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They’re a little cranky over on the left today : The bodies aren’t even cold yet in the House, but the Democratic Party has already opened up a bitter debate over who’s to blame. The party’s bloodied moderates Wednesday released two years of pent-up anger at a party leadership they viewed as blind to their needs and deaf to the messages of voters who never asked for President Barack Obama’s ambitious first-term agenda. Liberals pushed back hard: The problem, they say, was those undisciplined moderates, who won delays, unsightly compromises and a muddled message from a too-accommodating administration. Yet a third group of Democratic politicians and operatives blamed not policy but a failed sales job for the party’s woes. One thing all sides agree on: The White House blew it. “It is clear that Democrats over-interpreted our mandate. Talk of a ‘political realignment’ and a ‘new progressive era’ proved wishful thinking,” the retiring Indiana Sen. Evan Bayh wrote in a New York Times op-ed posted online as the scope of last night’s losses became clear. Bayh called the decision to focus on health care in a bad economy “overreach.” “We were too deferential to our most zealous supporters,” he wrote. Mandate? What mandate? Obama won only 53% of the vote and although the Dems had strong majorities in Congress there was no mandate, certainly not for the leftist agenda that Obama wanted to jam down America’s throats. It should have been clear to the Dems that when you have a mandate you don’t have 60%+ of the people yelling STOP! as they did during the Obamacare debate. It was a mandate to quit. This election was a referendum on Obama and on Obamacare. If they hadn’t overreached with nationalized health care they wouldn’t have taken such a beating on Tuesday.

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A Surprisingly Simple Solution to a Big Climate Change Problem

Photo credit: Tormod Sandtorv / Creative Commons This guest post was written by Le Ngoc Thach, president of the Dai Nghia cooperative and one of the first SRI farmers in Ha Noi province, courtesy of Oxfam America . Watching my parents’ rice crop fail was a heartbreak I will never forget. It was 1984, and that growing season, stem borer grubs devoured… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Is Honda About to Pull a Nissan and Go Electric?

Photo: Michael Graham Richard New CEO = New Direction Honda has always been rather hesitant and skeptical about battery electric cars and plug-in hybrids. Its former CEO, Takeo Fukui, though that hydrogen fuel cells were the future, which explains the FCX Clarity (a great car, but expensive to make and building a hydrogen infrastructure is problematic). But Honda now has a new CEO, Takanobu Ito, who seems more inclined to develop new EVs and PHEVs. Could Honda

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Samsung Galaxy S first smartphone to be Wi-Fi Direct certified

Samsung has generally been on the cutting edge when it comes to giving its smartphones the latest and greatest in terms of compatibility, with the Omnia being the first DivX certified handset in America this month two years ago. Now, it’s looking to wrangle yet another first, with this one having the potential to be far more important. The outfit’s hot-selling Galaxy S smartphone (GT-I9000) is now listed on the Wi-Fi Alliance’s Wi-Fi Direct certification docket, and while we knew that a handful of Wi-Fi modules and chipsets were about to get green-lit, this marks the first actual device to join that crowd. As we mentioned before , any modern-era WiFi device is capable of becoming Direct certified (via a firmware update given that there’s no hardware change in the protocol), but it seems as if Sammy is being Johnny-on-the-spot. We’ll keep an ear to the ground regarding an actual update that brings this functionality to life, but for now, let’s all cross our fingers and hope those other phone makers get their handsets in line, too. Samsung Galaxy S first smartphone to be Wi-Fi Direct certified originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Nov 2010 14:26:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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From Mark Levin’s interactive election map

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In all the fuss going on last night I didn’t really pay attention to Sen. Russ Feingold’s concession speech.

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Bozell Column: Obama Failed to Communicate?

In one of his latest attempts to get his face on every television network in America before the election, President Obama appeared on “The Daily Show” with Jon Stewart to plead his case to the hip, young, leftist voters who love that show. Obama claimed he had done so much, “We have done things that some folks don't even know about!” In a more serious interview, Obama told the Los Angeles Times the economic mess he “inherited” required him to take so many rapid actions that he could not “communicate effectively to the public in any coherent way.” This has to be the most ridiculous spin to emerge to explain the Why Republicans Massacred Us question: Barack Obama somehow failed to communicate his “accomplishments.” This man has been everywhere from MTV to CNBC to Univision to the entire NBC-Universal slate of channels selling his policies. And when he’s not there, the reporters do his bidding regardless. How can a man who was sold to us as an absolutely magic combination of Lincoln and Franklin Roosevelt now suggest he was made “incoherent” by the economy? read more

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Canalys: iPhone becomes most popular smartphone in the US, Android continues as most popular OS

The Canalys numbers are out, and with Android coming off an 886 percent jump reported at the end of the second quarter we were expecting something big. So, here it is: Android is up 1,309 percent worldwide from this time last year, taking over 43.6 percent of the US smartphone market in the third quarter. In terms of mobile operating systems that makes it the dominant player in America, but with Apple capturing 26.2 percent it now jumps into the lead when it comes to hardware, beating out RIM’s 24.2 percent. That’s a swap from last quarter, where BlackBerries beat iPhones 32 to 21.7 percent, and worldwide things are looking the same: Apple at 17 percent compared to RIM’s 15. However around the globe it’s Nokia and the Symbian Foundation still dominating the stage as the leading smart phone OS vendor, owning 33 percent of the market compared to 38 last quarter, while Microsoft sits at a lowly 3 percent. With WP7 ready to rock the world, and Ballmer ready to release the advertising hounds , that’s a figure we’ll be keeping a close eye on for the next few quarters. Canalys: iPhone becomes most popular smartphone in the US, Android continues as most popular OS originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Nov 2010 08:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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ABC Highlights Black Republicans Running for Congress
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