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Officials: Sen. Joe Lieberman to Retire in 2012

Sen. Joe Lieberman, the 2000 Democratic vice presidential nominee who angered the party by backing Republican John McCain for president in 2008, will retire and not seek a fifth term, Democratic officials said Tuesday. (Jan. 18)

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Baby Doc Charged, But Duvalierism Remains Alive in Haiti

Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier probably had every reason to believe that Haiti wouldn’t book him when he made his stunning return to the country on Sunday. Although the exiled former dictator is accused of an orgy of brutality and embezzlement while ruling Haiti from 1971 to 1986, he may well have assumed the government at the moment had enough on its broken plate – earthquake recovery, a cholera epidemic, a presidential election crisis – that it couldn’t afford the political turbulence of arresting, charging and prosecuting him as well. If so, it seems Baby Doc miscalculated. Tuesday morning, a Haitian judge and prosecutor, backed by police and a government helicopter buzzing overhead,…

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Why any good Democrat would think the focal point of the deficit is the most important thing that President Obama should be talking about in the SOTU is beyond me. Atrios: By accounts Christina Romer is one of the better members of Tribe Econ, but the idea that it’s good politics to talk about the deficit in the State of the Union is insane, and the idea that it will be good for policy to have the political dialogue focused on the deficit, as opposed to, you know, JOBS, is even more insane. We are doomed. Focusing on the deficit only strengthens the GOP’s hold over this administration and the media narrative, when what Americans are really interested in JOBS. Republicans only care about the deficit when they can use it like a sledgehammer to pulverize any Democratic administration as a way to justify their insane beliefs that the working class are only cattle to be used as goods. You have to read Chrystia Freeland’s article: The Rise of the New Global Elite. It’s an excellent piece that delves into the Randian/Super Elite mindset. How do you think they feel about the American worker? The U.S.-based CEO of one of the world’s largest hedge funds told me that his firm’s investment committee often discusses the question of who wins and who loses in today’s economy. In a recent internal debate, he said, one of his senior colleagues had argued that the hollowing-out of the American middle class didn’t really matter. “His point was that if the transformation of the world economy lifts four people in China and India out of poverty and into the middle class, and meanwhile means one American drops out of the middle class, that’s not such a bad trade,” the CEO recalled. I heard a similar sentiment from the Taiwanese-born, 30-something CFO of a U.S. Internet company. A gentle, unpretentious man who went from public school to Harvard, he’s nonetheless not terribly sympathetic to the complaints of the American middle class. “We demand a higher paycheck than the rest of the world,” he told me. “So if you’re going to demand 10 times the paycheck, you need to deliver 10 times the value. It sounds harsh, but maybe people in the middle class need to decide to take a pay cut.” At last summer’s Aspen Ideas Festival, Michael Splinter, CEO of the Silicon Valley green-tech firm Applied Materials, said that if he were starting from scratch, only 20 percent of his workforce would be domestic. “This year, almost 90 percent of our sales will be outside the U.S.,” he explained. “The pull to be close to the customers—most of them in Asia—is enormous.” Speaking at the same conference, Thomas Wilson, CEO of Allstate, also lamented this global reality: “I can get [workers] anywhere in the world. It is a problem for America, but it is not necessarily a problem for American business … American businesses will adapt.” Americans businesses will adapt, which means that the American worker will suffer and suffer badly. Richard Wolffe reported that Obama will work with the business community, and I guess that will lead into regulations, or the gutting thereof. Darry Issa already is asking business what regulations they want him to attack so we know where his committee is headed. With the GOP’s help, they can continue to make their fortunes off of the backs of our workers with no remorse or regard to the Tea Party fetish of cutting Social Security, unemployment, medicaid/medicare and the destruction of all unions. The Military Complex will of course not be called on to sacrifice any of their federal dollars, only the working class. President Obama needs to champion the cause of the working class and make the case that he will not allow these programs to be compromised.

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Bozell Column: Who Is Eric Fuller?

OK, so conservatives have to be accused of fostering hatred with our alleged vitriol, the kind of vitriol which fuels the flames of violence, like we witnessed in Tucson except – well, except there wasn’t, and isn’t, a shred of evidence that the killer was influenced by any conservatives since a) he didn’t listen to or watch conservative programming and b) isn’t a conservative. There is the hypothetical question: What if the perpetrator of violence were liberal? How would the media react then? How many would put Chris Matthews, Paul Krugman, Keith Olbermann and Co. on trial for creating the “atmosphere” of “hatred” so often ascribed to conservatives only? In fact, it happened. One of Jared Loughner’s shooting victims was a local leftist activist, Eric Fuller, who last week was invited to ABC’s taping of an “American Conversation.” There, in front of all the cameras, he interrupted a local Tea Party activist by uttering what should be considered in this atmosphere to be a blood-curdling threat:

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Samsung says it isn’t charging carriers for Android updates, promises Galaxy S status report

Buying a Samsung Galaxy S sounded like a fantastic decision when Android 2.1 was hot stuff, but now that Gingerbread ‘s out of the oven, Fascinate, Captivate, Vibrant and Epic 4G owners are starting to get a little tired of being stuck behind the curve. And while we can think of at least one fairly nasty reason why Samsung might be delaying, we’ve been hearing all sorts of conspiracy theories, ranging from holding back Froyo to sell more dedicated Gingerbread phones to making the cellular carriers foot the bill for Android updates for every handset sold or else not get the update at all. Well, it seems that last rumor’s gained a little traction, because Samsung’s taken it upon itself to squash the story flat. The company gave Phone Scoop the following statement: “No. Samsung is not charging carriers for Froyo updates to Galaxy S. We hope to have more detail on status shortly. Promise!” At this rate, we’re wondering if Samsung should just skip Froyo and just start rolling out some Gingerbread men instead. Samsung says it isn’t charging carriers for Android updates, promises Galaxy S status report originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Jan 2011 22:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Microsoft releases OneNote app for iPhone, free for a ‘limited time’

Well, here’s something of a surprise — Microsoft has just brought its OneNote app to the iPhone, and it’s made it available as a free download “for a limited time” to boot. As with the Windows Phone 7 app (previously the only mobile version), the iPhone app will let you manage notes and shopping lists (and even add pictures taken with the iPhone’s camera), and then sync those with Windows Live SkyDrive so you can access them in either the Windows desktop application or its web-based counterpart. As ZDNet ‘s Mary Jo Foley notes, however, perhaps just as interesting as the app itself is the question of what else might follow — a native OneNote app for iPad, perhaps, or even iOS versions of other Office applications? Microsoft unsurprisingly isn’t commenting on those possibilities, but it did note that the OneNote app is the culmination of some 18 to 24 months of development from a team of Microsoft Mac Office and OneNote engineers, which is either a sign of some serious slacking or a fairly significant commitment on Microsoft’s part. No word on when the “limited” free period will run out (so you’ll probably want to grab it while you can), nor is there any world on a worldwide release — it’s currently only available to US users, unfortunately. [Thanks, Pradeep] Microsoft releases OneNote app for iPhone, free for a ‘limited time’ originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Jan 2011 22:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Right-wingers want to make Obama’s message in Tucson into vindication for their hatemongering

Click here to view this media You just knew that when President Obama issued his call for a return to civility last week in Tucson , folks on the right would happily embrace the simple standard he elucidated — “It’s important for us to pause for a moment and make sure that we’re talking with each other in a way that heals, not in a way that wounds” — to everyone but themselves. Sure enough, there was Bloviating BillO last night on Fox, complaining because that evil liberal Richard Cohen had called Sarah Palin stupid, and Bill Maher said that the Founders would despise the Tea Partiers: Delightful. Now, I don’t hold Mr. Maher to the same standard as The Washington Post because he’s a comedian, a man who makes a living expressing a point of view. But apparently the president’s point of view, more civility, is not being embraced by Mr. Maher. Also, I’ve gotten a lot of mail asking me why I don’t come down on right-wing talk radio, and it’s the same thing: Talk radio is entertainment. People on there make a living expressing opinions. It’s not a news forum; therefore the standards are not the same. Of course not — they exist in the zone known as the Fox Double Standard: If it attack liberals and Democrats, it’s OK. Otherwise not. And then he gets into outright projection: Immediately after President Obama’s speech last Wednesday, “Talking Points” said that the call for civility would most likely not be answered, and we pointed to the money train as the primary reason. Once again, there is big money in the hate industry, and it’s easy to attack people. Indeed there is — after all, look at all the dough Fox is rolling in. And he’s right: Obama’s call to civility most likely will not be answered … by ANYONE on the Right. They’re too busy pretending their vicious, violent and eliminationist rhetoric has no effect on people. Especially rhetoric that singles out people for demonization and elimination. Rhetoric like this: Click here to view this media O’REILLY: So you would like to see the same kind of situation that happened after 9/11 attack now, where they would all come out and say, “Enough with this crap”? BECK: Of course. O’REILLY: Right. BECK: Every American wants that. What I… O’REILLY: Not every American. George Soros doesn’t want that. BECK: Frances Fox Piven doesn’t want that. O’REILLY: Who is Frances Fox Piven? BECK: Cloward-Piven, from the 1960s. That’s a theory that was inspired by the Watts riots and is being used right now. And she is actively, actively — Columbia University professor used to be. I think she’s — at CUNY now. But she is actively saying, “Rise up, embrace your anger. Turn on your bosses, turn on the politicians.” O’REILLY: All right. She’s Black Panther. Overthrow, kill the pigs. BECK: She is — she stands with the Clintons. Signing. She’s very… O’REILLY: Still around? BECK: Oh, yes. Yeah, that’s some civility standard. Oh, but I forget — O’Reilly obviously operates inside the Fox double Standard Zone too.

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Detroit Police Search for Serial Rapist

Detectives are searching for a man who they believe sexually assaulted seven women since New Year’s Day and tried to attack another, Detroit’s police chief said Monday. (Jan. 18)

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What It Was Like to Be John F. Kennedy

By Richard Reeves Fifty years ago, John F. Kennedy was sworn in as the 35th president of the United States. He gave a stirring inaugural address and then took over a job for which he was unprepared. No one is ever prepared. Related Entries January 18, 2011 Tucson, Juarez and an Assault-Weapons Ban January 18, 2011 The Lives of Dictators

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Bill Clinton Urges Chicago Crowd to Back Emanuel

Former President Bill Clinton shined the spotlight on a former top aide Tuesday, telling a crowd of hundreds to back Rahm Emanuel’s bid to be the next mayor of Chicago. (Jan. 18)

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