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Les Miserables

I Dreamed a Dream (Symphonic Instrumental/Karaoke Track) The Musician and the Performer Part Three Les Miserables Bring Him Home- May 2011 The Badger Herald: ' Les Misérables ' fresh even at 25 | Arizona … Loved by audiences for 25 years now, you can say “ Les Misérables ” ages well. The Broadway production is celebrating its 25th anniversary with a tour that is currently at the Overture Center for the Arts. Tuesday marked opening night … Les Miserables : [ Les Miserables ] 10Th Anniversary – On My Own … [ Les Miserables ] 10th anniversary – Building the Barricade+On My Own. ← Make It Or Break It: Make It Or Break It Season 1 Episode 1 ” Pilot ” Part 1_5 · Lenny Kravitz: Lenny Kravitz “Believe” → … Les Misérables : The Dream Cast in Concert (1995) Watch Online … Online Watch Movies, Movies Online Watch, Online Movie, Watch Movie Online, Free Movies Online, Hindi, Hollywood Movie, Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam, Punjabi, Dubbed Movies, English Movie, kid, Children Movie, Animation Movie, Drama, … Les misérables (1998) Watch Online | Watch Movies Online Free … Online Watch Movies, Movies Online Watch, Online Movie, Watch Movie Online, Free Movies Online, Hindi, Hollywood Movie, Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam, Punjabi, Dubbed Movies, English Movie, kid, Children Movie, Animation Movie, Drama, … The Erratic Muse: 24 Hours for your Entries! First prize will be Les Miserables : The 25th Anniversary Concert DVD! Runner up prizes will include Les Miz themed jewelry, artwork, books, and posters. If we more than 100 essays are submitted a recording of Les Miz will go to the … tdvideos says: Les Miserables : [ Les Miserables ] 10Th Anniversary – On My Own http://ping.fm/NTR3O

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Tornadoes Hit Midwest: Missouri Tornado Kills At Least 116 (VIDEO)

JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) — Rescue crews dug through piles of splintered houses and crushed cars Monday in a search for victims of a half-mile-wide tornado that killed at least 116 people when it blasted much of this Missouri town off the map and slammed straight into its hospital. It was the nation’s deadliest single twister in nearly 60 years and the second major tornado disaster in less than a month. Authorities feared the toll could rise as the full scope of the destruction comes into view: house after house reduced to slabs, cars crushed like soda cans, shaken residents roaming streets in search of missing family members. And the danger was by no means over. Fires from gas leaks burned across town, and more violent weather loomed, including the threat of hail, high winds and even more tornadoes. At daybreak, the city’s south side emerged from darkness as a barren, smoky wasteland. “I’ve never seen such devastation – just block upon block upon block of homes just completely gone,” said former state legislator Gary Burton who showed up to help at a volunteer center at Missouri Southern State University. Unlike the multiple storms that killed more than 300 people last month across the South, Joplin was smashed by just one exceptionally powerful tornado. Not since a June 1953 tornado in Flint, Mich., had a single twister been so deadly. That storm also killed 116, according to the National Weather Service. Authorities were prepared to find more bodies in the rubble throughout this gritty, blue-collar town of 50,000 people about 160 miles south of Kansas City. Gov. Jay Nixon told The Associated Press he did not want to guess how high the death toll would eventually climb. But he said: “Clearly, it’s on its way up.” Seventeen people were pulled alive from the rubble. An unknown number of people were hurt. While many residents had up to 17 minutes of warning, rain and hail may have drowned out the sirens. Larry Bruffy said he heard the first warning but looked out from his garage and saw nothing. “Five minutes later, the second warning went off,” he said. “By the time we tried to get under the house, it already went over us.” As rescuers toiled in the debris, a strong thunderstorm lashed the crippled city. Rescue crews had to move gingerly around downed power lines and jagged chunks of debris as they hunted for victims and hoped for survivors. Fires, gas fumes and unstable buildings posed constant threats. Teams of searchers fanned out in waves across several square miles. The groups went door to door, making quick checks of property that in many places had been stripped to their foundations or had walls collapse. National Weather Service Director Jack Hayes said the storm was given a preliminary label as an EF4 – the second-highest rating assigned to twisters based on the damage they cause. Hayes said the storm had winds of 190 to 198 mph. At times, it was three-quarters of a mile wide. Some of the most startling damage was at St. John’s Regional Medical Center, where staff had only moments to hustle their patients into the hallway. Six people died there, five of them patients, plus one visitor. The storm blew out hundreds of windows and caused damage so extensive that doctors had to abandon the hospital soon after the twister passed. A crumpled helicopter lay on its side in the parking lot near a single twisted mass of metal that used to be cars. Dr. Jim Riscoe said some members of his emergency room staff showed up after the tornado with injuries of their own, but they worked through the night anyway. “I spent most of my life at that hospital,” Riscoe said at a triage center at Joplin’s Memorial Hall entertainment venue. “It’s awful. I had two pregnant nurses who dove under gurneys … It’s a testimony to the human spirit.” Once the center of a thriving mining industry, Joplin flourished though World War II because of its rich lead and zinc mines. It also gained fame as a stop along Route 66, the storied highway stretching from Chicago to Santa Monica, Calif., before freeways diminished the city’s importance. The community, named for the founder of the area’s first Methodist congregation, is now a transportation crossroads and manufacturing hub. It’s also the hometown of poet Langston Hughes and “Gunsmoke” actor Dennis Weaver. Major employers in and around the city include electronics manufacturer LaBarge Inc., colleges such as Missouri Southern State University and hospitals and clinics. Agriculture is also important to the economy. As the tornado bore down on their trailer home, Joshua Wohlford, his pregnant girlfriend and their two toddlers fled to a Walmart store. The family narrowly escaped after a shelf of toys partially collapsed, forming a makeshift tent that shielded them. “It was 15 minutes of hell,” Wohlford said. At a Fast Trip convenience store, another 20 people ran into a pitch-black cooler as the building began to collapse around them. They documented their experience with a video that was drawing tens of thousands of views online by Monday afternoon. The audio was even more terrifying than the imagery – earsplitting wind, objects getting smashing, wailing children and a woman praying repeatedly. Brennan Stebbins said the group crouched on the floor, clinging to and comforting each other until they were able to crawl out. No one was seriously hurt. Shielded by mattresses, former lawmaker Chuck Surface rode out the storm in his basement with his wife, daughter, granddaughter and dog. After about five minutes, the deafening roar abruptly stopped. “When it got to where we thought we could look out,” he said, “we went to the top of the stairs and there was no roof – it was all open air.” Dazed survivors tried to salvage clothes, furniture, family photos and financial records from their flattened or badly damaged homes. Kelley Fritz rummaged briefly through what was left of a storage building, then gave up. Her boys, both Eagle Scouts, rushed into the neighborhood after realizing every home was destroyed. When they returned, she said, “my sons had deceased children in their arms.” Others just waited for answers. Justin Gibson stood outside the tangled remains of a Home Depot and pointed to a black pickup that had been tossed into them. It belonged to his roommate’s brother, last seen at the store with his two young daughters. “I don’t know the extent of this yet,” Gibson said, “but I know I’ll have friends and family dead.” Last month, a ferocious pack of twisters roared across six Southern states, killing more than 300 people, more than two-thirds of them in Alabama. As in the Midwest, the Southerners also had warning – as much as 24 minutes. But those storms were too wide and too powerful to escape. They obliterated entire towns from Tuscaloosa, Ala., to Bristol, Va., in what the weather service said was the nation’s deadliest tornado outbreak since April 1974. “This was one tornado,” said Greg Carbin, warning specialist with the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla. “It was not the same type of large-scale outbreak.” It did, however, get the attention of those who suffered in the South. “We’re praying for those people,” said retired Marine Willie Walker, whose Tuscaloosa home suffered more than $50,000 in damage. “We know what they’re going through because we’ve been there already.” Forecasters said severe weather would probably persist all week. Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma could see tornadoes through Tuesday, and the bad weather could reach the East Coast by Friday. The twister that hit Joplin was one of more than 50 reported across seven Midwest states over the weekend. One person was killed in Minneapolis and another in Kansas, but Missouri took the hardest hits. Triage centers and shelters around Joplin rapidly filled to capacity. At a Lowe’s home-improvement store, wooden planks served as cots. Kerry Sachetta, principal of a flattened Joplin High School, could barely recognize his own building. “You see pictures of World War II, the devastation and all that with the bombing,” he said. “That’s really what it looked like.” ___ Associated Press Writer David A. Lieb in Jefferson City contributed to this report.

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Paul Ryan has his highest profile fan for his non-existent presidential race yet, reports Politico. The House’s No. 2 Republican, and Ryan’s fellow self-styled “Young Gun,” Eric Cantor thinks the Budget Committee chair should make a run for the White House. “Sure,” he replied when asked about a Ryan run,…

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WaPo Story Honoring House for LGBT Teens Has Zero Space for Disagreement

You know you’re reading the liberal Washington Post when a story rejoices in the D.C. government offering “a measure of freedom she has never had” to “slip on a flower-print blouse and shave her face.” The place is Wanda Alston House, named after a lesbian activist staffer of NOW and the Human Rights Campaign who was stabbed to death in 2005. The top story in Sunday’s Metro section was headlined : “A Haven from the Streets: For lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender youths, who face a higher risk of becoming homeless, D.C.’s Wanda Alston House offers refuge where they don’t have to fear being themselves.” Reporter Theresa Vargas was typically all sympathy and zero skepticism for the politically correct cause: As the District takes significant strides to advance the rights of LGBT residents — for example, recently legalizing same-sex marriage — the youths who pass through the Wanda Alston House tell of the vulnerability the community still faces. The house, named after an LGBT leader and mayoral adviser who was killed in 2005, is one of a handful of transitional houses in the nation that cater to people who experts say are more likely to become homeless and who, once in that category, pose challenges most shelter systems are unequipped to address. Should a transgender female be placed in a shelter with men or women? Where should a transgender male who still has the anatomy of a woman shower? …”These kids get swallowed up in the system,” says Brian Watson, who manages the house through the District’s Transgender Health Empowerment program. He says he has seen young people come from shelters who have been sexually abused, ridiculed and, in one case, made to sleep in a common living room instead of a bedroom because she was transgender. “These are good kids, really good kids,” Watson says. “They just need a chance.” The story not only dominated the front page of Metro, but all of page C-4. There were also two videos, also unanimous. In one, Watson explains “There’s just a lot of non-understanding of what is a transgender person, what is gender identity. I think that our GLB youths are at risk, but our T youth, our transgender youth, are definitely at a higher risk.”

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The 99ers Are The Elephant In The Recovery Room That No One Wants To Address

From the Layoff List, a story that continues to slip the minds of Congress, the media and the White House — but not the people who are still hanging by a thread: The April 2011 BLS employment report showed a gain of 244,000 jobs, which was trumpeted by the Obama administration and the mainstream media as a continuation of a rapidly improving jobs market. While job growth is important, it’s also important to realize the jobs hole that needs to be filled. Over the past four months more than 800,000 jobs have been created, but in January 2009 alone, more than 800,000 jobs were lost. Since February 2010, 1.8 million jobs have been created , but 8.8 million jobs were lost prior to that period. That’s a job shortage of 7 million and that doesn’t include the 125,000 jobs each month that needed to be created to simply absorb new entrants into the workforce. Additionally, the unemployment rate increased to 9%, since more people began looking for work. Returning job seekers is often considered an improved sign of job availability, but if they aren’t hired, they will go back into hiding and the unemployment rate will decline. Because of returning job seekers, the number of officially unemployed increased 205,000 to 13.75 million , which is still historically high when compared to other jobs challenged times. One of the few honest assessments of the current jobs market was offered by Heidi Shierholz of the Economic Policy Institute: At this point, coming out of a recession this deep, we should be getting unambiguously huge growth, of 300,000 to 400,000 [new jobs] a month,” said Heidi Shierholz, a labor economist at the Economic Policy Institute. “And it’s just nowhere near that.” She concluded: “We’re still in a rocky place.” The job market is admittedly improving for some, but it’s not improving quickly enough for millions of jobless, especially the long-term unemployed. In April, the ranks of the unemployed who have been out of work for 99 weeks or more increased by 21,000 to a record 1,920,000 . That equates to 14.5% of all unemployed.Other long-term unemployed fared a little better in April compared to March. Those out of work for 26 weeks or more decreased from 5.839 million from 6.122 million in March. But their percentage of the overall unemployment rate remained elevated at a near record level of 43.2%. The percentage of those out of work for more and 52 weeks increased from 31.5% to 32.8% of all unemployed. The Congress, the Obama administration and most media outlets are silent about long-term unemployment. How do they reconcile the fact that 244,000 jobs were created, but 21,000 additional workers have been unemployed for more than 99 weeks? How do they put on a happy face when a near record 5.893 million or 43.2% of all unemployed workers have been jobless for more than 26 weeks? How do they rationalize their cheerful statements of job improvements with the facts that job creation is very weak considering the trillions of dollars pumped into the economy to support Wall Street and fund tax breaks? How do they high-five the economic recovery when the labor force participation rate — the share of people over age 16 who are either working or actively seeking work — is at a low rate of 64.2%, a rate not seen since 1985? They can’t. They generally ignore the issue; long-term unemployment is the elephant in the economic recovery room. What is being done legislatively to address this elephant in the room? To date, nothing. The GOP controlled House has been busy attempting to cut the deficit, repealing healthcare funding, and restarting offshore oil drilling. The Republicans, with the help of some Democrats, are working to weaken Wall Street regulation legislation, end net neutrality, and are arguing the Defense of Marriage Act. They are pandering to their base, acquiescing to their corporate overlords and obliging their big-wallet campaign contributors.Congressional leaders are more concerned with ideology than reality. They have not presented a jobs bill or employment training legislation, conducted investigations on how to solve long-term unemployment, or offered tax incentives for companies to hire the long-term unemployed. They have ignored legislation, such as Rep. Barbara Lee’s H.R. 589 , that would help millions of long-term unemployed, the 99ers, who have exhausted all unemployment benefits. While most of the blame can be placed at the door of the GOP controlled House, the Democratic controlled Senate and Obama have been suspiciously silent about the long-term unemployment problem. The long-term unemployed are also part of the growing ranks of food stamp recipients, personal bankruptcies, foreclosures and healthcare uninsured. H.R. 589 is legislation designed to help the long-term unemployed by extending Tier 1 unemployment benefits 14 weeks. Those 14 weeks could be a financial lifesaver for millions of unemployed. Although the legislation has been discussed for months, moving it forward in a Republican controlled House will be challenging. How challenging? House Republicans are hoping to introduce legislation that could cut extended unemployment benefits in favor of lower business taxes and allow states to spend that money on other programs: The Ways and Means Committee passed a bill by 20-14 today that lets states shift some of the $31 billion they are set to get for extended unemployment aid to prevent the tax increases, pay back federal loans or fund job-training programs.While those are all commendable options, they are long-term rewards that won’t help those that need immediate financial assistance. Oil companies have reported record profits, but the GOP favors giving them billions in taxpayer subsidies while at the same time forcing the long-term unemployed to suffer without any financial assistance. The latest H.R.589 update comes from Crew of 42′s Lauren Victoria Burke; the news is both positive and disappointing: The good news for 99ers: The president mentioned he wants to possibly attach the 99ers money to some other big piece of legislation somehow… which piece, how and when is unclear…The bad news for 99ers: The president does not seem deeply motivated to to actively support unemployment benefits in general terms. .

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GOP pollsters warned House leaders not to call a vote on Paul Ryan’s budget proposal, saying its Medicare provision was positively toxic. No matter how positively they framed the bill, the plan’s approval rating never climbed above the upper end of the 30s, and its disapproval numbers were always well…

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Arnold Schwarzenneger could find himself facing one of the costliest divorces in Hollywood history, if he and Maria Shriver do decide to “terminate” their marriage. The New York Post reports that the couple’s worth is somewhere between $200 million and $400 million, which means Shriver could stand to walk away…

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Rosemary Nelson inquiry finds security forces did not collude

Northern Irish solicitor murdered by paramilitaries was, however, threatened by police before she was killed by car bomb The security forces did not collude directly with loyalist paramilitaries who murdered the Northern Ireland solicitor Rosemary Nelson, a public inquiry has concluded. But the 40-year-old lawyer was abused and threatened by Royal Ulster Constabulary officers before she was killed by a bomb under her car at her home in Lurgan in 1999, the inquiry found. The conclusion of the long-running inquiry was welcomed by the Northern Ireland secretary, Owen Patterson, as proof there had been no “conspiracy”. The report’s damaging passages, however, highlight concerns raised by human rights groups during the Troubles. Lurgan, in mid-Ulster, has been a centre of sectarian conflict. It is now the centre of resurgent dissident republicanism. Nelson, who represented clients in many terrorism cases, became identified in the eyes of local loyalists with republican clients. That perception was, at the very least, reinforced by the police, the report said. An assault on Nelson by officers in Portadown two years before her death “had the effect of legitimising her as a target” in the eyes of loyalists, it noted. RUC intelligence about her had also leaked out into the community. “There is no evidence of any act by or within any of the state agencies [RUC, Northern Ireland Office (NIO), the army or MI5] which directly facilitated Rosemary Nelson’s murder,” the inquiry concluded. “But we cannot exclude the possibility of a rogue member or members of the RUC or the army in some way assisting the murderers to target [her].” It added: “Some members of the RUC made abusive and/or threatening remarks about Rosemary Nelson to her clients. This became publicly known.” There was also negligence by state agencies which failed to protect her. Instead they rendered her “more at risk and more vulnerable,” the inquiry found. The local RUC – apart from “negligently” failing to stop officers from threatening and abusing her – failed to follow though on promises to pay special attention to her home and offices, it said. “There was a corporate failure by the RUC to warn Rosemary Nelson of her vulnerability and offer her security advice.” RUC Special Branch is criticised for providing “incomplete” cooperation. They are said to have been “over-possessive” about their intelligence. The NIO is blamed for dealing with warnings about the threat to her safety from human rights groups in a “mechanistic way” and for failing to get involved “proactively”. Presenting the report to the House of Commons, Patterson said: “I am profoundly sorry that omissions by the state rendered Rosemary Nelson more at risk and more vulnerable.” “It is clear that just as Lord Saville found no evidence of a conspiracy by the British state; just as Lord Maclean found no evidence of state collusion in the murder of [the loyalist] Billy Wright; so this panel finds no evidence of any act by the state which directly facilitated Rosemary Nelson’s murder.” Margaret Ritchie, leader of the Social Democrat and Labour party, said: “I am very disturbed at some of the findings of the inquiry into the murder of Rosemary Nelson. It is quite clear the report raises serious issues and identifies major failings. “Rosemary Nelson made it her duty to uphold law, order and justice on behalf of society and its citizens. It is clear that the authorities failed to uphold their duty of care towards her as a citizen and offer reasonable protection. “If these failings are not tantamount to collusion then exactly what do they amount to? “To this day no one has been charged with Rosemary Nelson’s murder – all efforts must be redoubled in order to bring those responsible to justice.” The RUC has since been reformed as the Police Service of Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland Police Crime Owen Bowcott guardian.co.uk

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Let’s pick up where we left on Friday. Judgment Day is coming for the Senate Republicans this week, and man, they are squirming. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell went on “Fox News Sunday” over the weekend and once again could not muster up the courage to fully embrace Paul Ryan’s disastrous budget plan . McConnell was so scared of supporting the Ryan plan to gut Medicare that he could not even say whether he supported all of the provisions of this budget plan. Meanwhile Senator Scott Brown has completed his flippity flop – known in the press world as “ a walk back ” – by now coming out against the Ryan plan. Uh, whatever you say Senator. As the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee noted, “Barn Coat” Brown is a “little light on straight talk” (via email): “Scott Brown has lost his barn coat sheen. He talks like a D.C. politician who is trying to have it both ways and hide his own extreme positions,” said Matt Canter, spokesman for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. “Brown’s op-ed today was certainly a tantalizing read, but there is still so much that Brown is refusing to tell his constituents about where he stands when it comes to Medicare and protecting seniors.” So the Republicans are clearly scared . Their anxiety is only going to intensify if they manage to choke away what should have been an easy win an upcoming special election tomorrow in New York’s 26th District. Any loss there for the Republican candidate would be nothing short of an epic disaster and could become foreshadowing of how House Republicans will remain haunted by their vote to end Medicare as we know it. I mean even the Politico – the inside-the-Beltway house organ for the GOP – is now calling the Ryan’s budget plan to gut Medicare a “political time bomb” for the Republican party (HT Benen ): “It might be a political time bomb — that’s what GOP pollsters warned as House Republicans prepared for the April 15 vote on Rep. Paul Ryan’s proposed budget, with its plan to dramatically remake Medicare. No matter how favorably pollsters with the Tarrance Group or other firms spun the bill in their pitch — casting it as the only path to saving the beloved health entitlement for seniors — the Ryan budget’s approval rating barely budged above the high-30s or its disapproval below 50 percent, according to a Republican operative familiar with the presentation. The poll numbers on the plan were so toxic — nearly as bad as those of President Barack Obama’s health reform bill at the nadir of its unpopularity — that staffers with the National Republican Congressional Committee warned leadership, “You might not want to go there” in a series of tense pre-vote meetings. Ouch. No wonder Senator McConnell went to Fox to desperately try out lines like this : “Let’s just stipulate that nobody is trying to throw Grandma off the cliff,” Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said on “Fox News Sunday.” It’s not that easy, Senator McConnell. If you and your colleagues in the Republican conference do not want to throw Grandma off the cliff , then you will need to come out and vote against the Ryan budget plan. We know, it’s a lose-lose proposition for the Republican Senators who are now part of a party dominated by extreme, nutty ideologues. That is their problem though. They either have to take a stand against the Ryan plan or show their support for it. They cannot have it both ways, just like “Barn Coat” Brown.

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Roger Ailes said to have concluded that Sarah Palin is an "idiot"

Click here to view this media Click here to view this media Roger Ailes has been a brilliant TV man who has turned Fox News into a right-wing ratings winner on cable TV. However, some of the choices he’s made haven’t panned out in the long run for the GOP and he’s been turning on the people he helped create. First Glenn Beck, and now, Momma Bear Palin. Or so we’re told in a great piece in the NY Mag: All the 2012 candidates know that Ailes is a crucial constituency. “You can’t run for the Republican nomination without talking to Roger,” one GOPer told me. “Every single candidate has consulted with Roger.” But he hasn’t found any of them, including the adults in the room—Jon Huntsman, Mitch Daniels, Mitt Romney—compelling. “He finds flaws in every one,” says a person familiar with his thinking. “He thinks things are going in a bad direction,” another Republican close to Ailes told me. “Roger is worried about the future of the country. He thinks the election of Obama is a disaster. He thinks Palin is an idiot. He thinks she’s stupid. He helped boost her up. People like Sarah Palin haven’t elevated the conservative movement.” In the aftermath of the Tucson rampage, the national mood seemed to pivot. Ailes recognized that a Fox brand defined by Palin could be politically vulnerable. Two days after the shooting, he gave an interview to Russell Simmons and told him both sides needed to lower the temperature. “I told all of our guys, ‘Shut up, tone it down, make your argument intellectually.’ ” “Roger thinks Palin is an idiot. People like her haven’t elevated the conservative movement.” For Ailes, Tucson was a turning point, suggesting an end to the silly season that had lasted most of Obama’s term as president and that Ailes had promoted and profited from. While Sean Hannity and other Fox pundits continue to hammer away at Obama, Ailes is hedging his bets. The network is pushing to make news anchor Bret Baier a bigger star. Shepard Smith’s newscast has flashes of outright liberalism. And last month, Ailes encouraged Bill O’Reilly—who seemed to be fading at the height of Beck’s power but now has been recast as the right’s reasonable man, Jon Stewart’s comic foil—to shoot down the “birther” conspiracy and other assorted right-wing myths that have dogged Obama since his election. It’s a long piece and well worth the read. Ailes was successful in reigniting the right-wing base and helping them to take back the House, so I’m not celebrating this story as much as some people are. Transmitting John Birch Society and Ayn Rand beliefs on a massive scale has only damaged America and the working class that helps make him as rich as he is.

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