Boy. I certainly wouldn’t want to give my business to this bank: PHILADELPHIA – An elderly New Jersey woman billed $5,800 after missing the final payment on her 30-year mortgage can pursue her lawsuit against the debt collectors. Lawyers for 85-year-old Dorothy Rhue Allen say the fees charged by two banks and a law firm violate consumer-protection laws. The suit says LaSalle Bank and Cenlar Federal Savings Bank started foreclosure proceedings in 2007 after the hospitalized Allen missed the last $432 payment on her Deptford, N.J., home. The banks advised her lawyers she could pay $5,800 to avoid foreclosure. But her lawyers instead sued over the fees, and the foreclosure action was dropped. A U.S. appeals court this week says Allen can pursue her case, reversing a federal judge who threw it out.
Continue reading …Fox News Watch panelists on Saturday named some villains concerning last week's tragedy in Tucson. Aside from the shooter himself, Newsweek's Jonathan Alter, New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, and Markos Moulitsas of Daily Kos were mentioned for their terrible coverage of this awful event (video follows with transcript and commentary): JON SCOTT, HOST: The media is always looking for heroes and sometimes villains in a case like this. Who made the list? LYNN SWEET, CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Well, number one the only one on my list of villains is the shooter, and his motivations are still being looked into. SCOTT: And he deserves to be there. Bill? BILL MCGOWAN: I would also say the shooter, but I’d also say that Paul Krugman in introducing to the media bloodstream the idea that this was political before any facts were known was a disservice to the broader understanding of the story. Even though he's an opinion columnist, he should not have been putting that out there that quickly. SCOTT: Judy? JUDITH MILLER, FOX NEWS: And in that same category, Markos Moulitsas at the Daily Kos, who announced immediately without any facts at all, “Mission accomplished, Sarah Palin.” JIM PINKERTON, FOX NEWS: And I would add Jonathan Alter of Newsweek who wrote a very crude column advising President Obama on how to take maximum political advantage out of that speech that he gave in Tucson. All columnists like to give advice, but this is a little too much based on blood and tragedy. SCOTT: But there are lots of columnists who, you know, speculated on what the President should say, the nation needed healing, that kind of thing. PINKERTON: Yeah, I mean, just read the column and decide yourself if he went over the board of saying, “Look, this is a tragedy, but here’s how, do what Clinton did, but only do it better.” We at NewsBusters agree with this assessment, as we chronicled the misdeeds of all three media members: Newsweek's Jonathan Alter Gives Obama Advice on Exploiting Tucson Tragedy for Political Gain Paul Krugman Blames Giffords Shooting on Palin, Limbaugh and Beck Moulitsas's dishonor can be found in the above-referenced Krugman piece On the other hand, one could make the case that it's wrong to only mention these three as the coverage of this event was universally atrocious.
Continue reading …In response to Amy Chua’s much-discussed book excerpt in praise of ultra-strict Chinese mothers, Ayelet Waldman begins her defense of “ambivalent” Western moms by rattling off a bunch of supposed no-nos she’s allowed her four kids to do—quit music lessons, sleep over at a friend’s, surf the web, etc….
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Sniff. Kinda makes you feel sad, doesn’t it? Nobody wants to sign Glenn Beck’s phony “non-violence” pledge. Hmmmmm. Wonder why that could be? Here’s Beck on Tuesday, whining: BECK: The number of people so far who signed this pledge denouncing violence: 14 — 14. Over 500 members in the House and Senate, and 14. Now, I was going to show you the 14 names because I’m proud of those guys, but maybe some other time. I don’t want this to turn into — I mean, this is not the Committee on Un-American Activities. That’s for Congress to do. Not a private citizen. So, I don’t want some list going around. I just want you to know it’s 14. And I have heard all kind of reasons and excuses. Some just say they just need more time. Some are afraid to be associated with it. Afraid? Some need more time to read it. It’s not really that complex. I don’t know if you know this. It’s this long. Others agree with it. Oh, Glenn, I’m telling you, we agree with it. We’re in complete agreement here. I’m a little uncomfortable signing anything. Really? Yeah, really. And as if to underscore exactly why, he went on O’Reilly last night and whined about it some more … and then launched into a vicious, demonizing smear of couple of leading progressive figures: 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: Clariton (ph) Piven, from the 1960′s. 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 SUNY (ph) 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. In fact, Frances Fox Piven was on with Amy Goodman the other night , and had to express her own bewilderment at the bizarre way that Beck is depicting and smearing her, as well as her work: As Media Matters points out, over at Beck’s own website, The Blaze, commenters responding to the Piven story left these comments — and they remained there even today [update: Some of these have now been taken down, though not all of them.]: enlarge enlarge enlarge You see, Glenn, here’s why no one is signing your Pledge: Because it contains this key point: I hold those responsible for the violence, responsible for the violence. I denounce those who attempt to blame political opponents for the acts of madmen. This is a copout, and everyone — except right-wing hatemongers and their Village apologists — knows it. Sure, everyone knows that crazy people do crazy things. But their heads get filled with crazy ideas by people who indulge in crazy talk for fun and profit. And the blood of the victims is on their hands too. The proof is right there at your own site, and there in your own rants. You claim to want to bring everyone together — and then viciously demonize people with whom you happen to disagree. Go look at those comments and try telling us again that your vicious demonization of people isn’t whipping up violent hatred, the kind that eventually gets acted upon. No one — no one — believes there is even an ounce of sincerity to your Pledge. We already know that you’re the last person on the planet who should be preaching nonviolence. Especially because you go out and prove our suspicions: let’s all come together except the progressives you intend to destroy. You see, Glenn, as SEK at Lawyers, Guns and Money explained the other day, violent rhetoric is not always the outright advocacy of violence, as you seem to think: it is just as often rhetoric that invites a specific audience to reach the conclusion that violence is the only appropriate action to deal with a problem. And this kind of rhetoric, as we know all too well, is your specialty in trade . So here’s what we at CrooksandLiars propose: We’ll sign your Pledge — with one simple amendment. Delete the copout “I hold those responsible” clause. And replace it with this clause: “I will not unnecessarily hold up entire groups of people, or representative leaders of those groups, and demonize and dehumanize them as objects fit only for elimination, especially in a way that invites my audience to take violent action to prevent dire catastrophes of my imagining.” Make that change, and we’ll happily sign your Pledge.
Continue reading …Eating carrots and other fruits high in carotenoids makes you more physically attractive, a new study suggests. British researchers had volunteers score pictures of other subjects by physical attractiveness, reports the AFP. It turned out that people who ate the most carrots, plums, and other strongly pigmented foods had a…
Continue reading …Today would have been Aaliyah’s 32nd birthday. SoulCultureUK spoke to both J. Cole and Drake while they were out on the UK leg of their European tour. Drake talks about how Aaliyah had the biggest impact on his music career after a conversation he had with his dad and after the jump, J. Cole talks Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Nah Right Discovery Date : 15/01/2011 21:06 Number of articles : 5
Continue reading …Emergency officials who went to the scene of the shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and 18 others are talking about their response one week after the rampage in Arizona. (Jan. 15)
Continue reading …Seems like a reasonable enough request: Nearly 50 members of Congress want drilling companies to disclose what kind of chemicals they use to “frack” gas wells on federal land. Worried that toxins will leach into groundwater during the practice known as hydraulic fracturing, they’ve asked the Interior Department to require…
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: Perrspectives For years, Republicans have deployed the word ” uncertainty ” to stymie any public policy with which they disagreed. A decade after President Bush declared “scientific uncertainties remain” about global warming , virtually the entire Congressional Republican caucus has proudly joined the deniers’ camp . Last month, GOP leaders revved up the uncertainty myth over taxes , falsely claiming that another tax cut windfall for the wealth was needed to “reduce the uncertainty that’s affecting employers all across our country.” Of course, on two of the most heated issues of the day – raising the U.S. debt ceiling and repealing the 2010 health care reform law – it is the GOP which is wholly responsible for creating real uncertainty for businesses, investors and all Americans. Next week , House Republicans will bring their quixotic effort to repeal the Affordable Care Act to the floor. (The vote originally scheduled for this Wednesday was delayed. That was altogether fitting, as Democratic Rep. Gabrielle Giffords received death threats and saw her office vandalized after her March 2010 vote for health care reform.) But whether they target the entire ACA or just individual provisions, Republicans are bringing only uncertainty – and not health care – to the American people. As Politico detailed yesterday (“Investors See Health Law’s Potential”), insurers themselves are agreed on that point: As Republicans push forward on repealing health reform, planning the law’s demise, a different conversation is happening among thousands of health care investors gathered in San Francisco for this week’s J.P Morgan Health Care Conference: how to capitalize on health reform’s new business opportunities. The Congressional Budget Office estimates 32 million Americans will gain health insurance by 2019 if the law stands. For health insurers, that represents a potential boon for both their individual market business as well as in the Medicaid market, where states regularly contract with private insurers to manage care. “The worst is behind them,” says Ipsita Smolinski, president of Capitol Street and senior advisor to McKenna Long & Aldridge, of the outlook for health insurers. “There was so much uncertainty last year. But with the MLR and rate review regulations out, investors know they have a pretty viable future. And it is the GOP’s threatened repeal effort, and not an influx of 32 million new subscribers, which is creating uncertainty among insurers: Health insurers spent barely anytime discussing Republicans’ repeal efforts. Aetna’s Zubretsky touched on the subject briefly only to say that Republicans understand that a rifle shot approach to tearing out specific health reform provisions, particularly the individual mandate, would not bode well for their business. “The unintended consequence of repealing and replacing part of the legislation is the biggest risk here,” he said. Of course, the risks for the American people are much greater still. Last week, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) reported that the GOP’s H.R. 2, the Repealing the Job-Killing Health Care Law Act, would not only lead to higher out of pocket costs, reduced benefits and saddle employers with higher premiums, but over the next 10 years would add $230 billion to the deficit. On Friday, Harvard economist David Cutler released a paper estimating that that repealing the health law could destroy 250,000 to 400,000 jobs annually over the next decade. And, as the Los Angeles Times reported, major insurers are reporting that thanks to the incentives in the Affordable Care Act, “a growing number of small businesses are signing up to give their workers health benefits.” But Republican bluster over health care pales in comparison to the potentially fatal effects of their refusal to increase the United States debt ceiling . On Friday, Greg Ip and Felix Salmon contended that failure to do so wouldn’t necessarily mean the U.S. couldn’t pay off its debts and so trigger a global economic meltdown. But as former McCain economic advisor Mark Zandi warned: “If we get into a heated, protracted debate over the debt ceiling, global investors are going to grow nervous, and start driving up interest rates. It will all become negatively self-re-enforcing. No good will come of it.” And last week, Obama economic advisor Austan Goolsbee wanted to be sure the American people understood the implications and causes of the GOP’s dangerously hypocritical game of chicken on the national debt: “This is not a game. You know, the debt ceiling is not something to toy with. … If we hit the debt ceiling, that’s essentially defaulting on our obligations, which is totally unprecedented in American history. The impact on the economy would be catastrophic. I mean, that would be a worse financial economic crisis than anything we saw in 2008… If we get to the point where you’ve damaged the full faith and credit of the United States, that would be the first default in history caused purely by insanity.” But that’s a game of chicken Republicans remain determined to play. And while Ron Paul said of shutting down the government “I don’t think it would hurt one bit,” Rep. Mick Mulvaney (R-SC) admitted, “I don’t know” what will happen if the debt ceiling isn’t raised. Senator Lindsey Graham , who like Rand Paul , plans to holds the debt ceiling hostage in exchange for still-unspecified spending cuts , painted a grim picture of what would ensue: “Let me tell you what’s involved if we don’t lift the debt ceiling: financial collapse and calamity throughout the world. That’s not lost upon me. But we’ve done this 93 times. And if we keep doing the same old thing, then that is insanity to the nth degree.” No, it’s hypocritical. Because as the data show, Senate Republicans voted seven times to increase the debt ceiling under George W. Bush . They only withdrew their support when Democrat Barack Obama entered the White House. ( Donny Shaw at OpenCongress has the details.) Sadly, the American people seem to be buying the GOP’s snake oil, with a recent poll showing 71% oppose raising the debt ceiling. But rating agencies including Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s are not, warning Thursday that their AAA ratings for the United States were at risk. The final irony of the uncertainty machine that is the Republican Party is that the GOP played that same card just weeks ago in the run-up to the lame duck deal on extending the Bush tax cuts for two years. Of course, they are predictably silent about the 1980′s, when Ronald Reagan upended the tax code four times in five years, including “the biggest tax increase ever enacted during peacetime.” And despite conservative warnings then as now about “job-killing tax hikes,” American businesses responded by adding 23 million jobs after President Clinton raised upper-income tax rates in 1993. As ThinkProgress concluded last month, the GOP’s supposed concern over uncertainty was all a charade: Of course, when it came to tax cuts, Obama’s plan for permanent extension of the middle-class tax cuts and expiration of those cuts for the richest two percent of Americans would have provided certainty. But the GOP was so desperate to extend tax cuts for the rich that “certainty” was thrown under the bus. As Weigel put it, “By Boehner’s own standard, this compromise doesn’t reduce uncertainty, which during the election and after the election really became the key Republican argument for keeping the rates.” Jonathan Chait added, “For those still clinging to any naive notion that Republicans meant this as anything more than a slogan, the answer is now clear. [Republicans] want low tax rates for the rich. They don’t care about certainty”: Republicans had a choice. They could accede to certainty with Clinton-era rates on the rich, or uncertainty with Bush-era rates on the rich. They chose uncertainty. The Bush-era rates will live on for two years, after which nobody knows if they’ll be extended or not. Only when another Treasury-draining windfall for the wealthy was in jeopardy did Republicans fret about uncertainty they couldn’t live with. As for the health of the American people and the economy, that’s another matter altogether. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)
Continue reading …A new sheriff is in town for the Republican Party. Ousted chairman Michael Steele has been replaced by Reince Priebus, the former RNC chair for the state of Wisconsin known most for claiming the RNC is “part of” the Tea Party movement. —JCL The New York Times: For Reince Priebus, the new chairman of the Republican National Committee, politics has long been more than simply a hobby. It provided the entertainment for the first date with his wife. More than a decade ago, when Representatives Henry J. Hyde of Illinois and James F. Sensenbrenner Jr. of Wisconsin were delivering keynote speeches at a Lincoln Day Dinner in Kenosha, Wis., Mr. Priebus reserved two tickets and turned the event into part of his courtship. “I know. Nerd alert,” Mr. Priebus said in an interview a few hours after he was elected on Friday to lead the national Republican Party. His voice was filled with self-deprecation as he recalled the moment “But we went to a movie after that.” Read more Related Entries January 12, 2011 ‘Daily Show’: Jim Gets a Promotion in the New ‘Huck Finn’ January 6, 2011 10 Reasons Why the Slurs Should Stay in ‘Huck Finn’
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