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Bristol Palin is writing a memoir after all, and besides some dope on her famous mom, the tome will include a bit of dish on Dancing With the Stars and two-time Bristol heartbreaker Levin Johnstone. It looked for a time like Bristol’s memoir, announced briefly then yanked from mention on…

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Pakistan’s minister for religious minorities was gunned down today in the country’s capital, AP reports. Shahbaz Bhatti, himself a member of the country’s Christian minority, had been threatened by Islamic militants in the past for calling for reforms of the country’s strict blasphemy laws, which impose the death penalty for…

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Yemen’s President Accuses US of Instigation

Yemen’s embattled president on Tuesday accused the US, his closest ally, of instigating the mounting protests against him, but the gambit failed to slow the momentum for his ouster. (March 2)

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Shock As Gunmen Kill Christian Pakistan Minister

Gunmen have killed a Christian Pakistan government minister who opposed blasphemy laws. Wednesday’s assassination of Shahbaz Bhatti was the second time in two months a prominent opponent of the laws has been struck down. (March 2)

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Republicans Push National Race to the Bottom

enlarge Credit: New York Times Just days after his sneering “so be it” at the prospect of massive job losses which could result from GOP budget policies, House Speaker John Boehner declared public employees have a “machine gun” pointed “at the heads of local officials.” That makes Boehner just the latest Republican leader respond to a $175 billion shortfall in state budgets that could trigger up to 900,000 layoffs by calling for an end to collective bargain rights for government workers they slander as “overpaid”, “freeloaders” and a “new privileged class in America.” But in their all-out war to crush union – and Democratic – power, Republicans are pushing the states into a headlong race to the bottom. Because as the numbers show, incomes, working conditions and educational performance are worst where union protections are weakest and Republicans poll best. To make their case during the current stand-off in Madison, conservatives have taken aim at Wisconsin’s teachers . Unfortunately for their GOP echo chamber, the right-wing blogosphere made the mistake of complaining that Wisconsin received millions of dollars in federal education aid when solidly Republican red states get much, much more . Then, the would-be Republican union busters are whining that Badger state students can’t read . As it turns out, Wisconsin students outperform their counterparts in those reddest of states where collective bargaining rights are few – or non-existent. Sadly for the right-wing commentariat, the data show that Wisconsin schoolchildren out-read the kids in states where Republicans do best and where the federal government most heavily subsidizes the local education systems. Even more telling, those know-nothing red states also happen to be public workers have the fewest collective bargaining rights . As the New York Times detailed just days ago, state workers without a college degree generally make more than their private sector counterparts ($34,000 versus $32,000, or a 6.3% gap), while college graduates make much less (a -19.9% gap). But in the reddest of states (see map at top), public employees experience a pay deficit regardless of education level . If that geography looks familiar, it should. It not only looks like recent American electoral maps, but the atlas of union-busting as well. Within the borders of the so-called “Right to Work” states (which prohibit workers from being required to join a trade union as a condition of employment), private sector and public sector employees alike find unfriendly faces in power: Just how unfriendly was documented five years ago by the Political Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts. The report, titled ” Decent Work in America: The State-by State Work Environment Index 2005 “, offers an assessment of the best work environments in the United States. The top five states were Delaware, New Hampshire, Minnesota, Vermont and Iowa, the bottom five were South Carolina, Utah, Arkansas Texas and Louisiana. (For the full data tables, analysis and methodology, see the report’s technical background paper .) As a rule of thumb, if your state voted for John McCain in 2008, workers there don’t have it very good. All of the top 5 states voted for Barack for President; all 10 bottom dwellers are residents of George W. Bush’s Red America. The Work Environment Index (WEI) rates the quality of Americans’ working lives by a weighting of three factors: job opportunities, job quality, and job fairness. Job Opportunities includes the statewide unemployment rates, the duration of unemployment, and the percentage of “involuntary” part-timers. Job Quality refers to average wages (importantly, adjusted for the cost of living) and the proportion of workers receiving health and pension benefits. Job Fairness measures each state’s percentage of low-wage workers (an indicator of income inequality), pay differential between men and women, minimum wage levels, collective bargaining rules and importantly, whether it is a “right to work” state. There are no surprises among the worst performing states in the Work Environment Index. Virtually all below the Mason-Dixon Line, the WEI laggards feature dismal pay and an outwardly hostile environment towards union organizing, workers’ rights and collective bargaining. Red America is the home of the Right-to-Work (RTW) states. A leader in the Right-to-Work movement, Bush’s home state of Texas was ranked 50th, with the percentage of workers with health and pension benefits running a full 10% below the top WEI performers. Since the WEI was published in 2005, the data on living standards in union-bashing Republican strongholds hasn’t gotten any prettier. The Census Bureau’s 2011 Statistical Abstract (which is based on 2008 data), shows per capita income and median household income is worst where GOP’s laissez-faire crowd finds its strongest support. And if poverty is at its highest, as Speaker Boehner might say, then so be it. Now, it is true that the cost of living in the right-to-work states is generally lower. And as Politifact explained, in recent years incomes in RTW states have performed better than in free-bargaining states. (Sadly, average household income began declining in the U.S. even before the onset of the Bush recession; an AFL-CIO analysis showed that between 2000 and 2009, median income dropped 3% in TRY states compared to 5% elsewhere.) But as Russell Kashian of the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater explained, given the small and declining unionized workforce in the United States: Any right-to-work effect on income growth likely is diminishing, he said. Employers seeking low wages are more likely to go overseas, rather than choosing a right-to-work state over a free-bargaining state in the U.S. As for right-to-work poster child Texas , the Lone Star State economic miracle never happened. As Paul Krugman explained, over the past decade, the unemployment rate in Texas (where less than 20% of public workers are covered by union contracts) has been little different from New York (where the figure is 75%). Rick Perry nevertheless finds himself with a $25 billion budget hole. As for Texas’ rapid population growth, “its liberal land-use and zoning policies have kept housing cheap.” Meanwhile, his health care system ranks 46th nationwide and dead last for the percentage of residents with insurance. Still, Republicans seek to level the economic playing field by lowering the floor for everyone. Americans wondering what will happen in Wisconsin if Governor Scott Walker succeeds should look not to high-performing states like Connecticut, Massachusetts and New Hampshire, but, say, Alabama. There, workers have no collective bargaining rights in the public or private sector. Dismal, under-funded schools are bankrolled with federal dollars from blue-state taxpayers. And low-incomes and high-poverty are the rule, not the exception. And still, as the New York Times detailed, the small town of Prichard stopped paying its retirees’ pensions. As Jonathan Cohn summed up the Republican race to the bottom: “But ask yourself the same question you should have been asking then: To what extent is the problem that the retirement benefits for unionized public sector workers have become too generous? And to what extent is the problem that retirement benefits for everybody else have become too stingy? I would suggest it’s more the latter than the former.” Republicans have seen the future, and it’s in Alabama. And if jobs, health care coverage and retirement benefits have to be slashed to get there, well, so be it. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

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Wisconsin Senator Glenn Grothman: We Can No Longer Have These ‘Slobs’ in Capitol Building

Click here to view this media Wisconsin state Senator Glenn Grothman apparently doesn’t think much of the protesters spending the night in the capitol building and used the excuse that they’re just a bunch of “slobs” trashing the building as the reason why Governor Scott Walker decided to lock them out. Apparently this is something he’s been throwing out there a lot lately as this blog which is devoted to tracking him has taken note of — What did Glenn Grothman get wrong this week? . I guess after this greeting he got from the protesters today while trying to enter the capitol building that they were locked out of, he’s even less happy with those “slobs”. I refuse to link to him, but this video is posted at The Gateway Pundit’s site, or as Media Matters calls him, the Dumbest Man on the Internet , under the breathless headline Breaking: Wisconsin GOP Senator Glenn Grothman Mobbed at Wisconsin Capitol . I guess if by “mobbed” you mean followed and having a bunch of people yell “Shame!” at you and then after being talked to by one of the Democratic congressmen and some others, people leaving with chants of “Peaceful protests!”. Tensions are running high right now in Wisconsin, but I didn’t see anyone looking like they were going to threaten the Senator. I’m sure he doesn’t like being followed or yelled at by a large group of people and I’m quite sure that’s an extremely intimidating situation for anyone to find themselves in. That said, it doesn’t look like anyone was out to do any physical harm to him either. When you’re out to destroy people’s livelihoods and they’re upset with your for it, sometimes democracy is messy and you’re going to end up with pissed off people yelling at you. It’s funny how the right seemed to love this stuff when it was bused in teabaggers screaming at Democratic members of Congress during the health care debate, one of them apparently armed that wingnut and now sadly CNN contributor Dana Loesch defended here , or when there were gun nuts showing up outside an Obama rally in Phoenix with assault rifles , but when one of their own elected officials who catered to them has a group of actual grass roots protesters yelling at him, he’s being “mobbed” by some dangerous crowd of “union thugs.” Quite the double standard out of these so-called “lovers of democracy” I’d say. Guns and threats of shooting someone and lots of yelling by our side sponsored by the Koch brothers, that’s just freedom of speech. For union members who aren’t packing heat but just making a lot of noise, not so much. Transcript below the fold. GROTHMAN: Well, we’re trying to keep some people out of the building because right now the building is becoming a pig sty. People are staying overnight, the building smells. We used to have nice little groups of fourth grade children walking through the building. There was something called the Senate Scholar programs that would track us around. All of that is being shut down by a bunch of slobs taking up the building. We can no longer continue to have all of these slobs in the building. O’DONNELL: Well Senator some of these slobs in the building are elementary school students who may be learning something more interesting or valuable or real about government that’s going on there, don’t you think? GROTHMAN: No. It would be embarrassing to me to take my child to that building today. O’DONNELL: Cory Mason, you get the last word with us. MASON: I’ve had my kids here the last couple weeks. I am proud to see them witness this great moment in democracy. And these slobs that you’re referring to are police officers and nurses and firefighters and people who care for the state. GROTHMAN: No they’re not. MASON: And you ought to be ashamed of yourself. Yes they are! Come in and look. Come on in and talk to them. GROTHMAN: I do talk to them all the time. The people who are inside the building are college students who are having a fun party. That’s largely who’s in the building overnight. And if you get up early Cory and talk to who’s in the building at 7am, you will find it is largely college students and hangers-on having a party in the state capitol. O’DONNELL: Senator Grothman, before we go I just want to get one clarification from you about the crowds. Are you saying that all of the protesters there are slobs? GROTHMAN: No of course not. But the people who are staying overnight are largely making a mess of our capitol and that’s what we were addressing. Why are we keeping people out of the building? Because we do not want to have so many people there overnight defacing our beautiful capitol. MASON: Nobody’s defacing anything. They’re participating in a democracy. O’DONNELL: But you would agree with Cory Mason that many of the protesters are in fact police officers, firefighters, other state workers, who you would never call slobs. GROTHMAN: A very small percentage. I think if you would interview all the people who are creating a ruckus the vast majority who are here today are not police officers or nurses. They are either college T.A.’s, college students or hangers-on or unemployed people who are just looking for somewhere to hang out.

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Today's Supreme Court ruling in Snyder v. Phelps is proving to be yet another occasion for the media to falsely describe the homosexuality-fixated Westboro Baptist Church as a “fundamentalist” congregation. The Associated Press , MSNBC and NPR.org have been among the news outlets using that tag for the Topeka, Kansas, organization that protests funerals of soliders, celebrating their deaths by claiming God killed them because he hates “fags.” But the AP's own style manual strongly cautions against the use of the term “fundamentalist,” noting that the term “fundamentalist has to a large extent taken on pejorative connotations except when applied to groups that stress strict, literal interpretations of Scripture and separation from other Christians.” “In general,” the AP manual adds, “do not use [the term] fundamentalist unless a group applies the word to itself.” At time of publication, Westboro's website was unavailable, but a cached version of its FAQ page on Google yielded no description of WBC as “fundamentalist.” Here's how the church describes itself: The Westboro Baptist Church (WBC) of Topeka, Kansas, is an Old School (or, Primitive) Baptist Church. We adhere to the teachings of the Bible, preach against all form of sin (e.g., fornication, adultery [including divorce and remarriage], sodomy), and insist that the sovereignty of God and the doctrines of grace be taught and expounded publicly to all men. These doctrines of grace were well summed up by John Calvin in his 5 points of Calvinism: Total Depravity, Unconditional Election, Limited Atonement, Irresistible Grace, and Perseverance of the Saints. Although these doctrines are almost universally hated today, they were once loved and believed. Even though the Arminian lies that “God loves everyone” and “Jesus died for everyone” are being taught from nearly every pulpit in this generation, this hasn't always been the case. If you are in a church that supposedly believes the Bible, and you are hearing these lies, then your church doesn't teach what the Bible teaches. If you care about your never-dying soul, you will carefully read every word of this web site, along with the entire Bible. Of course, there are plenty of Christian churches that do favor “strict, literal interpretations of Scripture” that denounce Westboro Baptist, such as the Primitive Baptists, who insist they have nothing in common with WBC. From PrimitiveBaptist.info (emphasis mine): PB-Online and the Primitive Baptist Church do not recognize the ministry of “pastor” Fred Phelps, nor do we have fellowship with the Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kansas, which styles itself as an Old School (or Primitive) Baptist Church. We find the actions of these people to be deplorable and against the very Scriptures they claim to believe. Let it be firmly noted that the Primitive Baptists do not and will not endorse, condone or support the base actions of this group.

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Visualized: if the iPhone had happened in an alternate reality

This collection of devices — from Germany’s SKS Hinkel, and winner of an iF Product Design Award this year — is really a video intercom system. But if you use your imagination, from left to right, it looks like an iPod shuffle, an iPod classic, an iPhone shuffle, and an iPhone classic all developed in some awesome alternate dimension where coiled phone cords are still cool. Admit it: you miss the click wheel. Visualized: if the iPhone had happened in an alternate reality originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 12:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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AIST shows off full-color night vision camera, well lit Bullwinkle figurine (video)

You might know them for seemingly ridiculous innovations like Segway shoes or the HRP-4C pop star robot , but the folks at AIST have put away the gimmicks for their latest invention — a full-color night vision camera. Produced by Nanolux, an arm of AIST, the camera uses a series of algorithms to read and process wavelengths reflected by objects lit with infrareds, allowing it to successfully reproduce reds, blues, and greens in the darkest of conditions. The company hopes to make the device available by the end of 2011 at a price point lower than conventional night vision cameras, and says they will work with different lenses to improve long-range photography for the device. Such an invention could have serious implications for fields like surveillance and wildlife observation, but fear not, AIST hasn’t lost its sense of humor — the company used a Bullwinkle figurine rotating on a Lazy Susan to demo its latest invention at Printable Electronics 2011. Check out the video after the jump. Continue reading AIST shows off full-color night vision camera, well lit Bullwinkle figurine (video) AIST shows off full-color night vision camera, well lit Bullwinkle figurine (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 12:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Genesi reduces price of Efika MX Smartbook, Smarttop, says it’s for greater good

Back in September, we reported on the absurdly overpriced Efika MX Smartbook — a little computer sporting a 10-inch display and a $349 price tag — and it looks like somebody took note. The folks over at Genesi have reduced the price of their entire line of Efika MX products, dropping the aforementioned Smartbook to $199 and its desktop companion, the Smarttop, to $129. Of course, they did so with a bit of marketing flair, claiming the deal would open “the door even more for billions of people and businesses in emerging markets to affordable state-of-the-art computing and Internet access.” Now, we’re not calling anyone out here, but we’re guessing we weren’t the only ones who thought the Smartbook was just a tad too pricey. Full PR after the jump. Continue reading Genesi reduces price of Efika MX Smartbook, Smarttop, says it’s for greater good Genesi reduces price of Efika MX Smartbook, Smarttop, says it’s for greater good originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 02 Mar 2011 08:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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