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The end is nigh—no, really this time!—but don’t bother repenting. That’s what Harold Camping, America’s favorite doomsday prophet , is preaching these days. In a message on his website spotted by USA Today , Camping says that Oct. 21, “at this point, looks like it will be the final end…

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Republicans Getting Buffetted by Taxes

For Republicans on the warpath against Warren Buffett, President Obama’s willing poster child for raising taxes on wealthy Americans, this week has been a very bad one. First, new polling confirmed that Americans overwhelmingly support President Obama’s jobs plan in general and his proposed gilded-class tax hikes in particular. (On that second point, Republican voters agree.) Then on Thursday, the billionaire called Republicans’ bluff and released his $6.9 million tax return and confirmed he paid a lower percentage to Uncle Sam than his secretary. And as it turns out, a new Congressional Research Service study found Buffett’s not alone, concluding that a quarter of millionaires in the U.S. pay federal taxes at lower effective rates than a significant portion of middle-income taxpayers. In response, frustrated Republican mythmakers could only accuse Warren Buffett of giving too much to charity . As Bloomberg News reported, federal tax data show that the need for the Buffett Rule is very real indeed. After IRS data for 2007 revealed that 959 millionaires paid no taxes at all, the new CRS analysis found: Preferential treatment of investment income and the reduced impact of payroll taxes on high earners lets about 94,500 millionaires pay taxes at a lower rate than 10.4 million “moderate-income taxpayers,” representing about 10 percent of those making less than $100,000 a year, according to the report by the non-partisan Congressional Research Service dated Oct. 7. The findings put the U.S. tax system in conflict with the so-called Buffett Rule, which says households making more than $1 million annually shouldn’t pay a smaller share of their income in taxes than middle class families, says the report, which analyzed 2006 Internal Revenue Service data. And as The Hill reported, the Buffett Rule is aptly named. Responding to demands from Kansas Republican Congressman Tim Huelskamp that he release his tax return (a disclosure Republican presidential candidates thus far have refused to make), Warren Buffett was only happy to comply: Buffett revealed in a letter sent to Huelskamp that his adjusted gross income was $62,855,038 last year and that he paid $15,300 in payroll taxes, as reported by CNN Money. He also claimed, as he had in an op-ed previously this year, that his federal income tax bill last year came to $6,923,494, or about 17 percent of his $39,814,784 taxable income. Finding themselves in a hole, Congressional Republicans continued digging. South Dakota Senator John Thune introduced a bill titled “The Buffett Rule Act of 2011″ (S.1676), which makes it easier for those who voluntarily wanted to pay higher taxes to do so. Meanwhile, Buffett’s House inquisitor Tim Huelskamp declared the billionaire’s response “inadequate” and charged: “What he does disclose may be accurate, but it is incomplete and it fails to explain how he shelters millions of dollars in income from taxation,” the lawmaker said in a statement. “It is unprecedented that we would write an entire law based on one man’s anecdotes without actual proof. By sheltering millions of dollars of income from taxation, probably through charitable giving, Mr. Buffett demonstrates that he doesn’t trust Washington with his own money either.” The Republican accusation that Warren Buffett is giving too much to charity is certain to backfire (even leaving aside that neither the McCains in 2008 nor the Romneys now have provided the information Huelskamp is demanding from Buffett.) For starters, Buffett with Bill Gates is one of the driving forces behind the ” Giving Pledge ” by which a growing group of American billionaires promise to give away half of their fortunes in their lifetimes. Worse still, Republican presidential candidates including Newt Gingrich and Michele Bachmann have stated that uninsured Americans should turn to charities for their health care. Most damning, Buffett highlights that Republican positions on taxes and charitable giving have it exactly backwards. In 2009, President Obama first proposed raising $318 billion over the next decade by trimming wealthier taxpayers’ deductions for charitable giving to 28% from its current 35%. Predictably, Republicans (joined by some Democrats) forecast an apocalypse for donations to charities. As John Boehner ominously (and wrongly) warned, “It will also deliver a sharp blow to charities at a time when they are hurting during the economic downturn.” But as Bloomberg and The Chronicle of Philanthropy each reported, Obama’s proposal would likely have little to no impact on charitable giving. As Bloomberg noted: Not necessarily, say tax and philanthropy experts. They say altruistic or religious motives outweigh tax-shelter considerations among such donors, and cite previous limitations placed on deductions for high earners that they say haven’t hurt donations. Among those previous limitations, as former OMB director Peter Orszag among others recalled, was the same upper income 28% deduction during Ronald Reagan’s first term. As Orszag told reporters in February 2009, the record shows that “what drives charitable contributions is overall economic growth.” Nevertheless, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor continued to push the talking point during an address Sunday at Manhattan’s upscale West Side Institutional Synagogue. Claiming Obama’s proposal to cap itemized deductions (including charitable donations) at the 35 percent tax bracket, a policy he said would cripple many nonprofits and rob altruists of “the mitzvoth of oblations,” Cantor asked: “Why would you do something that makes it less attractive to give to charities when so many people are in need?” As it turns out, while reducing the charitable deduction would likely not have a significant impact on giving, one policy virtually all Republicans support – eliminating the estate tax – surely would. As the data make clear, America’s churches, non-profits, foundations and charities stand to lose billions if the Republicans succeed. In 2003, the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center documented the hemorrhaging that would ensue, concluding “We find that estate tax repeal would reduce charitable bequests by between 22 and 37 percent, or between $3.6 billion and $6 billion per year.” A 2006 analysis of CBO data by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities found that “had the estate tax not existed in 2000, charitable donations would have been $13 billion to $25 billion lower that year” and that “repealing the estate tax would have reduced charitable bequests by 16 to 28 percent and charitable giving during life by 6 to 11 percent.” And before he became the chief economic adviser for John McCain (who in 2008 called for the repeal of the estate tax despite two years earlier having proclaimed “most great civilized countries have an income tax and an inheritance tax” and “in my judgment both should be part of our system of federal taxation.”), then Congressional Budget Office head Douglas Holtz-Eakin agreed. As CBO director Holtz-Eakin wrote in “The Estate Tax and Charitable Giving”: Furthermore, the estate tax provides an incentive to make charitable contributions during life. The paper finds that increasing the amount exempted from the estate tax from $675,000 to either $2 million or $3.5 million would reduce charitable giving by less than 3 percent. However, repealing the tax would have a larger impact, decreasing donations to charity by 6 percent to 12 percent. Warren Buffett couldn’t agree more. Buffett, who declared “it’s my class, the rich class, that’s making war, and we’re winning,” voiced his support for the estate tax by remarking it’s time for Washington to stop “giving incredible head starts to certain people who were very selective about the womb from which they emerged.” But for Republicans who falsely claim that at a time of record high income inequality and historically low federal taxes that boosting upper-income rates would cripple America’s small businesses and crush its supposed “job creators” , Warren Buffett remains the billionaire they love to hate. Sadly for the right-wing propagandists, Buffett has his life story, the national data and, most importantly, the American people on his side when he makes his argument. Stop coddling the super-rich . (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

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Why Americans are Taking to the Streets…in Charts

enlarge Credit: Business Insider Top percent own 42 percent of Wealth in America. Business Insider uses a multitude of charts to explain where the anger from the Occupy Wall Street protesters come from. CHARTS: Here’s What The Wall Street Protesters Are So Angry About… So, what are the protesters so upset about, really? Do they have legitimate gripes? To answer the latter question first, yes, they have very legitimate gripes. And if America cannot figure out a way to address these gripes, the country will likely become increasingly “de-stabilized,” as sociologists might say. And in that scenario, the current protests will likely be only the beginning. The problem in a nutshell is this: Inequality in this country has hit a level that has been seen only once in the nation’s history, and unemployment has reached a level that has been seen only once since the Great Depression. And, at the same time, corporate profits are at a record high… read on Make sure to click through and check out all the graphs and charts. (h/t Atrios )

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Journalist Chris Hedges goes to Canada, ends up on Fox News

Click here to view this media This interview actually took place last week on the CBC but I just got around to seeing it. Seems they have A-holes up there as well, even on their public broadcasting network. Chris Hedges is probably one of America’s best journalists and doesn’t suffer fools gladly. At the end of the interview he vowed it would be his last one with that CBC show. The exchanges between the crypto-fascist venture capitalist/investor O’Leary and Hedges grabbed most of the attention, but Hedges’ simple but lucid replies to those questions the media seems to have the most trouble with (“What does OWS stand for?”, “Aren’t they all just dirty hippies?”, “What do they want?”) are instructive and persuasive. via the blog Creekside : Yesterday CBC continued its ongoing snide, dismissive, and condescending coverage of the third week of Occupy Wall Street with an interview with author/activist/Pulitzer Prize winner Chris Hedges on its “inside the business world” show, the Lang and O’Leary Exchange. After the by now obligatory opening protestations of puzzlement as to what OWS is all about – “low budget” and “pretty nothing burgers” as blowhard host Kevin O’Leary described it – he then responded to Hedges’ patient explanation by calling him “a left wing nutbar”. The transcript begins a few minutes into the 7 minute clip and you can skip ahead past the introduction if you like. (Note: Hedges wasn’t actually in Canada for this interview, as he was about to speak at OccupyDC in Washington.) O’Leary : So what exactly is everyone complaining about? And also give me a sense of how much momentum this movement has because it’s pretty nothing burgers so far – just a few guys, guitars. Nobody knows what they want – they can’t even name the names of the firms that they’re protesting against – very weak, low budget. Hedges : I wouldn’t agree with that assessment at all. They pulled thousands of people into the street last night and here in Washington when everyone marched past the Bank of America, they were shouting Shame! Shame! Shame! They know the names of these firms and they know what these firms have done not only to the American economy but to the global economy, and the criminal class who runs them. Fill-in for Lang : Well Kevin made this point that nobody knows what they want. What do you say to that? We know that this is a very diverse group, there are many different agendas at play … what is the sense you have of what this movement would like to see happen? Hedges : They know precisely what they want ; they want to reverse the corporate coup that’s taken place in the US and rendered the citizenry impotent and they won’t stop until that happens and frankly if we don’t break the back of corporations, we’re all finished anyway since we’re rapidly trashing the ecosystem on which the human species depends for survival. This is literally a fight for life – it’s that grave, it’s that serious. Corporations, unfettered capitalism, as Karl Marx understood, is a revolutionary force – it commodifies everything – human beings, the natural world which it exploits for profit until exhaustion and collapse. The bottom line is we don’t have much time left – we are on the cusp of perhaps another major banking crisis in Europe, defaults in Greece, followed by Spain, Portugal. There’s been no restrictions, no regulations on Wall Street – they’ve looted the US Treasury, they’ve played all the games that they were playing before and we’re about to pay for it all over again. O’Leary : Listen don’t take this the wrong way but you sound like a left wing nutbar. If you want to shut down every corporation, every bank, where are you going to get a job? Where are you gonna work? Where’s the economy gonna go? Hedges : Corporations don’t produce anything and O’Leary : Oh really!? Hedges : No. Financial corporations on Wall Street O’Leary : Are you driving a car to the protest? Hedges : They are speculators. I’m talking about the financial institutions like Goldman Sachs. They don’t manufacture, they don’t make anything – they gamble, they use money, and they believe falsely that money is real as we dismantle our manufacturing base and send jobs over the border to Mexico and finally into the embrace of China. Fill-in for Lang : Well I see that you and Kevin could get into an actually huge argument here. Hedges : Well you know I don’t usually go on shows where people descend to character assassination. if you want to discuss issues, that’s fine but this sounds like Fox News and I don’t go on Fox News. Either you discuss the issues and … look, you have had very eloquent writers – people like John Ralston Saul in Canada who have laid this out with incredible lucidity – and to somehow attack this critique by calling someone a nutcase engages in the kind of trash talk that’s polluted the corporate airwaves.

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(CNN) – Amid political warfare, it’s certainly meant to shock and awe: some conservatives have recently said that Herman Cain could become America’s “first black president.” Three years after the nation elected its first African-American president, the Republican Party could make its own history – given his rising poll numbers and raised awareness among voters

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Storms leave 29 dead in Central America, Mexico

Two storm systems left 29 people dead and forced tens of thousands from their homes as heavy rains battered Central America and Mexico’s Pacific coast, officials said. Central America alone accounted for 24 of those dead and nearly 60,000 people made homeless by the storms, according to local authorities and emergency services. Another five people were killed in Mexico, where Hurricane Jova’s torrential rains forced at least 4,000 people to leave their homes. The storms triggered heavy flooding, blocked roads, and caused electricity outages and mudslides. Many homes were destroyed. In hard-hit Guatemala, where 15 people died and over 52,000 were forced from their homes, torrential rains…

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Anti-Choice Rep. Virginia Foxx: ‘Nobody Has Fought More for the Rights of Women’

Click here to view this media Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-NC) denied Thursday that a bill that would allow hospitals to refuse treatment to pregnant women was misogynist, adding that “nobody has ever fought more for the rights of women than I have.” In a speech on the House floor, Rep. Jackie Speier (D-CA) explained why she believed “The Protect Life Act” was a step backward for women’s reproductive rights. “I think this bill goes to the farthest extreme in trying to take women down, not just a peg, but take them in shackles to some cave somewhere,” she said. “Twenty-five years ago, this body passed [The Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA)], a bill that basically said that anyone that shows up at an emergency room would access health care, no questions asked. Now, my colleagues on the other side of the aisle want to amend that law and basically say, ‘Oh, except for a woman who is in need of an abortion, or except for a woman who is bleeding to death who happens to be pregnant. Or except for a woman who is miscarrying.’ Basically, what this bill would do is say that any hospital could decline to provide services to one class of people in this country and that one class of people are pregnant women.” Speier added: “What my colleagues on the other side of the aisle are attempting to do is misogynist. It is absolutely misogynist.” Foxx responded by charging that Democrats were “outside the mainstream” for wanting to use taxpayer funding for abortions. “For my colleagues across the ailes who say that this is a misogynist bill, nobody has ever fought more for the rights of women than I have,” she declared. “Fifty percent of the unborn babies that are being aborted are females. So the misogyny comes from those that promote the killing of unborn babies. That’s where the misogyny comes in, Madame Speaker.” In the past six years, Foxx has voted against abortion rights at least nine times . Family planning advocates claim that an amendment introduced by the congresswoman in May was designed to prevent doctors from being properly trained to perform abortions. “Once again, instead of focusing on improving access to health care, opponents of women’s health are manipulating the legislative process to undermine women’s access to and information about comprehensive reproductive health care services,” Planned Parenthood Federation of America’s Dawn Laguens said in a media advisory . Democrats have called House Republicans’ latest effort a waste of time because “The Protect Life Act” would never be passed by Democrats in the Senate or signed into law by President Barack Obama. “Under this bill, when the Republicans vote for this bill today, they will be voting to say that women can die on the floor of health care providers,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) told reporters Thursday. “I can’t even describe to you the logic of what they are doing today.”

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Sandra Bullock: ‘Trouble With The Curve’ With Clint Eastwood Negotiations?

The transformation was incredible, Sandra Bullock going from one of America’s romantic comedy sweethearts to southern sass queen, and as she tough loved her way to an Oscar win for her role in “The Blind Side,” it’d have been no surprise if she uttered those famous Dirty Harry lines at someone getting in her way: “Go ahead punk, make my day.” It didn’t happen, of course, but if a new report is true, her next opportunity to utter that bold dare could be downright, deliciously meta. According to Twitch Film, Bullock is in talks to star alongside Clint Eastwood — Dirty Harry himself — in the upcoming family baseball drama, “Trouble With The Curve.” The film is set to feature the legendary actor as a baseball scout, saddled with onsetting blindness, near the end of his working days, who brings his daughter along on one final player evaluation trip. For Eastwood, the opportunity to act in the film comes thanks to Beyonce’s pregnancy; he had been slated to direct the actress in “A Star Is Born,” but had to delay that project. He had declared himself retired from acting, having last starred in “Grand Torino” in 2008. Eastwood directed that film, but would not be behind the camera on this one. His next directorial effort comes out next month, in the Leonardo DiCaprio-starring biopic of former FBI director J. Edgar Hoover. As for Bullock, she’ll next feature in the Oscar-bait book adaptation, “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close.” For more, click over to Twitch Film.

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Vikram Pandit, Citigroup CEO: Occupy Wall Street’s Sentiments Are ‘Completely Understandable’

Vikram Pandit, CEO of one of the most visible Wall Street institutions in Citigroup, said he thinks the sentiments of the Occupy Wall Street protesters are “completely understandable.” “Their sentiments are completely understandable,” Pandit said in an interview Wednesday with Andrew Serwer of Fortune Magazine. “The economic recovery is not what we all want it to be, there are a number of people in our country who cant achieve what they are capable of achieving and that’s not a good place to be.” Demonstrators have been camped out in Manhattan’s financial district since September 17 protesting against income inequality, corporate greed and the power of financial institutions, among other topics. The protests have inspired similar demonstrations across the country. The group in Manhattan took their march to the home of Pandit’s fellow big bank executive Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan Chase, and News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch Tuesday. They have plans to demonstrate in front of a JPMorgan Chase skyscraper Wednesday. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a billionaire himself, said the protesters were wrong to pick on Dimon because he is “honorable and pays his taxes”, according to The New York Observer. But Pandit seems to think they have a point. “I would also corroborate that trust has been broken between financial institutions and the citizens of the U.S. and that it’s Wall Street’s job to reach out to Main Street and rebuild that trust,” he said in the interview. “I’d talk about the fact that they should hold Citi and the financial institutions accountable for practicing responsible finance.” Pandit added that he’d “be happy to talk to them anytime,” noting that he would emphasize Citi’s efforts to expand small business lending and their decision not to charge a fee for debit card use. Bank of America announced last month that it would start charging a $5 fee for using a debit card for purchases starting in 2012. Wells Fargo also announced it would test a $3 fee. Pandit isn’t the only famed financier expressing some measure of support for the protesters. George Soros said he sympathizes with the protesters and PIMCO founder Bill Gross said in a tweet Tuesday that the protesters are just “fighting back after 30 years of being shot at.”

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South Park: Obama’s Made U.S. ‘So Sh-tty’ Mexicans Are All Going Back Home

Comedy Central's cartoon hit “South Park” made quite a political statement Wednesday evening. In an episode called “The Last of the Meheecans,” Cartman becomes a border patrol agent only to discover that not only aren't Mexicans trying to cross over into the United States anymore, Obama has made America “so sh-tty” they're all going back home (videos follow with commentary, vulgarity warning): The story begins with the kids of South Park playing a game to prevent Mexicans from coming over the border. But what they don't know is that things have gotten so bad in the United States: Eventually, Cartman heads to the border only to find that nobody's trying to get into America anymore: “When we asked Obama to stop illegal immigrants, we didn't mean to make the U.S. so sh-tty they wouldn't want to come anymore.” Maybe some of them have joined the Occupy Wall Street movement. Hmmm. (H/T my dear friend at Ms. Underestimated )

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