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In September, future House Speaker John Boehner unveiled the GOP Pledge to America , which among its other warmed-over Republican nostrums promised to save “at least $100 billion in the first year alone” from the federal budget. On the eve of the election (around the 1:50 mark of the video above), Boehner doubled down , claiming the GOP Pledge would quickly lead to “saving taxpayers $100 billiion almost immediately.” In December, incoming House Budget Committee chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) repeated the GOP guarantee that “a good $100 billion” would be trimmed. Now, after months of cowardly refusing to specify what those draconian cuts to discretionary spending might be, Republicans are acknowledging their tough-talk was merely ” hypothetical .” As Boehner grabbed the Speaker’s gavel on Wednesday, the New York Times confirmed that among his first acts would be both the betrayal of the Republican base and his word to American voters: Republican leaders are scaling back that number by as much as half, aides say, because the current fiscal year, which began Oct. 1, will be nearly half over before spending cuts could become law. While House Republicans were never expected to succeed in enacting cuts of that scale, given opposition in the Senate from the Democratic majority and some Republicans, and from President Obama, a House vote would put potentially vulnerable Republican lawmakers on record supporting deep reductions of up to 30 percent in education, research, law enforcement, transportation and more. Now aides say that the $100 billion figure was hypothetical, and that the objective is to get annual spending for programs other than those for the military, veterans and domestic security back to the levels of 2008, before Democrats approved stimulus spending to end the recession. Of course, there was nothing hypothetical about the budget ax Republicans promised to wield in the actual text of their Pledge to America last fall: With common-sense exceptions for seniors, veterans, and our troops, we will roll back government spending to pre-stimulus, pre-bailout levels, saving us at least $100 billion in the first year alone and putting us on a path to balance the budget and pay down the debt. We will also establish strict budget caps to limit federal spending from this point forward. A quick glance at the numbers, however, showed the Republican pledge came with an expiration date designed to come due on Election Day. As the New York Times and Bloomberg explained at the time, the GOP’s promise to immediately return to pre-recession FY 2008 levels for “non-security discretionary spending” with would result in devastating cuts to popular and needed programs. With the Pentagon, Social Security and Medicare off the table, those draconian cutbacks would slash more than 20 percent of spending by departments like Education, Transportation, Interior, Commerce and Energy: U.S. House Republicans’ pledge to cut $100 billion from the federal budget next year would slash spending for education, cancer research and aid to local police and firefighters. Keeping the midterm-campaign promise would require a Republican-led Congress to cut 21 percent of the $477 billion lawmakers have earmarked for domestic discretionary spending. Which is why Republicans before the midterm elections and since steadfastly refused to say what cuts they would actually make. Pressed by NBC’s David Gregory in October, then third-ranking House Republican Mike Pence could not “name the painful choice on a program that you’re going to cut.” Asked seven times by Chris Wallace of Fox News, failed GOP California Senate hopeful Carly Fiorina responded only, “you’re asking a typical political question.” Even as he touted the “GOP Pledge to America,” Speaker-to-Be Boehner dodged Wallace as well even as pledged an “adult conversation” on the budget: “Let’s not get to the potential solutions. Let’s make sure Americans understand how big the problem is. Then we can talk about possible solutions and then work ourselves into those solutions that are doable.” As David Leonhardt of the New York Times summed up the Republican charade: In their Pledge to America, Congressional Republicans have used the old trick of promising specific tax cuts and vague spending cuts. It’s the politically easy approach, and it is likely to be as bad for the budget as when George W. Bush tried it. During the lame-duck session of Congress, Republicans delivered on their budget-busting tax cuts for the wealthy. But when it comes to those spending reductions, the rest is silence. Within 24 hours of the election, Eric Cantor , Michele Bachmann and Tennessee’s Marsha Blackburn all did the duck-and-cover on spending cuts. With defense, Social Security and Medicare (not to mention interest on the national debt) off the table, the unexplained GOP pledge to cut $100 billion in “discretionary” spending would necessarily gut the departments of Education, Transportation, Interior, Commerce and Energy by more than 20%. To be sure, there’s no shortage of tough talk on spending from a GOP playing a dangerous game of chicken over the U.S. debt ceiling . Las month, incoming Kentucky Senator Rand Paul announced, “I think that every piece of major legislation that goes forward from now on needs to have attached to it spending cuts.” Appearing on Fox News Sunday, Tom Coburn (R-OK) warned of “apocalyptic pain” due to future deficits and claimed, “There’s well over $300 billion a year that I can lay out for you in detail that most Americans believe we should eliminate.” And, as CNN reported, House Speaker-to-Be John Boehner is promising to keep his GOP Pledge to America, declaring “slashing the federal budget by $100 billion will be priority number one.” Unfortunately, Speaker Boehner like his Republican colleagues still won’t say how. As CNN noted last month: Asked which programs will be cut to get to the $100 billion target, Boehner did not offer specifics. “But I will tell you,” he told reporters earlier this month. “We are going to cut spending.” Even today, Rep. Ryan chickened out , telling Meredith Viera, “I can’t tell you by what amount and which program, but all of it is going to be going down.” So much for that adult conversation. If this you think you’ve heard this story before, it’s because you have. In 1981, Ronald Reagan came to office promising to slash taxes and balance the budget. Instead, the national debt tripled under Reagan’s watch, only to double again under George W. Bush. Sadly, the American people put the Republican Free Lunch Party back in the House majority. In so doing, they ignored Bush’s own warning : “There’s an old saying…that says, fool me once, shame on — shame on you. Fool me — you can’t get fooled again.” (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

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SanDisk reveals $1500 128GB Extreme Pro CF card, Ultra / Cruzer Edge USB drives

The world’s fastest high-capacity CompactFlash card? Yes, please! SanDisk has just taken the CF game to an entirely new level, doubling the capacity of its current highest Extreme Pro offering by dishing out a 128GB model here at CES. The Extreme Pro is definitely the card of choice for the high-speed cameras here at Engadget HQ, and for those who’ve outgrown their twin 64GB setup within their D3S , you can soon pop in a pair of these bad boys for a nominal fee. The card touts performance as high as 100MB/sec (write), a Power Core controller and a UDMA-7 interface, perfectly suited for capturing hours of 1080p footage. Oh, and speaking of that nominal fee — it’s expected to hit retail “later this year” for $1499.99. Yeah, a grand and a half. But hey, you get what you pay for. In less enticing news, a pair of new flash drives are also being launched this evening, the SanDisk Ultra and Cruzer Edge. The Ultra offers transfer rates as high as 15MB/sec, ships in capacities ranging from 8GB to 32GB and will cost between $44.99 and $109.99. The Cruzer Edge reaches from 2GB to 16GB and will set you back between $12.99 and $79.99. Check out the full releases after the break, and though we shouldn’t need to advise you, we’d recommend you start pinching those pennies dimes soon. Continue reading SanDisk reveals $1500 128GB Extreme Pro CF card, Ultra / Cruzer Edge USB drives SanDisk reveals $1500 128GB Extreme Pro CF card, Ultra / Cruzer Edge USB drives originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Jan 2011 22:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Netflix and Hulu Plus with Kinect coming this spring to Xbox 360

Good news, Hulu Plus is finally coming to Xbox 360 this spring. Better news, both Hulu Plus and Netflix will be compatible with Kinect. We imagine it’ll be just like Zune Video’s interface. Developing… Netflix and Hulu Plus with Kinect coming this spring to Xbox 360 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Jan 2011 21:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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Live from Microsoft’s CES 2011 keynote

Once again we’re on the ground to deliver all the news from Microsoft’s much-talked about CES 2011 keynote event! Will we see new Windows Phone 7 devices or software? An appearance of Windows 8 ? A slew of new tablets? Xbox advancements? Media Center updates? The Courier ? We kid. One thing you can count on is that we’re delivering everything fresh and as-it-happens — capturing every minute of Steve Ballmer’s rage-filled presentation with the kind of joy only Engadget can deliver. So tune back in at 9:30 EST / 6:30 PST for all the action! Live from Microsoft’s CES 2011 keynote originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Jan 2011 21:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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MSNBC's Ed Schultz on Wednesday called Republicans bastards that want to destroy the American dream. Apparently recognizing that he might have gone too far, the “Ed Show” host apologized moments later (video follows with transcript and commentary): read more

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BP and industry blamed for ‘avoidable’ Gulf of Mexico oil spill

A PRESIDENTIAL commission has concluded the Gulf of Mexico oil spill was an avoidable disaster that resulted from management failures by BP PLC and its main contractors, the Wall…

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New Lawmakers Set to Navigate Corridors of Power

A GOP wave in the 2010 midterm elections means dozens of new lawmakers in the nation’s capital. Republican Adam Kinzinger from Illinois is part of the biggest freshman class on Capitol Hill in decades.

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Vulture Suspected of Spying Arrested in Saudi Arabia

Photo: Jeremiah John McBride / CC In the coat and dagger world of international espionage, it takes a cool head and nerves of steel to get the job, though being a human isn’t necessarily a prerequisite — at least that’s according to authorities in Saudi Arabia who recently detained a wild vulture under the suspicion that the bird was a spy. Yes, a vulture. Officials became concerned when they discovered that the otherwise unremarkable bird was wearing a transmitter and a ID bracelet around its leg, tying it to a foreign entity…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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T-Mobile and LG announce G-Slate tablet; HSPA+, Android 3.0

Hot on the heels of Motorola’s XOOM announcement, T-Mobile and LG have let go a tablet announcement of their own. The two companies issued a joint press release introducing the G-Slate with Google; a tablet of an undisclosed screen size running Android 3.0. The press release links to a very familiar video and is pretty light on specifics. From what we can gather, the device will have an HSPA+ radio… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Boy Genius Report Discovery Date : 06/01/2011 02:14 Number of articles : 12

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Susie Madrak on the DR Show — Republicans and Media Go After Public Employee Unions

Click here to view this media Our own Susie Madrak joined Dylan Ratigan to discuss the response to the Boxing Day Blizzard which she wrote about here — Take A Good Look At Post-Blizzard New York City. This Is What Our ‘New Austerity’ Will Look Like . And of course Republicans are using the complaints about worker slow downs during the blizzard to attack public sector unions, gladly aided and abetted by their allies in the media. More on that at her blog here. Federal investigation : So let me get this straight. We see no criminal charges against the banking masterminds who crashed the economy, or the mortgage company crooks who are still stealing people’s houses with impunity, but this is at the top of the priority list? Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn have opened a preliminary investigation into allegations that disgruntled sanitation workers sabotaged the cleanup after the blizzard last week that left some neighborhoods snowbound for days, people who have been briefed on the inquiry said Tuesday. The investigation is focusing on whether there was a work slowdown and, if so, whether it was an effort to pad overtime. If the actions took place, two of those people said, they could constitute wire fraud or wire fraud conspiracy, both federal crimes. Both people spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation was continuing. The inquiry, which began last week, is being conducted by the Public Integrity Section in the office of United States Attorney Loretta E. Lynch, which will work with the city’s Department of Investigation, one of the people said. The city investigators also began looking into possible efforts to sabotage the cleanup last week. “We’re taking a look at this,” one of the people said, adding that the inquiry was in its earliest stages. It was reported Monday night by WCBS-TV News. Go read the rest for more. And as she also noted, they won’t go after the banksters on Wall Street, but they’re more than happy to go after those public pensions as well .

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