(Above video is from a Cavuto appearance ) I’ve discussed Social Security with President Obama at the White House and he assured us that he wouldn’t hurt Social Security. I know many of us on the left have said this before, but I’ll say it again: Why appoint somebody like Alan Simpson to his Catfood Commission if he’s serious about saving and strengthening our social safety nets? Here’s Alan, the High Lord of Mean: Alan Simpson’s cold relationship with AARP is no secret, but the former Republican Senator from Wyoming took it to a new level Friday. At an event hosted by the Investment Company Institute, Simpson delighted the finance industry audience members by aiming a rude gesture at the leading lobby for senior citizens. Financial and investment interests have long been supportive of Simpson’s broad critique of Social Security, since privatizing the old-age and disability support program would be a tremendous boon for Wall Street’s financial managers. ICI represents mutual funds and other money managers who control more than $13 trillion in assets. Simpson’s forceful gesture came after an extended diatribe against Social Security, which he said is a “Ponzi” scheme, “not a retirement program.” Simpson argued that Social Security was originally intended more as a welfare program. “It was never intended as a retirement program. It was set up in ‘37 and ‘38 to take care of people who were in distress — ditch diggers, wage earners — it was to give them 43 percent of the replacement rate of their wages. The [life expectancy] was 63. That’s why they set retirement age at 65” for Social Security, he said. In 2010, President Obama appointed Simpson to a deficit commission that recommended cutting taxes and reducing entitlement spending. The commission’s outline is being used as a framework for reform in Congress. This is totally insane thinking and he’s welcome to his twisted logic, but what he said and did with his Bras d’honneur was completely inappropriate as well, since he accepted a position on Obama’s commission. Sir, if you could only see my hand now. If he hates Social Security and Medicare that’s fine. Start a PAC. But when you’re in a position of trying to help the most beloved social programs America has ever had, at least show some respect. Oh, and stop lying about it. By the way, this isn’t the first time he’s stated misinformation about Social Security, either. RJ Eskow wrote a post for C&L about a Simpson exchange with Alex Lawson that was sickening because of all his lies: Digby writes : Uhm no. This life expectancy misinformation is so widespread, I don’t know if we’ll ever be able to set it straight. But I might have expected that one of President Obama’s Deficit commission appointees — the co-chairman no less — would not be among those who believe it. (Normally I would suggest that he was just a liar, but from this account it’s pretty clear to me that he really doesn’t understand it.) This is a very important point and one that everyone needs to understand if they hope to beat back the social security assault: HuffPost suggested to Simpson during a telephone interview that his claim about life expectancy was misleading because his data include people who died in childhood of diseases that are now largely preventable. Incorporating such early deaths skews the average life expectancy number downward, making it appear as if people live dramatically longer today than they did half a century ago. According to the Social Security Administration’s actuaries, women who lived to 65 in 1940 had a life expectancy of 79.7 years and men were expected to live 77.7 years. “If that is the case — and I don’t think it is — then that means they put in peanuts,” said Simpson. Simpson speculated that the data presented to him by HuffPost had been furnished by “the Catfood Commission people” — a reference to progressive critics of the deficit commission who gave president’s panel that label. Told that the data came directly from the Social Security Administration, Simpson continued to insist it was inaccurate, while misstating the nature of a statistical average: “If you’re telling me that a guy who got to be 65 in 1940 — that all of them lived to be 77 — that is just not correct. Just because a guy gets to be 65, he’s gonna live to be 77? Hell, that’s my genre. That’s not true,” said Simpson, who will turn 80 in September. Why is Dick Durbin acting like a beard for these people? Simpson is an old hack, but Durbin should be ashamed of himself because he does know the truth and the figures that we’re talking about here. Back to Digby: Simpson surely knows about the Greenspan Commission. He’s just lying about that (or he’s senile.) But what’s Erskine Bowles’ excuse? Or Dick Durbin or Saxby Chambliss or all the other politicians who parrot this misinformation all the time? Are they all senile too? The people who designed the system understood very well that if “life expectancy” went up it would mean that there were also more younger workers who hadn’t died in childbirth paying into the system. And they understood the concept of productivity gains and knew that more people would be brought into the system — paying as well as receiving benefits — over time. They weren’t cave men. It was only 70 years ago. Simpson was a teen-ager at the time. What they may not have anticipated was just how badly the political system would be distorted by corporate propaganda that made people believe that black is white and up is down. It’s the real problem and solving social security’s minor shortfall in 2038 is a piece of cake compared to solving that one. I doubt they ever imagined that our political system in seventy years would have turned out members of Congress right out of a John Birch Society hoedown.
Continue reading …Sunday’s Washington Post Magazine carried a cover story that oozed with compassion for radical-left WikiLeaks suspect Bradley Manning. Just as they did in
Continue reading …Sunday’s Washington Post Magazine carried a cover story that oozed with compassion for radical-left WikiLeaks suspect Bradley Manning. Just as they did in
Continue reading …There are times when I watch MSNBC and truly can't understand how a major American television news network could possibly have assembled such a group of ignoramuses to act as commentators. Take for example Lawrence O'Donnell who on Monday's “The Last Word” actually said, “The Founding Fathers would have understood [raising the debt ceiling] would be imperative to maintain the credit rating of the United States of America” (video follows with transcript and commentary): LAWRENCE O’DONNELL, HOST: I don’t know if you could, had a monitor there, you could see who actually appeared at the National Press Club today in Washington, but it is a new low. He appeared in costume as a pretend Founding Father outraged at the notion of raising the debt ceiling which of course the Founding Fathers would have understood would be imperative to maintain the credit rating of the United States of America. Oy! First, credit ratings agencies in America didn't appear until the early 1900s. As such, the Founding Fathers wouldn't have had a clue what a credit rating was. Second, the concept of a debt ceiling wasn't introduced until 1917 when Congress passed the Second Liberty Bond Act. This came somewhat coincident to the creation of our nation's first Treasury paper to fund World War I. Makes you wonder how the Founding Fathers could have had such a definitive opinion about things that wouldn't emerge until more than a century after the Constitution was ratified. Sadly, this is the kind of history regularly taught on MSNBC. And Paul Krugman wonders why voters are so ill-informed.
Continue reading …City University of New York board overturns attempt to block prize-winning playwright’s award because of his views on Israel The trustees board of the City University of New York (CUNY) brought to an end an embarrassing row over freedom of expression by voting unanimously to award an honorary degree to the award-winning playwright Tony Kushner. A firestorm was ignited last week when a single trustee, Jeffrey Wiesenfeld, launched an attack on the Jewish playwright on the grounds that he was not sufficiently pro-Israel. The intervention blocked the award of the degree which would normally have been routine. The chancellor, Matthew Goldstein, addressing the board on Monday night, said he had supported the original recommendation of the award and praised Kushner’s “extraordinary body of work”. He urged the board to overturn last week’s decision and to support the award. Some members of the board spoke, all of them voicing support for Kushner. One of them described the row as a “blemish” on the university’s reputation as an upholder of freedom of expression. After only 20 minutes of discussion, the board voted in favour of the award. The decision last week prompted a letter from Kushner, saying he had always supported the right of Israel to exist and protesting that he had been given no chance to defend himself. The New York Times said the university had shamed itself by shunning one of America’s most important playwrights and called for Wiesenfeld’s dismissal. The board indicated it would use the meeting of the smaller executive committee, to which Wiesenfeld does not belong, to try to make amends. Benno Schmidt, who chairs the committee, said the decision to set aside the award was “a mistake of principle”. In a statement, he said: “Freedom of thought and expression is the bedrock of any university worthy of the name. It is not right for the board to consider politics in connection with the award of honorary degrees except in extreme cases not presented by the facts here.” Kushner is an award-winning playwright who is considered one of the leading voices of his generation. His play about the Aids crisis, Angels in America, won Pulitzer and Tony awards, and his latest work, The Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide to Capitalism and Socialism with a Key to the Scriptures , has recently opened off Broadway. Wiesenfeld has a record of acting to forward what he considers the interests of the state of Israel. A former political fixer for the then governor of New York state, George Pataki, he was instrumental earlier this year in having a temporary lecturer fired from CUNY because of his views on Israel. The teacher was later reinstated. In the wake of his intervention against Kushner, he told the New York Times that he believed the Palestinians had “developed a culture which is unprecedented in human history”. He said: “People who worship death for their children are not human.” In response to the news that the university would grant Kushner an honorary degree after all, Wiesenfeld repeated his claim that the playwright had uttered a “blood libel against the Jewish people” by accusing Israel of having committed ethnic cleansing. Tony Kushner New York United States Israel Theatre International education news Ed Pilkington Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Sharp Train ep.1 Scottish Naloxone kit, assembly demo so easy its childs play!!2 Empty Train – Revolution (Live Acoustic) New Jersey Train Crash To Cause Delays In New York City HOBOKEN, N.J. — Workers repaired damage caused when a commuter train crashed, but the derailment of an empty Amtrak train in a tunnel was causing headaches for other commuters into New York City. Travelers were urged to allow extra … Metrolink Launches 16 New Train Services « CBS Los Angeles Metrolink has launched 16 new train services to help commuters save both travel time and gas money. Delays For Morning Commute Follow PATH Train Crash That Sends … As the PATH system resumed normal service, New York Waterway and NJ Transit buses were nonetheless adding additional service. NJ Transit was cross-honoring PATH tickets. New Mexico Daily Lobo :: Public transportation praised on Train Day Janet Schlotthauer, Amtrak district manager, said she recommends train travel because, unlike road trips, passengers can move around the caboose, and, unlike air travel, they aren’t exposed to strict security. … Schumer Proposes Train 'No Ride' List | FrumForum The New York Daily News reports: America needs a no-ride list barring suspected terrorists from Amtrak trains because of the potential threat of an Al. goldiluckss says: Dis train smells like a rotten fish kmft
Continue reading …Dallas Wiens tells of joy at being able to taste lasagne after pioneering work by US surgeons A man who lost almost all his face when he touched an electric cable while painting a church three years ago showed off the results of America’s first full face transplant. Dallas Wiens, 25, speaking with difficulty at a press conference in Boston, said his daughter had told him he looked “handsome”. The work is not yet completed and there will be further surgery. He told reporters that one of his biggest impressions after having the transplant was being able to smell and taste lasagne prepared by the hospital. Wiens from Fort Worth, Texas, was blinded in the accident and the damage was too severe for doctors to restore his sight. He has been given a new nose, lips, nerves, skin and muscle. The press conference at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts was his first public appearance since the 15-hour operation was carried out in March. “It feels natural,” he said of his face. “It feels as if it has become my own.” Associated Press reported that the Pentagon had paid for the operation in the hope that the findings can help treat soldiers badly wounded in battle. The five transplants have cost a total of $3.4m (£2.1m). The world’s first full face transplant was carried out last year in Spain . United States Disability Health Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Dallas Wiens tells of joy at being able to taste lasagne after pioneering work by US surgeons A man who lost almost all his face when he touched an electric cable while painting a church three years ago showed off the results of America’s first full face transplant. Dallas Wiens, 25, speaking with difficulty at a press conference in Boston, said his daughter had told him he looked “handsome”. The work is not yet completed and there will be further surgery. He told reporters that one of his biggest impressions after having the transplant was being able to smell and taste lasagne prepared by the hospital. Wiens from Fort Worth, Texas, was blinded in the accident and the damage was too severe for doctors to restore his sight. He has been given a new nose, lips, nerves, skin and muscle. The press conference at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts was his first public appearance since the 15-hour operation was carried out in March. “It feels natural,” he said of his face. “It feels as if it has become my own.” Associated Press reported that the Pentagon had paid for the operation in the hope that the findings can help treat soldiers badly wounded in battle. The five transplants have cost a total of $3.4m (£2.1m). The world’s first full face transplant was carried out last year in Spain . United States Disability Health Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Florida wants to ban sagging and Obama hates it too, but can anything stop blokes wearing their jeans below their pants we ask. Plus, some habitual ‘saggers’ tell us why they wear their trousers slow-slung Florida’s attempt to ban young men from “sagging” – wearing jeans so low they show their underpants – has plenty of precedents. In 2008, on the campaign trail, Barack Obama told MTV that “brothers should pull up their pants” . A year before, the mayor of Delcambre, Louisiana, threatened six months in jail and a $500 fine for any man allowing his jeans to slide down his buttocks . The sight of exposed boxer shorts has caused consternation this side of the pond too: last year, 18-year-old Ellis Drummond was threatened with an Asbo for wearing trousers so low that they were showing his underpants. In the end, the attempt had to be abandoned. The fact is that not only has the saggy jean proved impervious to attempts to drive it off the street, it has actually mutated to survive. While the look is most associated with hip-hop culture, where it originated in the early 90s, young indie kids not overly endowed in the arse department also tend to wear their jeans hanging low. The godfather of the skinny jean, Hedi Slimane, designed his denims for Dior Homme to sit well below the hip-bone, and plenty more brands have followed suit. A jean that’s tight in the leg and low-slung in the crotch is not easy to wear – climbing over anything is particularly challenging – but that hasn’t deterred the nation’s teenage boys, or the older hipsters, buying posher versions of the look. So why has the desire to expose one’s buttocks and boxers to the elements proved so enduring, and how come it unites fans of both These New Puritans and 50 Cent? The answer is, simply, rebellion. It’s well documented that the look comes from prisoners having their belts taken away in case they use them to hang themselves. Though showing your barely clad backside to an unsuspecting world carries only a dim echo of this lawless attitude, that echo is amplified when the authorities fall into the trap of trying to criminalise it. There’s also the fact that showing your arse is an insult that predates hip-hop by centuries – this is simply a muted version, hence its persistent popularity with teenage boys. Hip-hop has also permeated popular culture to such an extent that teenage boys aren’t bothered by accusations that a look which may seem threatening in South Central, LA, looks simply ridiculous in St Albans, Hertfordshire. The culture is global
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