Click here to view this media I know there are differing opinions on Julian Assange and WikiLeaks around the blogosphere, but what’s shocking to me is how the media has taken on such a hostile attitude against a man that they should be rallying around and who essentially is the new-age Daniel Ellsberg. There are differences, of course, but the fact that Assange has been targeted by Big Business is shocking. What’s at stake? The freedom of the press, that’s what . Here’s a great piece by Michael Lacy of The Village Voice echoing the same sentiments: WikiLeaks Betrayed by Amazon, Visa, Mastercard — and, Worst of All, the Media (h/t LA Weekly ) The outrageous behavior of Amazon, Visa, Mastercard, and PayPal directed at WikiLeaks represents a much greater threat to America than any of the alleged security breaches from Julian Assange…..Amazon, Visa, Mastercard, and PayPal set themselves up as judges, juries and executioners. And perhaps more troubling is that while the mainstream media happily regurgitated, repurposed and — in the case of The New York Times — reported the context of the released diplomatic cables, they have been noticeably silent as web conglomerates reshaped the First Amendment. Or, as in the case of The Washington Post and The Washington Times , they’ve joined the ninnies calling for Assange’s head. The chief enabler is Barack Obama’s Attorney General, Eric H. Holder who announced that the Justice Department and the Pentagon were in the midst of “an ongoing criminal investigation.” The key word is “investigation.” The Attorney General has yet to charge anyone, let alone bring the case. This is the same Attorney General who has investigated Arizona’s Sheriff Joe Arpaio — the sadistic and brutal jailer who flouts the Constitution in pursuit of Mexicans. The FBI and the Justice Department have had Arpaio under investigation, on a variety of fronts, since 2008. The Sheriff’s jails have been declared “unconstitutional” by the same Justice Department since 1996. Have banks or credit card companies seized Sheriff Arpaio’s home because he is under investigation? Did any internet company deny Sheriffi Arpaio access to his extensive, online marketing empire? No, that has not happened. But, with the patriots in Congress howling, Amazon and the others moved to isolate and strangle WikiLeaks. And the press does not speak out when the single largest document dump in the history of the media results in financial institutions determining when the flow of information will stop? PayPal’s president, Osama Bedler, explained his action by pointing out that the State Department claimed WikiLeaks’ dissemination of cables was illegal in a November 27 letter to Assange. And so they did. And so what? The State Department is not a judicial body. It is part of the Executive branch — and furthermore, they were the target of the revelations. {} “Your rights on the internet are only as strong as the will of companies to let you have it,” observed Hofmann. In such an anarchic environment, is it any wonder that anarchists have responded with the only weapons left? Congressional hearings are now scheduled for this Thursday, December 16. The House Judiciary Committee will not, I predict, worry much about the First Amendment. No good will come to free speech in such a political forum. I expected the State Department to speak out against WikiLeaks, but why have the media been so hostile to WikiLeaks and so passive about the people trying to silence his operation without a shred of evidence of him being guilty of a crime? I wonder if they are afraid that either they or their friends might show up in some of these leaked cables in an unfavorable light. Yesterday on MSNBC, Andrea Mitchell was discussing Assange’s bail in the UK and seemed afraid that he might have access to the dreaded “Internet” and destroy the world. Digby: Stephanie Gosk: the Swedish authorities had two hours to challenge this decision and that’s exactly what they’ve done and it has to be heard by Britain’s high court within the next 48 hours and that means that Julian assange will be in jail during that time. If they lose that case, and Julian Assange is granted bail as the magistrate has granted him today, he will be allowed to go but he has to stay at a registered address and one of his supporters, luckily enough, has a 600 acre mansion in southern England and he’s going to be allowed to stay there. He’s not going to be free to run around, he’s going to have electronic surveillance, he has a curfew and he’s already turned in his passport. But it has been a victory today, a small one, he trying to fight that extradition back to Sweden. Andrea Mitchell: He can be on a 600 acre estate with all sorts of electronic monitoring … but can he go on the internet?! … and sexually assault some female avatars and then destroy us all with his x-ray vision and cyber-army?? Run for your lives! The WikiLeaks saga has exposed the vapid stupidity of the celebrity press corps like nothing since the Great Clinton Panty Raid. One thing is very, very clear — they aren’t journalists and don’t even consider themselves journalists. They are celebrity public relations professionals who just aren’t as bright as the real public relations professionals Remember a reporter named Judy Miller? The media came out to support her when she wouldn’t give up her source of the Valerie Plame leak. Her stories were a huge factor in selling the Iraq war to the American public and her motives were questioned in 2003 by Slate: But none of Miller’s wild WMD stories has panned out. From these embarrassing results, we can deduce that either 1) Miller’s sources were right about WMD, and it’s just a matter of time before the United States finds evidence to back them up; 2) Miller’s sources were wrong about WMD, and the United States will never find the evidence; 3) Miller’s sources played her to help stoke a bogus war; or 4) Miller deliberately weighted the evidence she collected to benefit the hawks. It could be that the United States inadvertently overestimated Iraq’s WMD program. For example, the United States might have intercepted communications to Saddam in which his henchmen exaggerated the scale of Iraq’s WMD progress to make him happy. “The country needs to know if the spy organizations were right or wrong,” concludes the Times editorial, a fair and equitable stand. But by the same logic, the country needs to know if Miller and the Times too gullibly advanced the WMD findings of their sources—and if so, why. Later we found out that she was being the useful idiot of the Bush administration in helping lead this country into war with Iraq by printing Bush talking points into her many “news” reports that stoked the flames of fear and disseminated lies — lies the administration wanted the public to believe. And Miller did it so she could have unfettered access, which is power in the news business. As Joseph Palermo writes: In their infamous September 8, 2002, above the fold, front-page story in the New York Times , “U.S. Says Hussein Intensifies Quest for A-Bomb Parts” — the same story that Condoleezza Rice, Donald Rumsfeld, Colin Powell, and Dick Cheney cited in their appearances that Sunday morning on the political talk shows, the reporters Judith Miller and Michael Gordon offered the following tidbits: “Senior administration officials insist that the dimensions, specifications, and numbers of the tubes Iraq sought to buy show that they were intended for the nuclear program.” “Although administration officials say they have no proof that Baghdad possesses the smallpox virus, intelligence sources say they cannot rule that out.” “Still, Mr. Hussein’s dogged insistence on pursuing his nuclear ambitions, along with what defectors described in interviews as Iraq’s push to improve and expand Baghdad’s chemical and biological arsenals, have brought Iraq and the United States to the brink of war.” And who could ever forget the coup de grace? “The first sign of a ‘smoking gun,’ they argue, may be a mushroom cloud.” — Judith Miller should be held accountable for serving as the chief stenographer for George W. Bush’s lies that have produced the horror in Iraq…. At a critical time, Miller was in a unique position of influence in America because of her high perch at the nation’s “paper of record,” her perfectly timed repetition of official lies, and because it was her articles to which Bush, Cheney, and Rice pointed to give their own lies the credibility they needed to reverberate convincingly throughout our political discourse. James Moore also writes a great account of her fraudulent reporting. That Awful Power: How Judy Miller Screwed Us All Do you think she’s the only one who has ever traded in government “management” in exchange for access, which brought journalistic success and power? Are Julian Assange’s leaked cables causing a few journalists to feel queasy at what we might find? Are other reporters toeing the line to defend their brethren? I may be wrong, but it does seem plausible. Let’s face it, the way the media — especially the elite Village pundit corps, who have been busy calling for Assange’s assassination — have reacted over WikiLeaks is the most implausible thing of all.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The hackery over at Fox just never stops. With the economy in the tank and millions of people out of work and fed up with what’s going on in America — the rich getting richer and income disparity we haven’t seen since the Gilded Age — someone gets fed up enough to start lighting rich people’s homes on fire, and of course it’s all the Democrats’ fault. Their sin, in Megyn Kelly’s eyes, is having a “class warfare narrative”. Obviously no one in the Democratic Party is advocating for people to go out there and burn down rich people’s houses. Kelly is ridiculous as she attempts to paint any Democrats who have been honest about the fact that there is class warfare going on, and the fact that the upper class is winning it, as the cause for civil unrest. Pointing out what’s painfully obvious already to the people suffering is not what causes someone to lash out like this. The suffering is. That, or just straight-out mental illness or both, which we won’t know until they catch the suspect[s]. In the meantime, of course, “Fair and Balanced” Fox anchors are free to speculate as wildly as they like. Kelly rounds out her coverage with telling her viewers to go check out Bernard Goldberg’s op-ed, which I already posted about here: Bernard Goldberg Attacks Senator Sanders and Calls for ‘Big Bronze and Granite Monument’ to Honor the Rich Yeah, that’s the ticket, Megyn. I’m sure reading that op-ed will just turn around every American who didn’t realize that their biggest economic problem is that they weren’t building enough monuments to rich people. h/t Media Matters and here’s more on the arson from The Boston Globe. Arson suspected in 2 Cape Cod incidents : State fire officials are investigating a connection between two separate incidents of arson in two Cape Cod towns, authorities said yesterday. In both instances, someone apparently left messages at the scene condemning wealthy people, officials said. State Fire Marshal Stephen D. Coan said evidence found at both locations has led investigators to believe they might be connected. “There is some commonality to both incidents,’’ Coan said. “There was offensive graffiti that was written and very visibly displayed at both sites.’’ On Nov. 24 at around 3:30 a.m., fire crews responded to Boulder Brook Road in Sandwich, where a heavy fire ripped through an unoccupied home and garage that was still under construction. Coan said State Police assigned to his office and personnel from the Sandwich police and fire departments concluded the blaze was intentionally set, based on physical evidence found. More than a week later in Barnstable, someone attempted to burn down a residence on Trotters Lane in the Marstons Mills section, Coan said. Barnstable police Detective John York said authorities discovered incendiary devices at the home, and someone had spray-painted expletives on the fence. A similar message was found at the house in Sandwich. York said the incendiary devices, which officials would not describe in detail, appear to have burned out before setting the Barnstable home on fire Dec. 2. “Fortunately, no one was injured in either incident,’’ Coan said. He declined to say how investigators determined the incidents to be arson, citing the ongoing investigation. Coan urged anyone with information about either incident to call the state’s 24-hour arson hotline at 800-682-9229.
Continue reading …Speaking at mass rally in Gaza to celebrate Hamas’ 23rd anniversary, Haniyeh says group won’t recognize Israel but will accept state within ’67 borders. US envoy meets Abbas, says America committed to creation of Palestinian state
Continue reading …Click here to view this media John King talked to Virginia’s wingnut birther Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli about today’s ruling by Judge Henry Hudson that the individual mandate in the health care law is unconstitutional. Cuccinelli dismissed concerns that this might create uncertainty for employers in Virginia and said he hoped that would make it harder for the Supreme Court to turn down hearing the case. Cuccinelli also defended immediately raising campaign funds from the ruling , painting himself as the victim who’s going to have powerful interests coming after him, rather than the fact that he’s been using the issue for political gain from day one. Par for the course, ignored in this conversation… Judge Hudson’s conflict of interests . Also ignored, whether or not conservatives getting their wish if the Supreme Court does take the case and rules against it, that potentially opening the door back up to a public option . CNN Transcript : KING: Dan Lothian at the White House — Dan pointing out a legal ruling that reignites the political debate. Now let’s get the perspective of the man who challenged the law and won, at least this first round. Republican Attorney General Kenneth Cuccinelli of Virginia joins us from Richmond tonight. Sir, I’m holding the decision here from Judge Hudson. You win the case on this round. You just heard Dan Lothian note there are two other cases upholding the law. One of them in Virginia — CUCCINELLI: Right. KING: What do you think makes this decision better than the other two? CUCCINELLI: Well, whenever you have a state as a party with the federal government, you’re in sort of a different category. And the next one of these is coming up Thursday in Florida when they have their merits hearing down in Florida. Probably get a ruling in January or February time frame in that case. There are 25 total cases running across the country. Certainly you’re going to see a series of rulings, but even in the two we’ve seen so far that went the federal government’s way on the individual mandate; the federal government was ruled against in both cases on their tax argument. And there are two arguments in this case. The individual mandate, whether or not it’s constitutional, and whether or not the penalty, if you disobey the government instruction that you must buy their government-approved insurance is a tax. And the federal government lost again on the tax argument in addition to the individual mandate today. This is obviously a very important ruling. But as you’ve pointed out here on this show, this one is probably going to the Supreme Court. We hope it gets there soon because it certainly introduces an amazing amount of uncertainty for our whole economy. KING: Let’s get to that point because I know your position. Your position is this law is unconstitutional. The administration clearly disagrees. CUCCINELLI: Right. KING: If you’re an American citizen watching, whether you live in Virginia or elsewhere of you’re an American employer watching, you’re in a bit of a limbo. The law is still in place obviously, but you’re thinking, should I change my conduct? Should I affect my hiring? What I get a new health care policy for my employees or what should I do if I’m an individual and I don’t buy insurance? So do you believe there’s the political will to at least ask the Supreme Court for an expedited review of this case or will this goes on in the courts for another two or three years before it gets all the way to the top? CUCCINELLI: I actually think it’s harder not to make the request than to make the request because there’s so much uncertainly out there. And we all know there’s a lot of business money parked on the sidelines, waiting to see what the rules of the road are going to be, not just in health care, but you introduces the tax compromise that’s being discussed in Washington. All these things have an impact on whether or not businesses are willing to start investing that cash that they’re holding and to help start creating jobs. And I think that this administration could benefit by moving this case faster and reducing the uncertainty in the economy more quickly. And whatever the outcome, whether Virginia wins or whether the federal government wins, knowing the outcome is a benefit by itself to all Americans. Obviously I hope that we protect the Constitution and Virginia prevails, but I don’t get to decide that. The Supreme Court is ultimately going to have to do that. KING: Mr. Attorney general, I know your position, the conservative, the federal government has no right to do this. That’s your position. Answer, though, if you go on Twitter, on Facebook, e- mails to us today, answer the critic of your position who says well then what happens? If you don’t have this mandate in play, what happens if some 30, 35-year-old person decides you know what, I’m young. I’m fine. I’m safe. They don’t buy insurance. They don’t get it from their employer and then they have a horrific accident, say a car accident. And they end up in the emergency room. Who pays then? CUCCINELLI: Yes, John, that’s a great question. And of course I’m an attorney general and my obligation first is to defend the Constitution. But the reality is, as you said, there are plenty of people who see benefits in this bill and in a 2,700 page bill surely there’s something in it for everybody. I hope, “A” that we win the case and “B” that the parties can get back to the table and start to work on the things that there’s broad agreement on. There wasn’t broad agreement. There were enough votes to get this through, but I wouldn’t call it broad agreement here. We need to start getting consumers in control of health care to drive costs down. More government hasn’t worked for 45 years. So we need to go in a different direction so we can offer people other alternatives. I did that as a state senator to increase the availability of health insurance, put in bills to help myself do that before I was an attorney general. There are ways we can do this to help take care of the folks who need greater access to health insurance, but violating the Constitution and eliminating some people’s freedom is not the way to do that. KING: This is a legal fight, but as you know, it’s also a high stakes political battle. And within minutes of winning this decision, you could go on the Internet and see an ad that’s congratulating you, celebrating your victory in this case in Virginia and saying donate money. Donate (ph) — make political contributions to Ken Cuccinelli, the attorney general of Virginia. Is that appropriate, sir, for you to raise money off of this especially within hours of the ruling? CUCCINELLI: Yes, there’s no question that the debate and the contest over this occurs not just in the media. It occurs in the political environment, by which I mean on Capitol Hill here in Richmond, but also in the political environment like campaigns. And the fact is I need to survive politically. I’m an elected official in Virginia. The people of Virginia, 58 percent of them voted for me in the last election. And an awful lot of very upset folks, a lot of them very powerful with plenty of money here are going to be coming after me. They’ve already said as much, in the next election. And we have to prepare for that as well while we continue to defend the Constitution regardless of what the consequences are. KING: Mr. Cuccinelli, appreciate your time tonight. We’ll keep in touch as the case makes it way through the court — CUCCINELLI: Thanks for having me.
Continue reading …enlarge Happy Tuesday! There’s lots of semi-interesting economic news to get to, so let’s git! The big news from yesterday is that a conservative judge overturned a key portion of Obamacare , namely the federal mandate that everyone in the country buy health insurance. Speaking personally, this doesn’t really bother me all that much. That’s because one of three things will happen: a.) Jon Walker will be right and people with preexisting conditions will still be able to get health insurance without the whole system collapsing. b.) The whole private insurance system will collapse due to adverse selection, thus leaving us no alternative but to go to single payer. c.) The GOP will try to repeal all of Obamacare, including the parts that bar insurance companies from discriminating against people with preexisting conditions. This will result in countless ads full of diabetic children staring into the camera and saying something along the lines of, “Please, Senator Crapbag, don’t take my health care away!” Oh and you’d also be telling seniors that they’ll have to pay more for prescription drugs. Those two things are typically not what you want to see when you’re up for reelection. So the death of the individual mandate is no sweat off my back, especially since I think the whole provision is just a glorified version of tax farming . The Republican judicial activists kill it and thus speed the demise of the private insurance market, more power to ‘em. I’m glad the mainstream press is making a stink about the very smelly way Peter Orszag has skipped dutifully from the White House to Wall Street. Joe Klein does a good job of explaining Why This is Important to the Democratic Party and American politics in general: [T]his move only reinforces my growing sense that the Democratic party has to pry control of its economic policy away from the Wall Street caucus–the Rubin, Summers, Geithner, Rattner and now Orszag etc. gang. I am sure they have had real value as policy-makers, but they’ve had real blind spots as well. Their blind spots have to do with the workers who once constituted the Democratic party’s base, but who now, with their manufacturing jobs gone, have lost their faith in government and find it easier to vote their anger–against one party, then the next–than to vote for anything or anyone. The Wall Streeters know the bond market intimately; they don’t spend much time thinking about how to improve life for the vast swath of Americans who have suffered the mergers-and-acquisitions, the leveraged-buy-outs, the private equity hoggery, the CDO and CDS’s and all the other financial gimmicks of the last 40 years. I guess the difference I have with Klein is that I don’t think American workers’ interests are “blind spots” to the Wall Street Dems. Rather, I think those interests are a direct impediment to the Wall Street Dems’ agenda of using open trade and open borders to undermine labor and environmental laws. These guys know precisely what they’re doing and they have ever since they co-opted the Democratic Party in the 1990s and got NAFTA passed, along with odious deregulatory legislation such as the Commodity Futures Modernization Act. The result has been a rapidly shrinking middle class, stagnant real wages and the worst global financial crisis in decades. Everyone deserves a “heckuva job” and a pat on the back. As I’ve said before, the most depressing part about our government’s fealty to Wall Street interests is that there’s broad bipartisan consensus across the general populace that Wall Street sucks. Check out this Bloomberg poll : More than 70 percent of Americans say big bonuses should be banned this year at Wall Street firms that took taxpayer bailouts, a Bloomberg National Poll shows. An additional one in six favors slapping a 50 percent tax on bonuses exceeding $400,000. Just 7 percent of U.S. adults say bonuses are an appropriate incentive reflecting Wall Street’s return to financial health. A large majority also want to tax Wall Street profits to reduce the federal budget deficit. A levy on financial services firms is the top choice among more than a dozen deficit-cutting options presented to respondents. With U.S. unemployment at 9.8 percent, resentment of bonuses and banking profits unites Americans across political, gender, age and income groups. Among Republicans, who generally are skeptical of business regulation, 76 percent support a government ban on big bonuses to bailout recipients, that’s higher than backing among Democrats or independents. I know a few Tea Partiers who truly despise Wall Street because they see how the biggest banks have used the government to secure spots for themselves as permanent economic winners. And really, hating Wall Street shouldn’t be a Red or a Blue issue because hating Wall Street is the most obvious and commonsense feeling that a normal human being can harbor, right up there with love of puppies and children. Yet perversely, our political leadership in both parties goes out of its way to show Wall Street who can do a better job of delivering the goods. It’s pretty sad. Hey, look! Fewer mortgages were underwater last month! But, uh, that’s not a good thing : The number of U.S. homes worth less than the debt owed on them dropped in the third quarter, largely because of mounting foreclosures rather than a rise in property values, according to CoreLogic Inc. About 10.8 million homes, or 22.5 percent of those with mortgages, were “underwater” as of Sept. 30, the Santa Ana, California-based real estate information company said in a report today. That was down from 11 million, or 23 percent, at the end of June, the third straight quarterly decline. Falling property values and unemployment near 10 percent have spurred a surge in foreclosures. The number of homes offered in foreclosure auctions averaged 110,000 a month in the third quarter compared with about 98,000 in the same period a year earlier, said Mark Fleming, CoreLogic’s chief economist. At least Paris Hilton gets to keep her tax cut. And sorry to end on a downer, but sometimes there’s just nothing happy to report. It looks like the big banks are headed toward another quarter of through-the-roof profits : The five largest U.S. firms by investment-banking and trading revenue — Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc. and Morgan Stanley — will likely have a better fourth quarter than the previous two periods, driven by equity underwriting and higher volume in stock and bond trading, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Even if this quarter only matches the third, the banks’ revenue will top that of any year except 2009. The surge has come after the five banks took a combined $135 billion from the Treasury Department’s Troubled Asset Relief Program and borrowed billions more from the Federal Reserve’s emergency-lending facilities in late 2008 and early 2009 following the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Since then, the firms have benefited from low interest rates and the Fed’s purchases of fixed-income securities. “This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for most of these banks, and I think they’ve recognized it as that,” said Charles Geisst, a finance professor at Manhattan College in Riverdale, New York, who has written about Wall Street’s history. “The profits they’re making now will allow them to replenish their capital and take care of the other things they need to do.” “Other things they need to do” is industry jargon for “having lots of coke-and-hooker parties this Christmas.” OK, try to have a happy day! Here’s some cheery footage of a young Itzhak Perlman playing the third movement of Mendelssohn’s violin concerto! It’s one of the happiest things you’ll ever hear, like leprechauns dancing a jig on your crotch (if you’re into that sort of thing!):
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Did you see all the golf references in the 60 Minutes segment on Rep. John Boehner? You can thank your donations to Blue America and Americans for AmericaPac, because CBS contacted us for permission to use our “golf ads” in their program. Lesley Stahl brought up his golf game a couple of times as she gave CBS a puff piece on Boehner just in time for Christmas. I didn’t really expect too much from her, but it would have been nice to mention a little of his sordid history of handing out checks from Big Tobacco if she was going to do a personal profile. In this 1996 documentary by PBS called “The People and the Power Game ,” John Boehner is caught red-handed in an amazing act of corruption, and his biggest critics are fellow Republicans. Boehner: Mine asked me to give out a half dozen checks quickly before we got to the end of the month and I complied. I did it on the House floor which I regret and I should not have done, it’s not a violation of the House rules, but it’s a practice that’s gone on here for a long time. Were the checks from tobacco companies? Boehner: Ahh, I think if my memory serves me correctly, I think it was a tobacco company, yes. Q)….but in this case tobacco’s well timed contributions helped save its subsidy. The people that were passing out the checks won. He did say that he’s never been to a tanning salon before so I guess it’s all that golf he plays in the bright sunlight that gives him that orange hue. Lesley also got hung up on the fact that President Obama repeatedly said that the Republicans were holding America hostage. Stahl: He basically called you a hostage-taker. Boehner: Excuse me, Mr. President. I thought the election was over. You know, you get a lot of that heated rhetoric during an election. But now it’s time to govern. {} Stahl: There have been moments of disrespect shown to President Obama. Boehner: Well, there was some disrespect, I would suggest, that was shown to me yesterday by the president. Boehner repeatedly attacked the Democratic Party and the President too many times for me to recount but here’s a few: Hmmm. So let’s see now. This would be the same John Boehner who threw an hour-long hissy fit on the House floor, called President Obama a “leftist” (when you stop laughing so hard, remember that David Gregory didn’t bother to challenge him on that either), promised to do everything within his power to make it difficult to pass health care reform , advocated layoffs of police and firefighters rather than compromise on the stimulus bill, and called President Obama a socialist before lying about calling him a socialist . He’s so sensitive, or is he? One of the most alarming things in this interview was the fact that he starts crying like a baby at the drop of a hat. There’s “sensitive” and then there’s pathological . It was truly bizarre. People think that’s it’s hard for an actor to cry during a scene, but watching Boehner weep more often than Glenn Beck illustrates that it’s not very hard at all. And on election night, in his victory speech, the public saw something they probably never expected from Boehner: it was called “the sob heard round the world.” Can you imagine if Democratic politicians acted this way? FOX News would be running stories 24/7 about how al-Qaeda and all the lone wolf cells would be emboldened to terrorism because of their weakness. It would be non-stop. How serious is a man like John Boehner after all? Here’s his take on global warming with the very serious George Stephanopoulos. Boehner cites cows’ flatulence to defend his sacred carbon emissions”> Rep. John Boehner cites cows’ flatulence to defend his sacred carbon emissions STEPHANOPOULOS: So what is the responsible way? That’s my question. What is the Republican plan to deal with carbon emissions, which every major scientific organization has said is contributing to climate change? BOEHNER: George, the idea that carbon dioxide is a carcinogen that is harmful to our environment is almost comical. Every time we exhale, we exhale carbon dioxide. Every cow in the world, you know, when they do what they do, you’ve got more carbon dioxide. And so I think it’s clear… Stahl missed that one too. His Tea Party allies will not be pleased as soon as he has to vote to raise the debt ceiling, but just think about it. He’s like the choice after VP Biden to take over the White House in case of an unforeseen emergency.
Continue reading …Photo: Kim Ream Tom Weis is not the kind of guy to back down a challenge. In fact, just last week he finished the type of feat few would ever attempt — riding a recumbent tricycle , called the ‘Rocket Trike’, some 2,500 miles across the United States, from Boulder, Colorado to Washington D.C., without consuming a drop of fossil fuels . For Weis, the biggest challenge facing America is to get everyone on board with a 100 percent
Continue reading …Click here to view this media [h/t PoliticsUSA ] Howard Dean appeared on Face the Nation today to discuss anger on the left, the tax deal, and why primarying Obama is a bad deal. Yes, there is anger, but it’s still a bad deal for a number of reasons. History proves it and the polls don’t support it . From the transcript (PDF) : HOWARD DEAN (Former Presidential Candidate): I don’t think he’s going to face an opponent in the democratic primary. I think that would be bad thing for the country and I think it would be a bad thing for the Democratic Party. The history of people running against Presidents in their own party as the challenger, you loses and then the President is weakened and loses. Now the President has done some things that I think are terrific. This is not one of them. But I– I think he will not get an opponent. This is not to say that Dean endorses the tax cut idea. He doesn’t. BOB SCHIEFFER: What do you think is going to happen here, governor? Do you think in the end the House Democrats like Congressman Nadler will come around, just looking– HOWARD DEAN: Well here’s the– here’s the big problem with this, Bob. This is terrible for the country long term and it’s not just the things that Jerry was talking about. First of all we’re going to find out if the Republicans are serious about the deficits. This tax cut’s not paid for. And the biggest part of the deficit in– as– if you project out until 2018 is the Bush tax cuts. That is what causes sixty percent of the deficit. Second of all the two percent payroll tax sounds great but in fact they take it out of the Social Security Trust Fund. Now here we are complaining about the Social Security Trust Fund going broke and we take a hundred and twenty million dollars of rev- – a billion dollars of revenue out and use it for a– a payroll tax mitigation. This is a short-term Washington fix. It does nothing about the biggest long term threat to America which is the deficit. I don’t hear Republicans or Democrats talking about the deficit. There is no pain in this agreement. This is the easy way out for everybody. Much as everybody is complaining and hooting and hollering, this is an inside the beltway fuss and somebody needs to do something about the long term problems in this country, it’s not in this bill. Later in the transcript Dean discusses the political cost to the President as a result of his deal with the devil Republicans: The truth is I don’t think this is all that bad for the President politically because he– he is going to be seen as acting presidential and bringing both sides together and all that stuff. The thing that bothers me about it is we have yet to deal with the biggest problem that is facing this country, which is the size of the deficit and nobody is doing anything about it. Dean almost got to why this deal really does put Obama at a political advantage in 2012 when he addresses the deficit issues. There have been rising signals from the White House that this bandage (or punt, or Hail Mary pass or whatever you want to call it) on the tax cuts doesn’t come without another price: A call for both sides to sit down and overhaul the tax code. Republicans have responded by promising cuts of an immediate $25 million by slashing Congressional staff budgets. Ooooh, a whole $25 million? Sheesh, $25 million doesn’t even cover John Boehner’s green fees, much less make a dent in the budget. If you want symbolism, that $25 million is it, right there. The new Republicans in the House and Senate are hiring lobbyists as their chiefs of staff, so count on a fight over pork — with the GOP taking the lead. Suddenly the party running on fiscal responsibility in 2010 will be held to that promise in 2011, and they’ll surely break that promise right away, leading to disappointment and anger in the Tea Party ranks . Over the next two years, they and their corporate masters will be forced into the position of having to defend their porky ways, their penchant for deficit spending, and their empty rhetoric. Will we capitalize on that? To me, a fight worth having is the one that hurts the other side, not our own side. We have shameless corporate hacks in charge of the budget and appropriations process now. They’ve promised to try and de-fund the health care bill, which will not be progress in any form if they succeed. They want to undermine Medicare and Medicaid while continuing outrageous corporate welfare to multinational corporations who currently pay no tax. When viewed in that frame (and by the way, please read this George Lakoff column for more on how we’ve all failed to frame this debate properly), aiming our ammunition at the right wing seems like a more sensible thing than assuming the mantle of the minority and the aggrieved.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The roof of the Metrodome in Minneapolis collapsed early Sunday morning under the weight of 17 inches of snow. Fox obtained time lapse video taken from inside the building as the roof collapsed that looked like something straight out of a disaster movie. The Minnesota’s Viking’s Sunday game with the New York Giants has been rescheduled to be held Monday at 7:20 p.m. at Ford Field in Detroit. The New York Daily News reported: The Giants woke up in Kansas City Sunday morning to the news that the game couldn’t be played in Minnesota. Big Blue has been stranded in Missouri since Saturday by the historic blizzard that’s wreaking havoc in Minnesota. They were originally scheduled to play the Vikings in Minneapolis Sunday, but late Saturday night the game was pushed back to Monday at 8 p.m. Then the roof fell in, leading to the move to Detroit. The situation has become a logistical nightmare for the team and the league, which was told by Metrodome officials Sunday morning that their dome “will not be available.” The Teflon-coated fiberglass roof on what is now known as Mall of America Field collapsed under the weight of 17-plus inches of snow between 4 and 5 a.m. According to reports, there were “several tears” in the roof and snow on the field before it collapsed.
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