Photo: Quest Point Solar Solutions I just got off a conference call with Secretary of Energy Steven Chu , in which he discussed the vision for clean energy President Obama put forth in last night’s State of the Union address. In that speech, Obama proclaimed that this was America’s renewable energy Sputnik moment (a line he took from Chu , actually) — the juncture… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Photo by don.wing45 via Flickr Creative Commons CNN recently reported that an average of 700 water mains break each day nationwide. While 700 might not seem like a lot when looking nationwide, the fact that that number occurs every day turns it into a big problem. In fact, the American Society of Civil Engineers gave the drinking water system in the US a grade of D- in its 2009 Report Card of America’s Infrastructure. It’s a sign that our country’s water infrastructure is outdated and crumbling, and is in major need of an overhaul if we’re … Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …I think the Giffords shooting and subsequent speech had a huge impact on the whole event tonight. President Obama’s SOTU speech was about as safe as it could be in a partisan sense. That’s the word that came to mind to me. He was big on examples of American ingenuity and made the case that we can overcome all the tough challenges we face. The Chamber had a weird vibe to it on TV with members of both parties sitting together like fifth graders with seating assignments as they made an effort not to over-clap the affair. The usual rousing ovations do inspire public speakers and performers as they progress and the audience in a way drained some of that energy. The President called for more bipartisanship again and praised our creative exceptionalism, defended his health care bill and made education, innovation and some infrastructure building the keynote topics, He also spent much of his time on right wing issues like the debt, fixing the tax code, tort reform and government spending. He said his Cat Food commission was a good thing but that he wasn’t going to use all their recommendations. I was happy that he didn’t give the impression that Social Security was going to be destroyed by the deficit and needed to be fixed now. I’m sure the Villagers won’t be happy with that. The speech seemed to be targeted at the mythical independent voters more than usual. It didn’t have the impact that a typical Obama speech has in my opinion, but CBS did a quick poll and 91% of Americans liked it.Oh, I was glad that he brought up the Dream Act again and said he was commited to immigration reform. FOX News had on Krathhammer, who said he thought it was a weaker Obama speech than usual and attacked many of the points he made, but Kristen Powers and Juan Williams liked it a lot because he laid out a vision for the country. Brit Hume was galled that Obama didn’t get into how we’re going to fix the deficit and was irked that entitlements were virtually left out. On the flip side Paul Ryan was just plain booooring and he looked kind of smarmy. His talking points focused on what you would expect, the deficit and government spending. He made no mention of his radical Roadmap plan to fix our economy, which would privatize Social Security and turn Medicare into a voucher program, which basically would destroy many people’s lives. That was odd, since it’s his true vision for America, but it wasn’t worthy to be brought to the American people on the biggest stage he ever had. On CNN David Gergen’s take on Ryan was that the speech was “lofty” . What the hell does that mean? ErickE brought back the painful memory of Bobby Jindal. Candy Crowley thought Ryan helped the Republican Party because he wasn’t Bush. If you have troubling sleeping, put the Ambien away and turn on Ryan’s speech. Hannity came on after the FOX All Star panel, which featured Frank Luntz and one of his dopey focus groups. It quickly turned into a shouting match with many of the participants calling the president a liar for much of the time. Michele Bachmann was reading her short soliloquy on a teleprompter — which she usually attacks Obama over — but made a very bad technical mistake. It looked like she was speaking into the Tea Party camera and not CNN’s, which gave it this freakishly creepy effect. Bad lighting and makeup didn’t help her appearance either. If you saw it on CNN you wondered who she was talking to. Are you talking to me? She used many debunked talking points — like those scary 16K IRS agents who are going to arrest you — and had a handy chart about unemployment. She actually told President Obama to repeal his own health care plan. Erick Erickson said that her performance actually backed up Paul Ryan’s speech. No, really. Ari Fleischer was there to back him up. Only in Red State world. They had got to try and mitigate the appearance of a split party and EE certainly had a plan in dealing with it. Remember, up is down and red is blue. Media Matters fact-checked her speech and found many distortions of the truth. Insisting that she was not upstaging the official GOP response to President Obama’s State of the Union, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) offered a combative and highly misleading speech of her own following the president’s address. In her “Tea Party Response,” Bachmann repeated a litany of false right-wing talking points about everything from the Recovery Act and job losses to the debt and “16,500 IRS agents.”.. .read on.
Continue reading …On the icy shores of Lake Michigan sits Manitowoc, Wisconsin…the picture of main street America and a region known for manufacturing and old fashioned work. (Jan. 25)
Continue reading …Apparently America’s latest drug craze is a chemical powder that is marketed as bath salt. AP reports the horrific story of one man who abused the substance and then attacked himself with a skinning knife. A quick Google search tells us this might not be the widespread phenomenon AP suggests, but we’ll keep our ears open. AP via Washington Post: Some say the effects of the powders are as powerful as abusing methamphetamine. Increasingly, law enforcement agents and poison control centers say the advertised bath salts with complex chemical names are an emerging menace in several U.S. states where authorities talk of banning their sale. From the Deep South to California, emergency calls are being reported over-exposure to the stimulants the powders often contain: mephedrone and methylenedioxypyrovalerone, also known as MDPV. Read more Related Entries January 24, 2011 Getting High on Bath Salts January 24, 2011 So Long, Jack LaLanne
Continue reading …Click here to view this media You could just about hear the heart attacks happening at Fox News — home of Republican nativists’ favorite rallying cry: ‘We have to secure the border before we can have immigration reform!’ — the other morning last week when documentary filmmaker Roy Germano — whose last movie, The Other Side of Immigration, is a must-see for anyone serious about the subject — came on to discuss a little clip he made recently. The clip, which he put up on YouTube , shows two American girls easily climbing over the border fence that Minutement, authorities and right-wing talk-show blowhards all seem to believe will keep out illegal immigrants. Obviously someone booked it at Fox because they thought it would demonstrate what a lousy job the Obama administration is doing on border security. But the clip itself actually made clear that the whole concept of using a fence to control immigration is a joke. As Germano put it: “I thought it revealed that the fence is quite absurd, it’s not doing the job it’s supposed to do, it’s a waste of money, and it also has a lot of unintended consequences.” And then he offered his thoughts on how to really make the borders secure — and as he explained, the only way we’re going to be able to do that is by having a rational system of immigration, instead of the outdated, xenophobic system we currently have in place. This, of course, is when the heart attacks started happening: GERMANO: If we are really serious about our border security, I think it’s in our interest to be monitoring and regulating the immigration flow that is inevitable. There is a multi-million-dollar — hundreds of million-dollar — industry out there of human smugglers that will try to smuggle people in. They will build tunnels under the fence, they will get people over the fence. So we should be investing in an immigration system that actually gives people the opportunity to enter the country legally. The typical Mexican has almost no way of entering the U.S. legally. So we should be expanding the number of visas we offer so that employers can hire the workers they need to meet the labor demand in our country. SCOTT: All right, y-you have just lit up our chat room, I’m sure, because there are lots of unemployed people in this country who would like to have jobs, and they say, ‘Why are we letting people in where there’s so much unemployment in America?’ GERMANO: But there are certain sectors of the economy where it’s the old, you know, ‘immigrants do jobs that Americans don’t want to do.’ I go to western New York state a lot and I visit family farms who have had ads in papers for 20 years and have never had a native-born speaker respond to that ad. And they depend on immigrant labor. But our H2A visa program, which is the farm worker visa program, only has less than 70,000 visas for 800,000 to 1.2 million jobs that need to be filled on our family farm. We’ve discussed this point quite a bit too. The only problem is that Americans are not only in denial about the numbers of unskilled-labor jobs their economy produces, but the willingness and ability of native-born Americans to actually fill them. Here’s the original YouTube clip from Germano:
Continue reading …Chris Matthews has a seemingly endless list of obsessions. Along with Dick Cheney, Sarah Palin and Michele Bachmann the MSNBC host is fascinated by trains, especially fast ones, and on Monday night's Hardball he called on Barack Obama, in his State of the Union Address, to push for high speed rail as a solution to America's economic woes. Matthews complained that in the area of “fast railroads” the French, Italians, Chinese, Japanese and Koreans are “so far ahead of us” and then implored: “Is this president really gonna shove that throttle forward tomorrow night and say 'Let's join the world in getting around?'” This isn't the first time Matthews has looked enviously at other countries and their faster trains as an inspiration for creating jobs in America, as back in 2009 he whined to Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter: “The Europeans seem to have fast trains that go 300 miles and hour and we're chugging along with Amtrak and Acela and we're still flying around short distances…Why can't this federal government use the power of the, the workforce we have out there, put 'em all to work and build a train system in this country of fast rail so we can – and this sounds so pathetic – catch up to Europe and Japan! Why don't we do that?! Catch up to the other major countries!” On Monday night, MSNBC political analyst stoked Matthews' most recent high speed rail rant by claiming GOP Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell's opposition to more stimulus spending was “at odds with 200 years of American history” and even Abraham Lincoln before concluding: “Right now it seems like the Republican Party doesn't really believe in investing in the future…it's really a problem for the future of the country.” The following is the relevant exchange was aired on the January 24 edition of Hardball: JONATHAN ALTER, MSNBC POLITICAL ANALYST: Mitch McConnell teed it up correctly. He said Democrats call it investment, Republican call it wasteful liberal spending. The problem with McConnell's position is that he's at odds with 200 years of American history. We're starting with Alexander Hamilton, through Henry Clay. Abraham Lincoln – his big thing was internal improvements. Building railroads, canals. That's infrastructure. Right now it seems like the Republican Party doesn't really believe in investing in the future in these capital programs and it's really a problem for the future of the country. CHRIS MATTHEWS: It's so awful. They are so awful. Look I'm gonna say this. They are so awful and the Democrats are just as bad. Because look if they hadn't built the railroads this country wouldn't be, there wouldn't have been a Manifest Destiny without the rails. If Ike hadn't built, with a Democratic Congress, a highway there wouldn't be a 95 going to Florida. They're wouldn't be a 70 and 80 crossing the country. You wouldn't be able to see the America and the U.S.A. – you wouldn't be able – in your Chevrolet. It wouldn't happen. We would be riding around in county roads trying to figure out how to get from here to there in some crappy little road somewhere. And today we have superhighways. Eisenhower did that. I just wonder why we don't have what the French have, fast railroads. We don't have anything like that, the Italians have them. Not knocking the Italians but they are so far ahead of us, I was just over there. The Chinese, the Japanese, the Koreans, all have fast rail, they all have infrastructure and we're diddling around here [John] Heilemann. Is this president really gonna shove that, that throttle, forward tomorrow night and say “Let's join the world in getting around?” Are we gonna catch up? —Geoffrey Dickens is the Senior News Analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here
Continue reading …I read an interview yesterday with one of the women who had an abortion at the horrible clinic that was shut down in Philadelphia. She said she’d tried to go to one of the well-known, respectable clinics — but she was scared off by the protesters. She went to the criminally-negligent clinic because someone told her there wouldn’t be any protesters. Women who are under the stress of an unwanted pregnancy have enough trouble just getting past the logistics (money, insurance, state waiting periods, etc.). To add the emotional coercion and financial demand of forcing them to undergo a sonogram — well, that’s just plain mean. As I keep reminding people, abortion is still legal in America, and a woman’s reason for choosing one is her own damned business. She shouldn’t have to jump through these hoops to exercise her right to the procedure: Gov. Rick Perry has fast-tracked legislation that requires physicians to show women a sonogram before they have an abortion. Perry this weekend added the issue to his list of emergency items, giving lawmakers the ability to consider such bills in the first 30 days of the session. “When you consider the magnitude of the decision to have an abortion, ensuring that the patient understands what’s truly at stake seems a small step to take,” Perry said in a statement.’ “When someone has all the information, the right choice – the choice of life – becomes clear. Now our legislature can take fast action on this important bill because we all know when it comes to saving lives, every second counts.” The list of emergency item this session has now grown to five. Other emergency items that Perry has set include establishing tougher eminent domain laws, abolishing sanctuary cities for undocumented immigrants, requiring voters to present a photo identification at the polls and calling for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would require the federal government to have a balanced budget. The state faces a budget shortfall of between $15 and $27 billion. Critics have questioned the governor’s selection of such emergency items at a time when public education, higher education and health care are facing deep cuts.
Continue reading …In at least a temporary victory for liberal groups, the president won’t endorse the catfood commission recommendation to raise the full retirement age for Social Security in tomorrow’s State of the Union address — but administration officials caution he won’t rule them out for good: President Obama has decided not to endorse his deficit commission’s recommendation to raise the retirement age, and otherwise reduce Social Security benefits, in Tuesday’s State of the Union address, cheering liberals and drawing a stark line between the White House and key Republicans in Congress. Over the weekend, the White House informed Democratic lawmakers and advocates for seniors that Obama will emphasize the need to reduce record deficits in the speech, but that he will not call for reducing spending on Social Security – the single largest federal program – as part of that effort. Liberals, who have been alarmed by Obama’s recent to shift to the center and his effort to court the nation’s business community, applauded the decision, arguing that Social Security cuts are neither necessary to reduce current deficits nor a wise move politically. Polls show that large majorities of Americans in both parties – even in households that identify themselves as part of the tea party movement – oppose cuts to Social Security. “Most of us would like to see the Democrats remain the strong defenders of Social Security, which they have to be if they want to win the next election,” said Roger Hickey, co-director of the liberal Campaign for America’s Future. Administration officials said Obama is unlikely to specifically endorse any of the deficit commission’s recommendations in the speech, but cautioned that he is unlikely to rule them off the table, either. On Social Security, for example, he is likely to urge lawmakers to work together to make the program solvent, without going into details, according to congressional sources.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Movement conservatives seem to believe that they’ve won the narrative after the tragic shootings in Tucson — namely, that Jared Lee Loughner was just a nutcase and there was nothing political about his attack on a Democratic congresswoman. Indeed, they seem to believe that it’s now conventional wisdom that whenever an angry right-wing nut violently attacks an oft-demonized liberal target, it has nothing, nothing whatsoever to do with the demonizing rhetoric that preceded it. Just another “isolated incident.” Even if we ARE up to 20 and counting. The problem with this “wisdom”? Reality has a nasty way of intruding, as David at VC noted yesterday , from a New York Times report about how Beck’s obsession with Frances Fox Piven has now produced death threats against her : Never mind that Ms. Piven’s radical plan to help poor people was published 45 years ago, when Mr. Beck was a toddler. Anonymous visitors to his Web site have called for her death, and some, she said, have contacted her directly via e-mail. In response, a liberal nonprofit group, the Center for Constitutional Rights, wrote to the chairman of Fox News, Roger Ailes, on Thursday to ask him to put a stop to Mr. Beck’s “false accusations” about Ms. Piven. “Mr. Beck is putting Professor Piven in actual physical danger of a violent response,” the group wrote. Fox News disagrees. Joel Cheatwood, a senior vice president, said Friday that Mr. Beck would not be ordered to stop talking about Ms. Piven on television. He said Mr. Beck had quoted her accurately and had never threatened her. “ ‘The Glenn Beck Program,’ probably above and beyond any on television, has denounced violence repeatedly,” Mr. Cheatwood said. Not as often, however, as it has denounced Frances Fox Piven. We’ve given some ripe examples in the video above, but really, it pales in comparison to a more complete list, such as this account from Media Matters . We’ve already seen what happens when Fox hosts hold individual people up for extreme demonization. When Bill O’Reilly called Dr. George Tiller a “Baby Killer” some 28 times, it was no surprise when a kook already worked up by an environment of hateful rhetoric walked into a church and shot Tiller in the head. And when O’Reilly more recently attacked Rep. Jim McDermott, a right-wing nutcase from California called McDermott up and issued a long string of obscene death threats. Glenn Beck is a particular case. When a Beck fan named Charles Wilson was inspired to call and threaten Sen. Patty Murray, we heard nothing from Fox News. Likewise, when it became clear that would-be Tides Foundation terrorist Byron Williams was directly inspired by Beck as well, not a word was heard. Now, having been directly confronted over the threats to Piven, this supposed news network is actually trying to stonewall its way past reality. So far, we’ve been lucky that no one outside of two injured Oakland police officers has been physically injured by the nutcases Beck inspires. But death threats are a real injury too. Which raises the question: Is Fox waiting until someone actually physically attacks Frances Fox Piven before convincing Beck to reel it in? Indeed, judging from the vociferous insistence that its ugly rhetoric and that of other right-wingers had nothing, nothing to do with the Giffords shooting, I think it’s safe to predict that if someone in fact does harm Ms. Piven, they’ll adamantly deny they had anything to do with it. They won’t be able to run and hide as they have from the Williams case. Especially considering the reality of the extraordinary level of threats being leveled in Pivens’ direction — including at Beck’s own website. As we reported last week, these threats remained up at Beck’s site for the better part of two weeks: enlarge enlarge enlarge Some have since been removed. Some remain, as do some others with threatening overtones. Frances Fox Piven herself was on with Amy Goodman the other night , and had to express her own bewilderment at the bizarre way that Beck is depicting and smearing her, as well as her work: As I explained at The Investigative Fund, this kind of extreme demonization is profoundly irresponsible — especially when it reaches the level where actual death threats are being drummed up and the news organization associated with them is refusing to accept any accountability for it: The critical components that distinguish irresponsible speech from responsible speech are interworking and interdependent, but they involve standards that are universally recognized by journalists as fundamental to their profession: truthfulness, accuracy, and fairness. Thus irresponsible speech usually has five features: * It is factually false, or so grossly distorted and misleading as to constitute functional falsity. * It holds certain targeted individuals or groups of people up for vilification and demonization. * It smears them with false or misleading information that depicts them in a degraded light. * It depicts them as either emblematic, or the actual source, of a significant problem or a major threat. * It leads its audience to conclude that the solution to the problem manifested by these people is their elimination. In the Goldmark case, the Duck Club members not only demonized the Goldmarks, but they told Rice things that were simply not true — though the tellers wished ardently that they were true, they were purely concoctions of their fevered imaginations. This is the case with so much far-right wingnuttery — the “Birther” conspiracy theories, the FEMA-camp claims, the “constitutionalist” theories about taxation and the Federal Reserve, the belief that President Obama is out to take away their guns, to list just a few examples — and yet people believe them anyway. Mainly because major-media figures and leading right-wing politicians have assured them that they are true. This rhetoric acts as a kind of wedge between the people who absorb it and the real world. A cognitive dissonance arises from believing things that are provably untrue, and people who fanatically cling to beliefs that do not comport with reality find themselves increasingly willing to buy into other similarly unhinged beliefs. For those who are already unhinged, the effects are particularly toxic. All of these paranoid theories, you’ll observe, serve the explicit purpose of creating scapegoats. A number of them have taken hold in the mainstream public discourse because they have been presented seriously for discussion by various right-wing talking heads, most notably Glenn Beck and Lou Dobbs, with full-throated support from Rush Limbaugh, Bill O’Reilly, Michael Savage, Sean Hannity, Michelle Malkin, and Sarah Palin. You have to wonder how long the rest of the journalism profession is going to let them get away with it. Enough is enough.
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