From this Thursday’s Thom Hartmann show , Hartmann debates Matthew Vandum who apparently thinks the only people who should be allowed to vote to promote their own interests are the rich. Here’s more on Vandum from TPM: Columnist: Registering Poor To Vote ‘Like Handing Out Burglary Tools To Criminals’ : Conservative columnist Matthew Vadum is just going to come right out and say it : registering the poor to vote is un-American and “like handing out burglary tools to criminals.” “It is profoundly antisocial and un-American to empower the nonproductive segments of the population to destroy the country — which is precisely why Barack Obama zealously supports registering welfare recipients to vote,” Vadum, the author of a book published by World Net Daily that attacks the now-defunct community organizing group ACORN, writes in a column for the American Thinker. “Encouraging those who burden society to participate in elections isn’t about helping the poor,” Vadum writes. “It’s about helping the poor to help themselves to others’ money. It’s about raw so-called social justice. It’s about moving America ever farther away from the small-government ideals of the Founding Fathers.” Most conservative criticism of voter registration drives aimed at poor and minority communities has been under the guise of worries about voter fraud. Vadum’s column is notable because he isn’t just pretending to be worried about the nearly non-existent threat of in-person voter fraud — he just doesn’t think poor people should be voting. And for a little blast from the past, here’s more from The Daily Show when John Oliver interviewed this same guy back in 2008 below the fold.
Continue reading …From this Thursday’s Thom Hartmann show , Hartmann debates Matthew Vandum who apparently thinks the only people who should be allowed to vote to promote their own interests are the rich. Here’s more on Vandum from TPM: Columnist: Registering Poor To Vote ‘Like Handing Out Burglary Tools To Criminals’ : Conservative columnist Matthew Vadum is just going to come right out and say it : registering the poor to vote is un-American and “like handing out burglary tools to criminals.” “It is profoundly antisocial and un-American to empower the nonproductive segments of the population to destroy the country — which is precisely why Barack Obama zealously supports registering welfare recipients to vote,” Vadum, the author of a book published by World Net Daily that attacks the now-defunct community organizing group ACORN, writes in a column for the American Thinker. “Encouraging those who burden society to participate in elections isn’t about helping the poor,” Vadum writes. “It’s about helping the poor to help themselves to others’ money. It’s about raw so-called social justice. It’s about moving America ever farther away from the small-government ideals of the Founding Fathers.” Most conservative criticism of voter registration drives aimed at poor and minority communities has been under the guise of worries about voter fraud. Vadum’s column is notable because he isn’t just pretending to be worried about the nearly non-existent threat of in-person voter fraud — he just doesn’t think poor people should be voting. And for a little blast from the past, here’s more from The Daily Show when John Oliver interviewed this same guy back in 2008 below the fold.
Continue reading …In the most fake-looking scary house ever, Tyra Banks has a nightmare that the most dramatic, troublesome, annoying contestants from the past sixteen cycles of America’s Next Top Model are hounding her to be on the new “All-Stars” season. But that’s not even the scariest part — it’s Tyra who’s playing all of the models ! More » Post from: Crushable Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Crushable Discovery Date : 09/09/2011 20:12 Number of articles : 3
Continue reading …Sights and sounds of this day in 2001, when America suffered the worst terrorist attack on its soil. (Sept. 11)
Continue reading …United 93 (Movie Theatre Trailer) United Flight 93 – Never Forget 9/11: America remembers 10 years on. Tom Brokaw – Part 8 Jinnyaod says: . united 93 Do you think i can write a whole paper on United Flight # 93 ? http://t.co/j67odQz
Continue reading …Last week, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) released analysis of data revealing a major increase in the incidence of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) among children in the United States. The number of children between the ages of five and 17 reported by their parents to “have” ADHD or the non-hyperactive form of the disorder (ADD) had risen from 7 to 9 percent over a decade ending in 2009. Nine percent translates to 4,858,210 children according to 2010 U.S. Census data. In actuality, the researchers do not know for certain whether these children actually meet criteria for ADHD/ADD. The data is culled from a national telephone survey which asks parents the question, “whether or not a doctor or other health-care provider had ever told them that their child had attention deficit disorder or attention deficit hyperactive disorder, that is, ADD or ADHD.’” Since there is no biological or psychometric test for ADHD/ADD no one can be certain these children have a definitive neurological condition. In its extreme form the hyperactivity and impulsivity of ADHD are easy to recognize. But most children are commonly diagnosed with the mild variety which blends seamlessly into the behavior of normal but active or lively children. It is with this mild form where opinions vary widely between professionals. This survey then only measured what parents had been told. Still the continued rise in the diagnosis and treatment of ADHD/ADD in children is unmistakable. As a long time observer and participant (I prescribe drugs like Ritalin, Adderall and Concerta every day) of this trend, I have watched the 20-year growth of this condition with curiosity and some consternation. I have also been involved in what has been colloquially called “The Ritalin Wars” — an often polemical debate conducted in the media as to whether the widespread use of prescription stimulant drugs (essentially amphetamine) is good or bad for the children of this country. The upward trend continues. Given the current CDC data, one can safely estimate (based on previously detailed distribution curves) that one of six 11-year-old white boys with medical insurance currently take a stimulant drug at least during the school week. Is this over medication or simply good medical care for children with a previously undiagnosed and untreated condition? What I do know is that we are the only society currently managing our under performing/misbehaving children with drugs to this degree. While the diagnosis of ADHD/ADD can seem ephemeral, the production of prescription stimulants, whose use is closely tied to the diagnosis, is monitored by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Since 1996 the annual amount of Ritalin type drugs approved for production by the DEA multiplied 4000 times to 50 million kilograms, and for Adderall 10000 times to 26 million kilograms. In more common terms, 83,776 tons of legal speed were approved for production in 2010 equaling more than half a pound for every man, woman and child in America. The U.S. is a signatory to a 1972 United Nations treaty monitoring the production and sale of potentially addicting substances. The U.N.’s International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) based in Vienna, monitors the production of legal stimulants worldwide. INCB data shows that in 2009 the U.S., representing 4 percent of the world’s population, produced 88 percent of the world’s legal Ritalin type drugs. Canada uses a third per capita of prescription stimulants compared to the U.S. — Germany, one eighth, the U.K. one twelfth, Japan, one fiftieth. These drug production amounts do not separate child from adult use and clearly there has been a surge in adult ADHD/ADD and their use of stimulants in America in the last decade as well. Still the CDC study marks a continued increase in the diagnosis and use of these drugs in children. Is this a good thing or a bad thing? I suppose it comes down to values. Amphetamine when used (in low doses) immediately improves focus and attention in anyone (including ADHD/ADD children) who takes them. Specific behavioral interventions (especially by parents) and educational interventions (by schools and teachers) also improve the performance and behavior of ADHD/ADD children. Pills, however, place value on efficiency — they work quickly and are relatively less costly. The non-drug interventions value engagement with the child; they require more time, more involvement by adults and initially cost more money. Medical and educational systems value efficiency. Parents generally value engagement but if the treating systems only offer pills, parents will surely take them over no treatment. Ritalin type drugs have been around for 80 years, used in children for 70. They are reasonably safe and effective in children — not so for older teens and adults, where the specter of over-use, tolerance and addiction has a long historical precedent. The trends that have fostered the United States of Adderall continue. I see no countervailing influences in the immediate future that may slow the use of prescription stimulants in children (and adults) in our country. As with most things in America, money factors rule. But a society that chooses to cope by using drugs, in the long term, does so at its own peril.
Continue reading …Type: Book Title: Summer of Fire (Yellowstone series) See all customer reviews Product Description: It is 1988, and Yellowstone Park is on fire. Among the thousands of summer warriors battling to save America’s crown jewel, is single mother Clare Chance. Having just watched her best friend, a fellow Texas firefighter, die in a roof collapse, she has fled to Montana to try and put the memory behind her. She’s not the only one fighting personal demons as well as the fiery dragon threatening to consume the park. There’s Chris Deering, a Vietnam veteran helicopter pilot, seeking his next adrenaline high and a good time that doesn’t include his wife, and Ranger Steve Haywood, a man scarred by the loss of his wife and baby in a plane crash. They rally around Clare when tragedy strikes yet again, and she loses a young soldier to a firestorm. Three flawed, wounded people; one horrific blaze. Its tentacles are encircling the park, coming ever closer, threatening to cut them off. The landmark Old Faithful Inn and Park Headquarters at Mammoth are under siege, and now there’s a helicopter down, missing, somewhere in the path of the conflagration. And Clare’s daughter is on it. See the details
Continue reading …Having read E.J. Dionne's Wednesday column in the Washington Post (HT Jim Taranto at the Wall Street Journal's Best of the Web), I am sooooo comforted — not. Dionne assures his readers that “Al-Qaeda is a dangerous enemy. But our country and the world were never threatened by the caliphate of its mad fantasies.” Thus, the last 10 years of the “war on terrorism” (lowercase letters and quote marks are his) have apparently largely been a waste of time and treasure, which is why, on the tenth anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks, Dionne asserts that “we need to leave the day behind,” and relegate it to “a simple day of remembrance.” Dionne is of course entitled to his opinions but not his facts. In addition to dangerously underestimating global jihad's devastating potential, Dionne overestimated what he must believe is a “lost decade” media meme, and completely misinterpreted the meaning of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address. What follows are excerptes from Dionne's column (bolds and numbered tags are mine): After we honor the 10th anniversary of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, we need to leave the day behind. As a nation we have looked back for too long. We learned lessons from the attacks, but so many of them were wrong. The last decade was a detour that left our nation weaker, more divided and less certain of itself. Reflections on the meaning of the horror and the years that followed are inevitably inflected by our own political or philosophical leanings. It’s a critique that no doubt applies to my thoughts as well. We see what we choose to see and use the event as we want to use it. This does nothing to honor those who died and those who sacrificed to prevent even more suffering. In the future, the anniversary will best be reserved as a simple day of remembrance in which all of us humbly offer our respect for the anguish and the heroism of those individuals and their families. But if we continue to place 9/11 at the center of our national consciousness, we will keep making the same mistakes. Our nation’s future depended on far more than the outcome of a vaguely defined “war on terrorism,” and it still does. Al-Qaeda is a dangerous enemy. But our country and the world were never threatened by the caliphate of its mad fantasies. [1] Forgive me, but I find it hard to forget former president George W. Bush’s 2004 response to Sen. John Kerry’s comment that “the war on terror is less of a military operation and far more of an intelligence-gathering and law-enforcement operation.” Bush retorted: “I disagree — strongly disagree. . . . After the chaos and carnage of September the 11th, it is not enough to serve our enemies with legal papers. With those attacks, the terrorists and their supporters declared war on the United States of America, and war is what they got.” What The Washington Post called “an era of endless war” is what we got, too. [2] Bush, of course, understood the importance of “intelligence gathering” and “law enforcement.” His administration presided over a great deal of both, and his supporters spoke, with justice, of his success in staving off further acts of terror. Yet he could not resist the temptation to turn on Kerry’s statement of the obvious. … In the flood of anniversary commentary, notice how often the term “the lost decade” has been invoked. [3] … We have no alternative from now on but to look forward and not back. This does not dishonor the fallen heroes, and Lincoln explained why at Gettysburg. “We can not dedicate — we can not consecrate — we can not hallow this ground,” he said. “The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract.” The best we could do, Lincoln declared, was to commit ourselves to “a new birth of freedom.” [4] This is still our calling. Explanations of the numbered tags follow. [1] — The idea that the U.S. or the world were never threatened by Al Qaeda is sheer, obvious fantasy. It's as if Dionne doesn't believe what he's been reading in his own newspaper during the past decade. In July 2009, Heritage listed in detail 23 terrorist plots against the United States which had been foiled since the 9/11 attacks. At least a half-dozen had direct Al Qaeda links, while others were more than likely inspired by Al Qaeda's “successes.” Worldwide, ReligionOfPeace.com has details of 17,715 attacks carried out by Islamic terrorists since 9/11. Major attacks with high body counts I can recall off the top of my head include Spain, London, Bali, and Mumbai. [2] — The disingenuous Dionne knows darned well that Kerry was talking about taking terrorists through our court system instead of treating them as enemy combatants. The WaPo writer's argument about the relative resources devoted to law enforcement vs. military efforts is irrelevant. As to the “endless war,” well, September 11, 2001 is when we finally recognized the reality that we had been in an “endless war” for some time — something George Bush's predecessor would not acknowledge, even after bombings at American embassies in Africa, Khobar Towers in Saudia Arabia, and the USS Cole. [3] — I did three related searches on ["September 11" "lost decade"] (typed exactly as indicated between brackets) at about 6:30 p.m. Results: Google News (past 30 days, sorted by date): 12, including Dionne's column; Google News Archive from January 1 through August 10, 2011 (sorted by date): 2; and Google Web from January 1 to September 9, 2011 (sorted by date): 349 (the first page says there are ” about 20,100 ,” but it's really 349 ). These are extremely sparse results, and certainly don't support Dionne's contention that the term “lost decade” is being used in “the flood of anniversary commentary.” Maybe at the WaPo water cooler, but that's about it. [4] — Dionne seems to have missed his calling. He should be in the meat processing business, given how he butchered the meaning of the Gettysburg address beyond recognition. The complete text of the segment of the address Dionne cited reads as follows (words Dionne quoted are in bold to highlight his selectivity): But, in a larger sense, we can not dedicate — we can not consecrate — we can not hallow — this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us — that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion — that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain — that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom — and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. Dionne wants readers to believe that Lincoln was only narrowly worried about “a new birth of freedom” in some abstract, undefined form. It's clear in the full text above that Lincoln was saying that the North, to honor the soldiers who died, had to renew its resolve to prosecute and win the Civil War, reunite the country, and end slavery. That was the “new birth of freedom” he sough. Additionally, even then, with its relatively slight worldwide influence, it's clear that Lincoln saw the United States as the best hope for freedom to prevail on earth. There's nothing even resembling “let's move on (and compartmentalize our memories)” in the address. One wishing to properly apply Lincoln's words today would have to conclude that he would have advocated a robust effort to win the War on Terror (my caps with no quotes, E.J.). It's also clear that he would not want us to relegate 9/11 to “a simple remembrance,” and that he would never want us to forget the entirely of the horrors which happened that day. Taranto at Best of the Web recommends that Dionne be considered an object of ridicule: When we gave E.J. “Baghdad Bob” Dionne his nickname, we worried that we were perhaps being excessively cruel. After all, liberals have feelings, or so we've been told. But based on Dionne's column yesterday, it looks as though he's embracing the moniker. Ridicule is fine to a point, but if there has even been a place to also include scorn, this would be it. Here we have a guy whose employer's headquarters is a very short distance from a place where hundreds died in a terrorist attack dismissing those who carried it off as on the whole “dangerous” but not threatening. This is ignorant, derelict, horribly irresponsible — and, I'm afraid, all too typical of the establishment media elite who bring us our daily news. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .
Continue reading …Christine Lagarde says Britain must be ready to change tack as Downing Street rules out copying Obama’s Jobs Act David Cameron and George Osborne were forced to defend their fiscal deficit reduction plan after the head of the IMF said Britain may have to change tack if the economy struggles to recover. As Labour claimed that Christine Lagarde’s warning showed the danger of cutting too quickly, Downing Street insisted there would be no change because Britain still faced “fiscal risks”. The row broke out after Lagarde, the managing director of the IMF, offered a qualified endorsement of the plan to eliminate Britain’s structural deficit by 2015. At a joint event with the chancellor at Chatham House, she said: “The policy stance remains appropriate, but the heightened risk means a heightened readiness to respond, particularly if it looks like the economy is headed for a prolonged period of weak growth and high unemployment.” Osborne made it clear there would be no change. “Britain will stick to the deficit plan we have set out. It is the rock of stability upon which our recovery is built. It has delivered record low interest rates. “Abandoning that plan would put those interest rates at risk. For nothing would be more damaging for Britain at this fragile moment for the world’s economy than an increase in mortgage rates for families and an increase in the cost of borrowing for businesses.” But Tim Geithner, the US treasury secretary who was joined by Lagarde and Osborne at a meeting of G7 finance ministers in Marseille yesterday, also appeared to question Britain’s focus on deficit reduction and monetary, rather than fiscal, policy. In an article for the FT, Geithner warned of “unwarranted disaffection with the efficacy of the traditional fiscal tools of tax cuts and investment to encourage growth”. He added that governments with high deficits were right to cut but “can at least slow the pace of consolidation”. Ed Balls, the shadow chancellor, said that Lagarde’s warning should be heeded by Britain. “Christine Lagarde is right to repeat her warning that cutting too quickly will hurt the recovery and jobs and that there is scope for reducing deficits more steadily to support economic growth. This is clearly a message aimed squarely at America, the eurozone and Britain too.”Amid the criticisms, Cameron issued a ringing endorsement of the chancellor’s plans. The prime minister told the BBC: “We have one of the biggest budget deficits in the world. That’s why the OECD and Christine Lagarde and others have said that Britain is quite a special case. We have got to deal with that. The reason we have interest rates that are as low almost as Germany’s, but our national deficit is actually bigger than Greece’s, is because we have a plan to deal with our debt. We mustn’t give up on that.” Downing Street had earlier made clear its determination to stick to Britain’s deficit reduction plan when it flatly ruled out following the example of Barack Obama. The president attempted to boost the US economy by outlining a $450bn (£283bn) jobs plan to Congress on Thursday night . Cameron’s spokesman distanced No 10 from the White House by saying that the US was facing a greater challenge than Britain. “Of course they have had particularly bad news over a sustained period with their labour market. He is seeking to address that.” The spokesman said: “Every country needs to have a response which is appropriate to its particular circumstances. The US is in a slightly different position because it has a reserve currency. Therefore it doesn’t face some of the same constraints other countries might face. It gives them more flexibility to do that.” The US Jobs Act would also not add to the US deficit, the spokesman added. “It is true, if you look at what Obama said, that he has been very clear that the American Jobs Act will not add to the deficit and that [in] the agreement passed in July, which cut government spending, he will be looking for more measures to cover the full cost of the Jobs Act.” The spokesman said Britain had to act with caution because it faced “fiscal risks”. He said: “Those countries which have particular fiscal risks – and remember we have the biggest deficit of any country pretty much – those countries need to take action to address their deficits and to consolidate.” Lagarde praised Obama’s plan. “We welcome the proposals announced by President Obama last night, which focus on supporting growth and job creation in the short term,” she said. But Lagarde added that she looked forward to hearing about Obama’s plans to cut the country’s debt. The IMF director added: “As the president also emphasised, it remains critical for the United States to clarify its medium-term plan to put public debt on a more sustainable path, and we look forward to the proposed consolidation plan to be announced in the coming days.” Treasury sources said Lagarde’s suggestions for future action were already government policy. These are: allowing the automatic fiscal stabilisers, which allow welfare spending to rise as tax receipts fall in a downturn, to kick in; and emphasising monetary policy. David Cameron IMF Economics Global economy Christine Lagarde George Osborne Nicholas Watt guardian.co.uk
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