Home » Posts tagged with » america (Page 11)

Republican hopefuls didn’t waste any time getting in touch after Sarah Palin announced that she isn’t going to run for president . Several candidates have already called and Todd Palin is setting up some meetings, Palin told Fox’s Greta Van Susteren in an On the Record appearance Wednesday night. Palin says…

Continue reading …
Sarah Palin will not run for president in 2012

In a letter to supporters, Sarah Palin said: ‘I have decided that I will not be seeking the GOP nomination for president of the US’ Sarah Palin has ended her year-long tease of American conservatives by finally announcing she will not be joining the presidential race. In a letter to supporters, Palin said: “After much prayer and serious consideration, I have decided that I will not be seeking the 2012 GOP nomination for president of the United States. “When we serve, we devote ourselves to God, family and country. My decision maintains this order.” Her departure clarifies the Republican field, with no other candidates likely to join the race at this late stage. The Republican contest is shaping up basically as between former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney and Texas governor Rick Perry, in spite of a recent surge in support for businessman Herman Cain. As well as saying she was putting her family first, she added she could be more effective for the conservative cause in helping getting Tea Party supporters and other rightwingers elected to Congress, governorships and the White House rather than standing herself. She did not need a title to help America recover, she said. “My decision is based upon a review of what commonsense conservatives and independents have accomplished, especially over the last year. I believe that at this time I can be more effective in a decisive role to help elect other true public servants to office – from the nation’s governors to Congressional seats and the presidency.” Still a strong voice in the Tea Party movement, she intends in the coming weeks to co-ordinate strategies to help Republicans retake the White House and Senate next year, and hold its control of the House. Palin has long toyed with the idea of a presidential run but has come up against poor poll ratings. One of the most recent polls, in the Washington Post this week, showed two-thirds of Republicans did not want her to stand. Palin rose to prominence in 2008 when she was the surprise choice of John McCain as his running mate against Barack Obama. She enjoyed high ratings among conservatives in the aftermath of the election and remains a popular figure on the right. Last year, she seemed to be a likely contender for the presidency but with each month that passed this year, her chances became slimmer, and irritation crept in among her supporters over her indecision. She was too late, seeing the right-wing ground she would have sought to occupy already claimed by figures such as Congresswoman Michele Bachmann and now Texas governor Rick Perry. She frequently left an impression that she would liked to have stood, turning up at key Republican events throughout the year that were attended by declared candidates. She launched a tour this year accompanied by her family aboard a bus painted like a campaign one and arrived in New Hampshire at roughly the same time as Romney was there announcing his decision to stand. In August, she dropped into Iowa as Republican candidates gathered for the Ames straw poll. She developed a strong dislike of much of the media, with the exception of a few trusted friends at Fox, where she is a paid employee. Some commentators predicted she would not stand because she feared the impact of renewed media scrutiny on her family, while others said she was enjoying the money from her new celebrity career too much to enter the fray. She suffered a serious political setback with the attempted assassination of the Democratic Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson, Arizona, in January. The attempt came after Palin had put out a graphic saying that Giffords was in her crosshairs. Although there was no evidence linking that to the shooting, it opened up a debate about whether rhetoric in American politics had become too violent. In her letter, Palin thanked her supporters who had defended her throughout the years and encouraged her to stand. She insisted that her decision not to stand meant she will fade out of politics and she set out her agenda for smaller government. “I will continue driving the discussion for freedom and free markets, including in the race for president where our candidates must embrace immediate action toward energy independence through domestic resource developments of conventional energy sources, along with renewables. We must reduce tax burdens and onerous regulations that kill American industry, and our candidates must always push to minimise government to strengthen the economy and allow the private sector to create jobs.” Sarah Palin Republicans United States US politics Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …
Roger Ailes: I Hired Sarah Palin Because She Was ‘Hot And Got Ratings’

NEW YORK — As the most powerful man in the universe, or one of them anyway, Roger Ailes can look back on the first 15 years of his crowning achievement, Fox News Channel, with satisfaction. And he does. It was way back in February 1996 that, at the behest of News Corp. chieftain Rupert Murdoch, Ailes began creating from scratch an all-news network to challenge the venerable CNN as well as upstart MSNBC, which was set to launch that July. “It was a risky move,” Ailes recalls, and not just for News Corp., whose $900 million or so would bankroll the venture. Fox News Channel was also risky for Ailes himself, who, then 55, was a communications guru of legendary savvy – a former Republican media strategist, TV producer and, until his abrupt resignation in January 1996, the head of CNBC and creator of another cable network, America’s Talking, that was being sacrificed to free up room for MSNBC. “I realized at my age that if I screwed up, or it didn’t work, I’d probably never work again,” says Ailes. “You just don’t go out when you’re over 55 years of age, have a colossal failure and expect to find work in your field again. “That was on my mind,” he confides, then pauses half-a-beat. “For a half-hour. Then I said, `I’ll make it work.’” He made it work. Fifteen years ago this Friday – on Oct. 7, 1996 – Fox News Channel signed on, as scheduled. And little more than five years later, it eclipsed that epic initial feat with another, by topping rival CNN in viewership for a full month. Allowing himself to gloat for a moment, Ailes savors the ill-advised prediction from a top executive at CNN parent Turner Broadcasting Co. who in May 2001 was quoted saying that, within a year, CNN’s new management team would vault CNN “well ahead of Fox.” Since 2002, Fox News has sealed the deal as ratings leader, dominating cable-news competition (and tying them in knots) in daytime, as well as in prime time with a murderers’ row of hosts led by Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity. The past year, Fox News Channel drew an average 1.1 million viewers – more than CNN and MSNBC combined. Propelled by Ailes’ “fair and balanced” branding, it successfully has targeted viewers who believe the other cable-news networks, and maybe the media overall, display a liberal tilt from which Fox News delivers them with unvarnished truth. Preaching its fairer-than-thou gospel, Fox News leveraged the public’s distrust for the media while positioning itself as the anti-media news-media alternative. Or so it seems to Fox News’ detractors, who lodge nonstop salvos against a network they decry as a conservative soap box writ large, even a mouthpiece for the Republican Party shaping public opinion on its behalf. These critics came to include Media Matters, a nonprofit group that polices Fox News as part of its larger stated mission to “correct conservative misinformation in the U.S. media,” and filmmaker Robert Greenwald, who in 2004 released the scathing documentary “Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch’s War on Journalism.” From the start, Ailes has steadfastly denied any such political bias or agenda on the part of his network. Politics, schmolitics: “I hired Sarah Palin because she was hot and got ratings,” he declares. From the get-go, he meant for his network to counteract the sins he saw others committing: “I really believed there was no fairness or balance” elsewhere on the journalism landscape. And they struck back. “Everybody who’s getting their ass beat vilifies the opponent,” he says, speaking of the networks Fox News is beating handily. “This is the first rule of fighting.” Ah, the fight! Ever since a 27-year-old Ailes counseled Richard Nixon on how to use TV to win the presidency, such terms as “combative” and “ferocious” have described Ailes’ two-fisted style. But during a recent conversation, Ailes, now 71, seems not as pugnacious as he surveys Fox News Channel’s history and his place in it. “Mellow” wouldn’t be the word for this chairman-CEO, but as he talks he seems more reflective than feisty. “I don’t rise to the occasion when there’s no occasion,” he replies when asked what the passing years have taught him. Ailes has eased his heavyset frame into a wing chair in his office at News Corp.’s mid-Manhattan headquarters, where he graciously receives a guest who likely represents one of his least favorite characters: a journalist who doesn’t work for him. “When there IS an occasion,” he goes on, “I will do what I have to do, and I will win. Is that mellowing? I tend to see it more as picking my battles a little better than I used to. That’s probably the best thing I’ve learned: to save it for when you need it, because when you need it, you have to win.” But why, specifically, has Fox News Channel won against its rivals for a decade? “The consistency of our product,” Ailes sums up matter-of-factly. “I think we do better television than the other guys, and no matter how we do it, they don’t seem to catch up. We seem to out-invent them and think ahead of them, and have better story ideas, better graphics, better on-air talent. We just are better television producers.” At Fox, there’s also a consistency in leadership – consistency in Ailes’ laser-focused vision for the network – that other networks can’t come close to matching. From them, “there have been 14 or 15 senior executives thrown at me,” Ailes says. “So part of their problem is, the corporations lost confidence in their own senior executives. I think that helped me some. I think their screw-ups may have been corporate in nature, in the sense that if they had great executives in there, they didn’t back `em. And some of them WEREN’T great executives.” While he allows that, in the beginning, he “underestimated a little bit” how hard it would be to seize the ratings mantle from his rivals, “I had not counted on them screwing up as much,” he hastily adds. Ailes, who calls himself “a television producer by trade” and understands TV in his bones as well as anyone alive, points to CNN’s “The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer” as an example of how the competition falls short. “Wolf Blitzer is an excellent reporter, but he’s not a star,” says Ailes. And since the format of the show calls for Blitzer to highlight visuals on the “news wall” behind him, “he spends half of his time with his back to the camera. I like Wolf. I think he’s a good journalist. But I get offended that his back is to the camera.” (CNN responded that it “has demonstrated that there is a place in cable news for objective coverage of politics and Washington. No journalist demonstrates this better than Wolf Blitzer.”) It is this level of detail at which Ailes scrutinizes what goes on the air, from his rivals and, especially – exhaustively – on his own channels, which also include the 4-year-old Fox Business Network. Ailes’ empire has further expanded to include Fox News Radio, Fox News’ digital platform, the Fox Television Stations Group and Twentieth Television syndication group since he flipped the switch on Fox News Channel’s first day. “If you’d asked me that day would I still be here in 15 years, I probably would have said no,” he muses, noting that his career had previously taken the form of serial troubleshooting: “People would call me and give me a really ugly problem to solve, and I would do it, and then I’d ride out of town like the Lone Ranger and go on to the next thing. “But the business channel, radio and dot-com world came along, and the competition of fighting NBC and CNN was exhilarating. So here I am.” One problem he insists he won’t be facing is the hacking scandal that has engulfed other areas of Murdoch’s News Corp. empire in London. “We don’t have a problem,” Ailes says flatly. It’s apples-and-oranges – British tabloid culture gone terribly wrong, as opposed to a U.S. television operation whose “editorial is terrific.” “I’ve stayed away from this News Corp. issue because it’s not a Fox News issue,” he says. “I know nothing more about it than I’m reading in the press, and I don’t discuss it with Rupert.” Ailes’ contract runs out in Summer 2013, after one more rollicking presidential race, and shortly after he turns 73. He says he hasn’t decided if he’ll stay on, or, if not, what’s next. “The bad news,” Ailes cracks, “is, I just went to my doctor and he said, `Other than arthritis, your chart reads like a 40-year-old’s. You’re old, you’re fat and you’re ugly, but you’re not going to die from any of those things immediately.’ So if I still feel like this and somebody offers me a job in June of `13, I may just take it.” Maybe he’ll take on this challenge back in his native Ohio: the Cleveland Indians. They won the World Series in 1948, and haven’t since. “I always wanted to raise the money to go back and buy the Cleveland Indians and be sure they won one more World Series,” Ailes says. “But I got sidetracked.” Then, chuckling, he cites his status as a favorite lightning rod for liberals’ disdain. “The politically correct crowd would go after me to change the team’s name,” he says, maybe joking and maybe not. “They’d be all over my ass because I bought the Indians!” ___

Continue reading …

A huge turnout Tuesday in Philadelphia to plan Occupy Philly’s sit-in in City Hall’s courtyard, and attendees decided it will begin at 9am this Thursday. I’m so thrilled that this is finally happening in the city that was the birthplace of our nation – and I’m pretty sure they’re going to need pizza : “This is what democracy looks like.” That was the thunderous chant of about 1,000 protesters who packed the Arch Street United Methodist Church Tuesday night as they voted to begin Occupy Philadelphia at City Hall at 9 a.m. Thursday. Supporters young and old turned out for the meeting to plan the next steps for Philadelphia’s extension of New York City’s Occupy Wall Street protests. Some said they foresee the movement catching on across the nation. “This is the first time in my adult life I feel there’s some hope,” said Carol Finkle, 69, of Philadelphia. “This will grow. Watch what’s gonna happen, in [young people's] lifetime and in mine.” Like some of New York’s protesters, many of Philadelphia’s plan to occupy City Hall 24/7 for its duration, pitching tents and camping there. Here’s an interview with Justin Harrison , an Occupy Philly organizer who works at Verizon as a splicing technician, and is a unit secretary for Communications Workers of America (CWA), Local 1300: In New York, they’re occupying Wall Street. In DC, they plan to occupy the the infamously lobbyist-ridden K Street. Will Occupy Philly be Philadelphian in some particular way? I think that Philly vs. New York, Philly is overwhelmingly a working class town. There’s been a strong consciousness to reach out into the communities. North, south, east, west, it’s the same stuff: jobs, housing, food and education. We don’t have Wall Street to occupy, but Philadelphia has a special flavor of its own. Is Occupy Wall Street a progressive response to the right-wing tea party? Or is it something completely different? I think that Occupy Wall Street is filling a vacuum that could have and should have been filled by the left. For example, the AFL-CIO. A lot of us feel that they dropped the ball in Wisconsin this spring [when there were weeks of  mass protests against Governor Scott Walker’s attack on collective bargaining rights]. People came out in the streets and occupied the capitol, but AFL-CIO put it into the Democratic Party and elections. I’ve been saying look, we need to pay attention to this. They’re doing stuff that we could have been doing and should have been doing. And we should help out, and we can learn from it. On the right, the tea party’s an expression of the vacuum. And with Occupy Wall Street, most people would identify as leftists. Many, including some on the left, have criticized Occupy Wall Street for not having a clear set of demands. If there isn’t a program, how do you deal with all the Ron Paul types talking about the gold standard and abolishing the Federal Reserve? Libertarians are for letting corporations do whatever they want–so how do they fit into this? I don’t think they’re overwhelming–but they’re there. If they’re gonna’ participate, they’re gonna’ participate. As a socialist, I believe overall that it’s a weakness because a movement is stronger if it has demands that it can put forward. The New York group released a statement; and it’s a pretty strong critique. Some say it’s not anti-capitalist, but that’s how I read it. You have a whole new layer of new activists, and they’ll need time to sort things out. I don’t think there’s a problem with having time for discussion. No one group should be able to dictate how things should be. You work at Verizon and just finished one of the largest  strikes in recent history. Does Occupy Wall Street and Occupy Philly relate to what you were fighting for there? Absolutely. The unions have a role in defending the interests of the working class, and not just their own members. Unions are strongest when they reach out and speak socially. That’s how we got education, the 8-hour day, and the weekend in this country. Unions in their best moments have always been concerned about clean water, education and public services. The stronger the working class movement as a whole is, and the stronger the unions are, the better able we are to defend ourselves. It’s a continuation from Wisconsin this spring. The bosses and the ruling class are emboldened and on the offensive. They’re trying to take it out on the people who work for 8 dollars an hour at Wal-Mart, and they’re trying to take it out on our pensions. We’re seeing a unified attack by Wall Street against our people: against unions, against public services, against public education, against the fabric of working class life in the United States that comes out of the New Deal, through the middle class lifestyle of the 50s, 60s, and 70s. Do you think that Occupy Wall Street, come 2012, will impact the presidential campaign? Hard to say. It’s a year away. I think that the Democratic Party will probably try to ride the wave a little bit, maybe try to move in. I think that’s something we’ll try to guard against. But that’s still an open book. Right now there’s other stuff to deal with: the congressional super committee is meeting this fall and may push cuts to Medicare and Social Security. So that could be another fight .

Continue reading …
Rick Scott’s Underhanded Effort To Privatize Prisons Thwarted By Court

enlarge Credit: Ocala.com Here’s how Florida’s prisons were nearly privatized without anyone knowing about it. In a rather arrogant and high-handed move, Republican lawmakers tucked a secret provision into the budget right at the end of the frenzied 2011 legislative session requiring private companies to take over 29 prisons by January 1st. Of course, it was all intended to union-bust and replace nearly 3800 union employees with minimum-wage private company replacements. Tallahassee.com : Turner and Johnson said Sen. JD Alexander, a Lake Wales Republican and budget chairman, placed the privatization language in the budget after the prisons portion had cleared earlier committees that would have opposed the move. Assistant Attorney General Jon Glogau argued that legislators have wide authority to tell departments how to use appropriated funds. He said the Legislature didn’t have to pass a stand-alone statute to privatize prisons because the state has had a law for 20 years allowing the DOC to outsource some prison operations. How many, and where those prisons will be, is up to the Legislature, Glogau said. He said every budget item embodies some form of policy choice and that House and Senate appropriations committees and subcommittees held many public hearings on all phases of the budget, including the final product. “Slippery-slope arguments are hyperbole, at best,” Glogau said. He said agencies have executive authority to organize, operate and staff their offices most efficiently. “Privatization of prisons is a unilateral right of the employer,” said Glogau. “I don’t want to make light of the fact that people are losing their jobs but, under the facts and the case law, it is the unilateral right of the public employer to do this.” That sneaky Senator. After the prison portions cleared committees who might have noticed, much less have agreed to it, he slipped it in there. Despite all the false bravado, there seems to be at least a small concern that it might not be one hundred percent on the level, since the good Governor Scott pressured former Florida Corrections overseer Ed Buss not to testify or give a deposition before the case was heard. Fortunately the unions were paying attention, and took it to court. Last Friday, Judge Jackie Fulford ruled the scheme unconstitutional. There is a cynical, criminal aspect to this whole scheme, in much the same way that Governor Walker rammed through his “reforms” in Wisconsin. TampaBay.com : Leon County Circuit Judge Jackie Fulford found that a plan to privatize 29 state prisons in South Florida is unconstitutional because lawmakers wrote the change into the state budget instead of passing separate legislation. Governors from both political parties and legislatures controlled by either Republicans and Democrats similarly have been overruled by the courts over the past 40 years for using the state budget to slip in significant changes to state law. That often happens when those policy changes can’t stand up to public scrutiny or don’t have enough support among rank-and-file lawmakers to be approved on their own merits. In this case, Scott and influential legislators such as Senate budget chief J.D. Alexander of Lake Wales were determined to pursue one of the nation’s largest privatization efforts no matter what. In the Senate, Alexander quietly stuck language into the budget to privatize prisons — to the surprise of the chairman of the committee that oversees criminal justice spending, Sen. Mike Fasano of New Port Richey. And Scott fired his Department of Corrections secretary after he questioned the wisdom of the privatization effort and supported the lawsuit filed by the union that represents state prison guards. It’s probably just a coincidence that the Boca Raton company expected to win the new prison contract, GEO Group, had 16 lobbyists in Tallahassee, donated $25,000 to Scott’s inaugural celebration and once employed Scott’s key outside budget adviser. Yeah, sure that’s coincidence. Just like it’s coincidence that CCA (Corrections Corporation of America) donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to the Republican Governors’ Association in 2010 so they could land the fat privatization contracts in those governors’ states. Not that it should surprise anyone, but this is standard operating procedure for these insane Republican governors. If you can’t win by legal and straightforward means, just go ahead and slip it in there where no one will notice. And if they happen to notice anyway, just stare them down and claim you’re perfectly right about screwing state employees. And if that doesn’t work, pray for a friendly judge. Rick Scott drew the short straw this time, so I expect his next move will be stacking the Florida court system with judges of his choice. What a good ole boy he is. Oh, and such good news for Florida! Tricky Ricky plans to run again in 2014 !!!!

Continue reading …
VIDEO- The Obama Presidency By The Numbers

By Susan Duclos Video below by Minnesota Majority . Pass it on, show it to everyone you know, ask them to pass it on. . Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Wake Up America Discovery Date : 04/10/2011 09:28 Number of articles : 4

Continue reading …
Chris Christie 2012 Decision: New Jersey Governor Will Not Run For President (VIDEO)

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie announced on Tuesday that he will not run for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012 at a press conference in his home state. “Now is not my time,” said Christie in explaining his decision. He quipped, “New Jersey, whether you like it or not, you’re stuck with me.” The New Jersey Republican added, “The deciding factor was that it did not feel right in my gut to leave now when the job is not finished.” While Christie has vehemently denied he could launch a campaign for the White House over the last year, speculation swirling over the prospect the big name Republican could jump into the race reached a fever pitch last week. HuffPost’s Jon Ward reported that a speech delivered by Christie at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library almost seemed like an audition for a potential run. On Tuesday, Christie said he felt an “obligation” to consider advice coming from members of the Republican party urging him to get into the race. “Over the last few weeks, I’ve thought long and hard about this decision,” he said. Christie signaled that he’s not prepared to make an endorsement in the GOP primary race at this time. He said, however, that he’ll ultimately stand behind the contender that gives his party the strongest chance at defeating President Barack Obama in 2012. The Republican governor also addressed the prospect he could be tapped as a running mate by one of the candidates vying for his party’s presidential nomination. “I don’t think there’s anybody in America who would think my personality is best suited to be number two,” he said. Below, a video mash-up capturing the build-up of speculation on Christie’s political ambitions. WATCH:

Continue reading …
C&L’s #OccupyWallStreet Solidarity Pizza Fundaiser Is Rocking!

enlarge Credit: Brian Malott Thanks so much for all your help. Please keep it coming. The retweets have helped big time too. We’re receiving more emails from those we’re helping to feed along with some cool pictures. Jackie of Blue America has taken over as our purchasing manager on this fundraiser so we can make sure the pizzas and whatever else is needed gets shipped or delivered in a timely manner since it’s become a pretty intense job right now. We’ve so far bought dinner for Seattle, Boston, New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Let us know where you guys are and what you’re doing. We’ll bring the pies! If you’d like to buy the occupiers some nosh, here’s the account we’ve set up: All amounts accepted and they all help tremendously! Here’s a few emails I’ve received: Photo of people eating pizza you contributed at OccupySF at Union Square in San Francisco Oct 01, 2011. Thanks for what you’re doing. Those pizzas are very much appreciated all over the country. Steve L — Dear Crooks & Liars, I was at Occupy Boston’s initial protest on Friday night, Sept. 30. Your organization delivered a bunch of pizzas to us and I want to thank you! A very simple gesture, but with high impact that did not go unnoticed. We were all hungry, having come right from work or school and just seeing that another organization was behind us and supporting us added to our resolve and sense of purpose. I will tell you that while we were there, truck drivers and other work vehicles were beeping their horns in support as they drove by. I truly believe this is just the beginning and, hopefully, we can turn our country around. Thanks again. Christine — Just sending thanks from OccupySF. I went to the General Assembly yesterday and today and both times your pizza donations were mentioned and applauded. It’s a small but growing and committed group down there. Your support is very much so appreciated. Thanks, Ken — enlarge Hi Crooks & Liars community, I just got back to my apartment from the Occupy Boston camp and I wanted to let you know how much the pizzas were appreciated. I don’t think you guys understand how happy they made us – they were like mana from heaven. Let me explain, we had a large tray of lentils and a large tray of rice for dinner tonight, but by the time General Assembly was finishing up all of this food had been finished. Your pizzas arrived mere minutes before the conclusion of General Assembly, as if on schedule. The pizza delivery actually saved Occupy Boston from having to dip into our supply of non-perishable items, for which we are glad. While I don’t have the authority to speak for the entire community (I don’t think anyone does), I would still like to pass along how grateful we were/are for the amazing donation! Ted D. — Thank-you on behalf of those of us who weren’t even there!! Thanks for your support. Smiles, Sage Please keep the donations coming because you’ve helped to lift the spirits of those protesting around the country.

Continue reading …
C&L’s #OccupyWallStreet Solidarity Pizza Fundaiser Is Rocking!

enlarge Credit: Brian Malott Thanks so much for all your help. Please keep it coming. The retweets have helped big time too. We’re receiving more emails from those we’re helping to feed along with some cool pictures. Jackie of Blue America has taken over as our purchasing manager on this fundraiser so we can make sure the pizzas and whatever else is needed gets shipped or delivered in a timely manner since it’s become a pretty intense job right now. We’ve so far bought dinner for Seattle, Boston, New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Let us know where you guys are and what you’re doing. We’ll bring the pies! If you’d like to buy the occupiers some nosh, here’s the account we’ve set up: All amounts accepted and they all help tremendously! Here’s a few emails I’ve received: Photo of people eating pizza you contributed at OccupySF at Union Square in San Francisco Oct 01, 2011. Thanks for what you’re doing. Those pizzas are very much appreciated all over the country. Steve L — Dear Crooks & Liars, I was at Occupy Boston’s initial protest on Friday night, Sept. 30. Your organization delivered a bunch of pizzas to us and I want to thank you! A very simple gesture, but with high impact that did not go unnoticed. We were all hungry, having come right from work or school and just seeing that another organization was behind us and supporting us added to our resolve and sense of purpose. I will tell you that while we were there, truck drivers and other work vehicles were beeping their horns in support as they drove by. I truly believe this is just the beginning and, hopefully, we can turn our country around. Thanks again. Christine — Just sending thanks from OccupySF. I went to the General Assembly yesterday and today and both times your pizza donations were mentioned and applauded. It’s a small but growing and committed group down there. Your support is very much so appreciated. Thanks, Ken — enlarge Hi Crooks & Liars community, I just got back to my apartment from the Occupy Boston camp and I wanted to let you know how much the pizzas were appreciated. I don’t think you guys understand how happy they made us – they were like mana from heaven. Let me explain, we had a large tray of lentils and a large tray of rice for dinner tonight, but by the time General Assembly was finishing up all of this food had been finished. Your pizzas arrived mere minutes before the conclusion of General Assembly, as if on schedule. The pizza delivery actually saved Occupy Boston from having to dip into our supply of non-perishable items, for which we are glad. While I don’t have the authority to speak for the entire community (I don’t think anyone does), I would still like to pass along how grateful we were/are for the amazing donation! Ted D. — Thank-you on behalf of those of us who weren’t even there!! Thanks for your support. Smiles, Sage Please keep the donations coming because you’ve helped to lift the spirits of those protesting around the country.

Continue reading …
David Cameron speech: let’s show the world some fight

In keynote address to Conservative conference, prime minister sets out upbeat vision following week of sombre speeches by cabinet colleagues David Cameron invoked the spirit of the British bulldog and the days of empire as he pledged to provide the leadership to take Britain to better days. In an attempt to imitate the optimistic vision of Ronald Reagan’s Morning in America campaign , the prime minister said he would fight a climate of “sogginess” which says Britain faces certain decline. “Britain never had the biggest population, the largest land mass, the richest resources – but we had the spirit,” the prime minister said in his keynote speech to the Conservative conference in Manchester. Referring to the British bulldog, Cameron added: “Remember, it’s not the size of the dog in the fight – it’s the size of the fight in the dog. Overcoming challenge, confounding the sceptics, reinventing ourselves, this is what we do. It’s called leadership.” Tory strategists decided the prime minister would use his speech to set out an upbeat and optimistic vision after a week of sombre speeches by ministers and notably by the chancellor, George Osborne. Cameron echoed Osborne when he said Britain faced a long struggle to revive the economy. “People want to know why the good times are so long coming,” he said. “The answer is straightforward, but uncomfortable. This was no normal recession – we’re in a debt crisis. It was caused by too much borrowing by individuals, businesses, banks and, most of all, governments.” As Downing Street confirmed earlier on Wednesday, the prime minister amended this sober section of his speech to tone down an apparent instruction to people to follow the example of the government and to pay off their credit cards. Instead, he said: “The only way out of a debt crisis is to deal with your debts. That’s why households are paying down their credit card and store card bills.” Cameron challenged Labour, which accuses the government of imposing spending cuts too quickly and too soon, by putting his deficit reduction plans within the tradition of moderate “one nation Conservatism” embodied by his political hero, Harold Macmillan. “This is a one-nation deficit reduction plan from a one-nation party,” he said. Having established the economic challenge facing Britain, the prime minister started to outline his upbeat vision as he pledged to reject pessimism and promote “can-do optimism”. The Tories illustrated this approach by inviting young people who have taken part in the National Citizens’ Service initiative to address the conference. But he said there was a downbeat mood and he would fight it. “Frankly, there’s too much ‘can’t do’ sogginess around,” he told delegates. “We need to be a sharp, focused, can-do country. But as we go for growth, the last thing I want is to pump the old economy back up, with a banking sector out of control, manufacturing squeezed, and prosperity confined to a few parts of the country and a select few industries. “Our plan is to build something new and to build something better. We can do it.” The prime minister cited health and safety rules as an example of how Britain was being held back. “This isn’t how a great nation was built,” he said. “Britannia didn’t rule the waves with armbands on.” Picking up on his theme of the empire, he said he would try to revive the spirit that allowed Britain to find a new role after the collapse of its empire. “They said when we lost an empire that we couldn’t find a role. But we found a role, took on communism and helped bring down the Berlin Wall,” he said. “They called our economy the sick man of Europe. But we came back and turned this country into a beacon of enterprise.” In his concluding remarks, Cameron said: “Let’s turn this time of challenge into a time of opportunity. Not sitting around watching things happen and wondering why, but standing up, making things happen and asking: ‘Why not?’. “We have the people, we have the ideas, and now we have a government that’s freeing those people, backing those ideas. So let’s see an optimistic future. Let’s show the world some fight. Let’s pull together, work together. And together lead Britain to better days.” Cameron’s speech outlined how key government reforms would help: • In education, there will be an emphasis on “core and vital subjects”, he said as he hailed the new free schools established by the education secretary, Michael Gove. “Change really is under way,” he added. “For the first time in a long time, the numbers studying those core and vital subjects history, geography, languages are going up. “Pupils’ exams will be marked on their punctuation and grammar. And teachers are going to be able to search pupils’ bags for anything banned in school – mobile phones, alcohol, weapons, anything. It’s a long, hard road back to rigour, but we’re well and truly on our way.” • On welfare reform, Cameron promised to return sense to the labour market and get people back to work, with a focus on people on incapacity benefit. “Under Labour, they got something for nothing,” he said. “With us, they’ll only get something if they give something. If they are prepared to work, we’re going to help them, and I mean really help them. “If you’ve been out of work and on benefits for five years, a quick session down the jobcentre and a new CV just isn’t going to cut it. You need to get your self-esteem and confidence back. You need training and skills, intensive personal support.” • On planning, the government would listen to people’s concerns about the changes, he said, adding that the government would do nothing to harm the countryside. But he said that it was important to ease the planning process, adding: “To those who just oppose everything we’re doing, my message is this: take your arguments down to the job centre. We’ve got to get Britain back to work.” Conservative conference 2011 David Cameron Conservative conference Conservatives Economic policy Recession Economics Communities Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk

Continue reading …