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Rachel Maddow has been on quite a kick lately showing how little influence the tea party actually wields. And it’s true, in election after election, we have seen tea party-touted candidates going down against more establishment rivals. But that doesn’t keep their over-developed sense of self-importance from thinking that America is demanding their candidacy… like Joe the “Plumber” Joe told Yahoo’s “The Ticket” his thoughts on the potential campaign: “I’m not ruling anything out,” Wurzelbacher told The Ticket in an interview Thursday. He added that he thought it was an “interesting idea” and that people have been asking him to run for office since he confronted Obama four years ago. He’s spent much of his time since then on the speaker’s circuit, he said, encouraging others to run for office. “I like the idea of it — just regular Americans running. If a regular guy runs, right away the media’s going to attack him,” Wurzelbacher said. “What kind of education does he have? What does he know about this? My answer to that is, regular Americans aren’t experts, but dammit, look where the experts have gotten us. Maybe we need some regular guys in there. That’s what I’ve been doing the past two and a half years, just encouraging regular Americans to run. Tell the liberal media to go to hell and I don’t care what you guys say about me, I’m going to try to fix this country.” Sorry, but I see it a different way. I like my elected officials to be a bit smarter than me. Seriously, if the best we can hope for solutions for the ills of this country is a guy called “Joe the Plumber” who is neither named Joe nor actually a plumber, we’re all in a world of a trouble. The reason these candidates are not doing well in elections is because they are all so ill-prepared to be candidates, much less actually representatives of the people. Bumper sticker slogans may work well in campaigning. They’re less than adequate once in office and the American people are smart enough to be able to make that distinction. But that doesn’t stop the media from propping up these tea party candidates as these refreshing outsiders. And despite Wuzelbacher’s tired liberal media trope, nowhere do they question their bona fides, point out inconsistencies in their facts, or point at the huge amount of astroturfed money behind the tea party movement. And the media, despite the reality in front of them, will continue to give self-identified tea partiers far more influence than they’re due.

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Washington Monument Earthquake Damage Worse Than First Thought (PHOTOS)

Shortly after the rare 5.8 earthquake in Virginia rattled Washington D.C. Tuesday, a Park Service spokesman said there was “absolutely no damage” to the Washington Monument. A more thorough assessment discovered a crack in the landmark. Not long after, additional damage was found, including three or four “significant” cracks. The monument has been closed indefinitely for further inspection and repairs, which will take at least a few weeks, according to The Washington Times. Robert Vogel, superintendent of the National Mall and Memorial, said in a statement: “The Washington Monument is one of America’s most important landmarks, and we will do whatever it takes to ensure that it is restored completely and correctly.” The monument was not the only structure affected. The National Cathedral sustained damage worth an estimated millions in repairs.

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Sarah Jessica Parker’s ‘I Don’t Know How She Does It’ Poster Begging To Be Photoshopped (VIDEO)

When we got a look at the poster for Sarah Jessica Parker’s upcoming movie, “I Don’t Know How She Does It,” the only thing we didn’t know how to do was stop laughing. To be fair, this working mom rom-com looks like it’ll delight SJP’s fans, but we couldn’t get over how funny Ms. Carrie Bradshaw looks next to a laundry list of seemingly normal activities accompanied by such an incredulous phrase. How does she do it? As any working mom (or anyone who’s ever had to finish a presentation, make dinner reservations, go to a PTA meeting AND check email all in one day) can tell you: it’s called life. On top of that, the poster itself is just BEGGING to be photoshopped. So we took it upon ourselves to come up with a couple of more realistic versions of the poster, which you can see underneath the orignal below. What do you think? The Original: Our Take On The Original: Or, If You Really Want To Be Honest About It: And If You’re So Inclined, Watch The Trailer Here:

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I Don’t Want Your Husband. No. Really!

“Are you going to the Schoenbaum’s?” I asked my old friend Marcy. For a moment the question hung in the air, finally she answered, “I won’t be there, but my husband will.” Since when did Michael become the “husband?” Since I became the not-so-gay divorcée, and in married America, there’s something very wrong with that. During my twenty-year marriage, whether àu deux or flying solo, as one half of a couple, socializing was pretty much a sexless affair. I was just as likely to be invited to join the boys at the poker table as I was to do lunch with the girls. Dads called to arrange play dates, emailed silly jokes, and wrote snarky comments on my Facebook wall. In the midst of singing the “did they really split up” “Bye Bye Birdie” telephone song, my world shifted on a dime. To my not only married, but partnered girlfriends, I became a potential enemy, to be watched. Very carefully. I was still “me,” but this me was untethered, and as a result, perhaps I’d develop an interest in the men they could barely stand themselves (Too soon?). I’d never do that. We have a code. They know that. But, when fear leads the way, rational thinking begone. What precipitates the fear? That they’ll end up (gulp) like me — the now pathetic, fifth wheel? It’s not that I can’t get a date. It’s just that I can’t… get a date. Not with someone I’d want to go out with anyway. If a guy is middle-aged and single, well, there’s usually a really good (bad) reason why. (It’s not them, it’s me.) My women friends try like hell to rectify that with a plethora of variations on the old, “Have I got a guy for you!” game. Are they trying to match me up to ease my loneliness and bring me back into the “couple fold,” or to keep me busy and away from their man? Perhaps both. It’s my… second divorce, I’m a two-time loser. To some of my girlfriends that makes me a winner. The mixed perception and reality that now I’m in the enviable position of starting over, from scratch, like a new cookie recipe. I think it scares and thrills them at the same time. (Kind of as it does me.) Perhaps I’m a painful reminder of what they don’t want to face in their own lives. I left and appear to be thriving. They don’t see the sleepless nights, the legal bills, and the freezer full of lean cuisines. Maybe they worry that this new life makes me more stimulating to their mate. The reality is that I’m worrying about income, health insurance, and menopause. Not so sexy. Granted, as a provocateur of words by trade, I can be pretty dirty. When I was married, my balls-to-the-walls straight-talk was considered good clean fun. Coupled people of both sexes would hop on one of my saucy Facebook threads or Twitter feeds without thought. I guess it could be considered brainflirting, with the funnybone the desired target, rather than the gonads. Shake up the domestic equation, however, and all bets are off. Profile pictures shift to “couple shots,” and funny status responses from the hubbies come via direct message rather than joining the public conversation. Worse still, the regular banter goes silent with both sexes and friendships falls away. Damn it! My comment numbers are plummeting! Off-screen, it plays out pretty much the same. Intimate dinner parties and nights out happen only with my single friends. There are some social invitations, but I’m hereby relegated to open house parties with mixed crowds where I’m encouraged to “bring a friend.” When I have a conversation with a coupled man, I can be sure to find his woman close enough at hand to listen in and watch the body language. If there’s seating of any kind, the wife will almost always take the chair next to me, the old dear, now single girlfriend, keeping a safe distance from her hubby, who in the past rarely exchanged more than kid poop and vomit stories with me. But, I get it. All of it. Long relationships rarely, if ever, maintain their sexual edge. Who doesn’t have a somewhat lazy eye after a decade or two of marriage? It’s just a shame. These friendships were, not long ago, trusted and easy. Now, there’s a level of guilt and question added in the mix, almost without exception. I don’t want your guy. Really. Hell, I’ve listened to you complain about him for ages. Don’t invite me to your couple parties, or sit me next to your man at dinner. Just please, please, hop my Facebook threads and follow me on Twitter.

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MI5 files reveal details of 1953 coup that overthrew British Guiana’s leaders

Documents released by National Archives show prime minister Winston Churchill feared the colony would turn communist Secret documents declassified on Friday by MI5 reveal in detail how in 1953 the UK under prime minister Winston Churchill overthrew the elected government of British Guiana – now Guyana – because he feared its leftwing leader and his American wife would lead the British colony into the arms of the Soviet Union. The documents reveal how British spies kept up intense scrutiny on Cheddi Jagan and his wife Janet, who together founded the People’s Progressive party (PPP) to campaign for workers’ rights and independence from British rule for the sugar-producing colony in northern South America. The UK had agreed a new constitution in the early 1950s which allowed British Guiana’s political parties to participate in national elections and form a government, but maintained power in the hands of the British-appointed governor. Christopher Andrew, MI5′s official historian, said the files provide new details of the coup and “further evidence that MI5 played a more important part in British decolonisation than is often realised”. The Jagans – a US-educated former dentist and his wife, born Janet Rosenberg in Chicago – seem an unlikely threat. But the 39 folders of files released by the National Archives are crammed full of tapped phone conversations, intercepted letters and accounts of physical surveillance over more than a decade. In 1951, the year after the Jagans founded their party, an MI5 agent based on the nearby island of Trinidad described them as “something new in British Guiana politics”. “Both are able and intelligent and the mere fact that Janet Jagan is white, young and not unattractive in appearance lends considerable interest to her activities and those of her husband,” he said. To British authorities, the Jagans were a headache. To the Americans, they were a potential communist threat on America’s doorstep. MI5 concluded that their party was “not receiving any financial support from any communist organisation outside the country”. Nonetheless, amid worsening strikes and unrest, Britain grew unhappy with the Jagans’ “disruptive antics”. After the party won a huge majority in British Guiana’s 1953 election, making Cheddi Jagan prime minister, Churchill decided to act. “We ought surely to get American support in doing all that we can to break the communist teeth in British Guiana,” he wrote to his colonial secretary. In the end, Britain acted alone, mounting a military operation codenamed Operation Windsor. Churchill dispatched a warship, HMS Superb, and brought hundreds of troops by air and sea to secure key sites. On 9 October, Britain suspended British Guiana’s constitution, fired its legislators and arrested the Jagans. The surprise military operation went according to plan. The Trinidad-based MI5 officer noted with quiet satisfaction that “it was obvious that the PPP leaders had no idea that the constitution would be suspended or that they might be arrested”. And the spy threw in a note of thanks for the women who helped the army to march on its stomach. “I might add in parenthesis that catering arrangements for the airborne troops during their halt in Trinidad were carried out by Mrs Beadon, wife of the commissioner of police, Mrs Rahr, my wife and Joyce Huggins … and I understand that no less than 600 large sandwiches were cut by these ladies,” he wrote. An outraged Cheddi Jagan appealed by telegram to Britain’s opposition Labour party for help. Leader Clement Attlee replied curtly: “Regret impossible to intervene.” For the next three years, British Guiana was ruled under emergency powers by the British governor and appointed officials, and the Jagans were kept under house arrest and strict surveillance. In the years that followed, MI5 softened somewhat toward Cheddi Jagan, acknowledging that he was an astute and popular politician – though the agent based in Trinidad strongly disliked Janet Jagan, whom he described as a committed communist “uncompromising in her hatreds”. By the 1960s, Britain’s spies worried that the Jagans would turn to newly communist Cuba, possibly making their country a base for Latin American revolutionaries. “If the Jagans remain in power after independence and if their activities and views remain unchanged, they will represent a threat to the stability both of British Guiana itself and of the neighbouring territories,” the officer wrote. Andrew said it was clear from previously released official documents that successive British governments “gave in to pressure from the White House to allow the CIA to use subterranean means to ensure that the first leader of independent Guyana in 1966 was not Cheddi Jagan”. He added in a podcast for the National Archives (begins 5m 38sec in): “In most British colonies, there was a relatively friendly transfer of power to independent governments. British Guiana was a notable exception.” The Jagans remained a major force in Guyanese politics and Cheddi Jagan became prime minister again in 1961, when the batch of MI5 files ends. After the cold war ended, Cheddi Jagan served as president of Guyana from 1992 until his death in 1997. His wife succeeded him between 1997 and 1999. She died in 2009, aged 88. Guyana Communism MI5 National Archives Winston Churchill guardian.co.uk

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The Guardian is inviting readers to share their recollections of the moment they found out America had been attacked

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The Guardian is inviting readers to share their recollections of the moment they found out America had been attacked

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AP Contends That Unemployment Claims Are ‘Stabilizing,’ Misses N.Y.-Only Element of the Verizon Influence

In his coverage of the Department of Labor's weekly report on unemployment claims this morning, the Associated Press's Christopher Rugaber, after noting how initial claims filed by Communications Workers of America members who are on strike against Verizon (more on that later) inflated this week's and last week's results, wrote that “excluding the work stoppage, layoffs appear to be stabilizing. That should help ease fears that the economy is on the verge of a recession.” The following chart, which excludes those workers' claims during the past two weeks, doesn't exactly give wholehearted support to Rugaber's key contentions: Unless Chris's crystal ball is better than mine, a 10,000-claim, one-week jump is not a particularly strong indicator of “stabilizing,” let alone a justification for contending that the news should ease recession fears — and this is before the current week gets revised. In 23 out of the past 24 weeks, the initially reported claims number has been revised upward. Including the one week where there was no change, the subsequent-week revision has averaged over 4,000 claims. Now let's look at those CWA/Verizon initial claims. Here's what Rugaber wrote about them: … last week's non-seasonally adjusted total included about 8,500 of those employees, the department said. About 12,500 striking workers filed claims two weeks ago. About 45,000 Verizon workers went on strike Aug. 7. Unions representing the workers ended the strike earlier this week. Typically, workers who walk off the job aren't eligible for benefits. But states have specific rules governing labor disputes. … Joshua Shapiro, an economist at MFR Inc., calculated that without the strike, applications would have dipped to 397,000 two weeks ago and risen to 407,000 last week. (The official all-inclusive totals are 412,000 and 417,000, respectively — Ed.) It turns out (HT to emailer Bill Sloat) that only one state allows striking workers to collect unemployment benefits, something I would think that those among Rugaber's readers who probably figured out on their own that less than half of those striking were collecting benefits would liked to have known (bold is mine): Why Verizon Strikers Filed For Jobless Benefits U.S. workers are usually denied jobless benefits when they go on strike. After all, they walked off the job. Except in New York. The state is the only one in the U.S. that in some cases allows striking workers to receive unemployment benefits, according to a union official. Apparently, thousands of workers at Verizon Communications (VZ) are trying to take advantage of the rare law. During a two-week strike that ended Tuesday, about 21,000 union members filed applications for unemployment compensation, according to the U.S. Labor Department. Those workers might be eligible for the $405 maximum weekly benefit New York provides. The state labor office was unable to immediately say who is eligible and under what circumstances. Interesting — and outrageous. Go on strike in New York, get a check. Only 16,000 of the 21,000 mentioned live in New York; the other 5,000 filed in other states, and will presumably have their claims denied. Assuming seemingly safely that the large majority of workers were eligible and entitled to collect the $405 maximum benefit, the weekly cost to the state before workers agreed a few days ago to come back as negotiations continue was about $6 million. If Empire State Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo was really serious about getting the state's house in order, he'd put a stop to striker eligibility for unemployment benefits. I'd love to be surprised, but I'll bet it's not even on his radar. Cross-posted a BizzyBlog.com .

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A stunning young woman walks down a street in Florence, her head held high. All around, men playfully gawk at her grace and beauty. Just then the camera shutter snaps. “American Girl in Italy” is among the most popular snapshots of all time, and it’s turning 60 years old this month. The photo, which was

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Welcome to First Look, our daily roundup of early-bird news: • European markets weathered a second straight day of brutal losses after Thursday’s worldwide rout, amid fears over debt and economic troubles on the continent and in the United States. (The New York Times) • With markets in turmoil, Vice President Biden sought to assure

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