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Extreme partisanship and corporate money. Those are the two biggest problems four departing Representatives — 2 Republicans and 2 Democrats — have with today’s political climate. Zach Wamp (R-TN), Chet Edwards (D-Tx), Carol Shea-Porter (D-NH) and Mike Castle (R-DE), sat down with ABC News last week to talk about their opinion of today’s Congress, politics, and the view from Washington, DC. It wasn’t pretty. Castle: Rep. Mike Castle, R-Del., who was taken out in his primary by Tea Party favorite Christine O’Donnell, expresed alarm at the division the movement had caused within his own party. “The Tea Party movement really is quite a bit different than the old Republican conservative movement, ” Castle said. ” They’re more than willing to take out Republicans, call us Republicans in name only, or whatever it may be. It was one thing when you were dealing with Democrats and Republicans. Now you’re dealing with divisions within your own party. ” Castle, a known centrist, also said that working with the other party — the Democrats — once seen as the cornerstone of a functioning democracy, has become a punishable offense. “I mean, I know I suffered in my primary defeat [because] I had supported some Democratic legislation, supported the president from time to time. And that was treated as a great sin,” Castle told ABC News. Both Democrats looked to the special interest money on Capitol Hill and in campaign finance as one of the reasons for Congress’ dysfunction: Shea-Porter said watching the growing influence of special interest money had been her biggest disappointment, calling it “awful for democracy.” ” I think it’s strangling us ,” she said. “They’re in the halls of Congress everywhere, and it means, for example, that you sit on a committee and you say something about concern about Chinese influence or something, you don’t even know if in the next election, somehow or another, they manage to send some money to some group that now doesn’t even have to say where they got it.” Edwards, too: ” In the future, you’re going to have to think before you cast a vote against an individual drug company. They can run a $2 million television campaign against you in central Texas or in Delaware, and take you out under the guise of being something they’re not,” Edwards said. “Congress has to find a solution to that within the limits of the new Supreme Court decision.” Not surprisingly, none of them had anything nice to say about the news media. Each member made a point to emphasize the bipartisan work they had taken part in during their time in Congress. However, each pointed out that the more cooperative interaction among members doesn’t hit the media radar as much as the conflicts. Shea-Porter said the media focused too much on the negativity in Congress. “I have listened to people on television say things like, ‘Well, everybody’s on the take in Washington,’ as if that’s a given fact. I think it just makes people more cynical about the whole process,” Shea-Porter said. Edwards blamed a misinformed public. “I think people are getting their news from stovepipe sources of information — where people are basically getting the news they want to hear. Whether it’s Fox on the right or MSNBC on the left, it’s making it hard for centrist Democrats. It’s making it hard to elect centrists, who I think are critical to the functioning of our checks and balances form of democracy.” Castle, who complained that conservative talking heads such as Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity, misrepresented him during his primary campaign, echoed Edwards’ complaints, saying, “People are listening to what they want to listen to, and not hearing any other point of view at all. That, I think, is a huge problem affecting politics in America today. ”

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Die-hards Surf Despite Frigid Munich Winter

The winter cold isn’t keeping surfers from grabbing the waves in the heart of Munich. (Dec. 29)

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Top 10 Heartburn Foods

WebMD examines the 10 most common foods that cause heartburn. From coffee and alcohol to tomatoes and grapefruit, here are helpful tips for avoiding foods — no matter how enticing — that may trigger heartburn.

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Broken Glass and Dust Provide Insights to Climate Change

Image by NASA Goddard Photo and Video via Flickr Creative Commons Our future climate may be revealed in the way a drinking glass shatters. At least, according to research by National Center for Atmospheric Research scientist Jasper Kok. Analyzing the patterns of broken glass help revel similar patterns in the fragmentation of dust particles — and its these dust particles in our atmosphere that play a big role in the planet’s climate. Watching how dust fragments could lead to better weather forecasting and clearer understanding of long-term climate change. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Skype outage post-mortem puts some blame on the elder Windows clients

If you wish to raise your fist in the air and curse anyone for the massive global Skype outage , direct your anger towards 5.0.0.152. That’s the Skype for Windows version that crashed when a December 22nd cluster of support servers responsible for offline messaging became overloaded. While that’s the only version affected — the latest 5.0.0.156 and 4.0 versions were fine, as were the clients for every other platform you can think of — the number of users running point-152 globally represent 50 percent of all the users. More importantly for the other half of the world, about 25 to 30 percent of all supernodes were affected, too, whose role is establish connections, among others. So… up to 30 percent of supernodes are down worldwide. The other 70 percent were taking on the increased load. The crashed Windows clients were by and large being restarted simultaneously by affected users. All this happened just before the usual daily peak hours and during the holiday season. It’s almost a comedy of errors, were it not impossible at the time to call someone and share in the laughter. For its part, Skype goes into detail over how it fixed the current situation and how it plans to be better equipped to handle any future duress. It’s a pretty interesting read, we suggest you set some time aside and check it out. Skype outage post-mortem puts some blame on the elder Windows clients originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 29 Dec 2010 11:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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First Person: Video Your Ski Run

New cameras can bring your friends and family with you as you ski or snowboard down the mountain. Record your best run and share the video. (Dec. 28)

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ShowBiz Minute: Box Office, Witherspoon, Rimes

Annual box office down a bit from 2009 record; Reese Witherspoon announces plans for 2nd marriage; LeAnn Rimes and Eddie Cibrian to wed. (Dec. 29)

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Fayyad: We want more than ‘Facebook state’

Palestinian prime minister says his people expected wider recognition of their statehood in coming year. Recognition by many countries will ‘enshrine’ Palestinians’ right to state in all of West Bank and Gaza Strip, he adds

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Looks Like Conservatives Are Just Big Scaredy Cats!

enlarge I don’t know that it’s this cut and dried (after all, look how optimistic the neocons were about the results of invading Iraq), but yes, I’d say that on the whole, the conservatives I know seem to be real bedwetters: Political opinions are considered choices, and in Western democracies the right to choose one’s opinions — freedom of conscience — is considered sacrosanct. But recent studies suggest that our brains and genes may be a major determining factor in the views we hold. A study at University College London in the UK has found that conservatives’ brains have larger amygdalas than the brains of liberals. Amygdalas are responsible for fear and other “primitive” emotions. At the same time, conservatives’ brains were also found to have a smaller anterior cingulate — the part of the brain responsible for courage and optimism. If the study is confirmed, it could give us the first medical explanation for why conservatives tend to be more receptive to threats of terrorism, for example, than liberals. And it may help to explain why conservatives like to plan based on the worst-case scenario, while liberals tend towards rosier outlooks. “It is very significant because it does suggest there is something about political attitudes that are either encoded in our brain structure through our experience or that our brain structure in some way determines or results in our political attitudes,” Geraint Rees, the neurologist who carried out the study, told the media. Rees, who heads up UCL’s Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, was originally asked half-jokingly to study the differences between liberal and conservative brains for an episode of BBC 4′s Today show that was hosted by actor Colin Firth. But, after studying 90 UCL students and two British parliamentarians, the neurologist was shocked to discover a clear correlation between the size of certain brain parts and political views. He cautions that, because the study was carried out only on adults, there is no way to tell what came first — the brain differences or the political opinions. But evidence is beginning to accumulate that figuring out a person’s political proclivities may soon be as simple as a brain scan — or a DNA test.

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