Home » Posts tagged with » house (Page 176)

One of the most stressful things about being a liberal blogger is having to watch as congressional Democrats stand openmouthed at the plate, watching the fastballs fly by. Steve Benen really nails it. Go read the rest: At face value, congressional Republicans went into budget talks playing a strikingly weak hand. They’re an unpopular party, pushing unpopular spending cuts, going up against a more popular president. Of the three main players — the House, the Senate, and the White House — the GOP controls about one-half of one-third of the relevant institutions. And yet, who seems to be calling the shots here? The  New York Times had  an interesting summary of the lay of the land, emphasizing the fact that Democrats seem to realize they let this debate slip away from them. Both parties remain uncertain about which of them would bear the brunt of public anger if Congress cannot agree on financing federal operations for the final half of this fiscal year and government agencies shut down or drastically scale back the services they can provide. Even many Democrats believe that House Republicans have gotten the better of the antispending, antigovernment argument. But Democrats insist that is because much of the public does not appreciate the impact the Republicans’ $61 billion in proposed reductions would have on spending for popular social programs if those cuts were to become law with just half of the current fiscal year remaining . Democrats are right; most of the country has no idea the extent to which the GOP’s proposed cuts would be devastating to key domestic priorities. These are cuts that, if put to a poll, the vast majority of the American mainstream would reject out of hand. But here’s another thought: maybe most of the country has no idea how brutal these cuts are because  Dems haven’t told them . Yes, yes, a thousand times yes! No coherent, consistent message, a new logo that looks like a sign for a bus stop and an overwhelming need to cooperate with the slash-and-burn Republicans who want to decimate these very popular programs. Why not stand up for people instead of helping them cut?

Continue reading …
Google Street View invades historic landmarks, makes it unnecessary for you to ever leave the house

The vagabonds of Google’s Street View team have struck again, this time conquering classical French and Italian landmarks for their mothership’s immense pictorial collection. As of today, you’re able to drop your little yellow avatar in Google Maps right atop such famous locales as the Colosseum of Rome or Florence’s Basilica di Santa Maria del Fiore, whereupon you’ll be transported right to it (or, in the case of the Colosseum, inside it) in the same way as if they were any old street addresses. This follows, of course, Google’s introduction of an intriguing indoor version of Street View for some of the world’s most prestigious museums recently and continues the company’s trend of bringing the arts, in this case classical architecture, to a wider audience. We just wonder what reason said audience will have to ever step outside with all this splendor at its fingertips indoors. Google Street View invades historic landmarks, makes it unnecessary for you to ever leave the house originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Mar 2011 07:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

Continue reading …
Ohio House Panel OKs Public Worker Union Bill

Ohio has moved a step closer to Wisconsin-style restrictions on its public employees. A House committee has voted to send a bill curbing the bargaining rights of the state’s 350000 public employees to the full House for a vote. (March 29)

Continue reading …
Dreamcast Collection

Type: Video Games Title: Dreamcast Collection See all customer reviews Product Description: The Dreamcast is back in a must-have collection! Relive the Dreamcast experience with four of Sega’s classic hits from the Dreamcast era. Speed through uncharted territories in Sonic Adventure, zip around town in Crazy Taxi, fend off menacing invaders in Space Channel 5 Part 2 or get your nostalgia fix with Sega Bass Fishing! These games are sure to delight old and new gamers of all ages and include HD graphics, wide screen support, Avatar Awards, leader boards and more. This is a must-have collection for Dreamcast fans! Features: Sonic Adventure: Take off on an adventure of epic proportions with Sonic and his friends ? run through exotic paradises, raise your own pet Chao, and collect the seven Chaos Emeralds to stop the evil Dr. Eggman! Crazy Taxi: Are you ready to make some crazy money? Deliver your passengers, do it with style, and earn extra money on the side – Crazy Taxi is a wild ride, here we go! Space Channel 5 Part 2: Reporting for Duty! Help star reporter Ulala fight the invaders and dance her way to victory in this classic Dreamcast rhythm game! Sega Bass Fishing: Fish! Grab a boat, pick your lure, and start fishing for the biggest bass you can find – Enjoy the great outdoors without ever leaving the house! See the details

Continue reading …

The hits just keep on coming. I bring to you the Evil Republican Governor Chronicles, Florida edition. TBO.com : Give Rick Scott sole authority to appoint Florida judges A move to restructure the Florida court system, giving more power in choosing judges to Gov. Rick Scott, moved forward in the state House Thursday despite objections that the bills are an attempt to take control of the state judiciary. The House Civil Justice Committee passed the three bills Thursday afternoon, all opposed by the committee’s five Democrats and backed by its 10 Republicans, including Shawn Harrison of Tampa. Other committee stops and action by the full House and Senate would be needed to pass them. They are: •An amendment to break the state Supreme Court in two, one court for criminal cases and one for civil cases, adding three justices so each would have five. An amendment to abolish the judicial nominating commissions that submit nominees for appeals court and Supreme Court justices. The governor would then have sole power to name justices, but the state Senate would have to confirm them. Proponents said it models the federal process for naming justices. A bill not requiring an amendment that gives the governor sole power to appoint all members of the judicial nominating commissions that submit nominees for trial court seats . (h/t BeachPeanuts ) These initiatives would have to be approved by 60% of Florida voters. Rest assured they will be framed in such a way that it will sound like a great idea. Just as great as electing this man governor in the first place. Don’t be fooled by the GOP claim that it increases efficiency. This move is retaliatory, in response to the Florida court upholding the November redistricting initiative that takes control out of the hands of the politicians and puts it in the hands of a citizen panel. They hate that. As to the splitting of the court and adding a few justices, I think they call that “court stacking”. When FDR contemplated it conservatives screamed like piggy boys. Now they think it’s just a fantastic idea down there in Florida. And wait, there’s more, thanks to Joy Ann Reid at the Reid Report . In Florida, Felonious Monk (A/K/A Rick Scott) is serving up a policy of mandatory, random drug tests for all state employees reporting to the executive branch (as well as anyone receiving public assistance) that will serve the twin purposes of humliating and demonizing the state workers Republicans so despise, while also potentially lining his pockets by pushing tens of thousands of new custormers to the chain of walk-in clinics he has temporarily signed over to his wife . However, Scott’s push could very well be … wait for it … illegal. Besides the fact that Joy-Ann’s post exposes the naked greed and powerlust in Florida, I had to share it just because the name Felonious Monk fits Scott so well. Well, doesn’t it?

Continue reading …
Wiz Khalifa Rolling Papers

Wiz Khalifa – ROLLING PAPERS Album Review Dead End Hip Hop | Webisode 9: Wiz Khalifa Rolling Papers Review Wiz Khalifa's Rolling Papers : The Reviews Are In! » MTV Newsroom Wiz Khalifa’s Rolling Papers : The Reviews Are In! Posted 3 hrs ago by Kyle Anderson in Music. Last year, a relatively unknown rapper from a city not traditionally known for hip-hop graduated from the mixtape circuit to the mainstream … ALBUM REVIEW: Wiz Khalifa – Rolling Papers at PMA | Pretty Much … wiz-khalifa-rolling-papers . 68 | Atlantic | 3.28.11 | MOG | AMAZON | INSOUND. The crossover hip-hop album is a much-maligned mainstay in a genre that prizes innovation, honesty and any other anti-pop sentiments that can be mustered. … Wiz Khalifa Rolling Papers | World Latest News Latest release, 3rd Album from R&B rapper Cameron Jibril Thomaz, also known as Wiz Khalfa. Album include “Black and Yellow”, by Grammy Winning Team Stargate, namely Rihanna, Beyonc and Katy Perry. Track refers to the colors of Pittsburg … Wiz Khalifa Rolling Papers | A-Pakistan News Wiz Khalifa Rolling Papers 2011 release, the third album by R & B rapper Gabriel Thomaz Cameron, more commonly known as Wiz Khalifa. The album includes the first single “Black and Yellow ‘, produced by Grammy winning team of Stargate … Wiz Khalifa Rolling Papers Releases Today | Daily Postal Watch out for the Wiz Khalifa Rolling Papers album set to release today, March 29. Here is the official track list to Wiz Khalifa’s “Rolling Papers ”… RHRips says: Wiz Khalifa Rolling Papers Full Album Download http://t.co/i6SZtwq

Continue reading …
GOP Threatens U.S. Fiscal Suicide over Balanced Budget Amendment

enlarge Credit: Wall Street Journal ( Click here for larger image ) The national debt of the United States tripled under Ronald Reagan and doubled again under George W. Bush. Bush and the GOP Congress cut taxes during wartime , a first in modern American history. During his presidency, Republicans voted seven times to increase the debt ceiling. As Utah Senator Orrin Hatch in 2009 described Republican orthodoxy under Republican presidents, “It was standard practice not to pay for things.” But that was then and this is now. And now with a Democrat in the White House, Hatch and his Republican colleagues are demanding passage of a Balanced Budget Amendment as a condition of raising the $14.3 trillion debt ceiling. Whether that blackmail is paid or not, either way the result would be a catastrophe for the United States. The Balanced Budget Amendment (BBA) gambit is just the latest chapter in the Republican saga of “America Held Hostage.” Earlier this month, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell warned that “not a single one of the 47 Republicans will vote to raise the debt ceiling unless it includes with it some credible effort to do something about our debt.” McConnell then upped the ante : Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell warned on Friday that GOP senators will not vote to increase the government’s borrowing limit unless President Barack Obama agrees to rein in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, laying down a high-stakes marker just weeks before the debt ceiling is reached. Now, as Human Events and Politico reported Friday, America’s Republican captors are threatening the shut down the government and undermine the full faith and credit of the United States if their demands for a “Starve the Beast” amendment are not met: The Senate Republicans are preparing to tell President Obama that they want a Balanced Budget Amendment (BBA) to the Constitution passed in Congress in exchange for raising the statuary debt ceiling above $14.2 trillion. “My hope is that we would force a vote on a Balanced Budget Amendment as a condition to voting on the debt ceiling,” Sen. John Cornyn (R.-Tex.) told HUMAN EVENTS. “By next week, or shortly thereafter, we will have all 47 Republicans unified behind the effort, and then begin to reach out to our Democratic colleagues.” A BBA would force the federal government to balance the federal spending to incoming revenue each year and cap spending at 18% of the gross domestic product (GDP). For the current Fiscal Year (FY 2011), the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that government spending will be $1.4 trillion more than revenue and account for almost 25% of the GDP. Of course, the GOP BBA is a recipe for disaster. If codified, Republican grandstanding on the budget would not only mean draconian cuts in government services. The fragile U.S. recovery would be stopped dead in its tracks. As a matter of simple math, balancing President Obama’s proposed FY 2012 budget would mean slashing $1.6 trillion from a $3.7 trillion spending request. That inevitably would devastate federal programs across the board. As this now-dated diagram of the 2011 budget below illustrates, you simply can’t get there from here without raising taxes . Taking interest on the debt and defense spending off the table (as most Republicans insist) means cutting over half of everything else the federal government does . And that includes Social Security and Medicare. Just as important, setting 18% of GDP as a target for both tax revenue and spending is both arbitrary and unrealistic. As the chart at the top shows, over the last 30 years federal spending dipped to 18% only during the presidency of Democrat Bill Clinton. It never dropped below 21% during the tenure of supposed small government advocate Ronald Reagan. As for revenue, the CBO among others reported that the combination of the Bush tax cuts for the rich and the recession which started in 2007 drove total federal taxes as a percentage of the U.S. economy at their lowest level since 1950. Making matters worse, in December Republicans demanded another $140 billion windfall for the wealthy as their price for continuing tax relief for everyone else. (More galling still, in February the GOP’s Jim Demint (R-SC) and Mike Pence (R-IN) proposed legislation which would make the Bush tax cust permanent beginning in 2013 – and drain another $4 trillion from the U.S. Treasury over the ensuing decade.) At a time of war and economic recovery, government should be high – certainly well above 18%. And as the economic recovery progresses, the government should and must raise taxes to reduce future deficits and to pay off what will be a $3 trillion tab for the nation’s unfunded wars. But the various versions of the Republican Balanced Budget Amendment would make the necessary virtually impossible . While both the House and Senate versions allow for the federal government to run deficits in wartime, both chambers would require a three-fifths vote to suspend the spending limit and balanced budget requirement ” “when the U.S. is engaged in military conflict which causes imminent and serious military threat to national security and declared by a joint resolution that is approved by a three-fifths vote of each House of Congress.” Even more onerous: Furthermore, the Senate BBA prevents future Congresses from raising taxes in order to meet the requirements of the balanced budget by stipulating that any bills with tax increases will need two-thirds votes in both chambers. For his part, Senator Cornyn (R-TX) acknowledged his party’s latest ransom demand over the debt ceiling is a political ploy. Despite some Democratic support in the past (including from then Senator Joe Biden), the BBA is not going to get through the Senate and may not even come up for a vote. And that’s just fine with John Cornyn: “If, for some reason, the Balanced Budget Amendment were not to pass, I think the voters would then know, with very stark clarity, who is for a balanced budget and who is not, and it could have a big impact on the 2012 elections.” Of course, if for some reason Republicans follow through on their blackmail regarding the debt ceiling, the results would be cataclysmic. While the specter of a global financial cataclysm caused by the default of the United States caused most sentient mammals to denounce that prospect as “insanity” (Obama economic adviser Austan Goolsbee ), resulting in “severe harm” (McCain economic adviser Mark Zandi ), “financial collapse and calamity throughout the world” (Senator Lindsey Graham ), “financial disaster” (House Speaker John Boehner ), Mitch McConnell and his Senate Republican colleagues are determined to continue with the game of chicken. Apparently, American fiscal suicide is a small price to pay for political power. Meanwhile, the same Orrin Hatch who admitted that when a Republican sat in the Oval Office “it was standard practice not to pay for things” is now sponsoring his own version of a Balanced Budget Amendment. As Hatch declared last week : “A Balanced Budget Amendment to the Constitution’s time has more than come.” No, it hasn’t. A Balanced Budget Amendment is a bad idea whose time should never come. And to use it to hold America hostage over the debt ceiling is beyond dangerous. It’s suicidal. (This piece also appears at Perrspectives .)

Continue reading …

For a bunch of people so concerned with the growing national debt, the House of Representatives doesn’t have a lot of members putting their money where their mouths are. The House has program that allows representatives to return a portion of their salaries toward debt reduction (the Senate doesn’t even…

Continue reading …

I can’t even bring myself to hope that mortgage companies will ever face significant consequences for the economic havoc they’ve wreaked. There have been rumors that the Obama administration has been leaning on the state AGs to get them to lighten up on their penalities; I hope they’re just rumors , but I suspect not: NEW YORK — The nation’s five largest mortgage firms have saved more than $20 billion since the housing crisis began in 2007 by taking shortcuts in processing troubled borrowers’ home loans , according to a confidential presentation prepared for state attorneys general by the nascent consumer bureau inside the Treasury Department. That estimate suggests large banks have reaped tremendous benefits from under-serving distressed homeowners, a complaint frequent enough among borrowers that federal regulators have begun to acknowledge the industry’s fundamental shortcomings. The dollar figure also provides a basis for regulators’ internal discussions regarding how best to penalize Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial in a settlement of wide-ranging allegations of wrongful and occasionally illegal foreclosures. People involved in the talks say some regulators want to levy a $5 billion penalty on the five firms, while others seek as much as $30 billion, with most of the money going toward reducing troubled homeowners’ mortgage payments and lowering loan balances for underwater borrowers, those who owe more on their home than it’s worth. Even the highest of those figures, however, pales in comparison to the likely cost of reducing mortgage principal for the three million homeowners some federal agencies hope to reach. Lowering loan balances for that many underwater borrowers who owe less than $1.15 for every dollar their home is worth would cost as much as $135 billion, according to the internal presentation, dated Feb. 14, obtained by The Huffington Post. But perhaps most important to some lawmakers in Washington, the mere existence of the report suggests a much deeper link between the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection, led by Harvard professor Elizabeth Warren, and the 50 state attorneys general who are leading the nationwide probe into the five firms’ improper foreclosure practices, a development sure to anger Republicans in Congress and a banking industry intent on diminishing the fledgling CFPB’s legitimacy by questioning its authority to act before it’s officially launched in July. Earlier this month, Warren told the House Financial Services Committee, under intense questioning, that her agency has provided limited assistance to the various state and federal agencies involved in the industry probes. At one point, she was asked whether she made any recommendations regarding proposed penalties. She replied that her agency has only provided “advice.”

Continue reading …

I can’t even bring myself to hope that mortgage companies will ever face significant consequences for the economic havoc they’ve wreaked. There have been rumors that the Obama administration has been leaning on the state AGs to get them to lighten up on their penalities; I hope they’re just rumors , but I suspect not: NEW YORK — The nation’s five largest mortgage firms have saved more than $20 billion since the housing crisis began in 2007 by taking shortcuts in processing troubled borrowers’ home loans , according to a confidential presentation prepared for state attorneys general by the nascent consumer bureau inside the Treasury Department. That estimate suggests large banks have reaped tremendous benefits from under-serving distressed homeowners, a complaint frequent enough among borrowers that federal regulators have begun to acknowledge the industry’s fundamental shortcomings. The dollar figure also provides a basis for regulators’ internal discussions regarding how best to penalize Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup and Ally Financial in a settlement of wide-ranging allegations of wrongful and occasionally illegal foreclosures. People involved in the talks say some regulators want to levy a $5 billion penalty on the five firms, while others seek as much as $30 billion, with most of the money going toward reducing troubled homeowners’ mortgage payments and lowering loan balances for underwater borrowers, those who owe more on their home than it’s worth. Even the highest of those figures, however, pales in comparison to the likely cost of reducing mortgage principal for the three million homeowners some federal agencies hope to reach. Lowering loan balances for that many underwater borrowers who owe less than $1.15 for every dollar their home is worth would cost as much as $135 billion, according to the internal presentation, dated Feb. 14, obtained by The Huffington Post. But perhaps most important to some lawmakers in Washington, the mere existence of the report suggests a much deeper link between the Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection, led by Harvard professor Elizabeth Warren, and the 50 state attorneys general who are leading the nationwide probe into the five firms’ improper foreclosure practices, a development sure to anger Republicans in Congress and a banking industry intent on diminishing the fledgling CFPB’s legitimacy by questioning its authority to act before it’s officially launched in July. Earlier this month, Warren told the House Financial Services Committee, under intense questioning, that her agency has provided limited assistance to the various state and federal agencies involved in the industry probes. At one point, she was asked whether she made any recommendations regarding proposed penalties. She replied that her agency has only provided “advice.”

Continue reading …