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Matt Damon Defends Teachers at Save Our Schools March

Click here to view this media Lawrence O’Donnell had nothing but praise for actor Matt Damon who came out over the weekend to support teachers during the Save Our Schools March & National Call to Action in Washington D.C. Apparently Damon’s mother is a school teacher and when confronted by some wingnut libertarian reporter from Reason.tv, Damon hit back at her pretty hard with her assumptions that teachers only care about tenure and job security, rather than being the underpaid civil servants that the majority of them are that put up with what they do because they really do love their jobs and care about educating kids. O’Donnell: That’s how crazy the attacks on teachers has become. Damon had some harsh words for what has become of our public school system these days where test scores are held above any care that curriculum is based on being able to be flexible enough to make sure that the children in any given class are actually given a well rounded education to where they’re actually learning something besides just being able to pass some standardized test. Lawrence O’Donnell also had something to add with his personal experiences on the topic and pointed out that the real reason that conservatives are attacking teachers’ unions and our public education system has a lot more to do with politics than any real concern for whether students in America are actually getting a decent education. It’s about busting unions and taking away any political power from Democrats since anyone who is a teacher obviously has no reason to support the Republican Party when they’d prefer our educators were working for minimum wage with no bargaining rights and no benefits if they had their way, or at least letting those more “productive” teachers who are younger come in and take the place of someone who’s been teaching twenty or thirty years plus and getting rid of that burdensome teacher who might be costing the tax payers too much by actually having their pension obligations honored that they bargained for. It’s a sorry state of affairs in this country when we’ve got one political party that cares more about busting unions than educating our children but sadly, our education system is not the only one you can make that point on when it comes to what the GOP has in mind for the future of our country and whether there are any companies or workforces left that are still unionized. They’d prefer workers having no voice and a race to the bottom with third world countries — and heaven forbid anyone pushes back against that and wants to retain a middle class in America. The HuffPo has more on Damon’s appearance over the weekend — Matt Damon Defends Teachers Against ‘Sh***y’ Reason.tv Cameraman (VIDEO) : Matt Damon had some strong words at last Saturday’s Save Our Schools march in Washington, D.C. Following his keynote address, the actor took offense to a Reason.tv reporter who contended that, as opposed to the environment faced by teachers in a tenure system, the lack of job security in acting functions as an incentive for hard work. Here’s what Damon had to say : So you think job insecurity is what makes me work hard? I want to be an actor. That’s not an incentive. That’s the thing. See, you take this MBA-style thinking, right? It’s the problem with ed policy right now, this intrinsically paternalistic view of problems that are much more complex than that. It’s like saying a teacher is going to get lazy when they have tenure. A teacher wants to teach. I mean, why else would you take a shitty salary and really long hours and do that job unless you really love to do it? Good for Matt Damon and thank you for speaking out. Damon: Maybe you’re a shitty camerman.

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Americans rule in-flight internet adoption — for now

It doesn’t get more American than gnawing on a doughnut sandwich while watching Toddlers in Tiaras, right? Well, apparently, the only thing more American is engaging in these two acts while connected to in-flight internet . In a recent BBC article, Gogo’s Jon Cobin said at least 1,200 commercial aircraft flying over these here amber waves of grain offer up WiFi, while there are only 100 [commercial] flying machines serving on-board connectivity in the rest of the world. Delta’s just announced full, fleet-wide WiFi connections on domestic flights, while most other major US carriers offer internet access on all or some of their planes. As the BBC points out, that could have something to do with the slow roll out of satellite-based systems — many American airlines depend on Gogo’s land-based services. Unfortunately for you die-hard patriots, however, acceptance of satellite broadband seems poised to take flight in the near future. At least we’ll always have Eden Wood. Americans rule in-flight internet adoption — for now originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Aug 2011 14:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Mariachi Band Serenades a Beluga Whale at Mystic Aquarium

Connecticut based Mariachi band Los Trovadores de America recently serenaded a Beluga Whale at Mystic Aquarium in Mystic, CT. via Boing Boing Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Laughing Squid Discovery Date : 03/08/2011 15:18 Number of articles : 3

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Sen. Joe Lieberman, who used to be a staunch ally for Medicare and Social Security is now throwing away any pretense that he was once a Democratic politician and would rather help destroy the lives of seniors in America to make sure funds flow to continue endless wars on Pam Geller’s favorite target: Radical Islamists . In a new bill that he’ll co-sponsor with Conservative Tom Coburn, they plan on helping to weaken one of our most cherished and valued programs, Social Security and send the cash over the the Military. he knows that Social Security is solvent for decades and doesn’t add a penny to the deficit which has preoccupied the White House, GOP and the beltway media. It doesn’t matter that Americans have said over and over again that they prefer defense spending to be cut, not our social safety nets. Think Progress: This past April, right-wing war hawk John Bolton suggested during an interview on Fox News that the United States should cut Social Security and Medicare to finance the defense budget. During debate over the debt deal today on the Senate floor, Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT) appeared to endorse this call. Lieberman explained that he is working with Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK) on a Social Security spending reduction plan and that “we can’t protect these entitlements and also have the national defense…to protect us…with Islamist extremists”: LIEBERMAN: I want to indicate today to my colleagues that Senator Coburn and I are working again on a bipartisan proposal to secure Social Security over the long term, we hope to have that done in time. To also forward to the special committee for their consideration. So, bottom line, we can’t protect these entitlements and also have the national defense we need to protect us in a dangerous world while we’re at war with Islamist extremists who attacked us on 9/11 and will be for a long time to come. In a quick search I found a poll done by Reuters/Ipsos back in March which says: A majority of Americans prefer cutting defense spending to reduce the federal deficit rather than taking money from public retirement and health programs, a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Wednesday showed. The poll found 51 percent of Americans support reducing defense spending, and only 28 percent want to cut Medicare and Medicaid health programs for the elderly and poor. A mere 18 percent back cuts in the Social Security retirement program. This fearmongering fiend would rather back an out of control war hawk’s idea from a nut like John Bolton, ( who also is a hero to Pam Geller ) than stand up for the Americans that already have been paying 600 billion dollars a year to the military. As ThinkProgress’s Ben Armbruster notes, the Bolton-Lieberman plan is “is basically a reverse Robin Hood scheme : robbing the poor to pay the rich, or really, the Military Industrial Complex on steroids.” Lieberman is bringing this to the floor because military spending is one of the triggers that will be activated if no deal is passed by the new Super Cat Food Commission. Congress nor the president seem to care that Americans also don’t want Medicare cut to appease the deficit hawks. Despite growing concerns about the country’s long-term fiscal problems and an intensifying debate in Washington about how to deal with them, Americans strongly oppose some of the major remedies under consideration, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. The survey finds that Americans prefer to keep Medicare just the way it is. WSJ/NBC: Less than a quarter of Americans support making significant cuts to Social Security or Medicare to tackle the country’s mounting deficit, according to a new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll, illustrating the challenge facing lawmakers who want voter buy-in to alter entitlement programs. In the poll, Americans across all age groups and ideologies said by large margins that it was “unacceptable” to make significant cuts in entitlement programs in order to reduce the federal deficit. Even tea party supporters, by a nearly 2-to-1 margin, declared significant cuts to Social Security “unacceptable.” Could Joe have acted any quicker to defend his precious wars?

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Side Deal With Bank Of America Would Cede Liability In Exchange For Homeowner Relief

WASHINGTON — Federal and state prosecutors are in advanced negotiations with Bank of America in pursuit of a settlement that would forgive the bank for a broad range of past mortgage abuses in exchange for fines that would finance a significantly expanded relief program for struggling homeowners, according to three people with direct knowledge of the matter. The negotiations are separate from ongoing talks between the nation’s five largest mortgage handlers and the U.S. Department of Justice, the Department of Housing and Urban Development and all 50 state attorneys general. Those talks, led by Justice and involving all five companies, are seeking a settlement to resolve allegations of past wrongdoing like so-called “robo-signing,” in exchange for lower payments and reduced mortgages for potentially millions of troubled borrowers. But the options under discussion with Bank of America, the largest U.S. bank by assets, go beyond what’s on the table in the larger group talks. Justice, along with a small band of state legal officers, is pursuing an agreement that would have the bank forgive what participants described as a significant amount of mortgage principal owed by distressed borrowers in exchange for receiving an effective grant of immunity from government prosecution related to alleged mortgage and foreclosure wrongdoing. Only a small, select group of states are involved in pursuing the side deal with Bank of America, sources said. The other banks targeted by the government — JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial — are engaged in similar individual negotiations with prosecutors. None of those talks are at such an advanced stage, though. The agreement, if reached, could be used as a template for the other four banks. The state and federal prosecutors are operating on the assumption that if they could strike a deal with Bank of America — the nation’s largest mortgage servicer — that would compel the other large banks to go along or risk prosecution. Participants described the talks as fluid. Remaining issues include the scope of the release and the breadth of borrower relief, sources said. For example, it could involve a release from liability for alleged lending abuses; alleged failure to properly securitize home loans in accordance with state laws; alleged abuses of distressed borrowers who fell behind on their payments; alleged illegal behavior when foreclosing on those homeowners; immunity from suits involving a combination of those claims, or from all of them — an effective grant of immunity from prosecution. Prosecutors are contemplating giving Bank of America this kind of a broad release — something not yet on the table for the other institutions, sources said — but in exchange for more money to be used to finance mortgage modifications for a targeted set of borrowers. The bigger the release, the more money banks like BofA would be willing to shell out to lower payments, reduce outstanding amounts owed, and provide for borrowers to transition out of their homes and into rentals. Of course, the flip side of that is the banks could largely escape prosecution of alleged widespread wrongdoing. Other outstanding issues include whether government-controlled mortgage firms Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are involved. The twin giants own or guarantee more than half of all outstanding home loans. But their federal regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, has been reluctant to allow loans from Fannie or Freddie to be part of the deal, sources said. The two companies employed law firms that used robo-signers. If an accord were reached, which participants stress is a ways away, borrowers that met the following criteria would be eligible for some kind of assistance: Their mortgages would have to either be owned by Bank of America or be serviced by the bank on behalf of private investors. Fannie or Freddie loans would not be eligible; A current principal balance of 1 million or less; The homes would have to be occupied by the owner, so no investor-owned properties; And the borrowers’ monthly mortgage obligation would have to comprise at least 25 percent of their monthly income. Participants believe such a pool would lessen the risk posed by moral hazard, a scenario in which people escape consequences for destructive activity, thus encouraging more destructive activity in the future, sources said. Eligibility would also be limited to homeowners in distress, which can be defined by the number of days late a borrower is on his mortgage payments or whether their income is too low to support their payment obligations. The program would in part build upon a deal reached earlier this year between Justice and Bank of America to settle allegations that the lender wrongfully foreclosed on active-duty members of the military, sources said. An accord would provide a sense of finality to BofA’s shareholders, who have seen the value of their holdings erode over the past year as the bank’s mortgage-related losses have mounted. Shares are down 34 percent over the past year. By comparison, the 24-company KBW Bank Index, which tracks large banks like BofA, is down just 11 percent over the same time period. ***** Shahien Nasiripour is a senior business reporter for The Huffington Post. You can send him an email; bookmark his page; subscribe to his RSS feed; follow him on Twitter; friend him on Facebook; become a fan; and/or get e-mail alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 1-917-267-2335.

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Side Deal With Bank Of America Would Cede Liability In Exchange For Homeowner Relief

WASHINGTON — Federal and state prosecutors are in advanced negotiations with Bank of America in pursuit of a settlement that would forgive the bank for a broad range of past mortgage abuses in exchange for fines that would finance a significantly expanded relief program for struggling homeowners, according to three people with direct knowledge of the matter. The negotiations are separate from ongoing talks between the nation’s five largest mortgage handlers and the U.S. Department of Justice, the Department of Housing and Urban Development and all 50 state attorneys general. Those talks, led by Justice and involving all five companies, are seeking a settlement to resolve allegations of past wrongdoing like so-called “robo-signing,” in exchange for lower payments and reduced mortgages for potentially millions of troubled borrowers. But the options under discussion with Bank of America, the largest U.S. bank by assets, go beyond what’s on the table in the larger group talks. Justice, along with a small band of state legal officers, is pursuing an agreement that would have the bank forgive what participants described as a significant amount of mortgage principal owed by distressed borrowers in exchange for receiving an effective grant of immunity from government prosecution related to alleged mortgage and foreclosure wrongdoing. Only a small, select group of states are involved in pursuing the side deal with Bank of America, sources said. The other banks targeted by the government — JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial — are engaged in similar individual negotiations with prosecutors. None of those talks are at such an advanced stage, though. The agreement, if reached, could be used as a template for the other four banks. The state and federal prosecutors are operating on the assumption that if they could strike a deal with Bank of America — the nation’s largest mortgage servicer — that would compel the other large banks to go along or risk prosecution. Participants described the talks as fluid. Remaining issues include the scope of the release and the breadth of borrower relief, sources said. For example, it could involve a release from liability for alleged lending abuses; alleged failure to properly securitize home loans in accordance with state laws; alleged abuses of distressed borrowers who fell behind on their payments; alleged illegal behavior when foreclosing on those homeowners; immunity from suits involving a combination of those claims, or from all of them — an effective grant of immunity from prosecution. Prosecutors are contemplating giving Bank of America this kind of a broad release — something not yet on the table for the other institutions, sources said — but in exchange for more money to be used to finance mortgage modifications for a targeted set of borrowers. The bigger the release, the more money banks like BofA would be willing to shell out to lower payments, reduce outstanding amounts owed, and provide for borrowers to transition out of their homes and into rentals. Of course, the flip side of that is the banks could largely escape prosecution of alleged widespread wrongdoing. Other outstanding issues include whether government-controlled mortgage firms Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are involved. The twin giants own or guarantee more than half of all outstanding home loans. But their federal regulator, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, has been reluctant to allow loans from Fannie or Freddie to be part of the deal, sources said. The two companies employed law firms that used robo-signers. If an accord were reached, which participants stress is a ways away, borrowers that met the following criteria would be eligible for some kind of assistance: Their mortgages would have to either be owned by Bank of America or be serviced by the bank on behalf of private investors. Fannie or Freddie loans would not be eligible; A current principal balance of 1 million or less; The homes would have to be occupied by the owner, so no investor-owned properties; And the borrowers’ monthly mortgage obligation would have to comprise at least 25 percent of their monthly income. Participants believe such a pool would lessen the risk posed by moral hazard, a scenario in which people escape consequences for destructive activity, thus encouraging more destructive activity in the future, sources said. Eligibility would also be limited to homeowners in distress, which can be defined by the number of days late a borrower is on his mortgage payments or whether their income is too low to support their payment obligations. The program would in part build upon a deal reached earlier this year between Justice and Bank of America to settle allegations that the lender wrongfully foreclosed on active-duty members of the military, sources said. An accord would provide a sense of finality to BofA’s shareholders, who have seen the value of their holdings erode over the past year as the bank’s mortgage-related losses have mounted. Shares are down 34 percent over the past year. By comparison, the 24-company KBW Bank Index, which tracks large banks like BofA, is down just 11 percent over the same time period. ***** Shahien Nasiripour is a senior business reporter for The Huffington Post. You can send him an email; bookmark his page; subscribe to his RSS feed; follow him on Twitter; friend him on Facebook; become a fan; and/or get e-mail alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 1-917-267-2335.

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Senior police face payments of £2,800 extra a year into pension

Home secretary’s proposal angers officers, some of whom already expect to lose £4,000 a year through pay reforms Senior police officers are facing up to £2,800 extra a year in pension contributions as a result of the Whitehall public spending cuts drive. The home secretary, Theresa May, told the police service on Tueday that rank and file officers should expect annual rises in contributions of £349 for a new constable to £1,169 for a senior PC. The increases are being introduced as part of the government’s target of cutting the public sector pension bill by £2.8bn a year and follow detailed announcements last week on the additional contributions facing teachers, nurses and civil

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US debt deal passes in Senate

Agreement to increase US debt limit gains enough votes to pass in Senate – with Obama expected to sign it into law immediately Congress has buried the spectre of a US debt default after it finally passed a deficit-cutting package – but the shadow lingered of a possible painful downgrade of the top-notch American credit rating. Just hours before the Treasury’s authority to borrow funds ran out, the Senate voted 74 to 26 to pass a hard-won compromise to lift the US government’s $14.3 trillion debt ceiling to last beyond the November 2012 elections. President Barack Obama, who will seek a second term next year, was expected to immediately sign the deal into law. His signature is set to draw a line under months of bitter partisan squabbling over debt and deficit strategy that had threatened chaos in global financial markets and dented America’s stature as the world’s economic superpower. There was little suspense about the outcome of the vote in the Democratic-controlled Senate. The bill overcame its biggest hurdle late on Monday when the Republican-led House of Representatives passed the $2.1 trillion deficit-reduction plan despite some resistance from Tea Party conservatives and liberal Democrats. Uncertainty remained, however, over whether the budget deal goes far enough in reining in deficits to satisfy major ratings agencies, which have threatened to downgrade the United States’ AAA credit rating. Such a move would raise borrowing costs and act as another drag on the stumbling economy. Ratings agency Standard and Poor’s said in mid-July there was a 50-50 chance it would cut US ratings in the next three months if lawmakers failed to craft a meaningful deficit-cutting plan. S&P could downgrade US ratings soon after the bill is signed by Obama, given that the agency will have all the information it needs to make a decision. Treasury secretary Timothy Geithner said he expected the ratings agencies to take a “careful look” at the situation but he was not sure whether the United States would be spared from a downgrade. “I don’t know. It’s hard to tell,” he told ABC News. The plan calls for $2.1 trillion in spending cuts spread over 10 years, and creates a congressional committee to recommend a deficit-reduction package by late November. That appears to fall short of rating agency S&P’s previous assertion that $4 trillion in deficit-reduction measures would be needed to avoid a downgrade by showing that Washington was putting the country’s finances in order. US Congress US economy US politics United States Barack Obama Economics guardian.co.uk

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Frank Rich: Murdoch and O’Reilly are ‘Thugs’

Click here to view this media New York magazine writer Frank Rich explained Monday that Rupert Murdoch’s unethical business practices were not limited to Britain. “I think that we’re deluding ourselves if we think the whole Murdoch culture has not spread to America,” Rich told HLN’s Joy Behar. “We’re reading all this sort of exotic stuff about having British police on the payroll. Bernie Kerik was on the Murdoch payroll. He had a huge advance from Harper Collins. And you know, the piece I’ve written in New York that’s out today, I talk about the bullying things that they do. It’s not just about politics. It’s not just about Fox being right-wing. It’s about them going after people who are personal enemies, Bill O’Reilly having producers stalk people on the street.” “Liberals love to criticize Fox because it’s not fair and balanced and all that. They like to criticize the Post because it’s very right wing. Forget about the politics. This is about power and money, punishing enemies that they don’t like, for reasons that could be personal or business, not just political.” “They’re thugs,” Behar remarked. “Yes,” Rich agreed. “It’s thuggery. And I think this scandal is going to play out like Watergate for a couple of years.”

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George Stephanopoulos Worries That Tiny 2012 Budget Cuts Will ‘Hurt’ the Recovery and ‘Cost Jobs’

Apparently, cutting the budget by $21 billion hurts the economy. Talking to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner on Tuesday, Good Morning America's George Stephanopoulos worried about the just-agreed to debt deal: ” But, don't you think that any deficit reduction now will hurt the attempts of the economy to recover ?” The former Clinton White House official turned journalist highlighted “economists who say cuts like this will make our weak economy weaker and cost Americans jobs.” In total, Stephanopoulos raised the question three times, wondering, “So, this won't cost us jobs?” Of course, the anchor didn't point out that there's almost no spending cuts before 2014, a mere $ 21 billion in 2012 and $42 billion in 2013. The GMA host didn't even challenge Geithner's assertion that if the economy regresses into recession, it could be the fault of Republicans who opposed increasing the debt limit. Geithner claimed that the “spectacle” Americans witnessed in Washington really damaged “the confidence, caused a lot of damage to confidence. ” To this, Stephanopoulos could only manage to mildly respond, “To the point where it could cause a double dip?” The journalist also didn't mention that the economy expanded at 1.3 percent in the second quarter or that this was prior to the debt debate. This isn't the first time, the network anchor hit Geithner from the left. On April 22, 2010 , he pressed the Treasury Secretary on financial reform, wondering why the “big banks” shouldn't be “broken up.” A transcript of the August 2 segment, which aired at 7:09, can be found below: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: And now that the deal is all but done we face the big question of what it means for the economy and whether it's strong enough to preserve America's AAA credit rating. I put those questions to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner in an exclusive interview and began by getting his response to economists who say cuts like this will make our weak economy weaker and cost Americans jobs. TIM GEITHNER: Well, let's start with what this deal does. The most important thing is it creates more room for the private sector to grow because although it locks in some very substantial long-term savings, the near-term costs are very modest. STEPHANOPOULOS: But, don't you think that any deficit reduction now will hurt the attempts of the economy to recover? GEITHNER: Part of governing is recognize we live with- we don't have unlimited resources and we inherited and are left with unsustainable deficits long term and the President understands for the sake of the economy long term it's very important to demonstrate to the American people, to people around the world that we can get our arms around it. STEPHANOPOULOS: So, this won't cost us jobs? GEITHNER: No, it will not. Now, if we put this behind us, then we can turn back to the important challenge of trying to find ways to make sure that we do everything we can to get more people back to work, strengthen growth.

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