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Kathy Hochul

Poloncarz on WIVB Talking About Kathy Hochul’s Victory Medicare Cuts Cost GOP New York’s 26th District Democrat Kathy Hochul Wins New York Special Election jeczaja says: Dem Kathy Hochul won special election 4 a deep-red House seat in New York. Dems won despite huge Karl Rove $$ infusion

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The Republicans are not reacting well to last night’s massive Democratic win in NY-26 which became a referendum on Representative Paul Ryan’s plan to end Medicare . Ryan tried awkwardly to laugh off the drubbing with the help of his dear buddy Joe Scarborough on MSNBC this morning but only looked like a petulant child in the process. His party is clearly on the defensive . His Leader – Speaker Boehner – haplessly fired off this tweet : GOP Path to Prosperity preserves & protects Medicare for retirees & future generations & leaves it completely unchanged for those 55 & over Uh yeah, okay. As Leader Pelosi’s office helpfully pointed out in this memo, it was Boehner, Ryan and the House Republicans who voted to : Re-open the prescription drug ‘donut hole’ for current Medicare beneficiaries (including for “those 55 & over”) Nationwide, nearly four million seniors would pay $2.2 billion more for prescription drugs in 2012 alone. [ DPCC Report] Eliminate the free annual wellness visit for current Medicare beneficiaries (including for “those 55 & over”) This could force at least one million seniors to pay over $110 million more for annual wellness visits in 2012. [ DPCC Report] What’s that word again? That’s right – PWNed . The reality is not fun for national Republicans. Even traditional media analysts are offering up the following ominous dose of conventional wisdom for the national GOP : The reality is that the total fealty to the Ryan budget increasingly demanded of Republican presidential candidates by the party’s base runs directly counter to the unpopularity of making drastic cuts to Medicare among the general electorate. Not only is that a major political problem for the party but it’s one without a simple solution. Of course the Republicans think that the simple solution here is to lie “message” their way out of it: “I think we need to be more aggressive in defining that Obamacare cuts Medicare,” said Christian Ferry, a senior Republican consultant. “Then, if the Ryan plan is our position for going forward, we need to actually get out there and define what it is and what it is not in an aggressive, offensive manner, rather than allowing the Democrats to play gotcha, scare politics as they did in NY-26.” Aaah, yes. Ferry and his GOP cohorts think just lying harder about Affordable Care Act is going to make their problems go away. That is not going to happen because more than a year has passed since ACA became law and not a single senior has seen their Medicare benefits cut. What the new health care law did do away with was waste and abuse in the form of billions of dollars, filling up the pockets of private insurance companies (Republican sugar daddies). As noted by the Economic Policy Institute , “[e]liminating these overpayments [to private insurance companies] would free up $157 billion over 10 years.” You can read more about the waste and abuse issue that ACA eliminated in this Center on Budget and Policy Priorities report . So trying to make their Medicare problem go away by crying about needless subsidies to the big insurance companies as “cuts” is just not going to work. So, back to the main event. What are the Senate Republicans going to do tomorrow? Are they going to bear hug a Ryan budget that even Republican Senators like Olympia Snowe are calling “a race to the bottom” ? Think about what someone like Senator Dean Heller is going to do. Is he going to vote to kill our Medicare program and throw our seniors off the cliff twice? He already voted to do it once as a member of Boehner’s crazy GOP caucus. Imagine the problems that will create for him in a battleground state like Nevada. If all the so-called “moderate” Republican Senators abandon ship when the RyanCare comes on the Senate Floor, that will pull the rug out of all the Republican Congressmen – voting to end Medicare – representing districts that were won by President Barack Obama in 2008. Any way you look at it, the picture is not pretty for the Republicans. It’s no wonder they are sounding like petulant children today.

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Catholic scholars raise moral issues for Republicans like Boehner — so O’Reilly calls them immoral

Click here to view this media There’s an interesting dynamic beginning to play out recently on Paul Ryan’s budget by Catholic theologians and scholars against what I would call Catholic lobbyists — and having been raised Catholic, it’s a dynamic I’m familiar with. A group of Catholic academics spoke out against Rep. John Boehner, (who is also a Catholic) because he supports Paul Ryan’s budget plan, which will ultimately hurt the least of us — and as such, he’s violating important tenets of modern Catholicism. Here’s the cached version of the letter that was sent to Boehner and those that signed it: Mr. Speaker, your voting record is at variance from one of the Church’s most ancient moral teachings. From the apostles to the present, the Magisterium of the Church has insisted that those in power are morally obliged to preference the needs of the poor. Your record in support of legislation to address the desperate needs of the poor is among the worst in Congress. This fundamental concern should have great urgency for Catholic policy makers. Yet, even now, you work in opposition to it. The 2012 budget you shepherded to passage in the House of Representatives guts long-established protections for the most vulnerable members of society. It is particularly cruel to pregnant women and children, gutting Maternal and Child Health grants and slashing $500 million from the highly successful Women Infants and Children nutrition program. When they graduate from WIC at age 5, these children will face a 20% cut in food stamps. The House budget radically cuts Medicaid and effectively ends Medicare. It invokes the deficit to justify visiting such hardship upon the vulnerable, while it carves out $3 trillion in new tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy … read on You remember the phony outrage that was caused when right wingers went ballistic over President Obama being invited to speak at Notre Dame? It’s not surprising the the mainstream media hasn’t covered this at all. But when it’s the Catholic Bishops trying to screw up health care reform, it’s major news. As E.J. Dionne also observed about this media blackout, you didn’t hear many news stories coming out about this divide because it doesn’t fit with the Beltway’s usual narrative: And the story broke from the stereotypical narrative the media like to impose on Christians in general, and Catholics in particular. If the headline is “Conservative Catholics Denounce Liberal Politician on Abortion,” all the boilerplate is at the ready. But when the headline is “Catholic Progressives Challenge Conservative Politician on Social Justice,” this is something new and complicated. It’s far easier to write the 10th story of the week about Newt Gingrich. Catholics Anthony Stevens-Arroyo writes: Catholics challenge Boehner on faith and morals The exception, in a perverse way, was Fox News, which briefly last week tried to make a right-wing issue out of the story. Bill O’Reilly led the charge, and he came up with an unusual defense of Boehner (since he sides with the GOP) by calling the academics, gasp, immoral. O’Reilly: But to attack Speaker Boehner as an unfit Catholic is itself immoral because only God can make that judgment. The college professors protesting the speaker’s commencement address at Catholic University are making a blatantly political statement that has little to do with religion . Bill O’Reilly, a self proclaimed moral gasbag opinionator, made what he calls his own moral arguments against Dr. George Tiller, and eventually Tiller was murdered. See, everything for right-wing Catholics is tied to a woman and how they can control them. It’s as if nothing else matters, and that’s sad. Bill O also lies by justifying his own position against our social safety nets by saying that America is going bankrupt. Now I, your humble correspondent, am also Catholic, and I do support spending cuts because even though entitlement programs do some good, the looming bankruptcy of the country would harm far more people than the entitlements help. Oh, and if you thought those Catholic Bishops wouldn’t support Paul Ryan’s odious budget, guess again: Jonathon Cohen: The Catholic Bishop and the Devil Timothy Dolan, the Archbishop of New York and president of the Conference of Catholic Bishops, sent a letter on Wednesday to House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan. The subject of the letter was the House Republican Budget, which Ryan wrote, and it was part of an ongoing dialogue between the two men. Dolan’s letter did not endorse the Republican budget per se. But it praised Ryan for his attention to the Church’s values and, if you read the text, you can see why Ryan has (according to Politico ) been brandishing it as a signal of support Digby recaps how those same Catholic Bishops acted as a lobbying group for Republicans in their efforts to kill health car reform. Here’s the entire Bill O transcript: Bill O’Reilly: Controversy Over Boehner Speaking at Catholic University Speaker Boehner is set to give the commencement address at Catholic University in Washington, D.C., this Saturday. But 79 college professors around the country have signed a letter opining that Mr. Boehner is not upholding Catholic moral teachings. The professors say that because the speaker supports budget cuts that might impact poor people, including women and children, that he is “anti-life and not upholding Catholic theology.” Mr. Boehner himself is a Catholic and replied this way: (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) REP. JOHN BOEHNER, R-OHIO, SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE: Like any religion, you will have some who are a little bit more liberal and some who are a bit more conservative. But I believe that the actions that I have taken during my years in Congress uphold the values of my faith. (END VIDEO CLIP) Now I, your humble correspondent, am also Catholic, and I do support spending cuts because even though entitlement programs do some good, the looming bankruptcy of the country would harm far more people than the entitlements help. The college professors are missing the essential point. The responsibility of the U.S. government is to protect all its citizens, and a bankruptcy in this country would devastate everyone. The cold truth of the matter is that our government simply cannot spend the amount of money it is spending. Everything has to be cut, including entitlements. That is not an immoral position. That is a responsible position because, again, if the economy collapses, everyone will be hurt. Now, many left-wing academics believe that raising taxes on the wealthy and corporations will cover the entitlement spending, but that is a canard. The enormous rise in Medicaid, Medicare and the looming Social Security disaster can never be covered by revenue enhancement. Never. All entitlements must be re-evaluated. There are ways to help the poor that don’t bankrupt us, and Catholics are compelled to help the poor. As you may know, “The Factor” gives millions of dollars to charitable causes. We have set up BillOReilly.com to do that because we believe those who have should help the have-nots. But to attack Speaker Boehner as an unfit Catholic is itself immoral because only God can make that judgment. The college professors protesting the speaker’s commencement address at Catholic University are making a blatantly political statement that has little to do with religion. And that’s “The Memo.”

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Ryan Fights Back on Medicare

House Budget Committee chairman Paul Ryan (R., Wis.) is out with another nifty floating charts video explaining why Medicare is in such desperate need of saving, and how Republicans plan to do just that. “We can no longer let politicians in Washington deny the danger to Medicare,” Ryan said in a statement. “The danger is all too real, and the health of our nation’s seniors is far too important.” “This… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Corner Discovery Date : 25/05/2011 14:39 Number of articles : 5

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CBS Concerned ‘Palestinians Were Not Impressed’ by Netanyahu’s Address

Plugging an upcoming story on Tuesday’s CBS Evening News , anchor Russ Mitchell highlighted that “Congress gives Israel's Prime Minister dozens of standing ovations but,” Mitchell warned as if it were just as relevant or surprising, “the Palestinians are not buying his peace plan.” The Palestinians haven’t yet bought into the right for Israel to even exist. Setting up the subsequent report, Mitchell repeated his formulation: “Nancy Cordes reports he got a standing ovation, but the Palestinians were not impressed.” Cordes emphasized how Benjamin Netanyahu “refused to compromise on the biggest prize: Jerusalem” and “an aide to Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas called that a ‘declaration of war against the Palestinian people.’” Cordes concluded by justifying President Obama’s hostility to Israel. After a soundbite of House Speaker John Boehner proclaiming “we stand shoulder to shoulder with Israel,” she asserted: “Congress, of course, does not have to broker a peace agreement while the White House must try to get both sides to give.” From the Tuesday, May 24 CBS Evening News: RUSS MITCHELL: Four days after that chilly meeting at the White House, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu got a warm welcome today from the House and Senate. He said he's willing to make painful compromises in the name of peace. Nancy Cordes reports he got a standing ovation, but the Palestinians were not impressed. ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER NETANYAHU, HOUSE CHAMBER: You got bin laden. Good riddance! NANCY CORDES: Congress greeted Israel's Prime Minister with 29 standing ovations as he vowed he was prepared to negotiate a lasting peace. NETANYAHU: We'll be generous about the size of the future Palestinian state. CORDES: But then he laid out his terms — and it was a long list. A Palestinian state, he said, must have no army of its own and Palestinian leaders must sever ties with Hamas. NETANYAHU: Israel will not negotiate with a Palestinian government backed by the Palestinian version of al Qaeda. CORDES: He said he would give up some settlements, but refused to compromise on the biggest prize: Jerusalem. NETANYAHU: Jerusalem must never again be divided. CORDES: An aide to Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas called that a “declaration of war against the Palestinian people.” When President Obama tried to push Netanyahu to go further last week, the Israeli leader pushed back, publicly. NETANYAHU, FRIDAY IN OVAL OFFICE: The Palestinians will have to accept some basic realities. CORDES: Congressional leaders made it clear today whose side they're on.

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The mutual animosity between House Republicans and White House adviser Elizabeth Warren was on full display today during a testy congressional hearing on the new consumer protection bureau she is working to get running. Rep. Patrick McHenry accused Warren of overstepping authority and misleading Congress about it (she said he…

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When the tornado hit Joplin, Lacy Tasker just had enough time to grab her 9-year-old son and jump into a bathtub at the house they shared with Tasker’s grandmother. It was only after the tornado passed that Tasker found the 89-year-old woman, whom she had been taking care of for…

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Haiti’s quake refugees brave sea and uncertainty for new life in Amazon

Haitians fleeing 2010 earthquake chaos are enduring long journeys and border-town limbo for a fresh start in Brazil Each night they gather on Brazil Avenue under the amber glow of street lamps. Perched on the wall of a convenience store they talk politics, crack jokes, and sing along to mobile phone music from home. As darkness envelops Iñapari, a riverside border town in the Peruvian Amazon, the sound of French Creole and Haitian Compas songs fills the air. “We have come here in search of a better life,” said Baptiste Suppler, a 29-year-old from Haiti’s fourth-largest city, Gonaïves. Suppler is one in a wave of Haitian migrants determined to build a new life in the Brazilian Amazon. He pointed across the river Acre, separating Peru’s Iñapari from the Brazilian border town of Assis Brasil, representing the last hurdle towards a fresh start in South America’s largest and wealthiest nation. “Our objective is to reach Brazil,” he added. According to the Brazilian authorities at least 1,500 Haitians have entered the Amazon region since a 7.0 magnitude earthquake devastated their country on 12 January 2010, killing about 200,000. After a gruelling, month-long journey via the Dominican Republic, Panama, Ecuador, Bolivia, Peru and sometimes Colombia, Haitian migrants arrive at remote border towns like Iñapari and wait for the chance to cross into the Brazilian Amazon. Once there many try to find construction jobs on Amazonian infrastructure projects, such as the Santo Antonio and Jirau hydroelectric dams. “I chose Brazil, and many Haitians choose Brazil, because in 2014 there will be a World Cup,” said Esdras Hector, who left Haiti on 11 March and made it to the Brazilian Amazon on 15 April after a four-week pilgrimage by plane, bus and on foot. “A lot of Haitians know Brazil will need a lot of workers to work during this time.” Brazilian authorities have been caught off guard by the sudden influx of Haitians. Unsure how to classify the migrants, federal police officials received orders to refuse entry to new arrivals while a solution was sought, they said. For now, the Brazilian border was closed, theoretically at least. But for the Haitians stranded in Iñapari, many heavily in debt, turning back is not an option. Some bide their time, hoping the border will reopen in a few months; others have already begun hiring coyotes (people smugglers) to guide them on a perilous illegal trek through the jungle into Brazil. “They won’t give up … they are just one step away from realising their dreams,” said Maria Cardozo Mouzully, 49, who owns Hospedaje Iñapari, a riverside guesthouse on the Peruvian side of the border that now houses many Haitians. In the absence of support from the local government, Mouzully ceded many of her hotel rooms and her kitchen to Haitian migrants left in limbo by the decision to seal the border. “What are we supposed to do? Kill them? Watch them starve to death outside our front door?” Go about 71 miles east from Iñapari and you reach Epitaciolândia, a small Brazilian town currently home to about 160 Haitian migrants who reached Brazil before the border closed. Among the mostly male group are university graduates, bricklayers, electricians and preachers, all sleeping on the floor of a gymnasium while waiting for papers letting them stay legally and work. To fill the time they play cards, read the Bible and do odd jobs for ranchers. “[The] disaster destroyed my country,” said Esdras Hector, 27, who hoped to learn Portuguese to land a job with the UN. “I know if I use my brain in Brazil I will realise my dream to help my family.” But for many, attempting to build a new life in Brazil has come at great personal cost. Silvaine Doris, a 46-year-old shampoo seller, who lost her brother and sister in the earthquake, left her daughter aged seven and 11-year-old son behind in Port-au-Prince in the care of a niece. “As soon as I bought my ticket … I started to cry,” she said. These days her home is the Pousada Sao Jose, a guesthouse in Brasiléia, an Amazonian town near Brazil’s border with Bolivia and Peru. “I’ve come here because of the economic problem. We don’t have anything – no jobs. All we could do was come here in search of a better future.” Haitians represent the largest portion of this new wave of Amazon migrants, but over five days in the region, four men from Bangladesh, one from Liberia and one from Nigeria talked to the Guardian. Pakistani and Tanzanian migrants are also said to have arrived. Peter John Prince, 27, from Liberia, said he was living in Ivory Coast until some months ago when his brother, owner of a sportswear shop, was killed by rebels. “I am a refugee … I had to get away because I don’t want to die.” Beside him stood Frank Jideofor, 23, from Nigeria’s oil-rich Bayelsa state. His left arm was amputated after he was shot by the same men who murdered his father, a government official. Why had he come to Brazil? “For the life-safe. They burnt our house, they shot me … because my father didn’t support them.” Back on Brazil Avenue, Suppler and his fellow Haitian travellers were mulling over the options. “Our situation is difficult. For now, the border is closed.” What would he do? “I will wait.” How long for? He crossed his fingers and looked towards the sky. “Persévérance.” Chasing the dream Throughout much of the 19th and 20th centuries migrant workers flocked to South America chasing the “Brazilian dream”. Foreign workers were widely seen as a key ingredient for economic growth, particularly after Brazil abolished slavery in 1888. Germans were among the first to arrive, colonising large areas of southern Brazil from the 1820s onwards. In some corners of Brazil’s deep south, German is still spoken as a first language. Between the mid-1870s and 1920 as many as 1.5 million Italian immigrants touched down in south and south-east Brazil. Today there are about 25 million Brazilians of Italian descent. Between 1908 and the 1960s up to 250,000 Japanese immigrants arrived, many fleeing rural poverty. The majority set sail for Sao Paulo and went to work in the region’s coffee plantations; others headed for the Amazon. Today Brazil is said to house the largest Japanese population outside Japan. Last year’s census counted at least 2 million Brazilians of Asian descent. Brazil Haiti Natural disasters and extreme weather Peru Migration Tom Phillips guardian.co.uk

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Westboro Baptist Church could soon find itself foiled in Illinois. The state Senate passed a measure yesterday that broadens the protection granted to funerals, requiring any protesters to remain at least 300 feet away from the site rather than the currently required 200 feet. The original House bill, proposed by…

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While addressing rumors about herself last night on the Late Show , Lady Gaga grabbed one of David Letterman’s note cards, ripped it up, and then … ate it. Dave, who had previously expressed concern over Gaga’s admission that she really did once eat a Barbie doll head (“That would poison…

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