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Sheen Blindsided by Sons Being Removed From Home

Charlie Sheen said Wednesday that after his two young sons were removed from his house overnight, he’s “very calm and focused” but ready to fight to get them back. (March 2)

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Melissa Gilbert Split

Melissa Gilbert Split from Bruce Boxleitner! Melissa Gilbert split from her husband of 16 years, Bruce Boxleitner.”We have loved each other for a very long time and we share four incredible sons. Bruce Boxleitner and Melissa Gilbert Split – Bitten and Bound Little House on the Prairie star and former Screen Actors Guild President Melissa Gilbert has filed for divorce from Tron actor Bruce Boxleitner. FAMILY PHOTOS. Melissa Gilbert Split from Bruce Boxleitner! | Gossip Pond Melissa Gilbert and Bruce BoxleitnerMelissa Gilbert split from her husband of 16 years, Bruce Boxleitner.We have loved each other for a very long time and we. Bruce Boxleitner and Melissa Gilbert Split Little House on the Prairie actress Melissa Gilbert has confirmed that she and her actor husband Bruce Boxleitner have decided to seek a divorce after 16 years. Charlie Sheen Quote Generator and More News | Wizbang Pop! Bruce Boxleitner and Melissa Gilbert Split – Bitten and Bound. Follow WizbangPop and we’ll follow you on Twitter and Facebook. We also reciprocate links. Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger… Did you like this? Share it: … flyingsaucerJ2 says: Melissa Gilbert Split from Bruce Boxleitner! – Gossip: Home · Gossip · Quotes · Celebrity Kids · Celebrities · V… http://bit.ly/fJabb0

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The congressman in charge of investigating Congress made quick work of an investigation into his own staff. Darrell Issa, the aggressive chair of the House Oversight panel, fired spokesman Kurt Bardella today because he shared journalists’ emails with a New York Times reporter, the Hill reports. ( Click for an…

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The Villagers Think the Peons Just Need to be ‘Brought Along’ on Social Security ‘Reform’

Click here to view this media As Digby noted, the Villagers think Americans are too dumb to make decisions . I’d say the larger problem is being exposed to too many like these two hacks that Tweety decided were somehow qualified to weigh in on Social Security “reform”. “Reform” of course meaning most of us should work until we drop dead because heaven forbid we can’t ask the rich to pay more in taxes. They’ve got way too many propagandized already into believing they should not expect Social Security to be there for them. Little wonder when this is the garbage that pollutes our airways. As for people not being willing to cut Medicare, perhaps some of these villagers ought to talk to the Republicans and their puppet masters who ran millions of dollars worth of ads in the last election demagogueing the cuts in Medicare in the health care reforms. It’s funny how that’s the one time in history that the Democrats took on one of their base’s favored programs and didn’t get any credit for it. In fact, they got crucified by the hypocritical GOP and nobody in DC said a peep. It’s not that the Village needs to “bring the public along” it’s that the public needs to stop listening to the Villagers altogether. They are a font of misinformation. Oh, and by the way, the deficit commission didn’t issue any recommendations because they couldn’t get a consensus. There’s a reason for that if the oh-so-smug and secure establishment journalists cared to look into it they’d find it’s really not painless for working people after all. Much more there so go read the rest. Transcript below the fold. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) REP. JOHN BOEHNER (R-OH): To not address entitlement programs, as in the case with the budget the president has put forward, would be an economic and moral failure. (END VIDEO CLIP) MATTHEWS: Wow. An economic and moral failure not to go after Social Security and Medicare? Wait until we see what happens when they do go after it. Welcome back to Hardball. While it appears there may be a deal coming to keep the United States government funded for another two weeks and open for business, avoiding a shutdown, the question remains whether Congress or the president will do something to curb the big, growing cost of programs like Social Security and Medicare. Or is it all talk and no action, for the obvious reason? Susan Molinari is a former New York congresswoman. And Jeanne Cummings is assistant manager editor at Politico. Jeanne, just in strict analytical terms, watching these folks, I wonder if anybody who wants to get elected again in Congress is willing to put their hand up and say: “I want to cut the benefits going to people on Social Security. I want to cut the health benefits. You’re not going to get dialysis for more than three months, X-many months. You’re not going to get the artificial limb reworked after seven years. You’re not going to get the following”? When it comes to the realities of cutting these programs, will any politician actually do it? JEANNE CUMMINGS: I don’t think we’re going to see that any time soon, and without a great deal of change here in Washington, Chris, for the reasons that you make clear. It’s politically very, very difficult. You have down in Florida Representative Adam (sic) West, who has actually talked — he’s a Republican, a freshman — and he’s talked more than many of them about some of the changes that would have to come to those programs. And the Democrats are immediately targeting him. And that — those are the very issues they’re using against him. MATTHEWS: Yes. CUMMINGS: So, it’s going to take a sea change. MATTHEWS: All you have to do — Paula Hawkins, remember — I’m sorry. But, remember, Paula Hawkins was a senator from down there, never did anything wrong, except she did what they told her to do. She voted to — she came out in public support of cutting for the COLAs for Social Security and got blown away. Jeremiah Denton. I think it’s the only issue, Susan — you were in the House — that you can be beaten for, just one vote. Vote to cut Social Security, vote to cut Medicare benefits to people, what happens to you? SUSAN MOLINARI (R), FORMER U.S. CONGRESSWOMAN: Well, except nobody’s talking about cutting benefits of the recipients right now. What they’re talking about is changing programs in the future. And I think… (CROSSTALK) MATTHEWS: But, in the end, doesn’t that do the same thing? MOLINARI: I think the Republicans are going to take that chance. Look, John Boehner has just said it. The speaker went out there and said it. Eric Cantor has said it. Paul Ryan has said, when he unveils his budget in a few weeks, there`s going to be entitlement change. Governor Christie has stood up and has staked his claim. Mitch Daniels has. I mean, you’re starting to see — and, look, it’s a different… MATTHEWS: It’s easy for Christie. He’s not doing this. He’s telling them to do it. (CROSSTALK) MOLINARI: It’s a different world now, though. MATTHEWS: OK. (CROSSTALK) MOLINARI: This is a different world. MATTHEWS: OK, Susan Molinari, I respect your judgment. Here’s the latest “USA Today” poll, Gallup poll — 61 percent of Americans oppose cutting Medicare spends — 64 percent oppose cutting Social Security spending. These are two-thirds votes. MOLINARI: I think the American people told the Republicans when they elected in the majority that they wanted this deficit to come under control and that they wanted a little sanity and some validity. MATTHEWS: I agree with all that. MOLINARI: We’re starting to see this with the C.R. We’re starting to see this with what the new Republican budget is going to do. I think you’re going to be surprised by the leadership that the Republican Party is going to show. And I think the American people are going to present them with reelection at the polls for showing that kind of leadership. I think what the last election about — was leadership. MATTHEWS: Every time, Susan — or, Jeanne, every time we poll people — and I did this back in, I think, 1971, working for a senator from Utah. You poll people and you ask them what they would like to see government cut, they say foreign aid and general government expenses. They want to see more money on education. They don’t want any cuts in Social Security or anything like it. If you ask them, do they want to see government waste cut, they don’t want real cuts. For example, I was just out doing something for Alzheimer’s this past week out in Las Vegas, trying to raise awareness for the big group out there that is working on research. Imagine telling people who have an Alzheimer’s victim in their house and they’re a caregiver — oh by the way, we’re cutting spending on research that you’re going to face another 20 or 30 years of Alzheimer’s hell in this country because we can’t solve the problem. Do people really want those kinds of cuts? CUMMINGS: Well, I think in addition to those challenges that you’ve just outlined, there is an additional one for this Congress and the White House if they really want to do anything. And that is that there is a sizable majority in the 60 percents in a recent poll by Kaiser who thinks you can fix Medicare and Social Security by just cutting the other parts of the budget. So, the public, while they may be coming around, they aren’t ready for this debate yet. There’s a lot of education that would have to take place before Washington could move in a serious and fundamental way. What struck me with the deficit commission in December was they made recommendations that would change Social Security, for instance. MATTHEWS: Yes. CUMMINGS: These — the effect of — the effect of those changes wouldn’t take place, wouldn’t affect anybody until 2050, OK? That’s a long time from now. MATTHEWS: I know. CUMMINGS: And, yet, they were criticized roundly on both sides of the aisle. And nobody’s been willing to touch that one. So, until they deal, they bring the public with them, I think this will remain, they’ve got to educate the public. But until they do that, I think it’s going to be a very tough issue. MATTHEWS: So, you’re 26 years old and this will affect you. I’m going the math. It’s 39 years from now. MOLINARI: Twenty-six-year-olds, 52-year-olds don’t rely on Social Security for our benefits. I mean, we’ve all grown up with the reality we don’t think it’s going to be there for them. That is why I think — you know, look, the line is being drawn. The abdication of leadership by President Obama in following in anything that his deficit commission — (CROSSTALK) MATTHEWS: Who on the other side is doing it? MOLINARI: Three week, Paul Ryan, and you just heard John Boehner say they`re going to make some changes in terms of entitlement reforms. When they come forth with their budget when they’re done cleaning — (CROSSTALK) MATTHEWS: Do you think that’s a smart move on their part? MOLINARI: I think it is a smart move for this country. And I think the voters understand it now. I think it is a different time than when Paula Hawkins and others — MATTHEWS: Jeanne, do you think the Republicans are going to be the first ones to move on this? Not the Democrats? CUMMINGS: I will be — I think they are going to do something. They are promised to do it and there will be something in their budget. Whether that is a serious proposal or not, I’m skeptical of. Only because we’ve been in this town for a long time and there are a lot of proposals that are supposedly serious proposals but they really aren’t. So, we’ll see if they will be first out and it will be a serious proposal. MATTHEWS: I will be very impressed — negatively or positively, I’ll be impressed if your party, the Republican Party, actually says, raise the retirement age, reduce the benefit levels, something that a person can see when they watch a program like this and read the paper, they can get it. They are cutting the benefits. MOLINARI: This is the party that’s at least proposed the spending cuts for C.R. that the Democrat Party was suppose to pass last year and moving toward September. So, let’s give them credit for what they’ve done so far. MATTHEWS: You’ve just done that. That’s sufficient. Anyway, thank you, Susan Molinari. It’s great to have you on because you are a good partisan. But I’m waiting for the Republicans or anybody — because I watched this under Reagan. And he was as popular as you could get in this country, and he got burnt on this thing.

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House Approves Budget Measure to Avert Shutdown

WASHINGTON — The House on Tuesday passed a two-week budget measure that cuts $4 billion in federal spending, and Senate Democrats said they would quickly follow suit, averting any threat of a government shutdown when money runs out on Friday. Multimedia Interactive Map House Vote: Spending Measure Blogs The Caucus The latest on President Obama, the new Congress and other news from Washington and around the nation. Join the discussion. FiveThirtyEight: Nate Silver’s Political Calculus More Politics News But the measure, approved by a bipartisan vote of 335 to 91, extends only through March 18, allowing little time for the Republican-led House and the Democratic Senate to bridge…

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Turkey and Iran may be winners, and the US a loser in the end – but first Arab societies must ‘win’ by making revolution work David Cameron’s suggestion that Britain may arm Libyan rebels opposed to Muammar Gaddafi vividly illustrates the dangerously fine line western leaders must tread as revolutionary unrest sweeps the Arab world. Despite recent violence, Libya is not yet in a state of civil war. But arming the opposition is a sure way to guarantee it soon could be. Thus a forcible intervention designed to help may have the opposite effect to that intended. Cameron’s ingenuous ideas about ending the Gaddafi era, outlined to the House of Commons this week, were prompted in part by a desire to ensure Britain is on the “winning” side when the history of the 2011 Arab awakening is written. This echoes the fatuous debate in Washington over whether Barack Obama “lost” Egypt when he abandoned Hosni Mubarak. Through their latest statements, the US and Britain are trying to assure, among other things, good post-revolution relations with successor regimes. But it’s clear, with the upheavals that began in Tunisia in December still spreading , that western military intervention in specific countries to hasten that end could be both hazardous and counter-productive. On the whole, affected populations say they do not want it , or only in very limited form. Gaddafi, for example, claims the US and Britain are bent on recolonisation and stealing Libya’s oil. He would like nothing better than to portray the rebellion as a western-inspired, anti-Arab plot. In terms of “winners” and “losers”, the US and close allies like Britain and Israel are already firmly positioned in the latter category. Washington has lost, or is losing, key alliances with pro-western leaders in Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen and some Gulf states. Where autocracies remain entrenched, as in Saudi Arabia, confidence in the western allies has been badly shaken, not least by the way they dumped Mubarak and suddenly ramped up the rhetoric of “universal values”. Successful revolutions will not guarantee a return to cordiality. “If democracy does take root in the Middle East – and the jury is still out – the regimes that emerge may well be much tougher customers than the autocracies they replace,” said Charles Kupchan of the US Council on Foreign Relations . “Western observers and policy-makers had better stop operating under the illusion that the spread of democracy to the Middle East also means the spread of western values.” The twin forces of political Islam and nationalism would wield ever greater clout in more open, post-revolutionary Arab states, he suggested. In short, the strategic outlook has changed permanently. Nor will it be clear, for a considerable while, who western governments are dealing with. “The regimes that emerge may call themselves democracies and the world may go along with the lie, but the test of a system is how the power relationships work behind the scenes” US analyst, Robert Kaplan , said. “The Arab world must create from the dust of tyrannies legitimate political orders. It is less democracy than the crisis of central authority that will dominate the next phase of Middle Eastern history.” If there are any state “winners” so far in this rapidly shifting geo-strategic chess game, they are Turkey and Iran, Saudi and other analysts suggest. “Viewed through the prism of a zero-sum conflict between a US-led alliance of Arab autocrats and Israel against an Iran-led ‘resistance’ camp, the Arab rebellion has been nothing short of catastrophic for the anti-Iran forces, ” Tony Karon wrote in The National . But this conclusion, he warned, was “based on the flawed premise that a setback for the US is automatically a gain for Iran. The Arab declaration of independence from Washington is anything but a declaration of loyalty to Tehran” – despite Iranian claims. A more comfortable thought, for western leaders at least, is that moderate, secular, neo-Islamist-led Turkey may provide a paradigm for emerging post-revolutionary Arab societies. Turkish commentators certainly see it this way. Turkey’s reform experience “could assist them in building a platform for channelling the aspirations and expectations of people to reflect better governance and transparency”, Abdullah Bozkurt said in Today’s Zaman. “Turkey can certainly be an inspiration for a lot of people in these countries.” Such sentiments reflect the newfound confidence of a former Middle Eastern empire that has successfully reinvented itself, one century on, as an ambitious and supposedly benign regional power. But even help from such a quarter may initially be too much for the Arab world’s opposition forces and successor regimes at this delicate moment. First and foremost, they themselves must “win” by making their revolutions work – for it is they, more than any outsiders, who will suffer the consequences of failure. Foreign policy US foreign policy Muammar Gaddafi Libya Middle East Egypt Saudi Arabia Arab and Middle East protests Simon Tisdall guardian.co.uk

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Random House switches e-book pricing models, clears way for entrance into iBookstore

Well, it looks like the last major holdout from Apple’s iBookstore could soon be joining its rivals on iOS devices — Random House announced today that it’s abandoning its current pricing model for e-books in favor of the so-called “agency pricing” that Apple insists on. That model requires publishers to set the retail prices of their books with the bookseller getting a 30 percent cut of each sale — as opposed to the traditional wholesale model that lets retailers set the price of books and even sell them at a loss (as Amazon has done in the past). As the Wall Street Journal notes, the agency model has been criticized by some (including Random House previously) for effectively eliminating discounting and guaranteeing retailers a profit on each book they sell. Of course, Random House hasn’t yet officially announced that it will be joining the iBookstore ranks, but this news does certainly line up nicely with a little event tomorrow. Random House switches e-book pricing models, clears way for entrance into iBookstore originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 01 Mar 2011 17:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink

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The Republican chairman of the House Oversight Committee has launched an investigation into the behavior of his own press secretary. Darrell Issa says he’s trying to determine whether Kurt Bardella improperly shared emails from other journalists with New York Times reporter Mark Leibovich, who is writing a book about Capitol…

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On Thursday's front page of The Washington Post, reporter John Wagner wrote of how Maryland's top three leaders are Catholics but are “crossing the hierarchy” of the church by imposing “gay marriage” on the state: “But the presence of three Catholics at the helm in Annapolis hasn't stopped a same-sex marriage bill from wending its way through the legislature, triggering deep disappointment among church leaders as it suggests a waning of Catholic influence in this heavily Catholic state.” But it must have surprised readers that those “church leaders” Wagner referred to were nowhere to be found in this Post story, not even their names. Cardinal Donald Wuerl oversees the suburban Maryland counties of the Washington area, and Archbishop Edwin O'Brien oversees Gov. Martin O'Malley's Baltimore stomping grounds. Wagner somehow could not find them in his phone book. It's not as if these prelates have been quiet on the “gay marriage” issue in Maryland . Archbishop O'Brien just took great exception to the “hatemonger” label in his newspaper the Catholic Review: Unfortunately, such sweeping characterizations took on additional meaning last week when Senator James Brochin (whose district encompasses the parishes of Immaculate Heart of Mary, Church of the Nativity, St. Pius X and Immaculate Conception, Towson) cited the tone of testimony offered by some who spoke against the bill at the hearing as the reason he was changing his publicly-stated position in support of traditional marriage, to now vote in support of redefining marriage. In spite of Senator Brochin’s claim that he only “heard hate and venom coming out of that hearing,” witness after witness voiced their opposition, offering no such judgments or invective, including members of our Maryland Catholic Conference and an Archdiocesan parish. Their testimonies can be viewed at catholicreview.org/matysekblog. The notion that anyone opposed to same-sex marriage is a bigot or “hate monger” is not only unfair and insulting, it also ignores the very belief system that underpins our support for marriage. Wagner and the Post seemed to want to let Catholic Democrats speak for themselves, and not create any public-relations problems for them by letting the actual church leaders discuss their opinions of these men and their John Kerry-style “not a Catholic on the day job” philosophy. Instead, Wagner quoted the top Catholic lobbyist, which doesn't have the same impact: Mary Ellen Russell, executive director of the Maryland Catholic Conference, a leading opponent of same-sex marriage, said she has been distressed by the debate and the governor's decision. “It's always troubling when someone in such a public position openly disagrees with the church,” she said, calling defeat of the legislation “a critically important issue for the church.” Wagner's report does dare to inquire about the depth of the politicians' practice of their faith. The story begins with Gov. O'Malley “regularly attends a weekday Mass and has sent his four children to Catholic schools” and later notes that neither House Speaker Michael Busch or Senate President Mike Miller is a regular churchgoer. But have top church leaders personally contacted these Catholic politicians on this “critically important” issue? Or are they leaving all the phone calls to the church lobbyists? This is certainly a question worth investigating that would strengthen the Post's story if the emphasis was on crossing the “Catholic hierarchy.” Putting that story on the front page without any apparent contact with the hierarchy is like walking into public without pants.

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Budget

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Budget

Pilera Easysite Admin Controls DIETING ON A BUDGET! Pinellas County 2012 Budget Public Meetings Congressional Week Ahead: Budget Battles – NYTimes.com The outlines of a stopgap deal to keep the government running for a couple of weeks are emerging, but action is needed by Friday to avoid a shutdown. Bill Gates: Education Budget Cuts Don't Have To Hurt Learning WASHINGTON — Even in the midst of large spending cuts, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates said Monday that schools can improve the performance of students if they put more emphasis on rewarding excellent teaching and less emphasis on … Moody's: GOP Budget Would Cost 700000 Jobs | TPMDC The Republican plan to cut government spending by more than $60 billion dollars will cost the unemployment rate dearly, according to a new report from Moody’s Analytics. According to Moody’s chief economist Mark Zandi — who the … U.S. Budget Deficit Is Economists' Number One Risk, Poll Finds WASHINGTON: The massive U.S. budget deficit is the gravest threat facing the economy, topping high unemployment and the risk of inflation or deflation, according to a survey of forecasters released on Monday. BankBazaar | Personal taxes and budget 2011! Budget 2011-12 has given a marginal benefit on the tax slab for individuals. However the benefits for very senior citizens are higher. However the expectations that there will be changes in the investment avenues and their slabs have … BetoMetroDos says: RT @ArrghPaine : Report: House Budget Would Kill 700,000 Jobs http://pulsene.ws/13F2i #p2 #tcot

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