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Space shuttle Atlantis lands at Cape Canaveral for the last time

Nasa employees turn out in darkness to welcome the space shuttle home after 126 million miles travelled The shuttle Atlantis has touched down at the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida for the last time, lowering the curtain on one of the most eventful eras in America’s long history of human spaceflight. The craft’s pre-dawn landing at the remote airstrip in the north of the space centre was a timid affair compared with the grand spectacle of its final launch 13 days ago , which attracted 1m visitors eager to witness a piece of history. But wheels-stop on the 135th and final mission of the 30-year space shuttle programme was no less significant, nor emotional as scores of Nasa employees turned out in the darkness to welcome the spaceship home for the last time – and mourn the end of a half-century of US dominance in space . Atlantis and its crew of four touched down at 5.56am (10.56am BST) on Thursday after a 5 million-mile mission to resupply the International Space Station, which must now be serviced by Russian spacecraft after the retirement of the three-strong shuttle fleet. “Having fired the imagination of a generation, a ship like no other, its place in history secured, the space shuttle pulls into port for the last time, its voyage at an end,” announced Rob Navias, the voice of mission control. Chris Ferguson, the last astronaut to command Atlantis, was also emotional. “Houston, Mission Complete. After serving the world for 30 years the space shuttle has earned its place in history and it’s come to a final stop,” he said. Before the landing, he also had warm words for the space centre workers, up to 10,000 of whom received redundancy notices coinciding with the end of the shuttle era. “We’ve had great teams all taking care of the shuttle programme for goodness knows how many years. We appreciate every one of their efforts, and they’re all with us in spirit today,” he said in a farewell message from space. “It’s been an incredible ride. We’re going go beyond again someday, hopefully in the not too distant future. We’re going to go back to the moon and to Mars, and the future is very bright. But for now it’s a little sad because we’re saying goodbye to an old friend.” Nasa’s retired shuttles are to go on public display . Atlantis, which travelled almost 126m miles in its 33 flights since its first launch in October 1985, will be relocated to Kennedy Space Centre’s visitor centre after a lengthy decommissioning process. Endeavour, which completed its final flight on 1 June, is heading for the California Science Museum in Los Angeles and Discovery, last flown in March, will replace the non-orbiting shuttle prototype Enterprise at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington DC. Nasa’s two other shuttles, Challenger and Columbia, were destroyed in-flight during missions in 1986 and 2003 respectively, each disaster costing seven astronauts their lives. The retirement of the shuttles leaves Nasa with no human launch capability of its own for the first time in the agency’s 53-year history. President Obama cancelled the planned next-generation Constellation programme of spacecraft and rockets on cost grounds, leaving American astronauts to buy seats to the International Space Station, at up to $63m (£40m) a time, on ageing Soviet-era Soyuz spacecraft . Private companies including SpaceX , Lockheed Martin and Sierra Nevada have won Nasa contracts to develop spacecraft to compete for such lower Earth orbit duties while the agency is charged with designing, but not yet building, a new heavy-lift rocket that might eventually take astronauts back to the moon for the first time since 1972. But critics fear that the end of the shuttle era, coupled with plans announced in the US Congress this month to slash Nasa’s budget by $1.9bn, and delays by the Obama administration in approving plans to build the rocket, the so-called Space Launch System (SLS), leaves the US looking backwards. “In my opinion, Nasa’s SLS programme is stalled because the White House doesn’t really want to do it,” Mike Griffin, a former administrator of the space agency, told the Huntsville Times , where Nasa rockets are built at the Marshall Space Flight Centre. “They will do everything possible to prevent it from occurring.” Final space shuttle mission The space shuttle Nasa Space United States Florida Richard Luscombe guardian.co.uk

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Traces on America’s Got Talent traces Clip Top 48 (Q2) Results ~ America’s Got Talent 2011 LIVE (p5) jobi20567a says: MIT's Backtalk project / art exhibit traces the unseen life of …: Sooner or later, the device you're reading t… http://bit.ly/ncEKbW

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Today in History for July 21st

Highlights of this day in history: First major battle in America’s Civil War fought at Bull Run in Virginia; Scopes ‘Monkey Trial’ concludes; Peace deal ends Indochina War; Author Ernest Hemingway and actor-comedian Robin Williams born. (July 21)

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Landowners Challenge TransCanada’s Keystone Pipeline

Sue Kelso, born Sue White, is fiercely attached to a 180-acre slice of southern Oklahoma farmland. The property, about two hours north of Dallas, has been in the family since Kelso’s parents, the late A.L. and Dollie White, purchased the first 80 acres in 1941. They added 100 more in 1950. Now, the Calgary-based pipeline company TransCanada wants to run its proposed Keystone XL pipeline — which would carry oil harvested from Alberta’s tar sands through six states to the Texas Gulf Coast — under the White family’s land. Kelso, 69, and her aging siblings ultimately refused, so TransCanada has invoked the power of eminent domain to do it anyway. The White clan is fighting the company’s claim to right-of-way in court. “My mom and dad had eight children, but one passed away when we were young, so seven of us grew up there,” Kelso said in a telephone interview. “We farmed peanuts and at times we had vegetable crops that we sold — cucumbers, peas and green beans. But we mostly farmed peanuts. We made money doing that, and we worked for other people hoeing and pulling cotton,” she said. “My dad was blind. He was legally blind when my mother married him. She was only 17. We scratched our living out of that dirt,” Kelso added. “That farm meant the world to my mom and dad and they said they were going to leave it to us to care for, and that’s what we intend to do.” They’ve got an uphill battle. TransCanada’s spokesman, Terry Cunha, emphasized that in neither this, nor in any other case, is the company seeking to seize property — even though the legal process is known rather harrowingly as “condemnation.” Rather, he said, the company only seeks to obtain easement rights to build and maintain its pipeline. “Our commitment is to treat landowners with respect, to work with them and come to the best possible solution,” Cunha said. “We do everything reasonable to avoid using eminent domain. We have always followed this process in negotiating rights of way from landowners along 35,500 miles of pipe.” But that’s of little comfort to Kelso. “It’s wrong,” she said. “That is our land, and it’s not fair that a foreign company can come in and condemn it.” Whatever the merits of the White family’s case, public concern over pipeline safety — and scrutiny of the actions of pipeline companies — has been heightened by a recent rupture in a line belonging to Exxon-Mobil, which allowed some 42,000 gallons of oil to seep into the Yellowstone River in Montana earlier this month. Indeed, environmental groups quickly linked the two pipelines, arguing that the Exxon-Mobil spill clearly demonstrates that the risks of TransCanada’s venture are too high. On Friday, seven Democratic senators, led by Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, sent a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton echoing that sentiment. They called for a review of the permitting process. “We write to express our continuing concerns regarding TransCanada’s proposed Keystone XL pipeline,” the letter began. “One need look no further than the ongoing impacts on the Yellowstone River in Montana from a leak in ExxonMobil’s Silvertip pipeline to recognize that such risks are very real.” The White family is deeply worried about spills, too, and their story is one of several highlighted in a report published in April by the environmental group Friends of the Earth. In it they argue that TransCanada has been bullying property owners as it tries to secure the rights to run its 2,000 miles of pipeline through the American heartland. “Eminent domain is supposed to be used for the public good,” said Alex Moore, an activist with Friends of the Earth. “Yet TransCanada is suing and threatening American farmers and ranchers with eminent domain so it can build a pipeline that will serve no one but TransCanada and Big Oil.” The tales gathered in the group’s April report include people like David Daniel, a carpenter from Winsboro, Texas, who said he first learned his property was included in TransCanada’s pipeline plans when he discovered that the company had hammered survey stakes into his land. “No one from the company had asked his permission — or even notified him after the fact,” the report stated. “When he denied the company further access to his land, their Houston law firm threatened to take his property through eminent domain.” Letters sent over the last year to landowners in various states by TransCanada, or by its agents, suggest that it regards eminent domain as a path of last resort — though one the company is certainly willing to take. But Cunha, TransCanada’s spokesman, said any suggestion that the company was bullying landowners was false, and that the company has diligently followed federal and state guidelines for pursuing legal easement deals with property owners in all states the proposed pipeline would traverse. He also disputed stories of wanton trespass. “We don’t just show up and start trespassing and laying stakes down without permission,” Cunha said. Meanwhile, the White family’s challenge, which questions TransCanada’s right to invoke eminent domain in the first place, is unusual. By many measures, it would seem a losing proposition. “The majority of time property owners do lose,” said Catherine Tedone Newman, the executive director of the Owners’ Counsel of America, an organization dedicated to protecting the rights of property owners in eminent domain cases. “But they lose for the good of the public. What you’re really trying to do is advocate for individual rights,” Newman said. “That’s what our founding fathers based our country on.” Eminent domain is a fickle business and the details vary from state to state. What’s certain, though, is that the law tends to favor local governments and developers who can legitimately claim that a greater public purpose is being served by whatever infrastructure project or economic enhancement is being undertaken — from utility wires and freeways, to schools, pipelines, railroad tracks and ports. Directly challenging a claim to eminent domain, therefore, is far less common than refusing to accept the financial terms proposed by a company to compensate property owners for the use of their land. Kelso said land agents representing TransCanada originally offered her family $1,300 for a 50-foot easement for the pipeline itself, which would cut across the southwest corner of the property, along with a 25-foot temporary easement on either side for equipment. According to court filings, that number was eventually increased to $2,123 for use of the land. The family still grazes cattle there, and another of the White’s daughters, Doris Lynn, still lives with her husband on the land. Kelso and her husband, Waylan, who now live just over the border in Texas, have built a retirement home on the property. “My brother and sister-in-law have cows on the place,” Kelso said. “It takes forever for that grass to come back, and TransCanada told us they wouldn’t pay for pasture damage if we didn’t take the deal.” So they thought about it. After all, the Whites weren’t strangers to pipelines. Four oil or natural gas lines — artifacts of deals made by their now-deceased parents — already slip underfoot at the property. Even Cunha said the company was close to a deal with the family. But after reading up on the Keystone XL pipeline and its proposed cargo — a thick, tarry form of oil called bitumen, which is diluted with other petroleum byproducts and pumped at higher pressures and temperatures than conventional crude — Kelso said she and her family became nervous and backed away. A spill on their property, she said, would be too much to bear. Last August, TransCanada filed a condemnation suit on the property. In January, the Whites fought back, arguing in a filing with Oklahoma’s Bryan County District Court that TransCanada’s claim ought to be dismissed because, among other things, the pipeline would serve no public good, no legislature had ever granted eminent domain for the right to move bitumen, and as a foreign corporation it has no right to eminent domain. From the filing: The Landowners’ property cannot be legally taken by TransCandada Keystone Pipeline, LP because the property would be taken: (1) by a privately-owned, foreign corporate entity; (2) by an entity owned and controlled by a privately-owned, foreign corporate entity; (3) for the benefit of a privately-owned foreign entity; (4) for the benefit of a foreign government; and (5) other reasons outside the scope of any public use for which property of citizens of Oklahoma and the United States may legally be taken under the Oklahoma statutes, the Oklahoma Constitution, or the United States Constitution. The White family’s attorney, Harlan Hentges, put it more simply: “It’s not that it’s an oil pipeline, it’s that the public gets no use from the pipeline. That’s the problem,” Hentges said. “The pendulum is swinging against eminent domain,” he added. “We’re not tilting at windmills, here. This is a good fight to fight.” TransCanada fired back in February, arguing in essence that the White’s challenge had no real merit, and that TransCanada’s claim to eminent domain was as legitimate as any other — not least because its Keystone operation is not a “foreign corporation,” but a limited liability partnership legally registered in Delaware. The oil from Alberta, it also argued, meets state standards, and the pipeline itself would serve the public good by creating jobs and delivering roughly $1.25 billion in economic benefits to Oklahoma alone — at least according to one study. Critics have disputed those numbers. They’ve also questioned the company’s pursuit of easements when the the U.S. State Department has not yet granted the company permission to build. Cunha argued that it only made business sense to pursue easement deals while waiting for the State Department to deliberate, so that the company is poised to begin building as soon as one is issued. In the event the permit is denied, he said, landowners get to keep the money. To date, TransCanada has secured 90 percent of its needed easement deals, Cunha said. In the remaining 10 percent of the cases, he added, negotiations over what constitutes fair market value for the use of various properties are ongoing, and the company expects that it will reach agreements with most cases. Whether that will prove overly optimistic remains to be seen. In Oklahoma alone, TransCanada has filed at least 59 suits seeking condemnation of properties, though Cunha said the White family’s case was the only one to his knowledge in which a landowner was not challenging the price offered, but the company’s right to eminent domain on its face. Sue Kelso, meanwhile, said she’s now convinced that no price is high enough. But she also said that she isn’t holding her breath that her family’s efforts — or those anywhere else — will stop the Keystone XL pipeline from ultimately being built. “They’ll get it though there anyway,” she said. “Let’s face it, all they’ve got to do is dangle a dollar in front to these politicians and they’ll think it’s the most wonderful thing in the world.”

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Landowners Challenge TransCanada’s Keystone Pipeline

Sue Kelso, born Sue White, is fiercely attached to a 180-acre slice of southern Oklahoma farmland. The property, about two hours north of Dallas, has been in the family since Kelso’s parents, the late A.L. and Dollie White, purchased the first 80 acres in 1941. They added 100 more in 1950. Now, the Calgary-based pipeline company TransCanada wants to run its proposed Keystone XL pipeline — which would carry oil harvested from Alberta’s tar sands through six states to the Texas Gulf Coast — under the White family’s land. Kelso, 69, and her aging siblings ultimately refused, so TransCanada has invoked the power of eminent domain to do it anyway. The White clan is fighting the company’s claim to right-of-way in court. “My mom and dad had eight children, but one passed away when we were young, so seven of us grew up there,” Kelso said in a telephone interview. “We farmed peanuts and at times we had vegetable crops that we sold — cucumbers, peas and green beans. But we mostly farmed peanuts. We made money doing that, and we worked for other people hoeing and pulling cotton,” she said. “My dad was blind. He was legally blind when my mother married him. She was only 17. We scratched our living out of that dirt,” Kelso added. “That farm meant the world to my mom and dad and they said they were going to leave it to us to care for, and that’s what we intend to do.” They’ve got an uphill battle. TransCanada’s spokesman, Terry Cunha, emphasized that in neither this, nor in any other case, is the company seeking to seize property — even though the legal process is known rather harrowingly as “condemnation.” Rather, he said, the company only seeks to obtain easement rights to build and maintain its pipeline. “Our commitment is to treat landowners with respect, to work with them and come to the best possible solution,” Cunha said. “We do everything reasonable to avoid using eminent domain. We have always followed this process in negotiating rights of way from landowners along 35,500 miles of pipe.” But that’s of little comfort to Kelso. “It’s wrong,” she said. “That is our land, and it’s not fair that a foreign company can come in and condemn it.” Whatever the merits of the White family’s case, public concern over pipeline safety — and scrutiny of the actions of pipeline companies — has been heightened by a recent rupture in a line belonging to Exxon-Mobil, which allowed some 42,000 gallons of oil to seep into the Yellowstone River in Montana earlier this month. Indeed, environmental groups quickly linked the two pipelines, arguing that the Exxon-Mobil spill clearly demonstrates that the risks of TransCanada’s venture are too high. On Friday, seven Democratic senators, led by Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island, sent a letter to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton echoing that sentiment. They called for a review of the permitting process. “We write to express our continuing concerns regarding TransCanada’s proposed Keystone XL pipeline,” the letter began. “One need look no further than the ongoing impacts on the Yellowstone River in Montana from a leak in ExxonMobil’s Silvertip pipeline to recognize that such risks are very real.” The White family is deeply worried about spills, too, and their story is one of several highlighted in a report published in April by the environmental group Friends of the Earth. In it they argue that TransCanada has been bullying property owners as it tries to secure the rights to run its 2,000 miles of pipeline through the American heartland. “Eminent domain is supposed to be used for the public good,” said Alex Moore, an activist with Friends of the Earth. “Yet TransCanada is suing and threatening American farmers and ranchers with eminent domain so it can build a pipeline that will serve no one but TransCanada and Big Oil.” The tales gathered in the group’s April report include people like David Daniel, a carpenter from Winsboro, Texas, who said he first learned his property was included in TransCanada’s pipeline plans when he discovered that the company had hammered survey stakes into his land. “No one from the company had asked his permission — or even notified him after the fact,” the report stated. “When he denied the company further access to his land, their Houston law firm threatened to take his property through eminent domain.” Letters sent over the last year to landowners in various states by TransCanada, or by its agents, suggest that it regards eminent domain as a path of last resort — though one the company is certainly willing to take. But Cunha, TransCanada’s spokesman, said any suggestion that the company was bullying landowners was false, and that the company has diligently followed federal and state guidelines for pursuing legal easement deals with property owners in all states the proposed pipeline would traverse. He also disputed stories of wanton trespass. “We don’t just show up and start trespassing and laying stakes down without permission,” Cunha said. Meanwhile, the White family’s challenge, which questions TransCanada’s right to invoke eminent domain in the first place, is unusual. By many measures, it would seem a losing proposition. “The majority of time property owners do lose,” said Catherine Tedone Newman, the executive director of the Owners’ Counsel of America, an organization dedicated to protecting the rights of property owners in eminent domain cases. “But they lose for the good of the public. What you’re really trying to do is advocate for individual rights,” Newman said. “That’s what our founding fathers based our country on.” Eminent domain is a fickle business and the details vary from state to state. What’s certain, though, is that the law tends to favor local governments and developers who can legitimately claim that a greater public purpose is being served by whatever infrastructure project or economic enhancement is being undertaken — from utility wires and freeways, to schools, pipelines, railroad tracks and ports. Directly challenging a claim to eminent domain, therefore, is far less common than refusing to accept the financial terms proposed by a company to compensate property owners for the use of their land. Kelso said land agents representing TransCanada originally offered her family $1,300 for a 50-foot easement for the pipeline itself, which would cut across the southwest corner of the property, along with a 25-foot temporary easement on either side for equipment. According to court filings, that number was eventually increased to $2,123 for use of the land. The family still grazes cattle there, and another of the White’s daughters, Doris Lynn, still lives with her husband on the land. Kelso and her husband, Waylan, who now live just over the border in Texas, have built a retirement home on the property. “My brother and sister-in-law have cows on the place,” Kelso said. “It takes forever for that grass to come back, and TransCanada told us they wouldn’t pay for pasture damage if we didn’t take the deal.” So they thought about it. After all, the Whites weren’t strangers to pipelines. Four oil or natural gas lines — artifacts of deals made by their now-deceased parents — already slip underfoot at the property. Even Cunha said the company was close to a deal with the family. But after reading up on the Keystone XL pipeline and its proposed cargo — a thick, tarry form of oil called bitumen, which is diluted with other petroleum byproducts and pumped at higher pressures and temperatures than conventional crude — Kelso said she and her family became nervous and backed away. A spill on their property, she said, would be too much to bear. Last August, TransCanada filed a condemnation suit on the property. In January, the Whites fought back, arguing in a filing with Oklahoma’s Bryan County District Court that TransCanada’s claim ought to be dismissed because, among other things, the pipeline would serve no public good, no legislature had ever granted eminent domain for the right to move bitumen, and as a foreign corporation it has no right to eminent domain. From the filing: The Landowners’ property cannot be legally taken by TransCandada Keystone Pipeline, LP because the property would be taken: (1) by a privately-owned, foreign corporate entity; (2) by an entity owned and controlled by a privately-owned, foreign corporate entity; (3) for the benefit of a privately-owned foreign entity; (4) for the benefit of a foreign government; and (5) other reasons outside the scope of any public use for which property of citizens of Oklahoma and the United States may legally be taken under the Oklahoma statutes, the Oklahoma Constitution, or the United States Constitution. The White family’s attorney, Harlan Hentges, put it more simply: “It’s not that it’s an oil pipeline, it’s that the public gets no use from the pipeline. That’s the problem,” Hentges said. “The pendulum is swinging against eminent domain,” he added. “We’re not tilting at windmills, here. This is a good fight to fight.” TransCanada fired back in February, arguing in essence that the White’s challenge had no real merit, and that TransCanada’s claim to eminent domain was as legitimate as any other — not least because its Keystone operation is not a “foreign corporation,” but a limited liability partnership legally registered in Delaware. The oil from Alberta, it also argued, meets state standards, and the pipeline itself would serve the public good by creating jobs and delivering roughly $1.25 billion in economic benefits to Oklahoma alone — at least according to one study. Critics have disputed those numbers. They’ve also questioned the company’s pursuit of easements when the the U.S. State Department has not yet granted the company permission to build. Cunha argued that it only made business sense to pursue easement deals while waiting for the State Department to deliberate, so that the company is poised to begin building as soon as one is issued. In the event the permit is denied, he said, landowners get to keep the money. To date, TransCanada has secured 90 percent of its needed easement deals, Cunha said. In the remaining 10 percent of the cases, he added, negotiations over what constitutes fair market value for the use of various properties are ongoing, and the company expects that it will reach agreements with most cases. Whether that will prove overly optimistic remains to be seen. In Oklahoma alone, TransCanada has filed at least 59 suits seeking condemnation of properties, though Cunha said the White family’s case was the only one to his knowledge in which a landowner was not challenging the price offered, but the company’s right to eminent domain on its face. Sue Kelso, meanwhile, said she’s now convinced that no price is high enough. But she also said that she isn’t holding her breath that her family’s efforts — or those anywhere else — will stop the Keystone XL pipeline from ultimately being built. “They’ll get it though there anyway,” she said. “Let’s face it, all they’ve got to do is dangle a dollar in front to these politicians and they’ll think it’s the most wonderful thing in the world.”

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Rupertgate Wednesday – Exchanging Hotseats and New U.S. Hacking scandal from News Corp.

enlarge Prime Minister David Cameron. Exhibit A: The Pretzel. Click here to view this media Continuing the fallout (or the detonations) from the Phone Hacking/Bribery/Influence peddling scandal currently engulfing Britain (and soon appearing at a hearing room near you), comes an appearance by Prime Minister David Cameron to an emergency session of Parliament, cutting short his visit to South Africa in order to attempt quelling of a growing concern in the Government. What did he know and when did he know it? Hard to say at the moment. How cozy was his relationship with disgraced former editor of News Of The World and Communications Director Andy Coulson? How much influence has been given with relation to the proposed BskyB takeover? Cameron, along similar lines to the Murdoch’s and Brooks, gives a hearty “I knew nothing” when asked repeatedly and at times contentiously. Prior to this appearance Cameron pointed to Coulson as a good and trusted friend. On this particular day, Coulson was reduced to the role of Anathema and Cameron was twisting himself in knots to make a point. Here is a wrap-up of the days activities via BBC Radio 4′s PM Program. And as a bonus I’ve included the Prime Ministers Statement and resultant Q&A session, or free-for-all as it sounds. The free-for-all starts here (all two hours worth): Click here to view this media Click here to view this media UPDATE : John Amato; As Rupertgate continues in the UK, more hacking cases are coming out from News Corp in the US. News Corporation admitted in 2009 to hacking U.S. rival’s website News Corporation admitted at a trial in 2009 that computers at its U.S. marketing division, News America Marketing, hacked into the secure website of a rival U.S.-based company 11 times, according to Bloomberg . The FBI is currently investigating allegations that News Corp, the parent company of Fox News and The Wall Street Journal , attempted to bribe police and hack into the cell phones of victims of the 9/11 terrorist attack. Senator Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) wrote Tuesday to Attorney General Eric Holder and FBI Director Robert Mueller to highlight the hacking allegation made by Floorgraphics Inc. Floorgraphics claimed in a lawsuit that News America Marketing stole business from the company by hacking into Floorgraphics website between October 2003 to January 2004. The company agreed to dismiss the case after receiving a $29.5 million payment from News America Marketing. A lawyer for News America Marketing admitted during that trial that someone hacked into Floorgraphics website “through a firewall at News America Marketing headquarters,” but that the company did not know who did it. “As the Department of Justice and FBI examine the recent hacking allegations involving News Corp. and its subsidiaries more closely, I wanted to make sure that you were fully aware of the case of Floorgraphics and News America, as it may be relevant to your current investigation,” Lautenberg wrote ( PDF ). What shall be revealed next? We’ll have more tomorrow….

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Wealthy Fox pundit Stuart Varney reminds poor people just how much better off they are nowadays

Click here to view this media I’m always amused when wealthy TV talking heads — people whose six-figure-and-better incomes pretty much ensure that they can afford whatever they want in terms of household appliances and other necessities of modern life — try to pretend that they’re just ordinary folks who understand what “middle America” is thinking. Even more hilarious, in a twisted way, is when they take it upon themselves to lecture those same Americans about the virtues of poverty — or to explain, as Fox’s Stuart Varney did yesterday, just how much better off poor Americans are now than they used to be. In fact, according to his guest — Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation, who has assembled his damned lies and statistics in a single report at their site , America’s poor people have a better standard of living than your average European. Right — if appliances were any accurate measure of your standard of living. This is just one of those pleasant reminders from our corporate masters that you’re never as bad off as you think you are. Why, Varney and Rector seem dismayed that today’s poor in America don’t live off dirt floors. If you keep pushing for taxes on the rich, that may be what you’ll get!

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Captain America The First Avenger

Sebastian Stan Captain America: The First Avenger Captain America: The First Avenger: Film Review Captain America Day: The Toy and Action Figure Museum baronb711 says: Not surprised, too bad tho RT @RottenTomatoes : Captain America: The First Avenger is currently #rotten . 40% @ 5 reviews. http://t.co/4h47ODZ

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Bill O’Reilly tries to reel in the wingnuts, admits GOP losing debt-ceiling PR campaign while bashing Michele Bachmann

Click here to view this media Lately Bill O’Reilly has been trying to convince his Tea Party base that Michele Bachmann is too extreme and dangerous as a GOP presidential candidate and that Congress must raise the debt ceiling. If you missed his interview with Michele Bachmann from last week, check out the above video. It would seem that the grand Wizards of the GOP are using BillO to now try and rein in the Tea Party hardliners they’ve created. Last night he revealed that on his own website his viewers voted against raising the debt ceiling by a 60-40 split. No matter how hard he tries, they ain’t buying his sales pitch for sanity. Do you believe the economy will be harmed if a debt deal is not reached? He quickly announced the results of his poll as an afterthought. Bill again made the case that the debt ceiling must be raised. He’s been very mindful to include his usual 1930s view opposed to government spending and sprinkled in that Obama wants to take all their money and give it to the poor , all so he wouldn’t lose too much favor with his base. On paper, the debt thing is boring, and many Americans are not paying attention. But the controversy will define the future of the USA. On one side, President Obama and the Democratic Party want America to become an entitlement state that compels social justice, financially supporting Americans who can’t or won’t support themselves. We’re all lazy welfare queens who want nothing more than to live off unemployment and raise family. In Bill’s eyes working in Texas in below-minimum-wage jobs like those Rick Perry is creating is such a beautiful alternative. The hell with real job creation. The debt ceiling vote was always a formality vote until Obama took office. We all pay into Social Security and Medicare, so it’s not a handout from rich people, but the word entitlement conjures up that illusion. That’s why I try to stay away from it and use the term ‘social safety nets.’ And Bill is very shrill about the reality that President Obama is proving his bully pulpit is still strong, since he’s turned all the earlier polling on the debt ceiling debate around completely to his side. Remember when all the polling looked like the latest one from Pew? By a 53% to 30% margin, most Republicans say that it will not be a major problem if the debt ceiling is not raised by Aug. 2 Now poll after poll is coming out much like the latest Gallup which has flipped that dynamic around. I’ve been writing that I had wished Obama’s approach from the the beginning of his tenure would be to explain why Keynesian policies are needed at this time of a massive financial meltdown rather than the “tightening our belts” approach which is dominating the debate now. Back to O’Reilly; He’s agreeing that the R’s are losing the PR wars, but cleverly pivots away from that into a man-crush on Marco Rubio. A new CBS poll says that Democrats are winning the PR war. When asked how the debt negotiations are being handled, 43 percent approve of the way President Obama is going about it; 31 percent say the Democrats in Congress are doing OK; and just 21 percent believe the Republicans have the correct position. That either means that the GOP is not getting its message out or the vast majority of Americans want a Western European-style entitlement state. “Talking Points” does not believe that most Americans want that, so the message seems to be the problem. Enter Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, who absolutely destroyed CBS newsman Bob Schieffer on Sunday. Rubio didn’t destroy Bob Scheiffer, he just didn’t answer his questions and scowled his responses, which to BillO and Bernie Goldberg are not questions journalists should be asking anyway. Here’s the transcript. See, it’s not allowed for any journalist or Villager to bring up the name George Bush since he put this country into the hole we now face, because that hurts the GOP. Alas, it must be an Obama planted question. BOB SCHIEFFER: Well, aren’t you going to have to concede, though, Senator, that maybe the previous administration might have had a little something to do with– SENATOR MARCO RUBIO (overlapping): Sure. But– BOB SCHIEFFER: –the bad economy that the President inherited when he came into office. I mean, and– and the other part is, when you say– SENATOR MARCO RUBIO (overlapping): So when does it start getting better, Bob? We’ve discussed Obama’s policies ad nauseum here, but Rubio doesn’t have a plan himself. Sen. Rubio believes that if unemployment drops dramatically, government revenues will rise because more people will be paying taxes. He went on to say that he does believe in closing some tax loopholes that corporations and wealthy people use. Now, this is not a partisan analysis here. This is the truth. Sen. Rubio put forth his party’s position clearly and efficiently. If the Republicans want to win this vital debate, they need to follow Rubio’s lead. And that’s “The Memo.” Cutting the deficit is not a job creator and Rubio’s position of closing loopholes is not the GOP’s position at all because they consider that a tax increase. Rubio, the King of the Tea, is actually in opposition to their sacred cows. O’Reilly is quite crafty how he presents his views. He carefully trashed Michele Bachmann as often as he can, he attacks government spending as much as he can and he’s for raising the debt ceiling. At the same time he’s trying to turn Marco Rubio into the next Chris Christie.

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Captain America & Super-friends Attend Premiere

Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Downey Jr. and Chris Hemsworth welcome Marvel’s latest super-hero, ‘Captain America’ star Chris Evans, to the ‘Avengers’ team at the film’s LA premiere. (July 20)

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