scouting out the place.” WTF? Are these guys kidding? Or are they just not even bothering to come up with halfway decent lies anymore? Because not only did Obama kick their asses from Baltimore to Seattle in that meeting, but he did so because he was invited by Republicans who were eager to kick his and massively failed. Josh Marshall hits this one out of the park : So was it an ambush? Well, My God, not even close. Here’s the press release from Mike Pence, Chairman of the House Republican Conference, thanking the president on January 13th for “accept[ing] our invitation to meet with the Republican Conference later this month.” And here’s the Politico’s write up from January 12th, the day before. In other words, that’s more than two weeks before these House Republicans who must have spent the month in a sensory deprivation chamber were stunned to see the president’s motorcade driving up unannounced to crash their party. And if they’d forgotten here’s the write-up from The Hill the day before the event … Emboldened by an unexpected victory in Massachusetts and frustrated with a “partisan” State of the Union address, House Republicans are eager to meet with President Barack Obama on Friday. So here they are all gunned up and eagerly awaiting President Obama’s ambush of them that they didn’t know anything about. And as Marshall explains, this was really about GOP hubris gone bad: It was clear that for the House GOP this was inviting the president to meet them on their turf rather than at the White House where opposition leaders are always put in a somewhat diminished position just because of the trappings of the place. And by the time the event rolled around, Scott Brown had won the Massachusetts Senate race. So, as The Hill put it, the House Republicans were “eager” to meet with the president. Only it didn’t work out according to plan. The president came, talked, took questions. And with the president there making his own arguments it was much more difficult for folks like Pence and others to claim, unrebutted, that Health Care Reform was going to cost $50 trillion, enforce mandatory castration and have one out of five grannies ritually slaughtered on a stone slab the bend the cost curve for longterm care. Put simply, the Republicans came off looking kind of stupid, unable to make their arguments when the president was there to point out the holes in their arguments. In this case, I was sympathetic to the president and to reform. So I’m sure people who didn’t share those sympathies saw the whole encounter differently. But House Republicans’ reaction then and now suggests they saw it pretty much as I did — that the president embarrassed them. Not by crashing the event, or ambushing them. But just because he did better at it than they thought he would and they didn’t do well at all. They invited him to make him look diminished. But he ended up making them look unserious and unprepared because they weren’t able to respond when he pointed out the holes in their arguments. All of which means that this whole storyline of the president wrongfooting them or showing up uninvited is made up out of whole cloth. And the real story is that they’re not confident it won’t happen again if they have some sort of public encounter with him. I can understand why they want to run. Because face to face with Obama, they won’t be able to get with the kind of crap they get away with in the media, particularly on Fox, in evading a simple truth: Republicans must choose between reducing the deficit and preserving the tax cuts for the wealthy, because they cannot have both. It’s a simple impossibility, and they know it, and Obama knows it. And letting the public see Obama expose their mendacity as thoroughly as he did in Baltimore is something they’re going to have to try to figure out before they dare tangle with him again. It will be interesting to see which tactic they deploy, won’t it?

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La Vie En Denial

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La Vie En Denial

By Ruth Marcus I read “Decision Points” and it turns out that George W. Bush is the Edith Piaf of fiscal policy: he regrets nothing. Related Entries November 16, 2010 Republicans Give Up Pork November 16, 2010 A Cry From Argentina: ‘Close Guantanamo’

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ABC's “The View” hosted pastor Joel Osteen Tuesday, author of the book The Christmas Spirit – but the conversation took a controversial turn and went from Christmas to homosexuality. Co-host Joy Behar belittled Osteen about his conservative Christian beliefs on the matter. ABC's Barbara Walters first popped the question in the middle of the interview, flagging it was a “controversial” topic. She referenced a previous quote made by Osteen on the show about homosexuality not being “God's best” for a person's life. Walters asked him how he felt about a Georgia pastor who recently came out and said he was gay. After Osteen's tepid response, Behar interrupted him and flatly lectured him that homosexuality is natural. “It's not a choice, Pastor,” she asserted. “It's not a choice, and therefore I don't think that God would look askance at homosexuality in that way, because it's not a choice. They're born this way, people are born this way.” [Video embedded after page break]

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