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Lawsuit: Mets Owner Made $300M From Madoff Fraud

The owners of the Mets turned a blind eye to Bernard Madoff’s massive fraud, reaping $300 million in false profits and using a large chunk to run the team, according to a lawsuit unsealed Friday. (Feb. 4)

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Video: Mercedes-Benz’s extended Super Bowl XLV ad shows C-Class coupe, SLS AMG Roadster

While we’re holding off on posting all the automotive Super Bowl XLV commercials until the game day on Sunday, we couldn’t refrain from posting this one. Mercedes-Benz has just released an extended version of its Super Bowl XLV commercial, which will focus around the 125 years of Mercedes-Benz heritage. The extended version of the commercial Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : eGMCarTech Discovery Date : 05/02/2011 02:29 Number of articles : 3

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Ed Schultz Unfamiliar With Widely-Read Document Known as the Bill of Rights

Even though Ed Schultz has been told by MSNBC to refrain from further “Psycho Talk” segments, no such restraint is evident on his radio show, one of the top rated for liberals in the country. On Wednesday, for example, Schultz criticized former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney for signing a bill into law in 2006 that includes an individual mandate for Bay State residents to buy health insurance, a provision also included in last year's health bill passed by Congress and signed by President Obama. Schultz played two clips of Romney, from 2009 and earlier this week on “Good Morning America,” talking about the individual mandate, followed by Schultz's criticism ( audio ) — SCHULTZ: Have you noticed the flip-flops that's been taking place in the conservative movement about health care reform, how the mandate was about the best thing since sliced bread when they came up with it back in the early '90s. We ran a montage of the sound bites and the lists of those on the conservative agenda who were in favor of the mandate and now all of a sudden, since it's been passed under a Democratic House and Senate and presidency, all of a sudden they're against it and it's a government takeover of health care and a job-crushing Washington takeover. That's their latest. But you don't have to look very far, you've got Mitt Romney here, number 7 there fellas (referring to audio clip), in 2009, Romney saying that what he had done in Massachusetts really should have been a model for the entire country. ROMNEY (source not cited): Massachusetts is a model for getting everybody insured in a way that doesn't break the bank and that doesn't put the government into the driver's seat and allows people to own their own insurance policies and not to have to worry about losing coverage. That's what Massachusetts did. SCHULTZ: That was the Mittster in 2009. This is the Mittster just yesterday. ROMNEY (on “GMA” with George Stephanopoulos): We are a federalist system. We don't need the federal government imposing a one-size-fits-all plan on the entire nation. STEPHANOPOULOS: But what he (US District Judge Roger Vinson of Northern District of Florida, who ruled that individual mandate in Obamacare unconstitutional) was talking about specifically was this requirement that people buy health insurance and you had exactly that same requirement in Massachusetts. Why is it right for a state to impose that kind of a mandate and not the federal government? ROMNEY: Well, states have rights that the federal government doesn't have. Under the 10th Amendment to the Constitution, the powers of the federal government

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Fmr. Egypt Ambassador: Mubarak ‘Lost Touch’

A new rally Friday by nearly 100000 protesters in Cairo piled more pressure on President Hosni Mubarak to make a swift exit. However former US Ambassador to Egypt Edward Walker says Mubarak ‘is not walking out the door tomorrow.’ (Feb. 4)

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Lions Suh Voted Top Defensive Rookie

Detroit Lions nose tackle Ndamukong Suh was voted the AP NFL defensive rookie of the year. The 307-pound Suh, the second overall pick in the draft, recorded 10 sacks and was selected for the Pro Bowl. (Feb. 4)

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Egypt: Demonstrations and political pressure, but Hosni Mubarak clings on

Barack Obama sends Mubarak his strongest message yet: it’s time to go Barack Obama today tried to nudge Hosni Mubarak towards the exit, sending his strongest message yet to the Egyptian president that it was time for him to quit. But Mubarak, even after hundreds of thousands took to the streets in Cairo, Alexandria and elsewhere in Egypt to call on him to go, remained defiant and showed little sign of preparing to depart. Mubarak earlier this week promised to leave in the autumn but that has failed to satisfy the protesters who want him to go immediately. Obama, taking questions from the media for the first time since the crisis began, used a White House press conference to drop a series of heavy hints that the US regarded Mubarak as having outlived his usefulness and that it would be better if he went. “In light of what’s happened the last two weeks, going back to the old ways is not going to work,” Obama said. “Suppression is not going to work. Engaging in violence is not going to work.” He added that work on an orderly succession had to begin “right now”, had to be meaningful and broad-based, which meant involving opposition groups. The US president stopped short of calling unambiguously for Mubarak to stand down immediately but his comments went further in support of the protesters than his brief statement on Tuesday. He condemned the attacks on journalists, human rights activists and protesters and said he held the Egyptian government responsible for their safety. He appealed to Mubarak to make the right choice with regard to his departure and to think about his legacy. “I believe that President Mubarak cares about his country,” Obama said. “He is proud, but he is also a patriot.” Obama said Mubarak had made the “psychological breakthrough” by announcing he’d stand down in the autumn, seemingly suggesting that the president should not make a fuss about a few more months. US officials confirmed that while Washington publicly does not want to be seen to be interfering in Egyptian domestic affairs, it is engaged with senior Egyptian officers and politicians about life after Mubarak, assuming he leaves soon. The EU also kept up pressure on Egypt’s government for a swift, orderly and peaceful transition today on a day that saw hundreds of thousands rally on the streets. It is possible that after such a huge turnout produced no tangible effect at home or abroad the protests will become harder to sustain – unless the fragmented opposition formulates more detailed demands. Diplomatic sources signalled that if Mubarak was not going to leave and thus deprive the protest movement of a “symbolic victory,” it might still be possible to pursue a dialogue with the government. “There are people digging in around Mubarak but others who are edging in the right direction,” a western official said. European leaders called for an immediate transition to a “broad-based” government, but like the US declined to call explicitly for Mubarak’s resignation. An EU summit in Brussels wrestled over a response to the crisis, with David Cameron urging more robust action in line with Washington while leaders such as Silvio Berlusconi praised Mubarak, and suggested he should continue in office. The UN secretary-general, Ban ki-Moon, demanded new elections be held as soon as possible, and not in September. US officials are proposing that a transitional government fronted by the military invite members from a range of opposition groups, including the banned Muslim Brotherhood, to begin work to open up the electoral system in an effort to bring about free and fair elections. “We have discussed with the Egyptians a variety of different ways to move that process forward, but all of those decisions must be made by the Egyptian people,” said White House spokesman Tommy Vietor. But the limits of US pressure were graphically illustrated by Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, when he warned in an ABC interview against any move to reduce the $1.3bn (£800m) in annual US aid to Egypt – apparently in response to calls that the funding be cut if the governmental transition in Egypt does not happen soon. “There is a lot of uncertainty out there and I would just caution against doing anything until we really understand what’s going on,” Mullen said. “I recognise that ($1.3bn) certainly is a significant investment, but it’s an investment that has paid off for a long, long time.” The US and Egyptian military are closely intertwined through extensive joint training and exercises in support of US interests in the Middle East. The US would suspend aid immediately if the Egyptian army was to crack down on peaceful protesters in the way the Iranian Revolutionary Guard did in 2009 and the Chinese military did in 1989. Mullen, defence secretary Robert Gates and other senior Pentagon figures have been in regular contact with their Egyptian counterparts all week. The largely trouble-free rally in Cairo suggested the government had acted smartly to rein in the pro-Mubarak demonstrators who caused mayhem and attracted international condemnation this week. The defence minister, Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, paid a very public visit to Tahrir Square and talked to protesters and military commanders — conveying the message that Egypt’s most powerful institution was sanctioning the rally. Egypt Middle East Hosni Mubarak Barack Obama United Nations European Union Ian Black Ewen MacAskill Ian Traynor guardian.co.uk

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Rams Quarterback Bradford Top Offensive Rookie

Top overall draft pick Sam Bradford was a runaway winner as AP NFL offensive rookie of the year. The Rams quarterback threw for more than 35-hundred yards and 18 touchdowns, leading St. Louis to a seven-win season. (Feb. 4)

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Hannity and Bozell bash media — especially Chris Matthews — for insffucient fearmongering over Egypt

Click here to view this media The right-wing Media Research Center’s Brent Bozell was on Sean Hannity’s Fox News show last night to talk about how horrible the American media have been in covering the situation in Egypt. How have they been horrible? Why, apparently because they aren’t being sufficiently Becklike in fearmongering over an imminent radical Islamist takeover: BOZELL: What happens when the government crumbles? What happens when this country is reduced to utter anarchy? What happens when the killings begin and the death begins? Are they still going to credit Barack Obama’s soaring oratory for that, or are they going to separate them? What happens if an Islamic caliphate takes over? Are they going to credit his soaring oratory at that point? No they won’t. And what happens, Brent Bozell, if the government remains standing but reconstitutes itself as a democratic republic? What happens when the violence subsides? Will you and Hannity be going on the air and abjectly apologizing to your audiences and the American public and President Obama and to your media colleagues for needlessly fearmongering and spreading panic? Um, no. You won’t. But Bozell reserved his special reservoir of venom for Chris Matthews, who dared compare the Muslim Brotherhood to the Tea Party. This, of course, made Hannity’s an Bozell’s collective pea-sized brains explode: BOZELL: Look, I listen to Chris Matthews and I have two reactions to that. My first reaction is, ‘Let’s put aside civility for just a minute and to say, I’m just so sick and tired of these disgusting, horrible, despicable attacks, I’m going to slug you and deck you one of these days.’ But that’s wrong. That’s the wrong reaction. The right reaction is to listen to him, and to listen to him clearly, and just start laughing at the guy. Look, if a meteor came out of the heavens and hit New York City, he would blame the Tea Party for it. He would blame Michele Bachmann for it. HANNITY: No. He would probably blame George W. Bush or Sarah Palin. Let’s be honest. BOZELL: Yeah, but if it hit Fox News, he would say it’s OK. Yeah, and if it his NBC News instead, Bozell and Hannity would say it was OK. Especially because we know that “first reaction” is, for right-wing clowns like these two, the one we’re going to get most of the time. Especially when it’s being encouraged by top-tier pundits on a cable network with an audience of millions. Oh, but if a liberal protester is overheard saying nasty things, why, that’s proof positive that it’s the “left” that cannot be civil.

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Parliamentary republic ‘solution’ to Egypt’s woes

Moustafa Elgindy, a member of the Egyptian Coalition for the Opposition and a former member of Egypt’s parliament, said the pro-democracy protests will continue until president Hosni Mubarak leaves office. He said the solution is a parliamentary republic with a strong army and a prime minister voted on by the people. He spoke to Al Jazeera from Washington, DC.

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World Net Daily: Fourth Horseman Of The Apocalypse Spotted In Egypt

According to today’s top story on World Net Daily , eagle-eyed Christians have spotted the Fourth Horseman of the Apocalypse riding through a crowd of Egyptian protesters. The footage, provided by Euronews and subsequently seen on MSNBC, CNN and uploaded over a dozen times to the popular video sharing site YouTube, captures the fiery, violent protests in Cairo this past week … and something else. Between… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Joe. My. God. Discovery Date : 05/02/2011 01:18 Number of articles : 3

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