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NBC’s Gregory Accuses GOP of ‘Politicizing’ Debt Downgrade, After Allowing John Kerry to Blame Tea Party

On Sunday's Meet the Press on NBC, host David Gregory allowed Massachusetts Senator John Kerry to blame Standard and Poor's downgrade of U.S. debt on the Tea Party without challenge . However, minutes later, in an interview with Arizona Senator John McCain, Gregory was quick to accuse Republicans of “politicizing” the issue by criticizing Democrats. After quoting a statement from House Speaker John Boehner on the downgrade – which cited the unwillingness of Democrats to curb massive government spending as a cause – Gregory fretted to McCain: “Do you not see this downgrade as something akin to war that should galvanize political leadership on both sides of the aisle, rather than politicizing it?” Earlier in the exchange, Gregory was happy further Kerry's assertion that it was a “Tea Party downgrade,” arguing: “There were Republicans and Democrats who said Tea Party members, a lot of them freshmen conservatives, were digging in and, actually, some used the word 'hostage,' holding the whole process hostage because they would not raise any taxes at all.” McCain condemned the depiction of Tea Party members of Congress as hostage-takers: “And by the way, talking about hostages, of lately the Democrats have been calling us terrorists. So we need to lower that level of rhetoric, obviously.” Responding to McCain's observation that President Obama had failed to lead in the debt ceiling debate, Gregory declared: “The President was dealing….John Boehner was dealing. They were coming up with a plan. They couldn't sell it. Was this really failed presidential leadership?” Here is a transcript of Gregory's August 7 exchange with McCain over the debt downgrade: 10:44AM ET DAVID GREGORY: Joining me now, Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, ranking member of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

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Latest Notable Quotables: Deriding the Tea Party as Terrorists ‘Strapped with Dynamite’

MRC has just posted the latest edition of Notable Quotables , our bi-weekly compilation of the latest outrageous, sometimes humorous, quotes in the liberal media. This week, NQ is chock full of quotes from journalists slashing the Tea Party as the Republican Party’s “Hezbollah faction,” who have “strapped explosives to the Capitol” and “waged jihad on the American people.” Oh, and New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd disparaging the “Tea Party budget slashers” as “cannibals,” “zombies,” and “vampires, draining the country’s reputation, credit rating and compassion.” So much for civility. The full package is available at www.MRC.org ; here are some of the best quotes: Deriding the Tea Party: Terrorists “Strapped with Dynamite” “There’s a nihilist caucus which is, ‘Listen, we want to burn the place down.’ I mean, they’re not, they’ve strapped explosives to the Capitol and they think they are immune from it. The Tea Party caucus wants this crisis, and do we want to do this again six months from now?” — Bloomberg columnist Margaret Carlson on Inside Washington , July 29. “If sane Republicans do not stand up to this Hezbollah faction in their midst, the Tea Party will take the GOP on a suicide mission.” — New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, July 27. “You know what they say: Never negotiate with terrorists. It only encourages them. These last few months, much of the country has watched in horror as the Tea Party Republicans have waged jihad on the American people….For now, the Tea Party Republicans can put aside their suicide vests. But rest assured: They’ll have them on again soon enough.” — New York Times columnist Joe Nocera, August 2. Tea Party Budget Slashers = “Cannibals,” “Vampires” and “Zombies” “Tea Party budget-slashers….were like cannibals, eating their own party and leaders alive. They were like vampires, draining the country’s reputation, credit rating and compassion. They were like zombies, relentlessly and mindlessly coming back again and again to assault their unnerved victims, Boehner and President Obama. They were like the metallic beasts in Alien flashing mouths of teeth inside other mouths of teeth, bursting out of Boehner’s stomach every time he came to a bouquet of microphones.” — New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd, August 3 column. Children Who Don’t “Understand” How Government Works “The question, I think, some people might be asking is, do you think that members of the Tea Party caucus know how to govern, or are they — do they understand that standing up for a cause is not the same as governing?” — Co-host Ann Curry to Tom Brokaw on NBC’s Today , August 1. “Some people say that the Republican Party has been held hostage by the Tea Party. One of our Facebook followers sent in an interesting analogy and said, ‘Why are Republicans allowing freshman congressmen to control this debate?’ and this person said, ‘It’s like letting the teenager in the family run the family budget.’ I mean, there’s some truth in that.” — Moderator Bob Schieffer to GOP Senate Leader Mitch McConnell on Face the Nation , July 31.

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Treasury Timothy Geithner

Peter Schiff Responds to Timothy Geithner on Debt Ceiling – “He’s just making this stuff up!” A Conversation Between Pres. Clinton and Sec. Geithner at CGI America Timothy Geithner says actually, the government doesn’t have to balance its budget like a family topix_usnews says: Geithner says he will stay at Treasury : Timothy Geithner has told President Barack Obama that he will remain on … http://bit.ly/nKx7iW

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Lots of qualities might make a city kinky: strip clubs per capita, average sexual satisfaction, or even a lack of anything better to do. Take a look at five of America’s dirtiest cities, as rounded up by AlterNet.org : Roselawn, Ind : Home to family-friendly nudist resort Ponderosa Sun Club, where…

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Daily Kos Week in Review: Dancing on the (Debt) Ceiling

John Boehner said he got 98 percent of what he wanted from the debt deal. That sounds about right, since Kossacks apparently got roughly two percent of what they wanted, judging from their rage-filled blasts this past week at Republicans, conservatives, the Tea Party, and businessmen. As usual, each headline is preceded by the blogger's name or pseudonym. Kos: You could call Republicans terrorists…

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Jim Jordan: Politicians Should be Careful About Shooting Their Mouths Off After He Blew Off Dangers of Defaulting on our Debt

Click here to view this media Ohio Republican Rep. Jim Jordan apparently has his irony alert button broken after this statement he made this Thursday for the Young America’s Foundation . Responding to a question by one of the student participants, he warned that politicians had better study up on policy before they come on the air and say something stupid. This video was from Thursday, before S&P decided to downgrade our credit rating after the debacle of watching our politicians run right up to the deadline before finally agreeing to raise the cap on our debt ceiling. If Jordan thinks politicians should be studying up on policy matters before they go on the air and say something ridiculous, maybe he should be rethinking his irresponsible remarks he made on C-SPAN’s Newsmakers last month , where he acted like a partial default and running past the deadline in August would have been acceptable and would not have caused even worse problems than what we’ve seen from Standard and Poor’s over the weekend. After being asked “how you decide what the difference between risk and being naive”, Rep. Jim Jordan responded this way. JORDAN: You want to educate yourself, now what the policy is, instead of just rushing in there and being goofy and saying all kinds of crazy things, you want to take the time to make sure that you’re prepared. That’s why I try to in my comments talk about, you know, being disciplined, doing the hard work and all those things. You’ve got to do that before you, particularly in politics, before you shoot your mouth off or something like that, along those lines. So, that’s important, just to do your homework and be prepared. That’s I think a prerequisite for just about anything you’re going to try to accomplish. Later in the segment, he also said that the United States should make cuts to domestic spending before they ever dare to cut a penny out of defense, because god knows, we’ve got to have our priorities straight, don’t we? Can’t dare to put an end to that war machine we’ve got going, but poor and elderly Americans, they’re expendable. Click here to view this media I’m not sure how much worse things have to get before the voters in these wingnuts’ districts start holding them responsible. Must they destroy what’s left of our middle class in America? All I can say is they’re probably really lucky that most of their constituents don’t pay nearly the amount of attention as I do with listening to what comes out of their mouths and how they’re governing. We all know that our corporate media isn’t pointing it out for them.

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On This Week with Christiane Amanpour, the impressive and intelligent Gov. Martin O’Malley goes up against the weaselly Sen. Jeff Sessions in a discussion of what can actually be done to help the economy. And of course, the biggest problem is that there is no real debt crisis. It’s a high-stakes game in which the Republicans were pushing their spending-cut agenda from one end, and a Democratic president and leadership on the other who thought they could work the situation to their own political advantage. And then there’s we the people, caught in the middle of this mess: AMANPOUR: And so a clear lack of faith in Washington’s political ability to make real economic progress. With me to discuss whether the parties can come together on anything, Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley, who chairs the Democratic Governors Association, and in Alabama, Senator Jeff Sessions, the top Republican on the Budget Committee. Gentlemen, thank you very much, indeed, for joining me. Let me first ask you, you heard from John Chambers now, still categoric that this downgrade should happen. Do you think it’s justified? And how do you think the parties — you and, for instance, Senator Sessions, in terms of parties — are going to get together to solve this? O’MALLEY: I don’t think it’s justified, in terms of when you look at the math here. They made a $2 trillion mistake. The other rating agencies did not downgrade the U.S. debt because they did not make that $2 trillion mistake. But one has to find understandable their pessimism about our inability to come together on the most important issue facing our country, which is, how do we create jobs? We need a balanced approach. And the extremism, the Tea Party obstructionism here in Washington, is keeping us from restoring that balanced approach that America has always used — of investing in the future, investing in job creation, and also being fiscally responsible at the same time. AMANPOUR: Senator Sessions, do you think that there can be now sort of a wake-up call, as some people have suggested, for both parties to really come together? I’ve heard people say, this is serious. We don’t want to see political parties sniping at each other right now. We want leaders to be as big as the crisis that they have to tackle. SESSIONS: Well, look, we do have a big, big crisis. I’ve been warning all year, every expert before the Budget Committee has told us we’re heading to fiscal crisis. We’re on an unsustainable path. We’re borrowing 40 cents of every dollar we spend. This year, the interest on our debt is $240 billion. It’s projected in 10 years to go to $940 billion in interest in one year. This is unsustainable. And sooner or later, if we don’t change, this kind of ratings are going to continue. But when you have a Democratic Senate that will not produce a budget — and 900 — 830 days without a budget, a president who submitted the most irresponsible budget in history, who’s continuing to talk about spending more, investing more, whose secretary of education was demanding a 13 percent increase in the Department of Education next fiscal year, beginning October 1st, you know we’re in denial. We’re not understanding the threat. The president is going to have to look the American people in the eye and tell them, “We are on an unsustainable course.” He’s got to do that. And if he asks us to reduce spending by 10 percent across the board, all these departments and agencies, Congress would rally to him, you know — you know, in a bipartisan way . Now, this would have been a good time for Amanpour to explain how the Senate Republicans blocked the Democratic budget. But for some reason, she didn’t think that was relevant. AMANPOUR: Senator… SESSIONS: But if he’s going to deny we have a crisis , he’s not going to have bipartisan support. AMANPOUR: Just quickly, while I still have you there, the S&P also talked about — you’re talking about cutting spending. They also talked about raising more revenue. They talked about the Bowles-Simpson, which puts that in. Do you think that, for instance, when the bipartisan committee gets stood up, that there will be a chance for both sides to give on some of their sacred cows? Would you, on — on tax loopholes, for instance, and tax reform? SESSIONS: Well, raising taxes is what balanced plan means. That’s plain to every American by now. The administration wants to raise taxes so they can permanently implant a larger level of spending. They’ve increased domestic discretionary spending 24 percent in two years. This is unthinkable. And this would have been a good time for Amanpour to point out that most of that is increased spending for food stamps and unemployment benefits because of the recession. But for some reason, she didn’t think it was necessary. I wonder why? AMANPOUR: All right. SESSIONS: And so we’ve got a problem that we’ve got to bring that spending down, not increase the burden on the private sector. O’MALLEY: In all of that, Christiane, I never once heard the distinguished senator say the word “jobs.” What we have right now are moms and dads in Maryland, moms and dads in Alabama who are looking for work and have been looking for work for a long, long time. Senator Sessions voted for the largest deficit increases under George Bush, and he, like others in his party, worship at – worships at the altar of the false god of tax cuts . We need to be about creating jobs. And there’s good people in the Republican Party that want our country’s economy to improve. And that’s what we need to allow space to emerge. AMANPOUR: So I asked Senator Sessions about tax loopholes… SESSIONS: Well, Governor, let me just say this. The highest debt President Bush ever had was $450 billion. This president is averaging $1,300 billion. O’MALLEY: And every single time – and, Senator, you voted to increase the debt limit… SESSIONS: And the debt already, according to expert testimony… O’MALLEY: … three or four times under George Bush. SESSIONS: … is pulling down growth and costing us jobs. O’MALLEY: Oh, good, you said “jobs,” Senator. SESSIONS: The debt is 100 percent of GDP, is hammering our economy, and that’s why we’re not having the growth. That’s why we’re having the unexpected decline in growth that we’ve seen the first half of this year. AMANPOUR: All right. You’ve both laid out the parameters that we’ve heard over and over again. I want to ask you, Senator Sessions, do you have faith that this debt committee will be able to come to the agreements and make the cuts and savings and also do what needs to be done to tackle the debt? SESSIONS: Christiane, I do believe that committee can function and be successful in the limited goal we’ve given them. What S&P is saying, it’s not enough. It’s only about $2 trillion, a little over, when we’re going to increase our debt in the next 10 years $13 trillion. So that’s why they’re concerned. Even the plan is insufficient, if – if successful. AMANPOUR: And, Governor O’Malley, do you have faith that the debt committee can actually tackle this? O’MALLEY: I do, because when you look at – when you ask the public if they believe a balanced approach is required, almost 50 percent of registered Republicans agree that a balanced approach is required. Millionaires and billionaires should be playing their fair share. We all need to pull together and create jobs and to make this new economy ours. And I believe that we can come together around that. Look, it’s not a Democratic or Republican idea. It’s a historic economic fact that a modern economy requires modern investments to create jobs. And that’s what we need to be about. AMANPOUR: Governor O’Malley, Senator Sessions, thank you very much, indeed, for joining us.

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Businesswoman: Apologize, Obama

Her name is Amilya Antonetti, CEO and chairwoman of AMA Productions, a small video production company out of Phoenix. She said we don’t have leadership in Washington. She wants President Obama to apologize for allowing America’s credit to be downgraded. Hiring? From Amilya Antonetti: “Why should I take the Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Don Surber Discovery Date : 07/08/2011 14:00 Number of articles : 2

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Standard & Poor’s yesterday not only defended its decision to downgrade America’s once-vaunted AAA credit rating for the first time, it warned that a second downgrade could be on the way if the US doesn’t get its act together. “Compared to some other highly rated governments, the US government does…

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Financial crisis: full force of US downgrade is felt around the world

US decline leaves China tipped as next economic superpower while pressure on US bonds is set to affect eurozone crisis When India joined China in criticising America’s chaotic handling of its hefty debts this weekend, describing the challenges facing the White House as “grave”, it was the clearest indicator yet that the old order had been swept away. Until recently the United States was the unassailable economic superpower, and the prospect of the White House being bossed about by the bond markets – let alone by Beijing or New Delhi – was unthinkable. But following a week when an estimated $3tn (£1.8tn) was wiped off the value of world shares, Friday’s downgrade of America’s cherished AAA rating to AA+ by Standard & Poor’s is set to cause more turmoil on global markets and potentially jeopardise Europe’s attempts to solve its own financial crisis. With currency markets, particularly the dollar, expected to come under pressure, and US bond yields almost certain to rise, this could have the knock-on effect of raising borrowing costs in the eurozone at a time when Spanish and Italian bonds in particular have seen yields soar. This could prove to be a tipping point for the transfer of global power from the US to its great rival China, even though the fortunes of Asia and the west are inextricably linked. The boom of the past two decades in the US, the UK and much of Europe came at the expense of an extraordinary growth in borrowing, much of it from the Chinese and other fast-growing Asian economies, which were happy to keep piling up Treasury bills and buying blue-chip companies, so long as the billions of dollars they spent were recycled into cheap consumer goods. At the height of the credit crunch, it seemed that both lenders and borrowers were finally getting their comeuppance, but as the Bank of England governor, Mervyn King, has repeatedly pointed out in the past 12 months, the “global imbalances” that led to the crisis – the vast trade deficits and eye-watering debts – never went away. Gerard Lyons, chief economist at Standard Chartered, blames the turmoil of recent days on a combination of “ineffective policymakers, excitable markets – and a realisation that the recovery is going to be very slow in the west”. David Blanchflower, a former member of the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, went further: “What we’ve seen is a once-in-100-years financial crisis that will take 20 years to adjust to.” As for the US itself, Alan Greenspan, the former Federal Reserve chairman, said on NBC that the downgrade was having a salutary effect on the public as well as on policymakers. “It gave the sense there is something basically bad going on. And it’s hit the self-esteem of the United States, the psyche.” But there is little glee in China about the west’s travails. Beijing has repeatedly expressed concern about the mounting US debt burden and the reliance of the global economy on the mighty dollar. Now, the gloves are finally off. The official news agency has accused the US of “debt addiction” and insisted that, as its largest creditor, China now “has every right to demand the United States address its structural debt problem and ensure the safety of China’s dollar assets”. The Chinese economist Sun Lijian, in a commentary for the People’s Daily, said: “The biggest victims [of the downgrade] may not be the United States itself, but other countries that have depended on external demand to amass national wealth – be they Asian nations that depend on exporting goods, or nations in Latin America and the Middle East, as well as Russia, that depend on exporting resources.” For decades, the interest rate on American debt has been known as the “risk-free rate”, because a US default was as close to impossible as anyone in financial markets could imagine, and all other bonds were priced relative to America’s. Now that the markets have been forced to think the unthinkable, it is not at all clear what happens next. Erik Britton, of the City consultancy Fathom, says one possibility is that borrowing costs everywhere will rise. “It’s the cascade effect – it’s the chain reaction that we’re concerned about. Do other countries retain the same risk premium relative to the US? If that’s the case, then all bond yields will go up. Everybody’s borrowing costs will go up, and that includes Italy and Spain, where it won’t take much to make their situation unsustainable.” And while the Standard & Poor’s verdict on the US is a humiliating blow, it merely raises the distant fear of a future default, while for Italy and Spain that risk is much more immediate. When the crisis reached Rome, it finally became impossible for Europe’s leaders to write off the turmoil in bond markets as a problem of the “periphery” – little Greece, Ireland and Portugal. As German officials told Der Spiegel this weekend, Italy’s economy simply looks too big to rescue, certainly by the current bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF). Jean-Claude Trichet, president of the European Central Bank (ECB), has reluctantly ridden to the rescue many times during the crisis; on Monday, bond investors are hoping to see large-scale buying of Italian bonds by the ECB. The eurozone has repeatedly drawn back from the brink over the past three years, but a default by Italy or Spain would pose a threat to the single currency’s existence. Sony Kapoor, of the Brussels-based consultancy Re-Define, said an ECB decision to buy bonds would not be enough; eurozone politicians also needed to revisit their plans for beefing up the EFSF. No one knows what will happen this week, but no one believes it can ever be back to business as usual for the global economy. Financial crisis Global economy US domestic policy Market turmoil China European debt crisis US economy Economic policy US economic growth and recession Heather Stewart Tania Branigan Dominic Rushe guardian.co.uk

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