enlarge We’re still in the early silly season, but that hasn’t stopped CNN from really stooping low. From the absurd tea party debate to their questionable personnel choices , they demonstrate again and again that their goal is to run to the right of Fox News . The headline in the image above is a shining example. Americans optimistic about Hillary Clinton presidency ? What presidency is that, exactly? Would that be the presidency that might have been, or is yet to be in the minds of Those Who Wish To Bait? Nothing would make conservatives happier than to see the Democratic party split between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. They’re drooling at the idea . Yes, there are various “Draft Hillary” initiatives all over the place, too. Why, there’s a Facebook page with just over 2,000 fans! That must mean she’s going to run, right? From the CNN article under the link-baiting, inaccurate, stupid headline: The Bloomberg survey released Friday showed 34 percent of those questioned said America would be superior under a Hillary Clinton administration, while 47 percent said it would be about the same and 13 percent said it would be worse. A quarter of respondents held similar wishful thoughts in a July poll. Clinton remains the most popular American political figure with nearly two-thirds of Americans holding a favorable view of the former first lady and New York senator. Half of the respondents felt the same way about President Barack Obama, who received the lowest job approval rating of his presidency, at 45 percent. What a fascinating way to interpret a poll. Thirty-four percent say the country would be better while 62 percent say it would be the same or worse, yet based on the headline alone, you’d think she already declared her candidacy, won the nomination, had been elected, and had been governing for the last couple of years or so. It’s also no surprise to hear that the percentage rose between July and September on that question. Our foreign policy has been pretty stable over these last two months, while the economy and our domestic situation has taken a pounding over the debt ceiling debacle and high unemployment. If I were Hillary Clinton, I’d be grateful every day to not have to deal with all of that while fending off the wingnuts and crazypants Congress. She’s got the best seat in the house. It really seems like CNN is burying the lede on this story in a tea party fantasy about Hillary Clinton. This is the real story: Former Massachusetts Gov. Romney received a 42 percent favorability rating while rivals Texas Gov. Perry and Rep. Ron Paul of Texas garnered 32 percent. Rep. Michele Bachmann of Minnesota and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich received a 28 percent rating and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who is still mulling a bid for the White House, came in at 26 percent. Oops. Saint Perry is slipping in all the polls after his Social Security gaffe at the debate, and Romney is gaining ground. Can’t report that in the headline. Wouldn’t be prudent. Also? Hillary Clinton announced today that she will be stepping down as Secretary of State when Obama wins his second term, and has no intention of holding or seeking any public office. How about that, CNN? Might be time for pollsters to shut that question down, now.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media OK, so most of our readers know about the loss of Wiener’s old NY-26 seat in a special election to a tea party candidate named Bob Turner. But what you may not know is that a new tactic is emerging that will surely be used against Obama and the Democratic Party in the run-up to the 2012 election unless the President puts out the flames of the fire he has started with his grand bargain scheme—which includes reforms to our social safety nets. I caught this via Digby: That race in NY this week featured a lot of talk about Israel and a whole lot of analysis about ethnicity and demographics. But one thing very few have noticed was an important piece of standard 2010 messaging . Dave Weigel did: In two robocalls, Koch promised voters that Turner wouldn’t cut Medicare or Social Security. The weekend before the election, Hikind said the same thing, and bolstered his case by saying Democrats were risking the programs: Dave Weigel: Actually, this disastrous election gave the Democrats a few hints. The party tried, and failed, to wound Turner by telling voters he’d provide one more Republican vote to weaken entitlements. That worked in New York’s 26th district, where Democrat Kathy Hochul tore pages out of the Ryan plan and made her Republican opponent eat them. In the 9th, Turner and his surrogates tried to neutralize the entitlement issue by promising not to cut entitlements. In two robocalls, Koch promised voters that Turner wouldn’t cut Medicare or Social Security. The weekend before the election, Hikind said the same thing, and bolstered his case by saying Democrats were risking the programs. “The president of the United States is now a member of the tea party!” said Hikind. “He said, in his own words, that there won’t be Medicare and Social Security for my children and your children and my grandchildren unless we address Medicare!” That’s not really a wedge issue – it’s the slow death of a wedge issue. It’s the start of a problem for Democrats, who have gone from attacking the Ryan plans for entitlement reform to vouching support for some undefined “everything on the table” entitlement reform. There might not be any way for Democrats to dodge this, and there’s no sign that they want to . And that leaves all of them in the position of Democrats in New York’s 9th. Their traditional base, weary of the recession, not sure what Democrats have to offer any more, are ready to be wedged. “This message will resound for a full year,” said Turner in his victory speech. “It will resound into 2012.” And Digby correctly writes: There are zero reasons to believe they won’t use this — to good effect — against Democrats and the president in 2012. Why would they? It’s working. This is incredible. Republicans and any ghost of Zell “Spitball” Miller that arises with an agenda of their own will have no problem using Medicare and Social Security to their advantage. I’ve loathed that Obama and his advisers have brought up reforming our social safety nets in these troubled times to appease the deficit hawks even if benefit cuts aren’t included. And now it can be used against them. It doesn’t matter how dishonestly it’s done. It’s not too late though. The President has not come forward and uttered the words to America that could unseat not only himself, but many other Democratic politicians in 2012.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media The one thing you can say about this Cheney family — they’ve got their lies and they’re sticking to them — no matter what. After feeling the need to give the Bush administration some glowing praise for torture, the Patriot Act and Guantanamo Bay, Bill O’Reilly actually challenged the assertion that we were greeted as liberators in Iraq made by Dick Cheney years ago on Meet the Press . Naturally, his daughter Liz, disagreed. O’Reilly pointed to the falling of the statue of Saddam Hussein and that there was only a very small group of people there as evidence that we were not greeted as liberators. What Billo failed to point out to her during this softball interview, is that event was staged by our military as our own Silent Patriot reminded us of back on the 4th anniversary of that event . As to Cheney still repeating the “greeted as liberators” line, John Amato wrote about this back in 2007 when John McCain was carrying water for the Bush administration, repeating that already tired and debunked line back then as well: John McCain told Tim Russert that America was greeted as liberators when we got to Iraq. What is he talking about. When were we ever greeted as liberators? It wasn’t like ten months of peace and tranquility. The looting began almost immediately . He also says that the war was easy. Easy for who? One thing we can count on is that as long as these neocons and supporters of the Iraq invasion are still alive, they’re going to do their best to continue to revise the history books in their favor. Full transcript below the fold. O’REILLY: Ok. The second one is the Iraq war. You know that I’m a supporter or I was a supporter. CHENEY: I actually didn’t know that. O’REILLY: Well, it’s true. I mean I’m on the record of supporting the enhanced interrogations, the Patriot Act, Guantanamo Bay and, you know, consistently across the line. But there’s a historical record and the historical record is that Americans were not aware of the big threat that al Qaeda was posing. CHENEY: The records actually on al Qaeda that before 9/11, we treated it like a law enforcement problem. O’REILLY: Yes. And Clinton did and Bush did. CHENEY: And I think that is the key difference is that the president and the vice president, Bush and Cheney understood after 9/11, this is war. And we’re at war. We have to do whatever it takes to keep the nation safe. O’REILLY: All right. Three days before the Iraq war was launched, here’s what Vice President Cheney said on “Meet the Press”. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) DICK CHENEY, FORMER VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: I think that things have gotten so bad inside Iraq from the standpoint of the Iraqi people. My belief is we will in fact be greeted as liberators. O’REILLY: Ok. Obviously, that didn’t happen. And I would love to know — CHENEY: It actually did happen. We were greeted as liberators and then we saw a massive, bloody, dangerous insurgency began. And it wasn’t frankly until we were able in 2006 with the surge to adopt a counter- insurgency strategy that we were able to frankly turn things around. O’REILLY: Ok. But here’s where you’re wrong. We weren’t greeted as liberators. We were greeted in a way that was tentative. CHENEY: It’s not true. O’REILLY: Yes it is. CHENEY: No, it’s not true. O’REILLY: You saw the statue came down and how many people were out there? Do you know how many people were out there when the statue of Saddam Hussein came down? Do you know how many? CHENEY: Do you know how many Bill? O’REILLY: Yes, I do. A couple of hundred, not thousands; Baghdad is a city of millions. A couple of hundred. CHENEY: Bill — O’REILLY: And then right after the statue came down, the armories were looted and the terrorists went in and they took all of Saddam Hussein’s arms, ok? CHENEY: Look, I know how much — O’REILLY: Because our government wasn’t accepting that. CHENEY: I know how much you care about no spin. O’REILLY: Right. CHENEY: And I think it’s really important here. Saddam was an incredibly repressive dictator — O’REILLY: No doubt. CHENEY: The Iraqi people were glad to see him go. Saddam had in place — there were elements from his regime that stayed in place. There were elements from al Qaeda, elements from Iran who were there who were ready, who launched a very bloody insurgency. O’REILLY: Correct. And it was not anticipated by us. That insurgency — (CROSSTALK) CHENEY: I think it was not anticipated by everyone. I think that’s true. O’REILLY: It was not anticipated. CHENEY: But it’s — when we removed Saddam Hussein, we made sure that there wasn’t going to be somebody in place who we knew had ties to terror, who we knew, knew how to make weapons of mass destruction, who we knew had used them before, who we knew was supporting terrorists. We also, by the way, as soon as Saddam was gone got a phone call from Moammar Gadhafi who didn’t want to be next, who gave up his nuclear weapons. O’REILLY: There were good things that happened. No doubt. CHENEY: I think that the notion that we now have in the heart of the Middle East, a democracy that is not supporting terrorists. It’s not perfect. But it is a huge accomplishment of the Bush Administration that we liberated all those people and the people in Afghanistan. And I think it’s just flat wrong for you to call it that. O’REILLY: Ok. And I disagree in the sense that it could have been done in a different way. I would have — the same result. CHENEY: Which way? Would you have gone and talked to Saddam and said, “Hey, you ought to — O’REILLY: No, I would have gone the Bush the Elder, way, the president’s father and I would have strangled them with a blockade. I would have no-fly zoned it as they would have done and then when the drones were developed — CHENEY: Bill, you have to look at the reports that were done by the Iraq survey group, for example. It was clear when we come came into office in 2000 that Saddam was a threat. He had between the time of the first Bush Administration and this Bush Administration completely ignored 16 U.N. Security Council resolutions — O’REILLY: There’s no doubt about it. CHENEY: — that the sanctions regime was crumbling. So it’s just not accurate to say he was in a box. We could have strangled him. And after 9/11, we couldn’t run the risk — that somebody like Saddam was going to share technology about WMD. O’REILLY: I don’t expect you and your father to agree with me, ok? But the blood and treasure of the United States spent in Iraq has now come back into our country in a very negative way. CHENEY: We need more time and I feel confident that I could convince you of the rightness of my position. O’REILLY: I thank you for coming in Miss Cheney. We appreciate it. CHENEY: Thank you. Good to be here.
Continue reading …Patent reform’s been bandied about on Capitol Hill for years now, and last week we finally got both houses of Congress to agree on the language to make it happen. Today, in what was a foregone conclusion, President Obama has finally made the thing official by signing the America Invents Act into law. In doing so, he made the dream of a first-to-file patent system in the US a reality. Of course, the law won’t go into effect for another 18 months, so we’ll have to wait awhile before we find out if it can curb all those companies’ litigious inclinations . Obama signs America Invents Act into law, makes patent reform a reality originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 16 Sep 2011 15:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …New York Times columnist Paul Krugman just can't stop offending of late. Krugman confounded even liberals with his ill-timed blog post on the morning of September 11 decrying President George W. Bush and New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani as “ fake heroes ” in the aftermath of the World Trade Center attacks. In his Friday column “ Free To Die ,” he suggested Republicans would prefer people die for lack of health insurance, using as evidence the dubious claim that the audience watching CNN’s Republican debate “erupted with cheers” at the prospect of a (hypothetical) man dying for being unable to afford intensive care. Has Krugman actually watched the clip? Back in 1980, just as America was making its political turn to the right, Milton Friedman lent his voice to the change with the famous TV series “Free to Choose.” In episode after episode, the genial economist identified laissez-faire economics with personal choice and empowerment, an upbeat vision that would be echoed and amplified by Ronald Reagan. But that was then. Today, “free to choose” has become “free to die.” I’m referring, as you might guess, to what happened during Monday’s G.O.P. presidential debate. CNN’s Wolf Blitzer asked Representative Ron Paul what we should do if a 30-year-old man who chose not to purchase health insurance suddenly found himself in need of six months of intensive care. Mr. Paul replied, “That’s what freedom is all about — taking your own risks.” Mr. Blitzer pressed him again, asking whether “society should just let him die.” And the crowd erupted with cheers and shouts of “Yeah!” But did it really? Erik Wemple, who blogs for the Washington Post, fact-checked the horrified liberal response of commentators like Krugman. This is how Wemple, not a Tea Party fan, described what happened after debate host Wolf Blitzer raised his inflammatory question ( you can watch the clip at the Post ).
Continue reading …From 24/7 Wall St.: The U.S. Census Bureau released two pieces of widely followed data Tuesday — one on poverty and the other on median income for 2010. The most interesting findings in this release were the state-by-state figures, especially when compared to national averages. A closer look at the statistics shows that a relatively small number of states suffer such widespread levels of low income and poverty that they skew the national numbers downward. The national poverty rate last year was 15.1%. That is up from 11.3% in 2000 and is the highest it has been since 1993. Over 46 million people lived below the poverty line in 2010. The cut-off for that line is households of four people who made under $22,314. The other troubling news was that median income per household nationwide was an inflation-adjusted $49,445. This is about the same as in 1989 and down 2.3% from 2009. Economists fear that Americans are not consumers. It is easy to tell why when their real income has been frozen in place for more than two decades. The problems of poverty and low income are as much local as national. The poverty rate is 21% in Mississippi. The state also has the lowest median income at $36,850. Mississippi is among the states with the worst education systems, highest obesity levels, highest unemployment, and lowest rates of health insurance coverage. The state is an economic black hole, and it shows in the way people suffer there. And, as is true with black holes, it is nearly impossible for the residents of Mississippi to escape their difficult financial situations. There is a dearth of federal programs that target specific states and cities based on local economic need. 24/7 Wall St. reviewed census data from all 50 states on median income, poverty rates, unemployment, and lack of health insurance. We then identified the ten states that have the lowest median income. We also looked at why low-income households are concentrated in these states and what, in some cases, has been done to reverse the difficult situations. These are the poorest states in America, according to 24/7 Wall St.:
Continue reading …Palestinians plan to push for full statehood in the UN later this month, and the US vows to block them. Reza Aslan offers five reasons in the Los Angeles Times why America should buck Israel (“it is not political suicide”) and change its mind: Failed talks: Twenty years of negotiations…
Continue reading …Joe McGinniss’s new book, The Rogue: Searching for the Real Sarah Palin, hits bookstores next week, but its controversial claims about the former Alaska governor are already making waves. In the book, McGinniss writes that Palin had a one-night stand in 1987 with future NBA basketball player Glen Rice nine months before she married her husband Todd. He quotes a friend who said Palin “had a fetish for black guys for a while.” “She was a gorgeous woman. Super nice. I was blown away by her,” Rice tells McGinniss in the book, NBC reports. “Afterward, she was a big crush that I had.” McGinniss’s book also alleges that Palin had an extramarital affair with her husband’s business partner, Brad Hanson, in the mid-1990s, and snorted cocaine off a 55-gallon oil drum while snowboarding. “An utter fraud. An absolute and utter fraud,” McGinniss calls Palin in an interview about the book with NBC. “At best, she’s a hypocrite,” McGinniss tells NBC’s Savannah Guthrie. “At worst, she’s a vindictive hypocrite.” WATCH: McGinniss famously moved into a house next door to Palin’s Wasilla, Alaska home to write his book — prompting the Palins to accuse him of stalking them. They built a high fence along their property to protect their privacy. In response to McGinniss’s book, Todd Palin gave a statement to NBC saying that McGinniss “spent the last year interviewing marginal figures with an axe to grind in order to churn out a hit piece to satisfy his own creepy obsession with my wife.” “I’d ask the fathers and husbands of America to consider our privacy when one summer day I found this guy on the deck of the rental property, just 18 feet away next door to us, staring like a creep at my wife while she mowed the lawn in her shorts,” Palin said. McGinniss says that anything he learned about Palin by living next door did not make it into the book, but he does become a character in the story himself. The New York Times writes in its review: Soon Mr. McGinniss is settling in to enjoy the fuss his mere presence has created. “Normally, for a news story to continue beyond the first 24-hour news cycle, something newsworthy must occur,” he writes loftily, but “The Rogue” is filled with proof to the contrary. What was his hate mail like? He quotes it. What did Glenn Beck call him? That’s here too. Who took umbrage at this venom and chose to help him? One man offered him a hideout, despite Mr. McGinniss’s slight skepticism about his motives. “But you don’t know me,” Mr. McGinniss protested. McGinniss’s book is scheduled to hit bookstores on Tuesday, Sept. 20.
Continue reading …This goes out to all you die-hard NFL fans living far removed from the local market of your favorite NFL team. Well, you finally have a chance share your displaced story with America. Oh….and by the way, you can win a trip to the Super Bowl in Indianapolis and spend some time with a player Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Seahawks Gab Discovery Date : 16/09/2011 00:53 Number of articles : 4
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Washington Post It comes as no surprise that Congressional Republicans are balking at President Obama’s $447 billion program forecast to produce as many as 1.9 million jobs . But while the GOP has opposed Obama’s calls for new tax revenue from the wealthiest Americans to pay for it, most of the Republican presidential field wants to give them yet another trillion dollar tax cut payday by eliminating the capital gains tax . With U.S. income inequality at its highest level in 80 years and the total federal tax burden at its lowest in 60, the last thing America needs to do is further reduce the capital gains tax. As a decade of data shows, the Treasury-draining Bush capital gains and dividend tax windfall for the wealthy not only failed to produce employment gains from America’s so-called ” job creators .” As the Washington Post detailed, “capital gains tax rates benefiting wealthy feed [the] growing gap between rich and poor.” Nevertheless, most Republicans are calling for a new capital gains tax rate: zero . As the Post explained, for the very richest Americans the successive capital gains tax cuts from Presidents Clinton (to 20 percent) and Bush (to 15 percent) have been “better than any Christmas gift”: While it’s true that many middle-class Americans own stocks or bonds, they tend to stash them in tax-sheltered retirement accounts, where the capital gains rate does not apply. By contrast, the richest Americans reap huge benefits. Over the past 20 years, more than 80 percent of the capital gains income realized in the United States has gone to 5 percent of the people; about half of all the capital gains have gone to the wealthiest 0.1 percent. The convenient chart above tells the tale. And as the Washington Post suggests elsewhere in its jaw-dropping series ” Breaking Away ,” plummeting tax rates overall and on capital gains in particular have been widening the chasm between the rich and everyone else in America: Nevertheless, the same Republicans digging in their heels against President Obama’s latest proposed middle tax relief in the form of a continued payroll tax holiday want to gut the capital gains tax or eliminate it altogether. In 2008, Republican presidential nominee John McCain called for halving the rate to 7.5 percent, a move which would have earned him and his beer heiress wife tens of thousands of dollars annually. This year’s crop of GOP White House hopefuls is little different. While Newt Gingrich long ago echoed Alan Greenspan’s demand that “the appropriate capital gains tax rate was zero,” Jon Huntsman reversed course to take the same position. (For his part, Mitt Romney wants to end capital gains taxes for that small group earning under $200,000 a year.) And as ThinkProgress reported, they have a lot of company from Michele Bachmann, Herman Cain and Ron Paul among Republican presidential candidates looking to drain $1 trillion from the Treasury over the next decade. Of course, given the massive giveaway of the past 10 years, yet another capital gains bonanza for the gilded-class will only serve to empty Uncle Sam’s coffers while doing little to benefit the economy overall. Back in May, John Boehner explained to CBS News who Republicans would be trying to protect during the debt ceiling negotiations with President Obama: “The top one percent of wage earners in the United States…pay forty percent of the income taxes…The people he’s talking about taxing are the very people that we expect to reinvest in our economy.” If so, those expectations were sadly unmet after the tax cuts of George W. Bush. After all, the last time the top tax rate was 39.6 percent during the Clinton administration , the United States enjoyed rising incomes, 23 million new jobs and budget surpluses. Under Bush? Not so much. On January 9, 2009, the Republican-friendly Wall Street Journal summed it up with an article titled simply, ” Bush on Jobs: the Worst Track Record on Record .” (The Journal’s interactive table quantifies his staggering failure relative to every post-World War II president.) The meager one million jobs created under President Bush didn’t merely pale in comparison to the 23 million produced during Bill Clinton’s tenure. In September 2009, the Congressional Joint Economic Committee charted Bush’s job creation disaster, the worst since Hoover: As David Leonhardt of the New York Times aptly concluded last year: Those tax cuts passed in 2001 amid big promises about what they would do for the economy. What followed? The decade with the slowest average annual growth since World War II. Amazingly, that statement is true even if you forget about the Great Recession and simply look at 2001-7. The data are clear: lower taxes for America’s so called job-creators don’t mean either faster economic growth or more jobs for Americans . But while Boehner’s job creators didn’t create any jobs after the top rate was trimmed to 35 percent and capital gains and dividends taxes were slashed, they did enjoy an unprecedented windfall courtesy of the United States Treasury. For Republicans, this predictable result of the Bush tax cuts was a feature, not a bug. As the Center for American Progress noted in 2004, “for the majority of Americans, the tax cuts meant very little,” adding, “By next year, for instance, 88 percent of all Americans will receive $100 or less from the Administration’s latest tax cuts.” But that’s just the beginning of the story. As the CAP also reported, the Bush tax cuts delivered a third of their total benefits to the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans . And to be sure, their payday was staggering. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities showed that millionaires on average pocketed almost $129,000 from the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003. As a result, millionaires saw their after-tax incomes rise by 6.2 percent, while the gain for those earning between $40,000 and $50,000 was paltry 2.2 percent. And as the New York Times uncovered in 2006, the 2003 Bush dividend and capital gains tax cuts offered almost nothing to taxpayers earning below $100,000 a year. Instead, those windfalls reduced taxes “on incomes of more than $10 million by an average of about $500,000.” As the Times explained in a shocking chart: “The top 2 percent of taxpayers, those making more than $200,000, received more than 70% of the increased tax savings from those cuts in investment income.” It’s no wonder that between 2001 and 2007- a period during which poverty was rising and average household income had fallen – the 400 richest taxpayers saw their incomes double to an average of $345 million even as their effective tax rate was virtually halved. As the Washington Post noted, “The 400 richest taxpayers in 2008 counted 60 percent of their income in the form of capital gains and 8 percent from salary and wages. The rest of the country reported 5 percent in capital gains and 72 percent in salary.” As ThinkProgress demonstrated, historically lower tax rates for the richest Americans did not produce either more job creation or faster economic growth . (In fact, the Bush years produced what the Times’ Leonhardt rightly labeled as “The decade with the slowest average annual growth since World War II.”) But what the conservative cornucopia for the gilded-class does reliably produce is unprecedented income inequality . (It’s worth noting that the changing landscape of loopholes, deductions and credits, especially after the 1986 tax reform signed by President Reagan, makes apples-to-apples comparisons of effective tax rates over time very difficult. For more background, see the CBO data on effective tax rates by income quintile.) At the end of the day, cutting capital gains taxes like the estate tax ultimately produces just another payout for many who have already won life’s lottery. As Warren Buffett once suggested, it’s time for Washington to stop “giving incredible head starts to certain people who were very selective about the womb from which they emerged.”
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