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US air traffic staff get longer breaks

Transport officials say extra hour off will leave staff refreshed but rejects calls to allow controllers to nap during breaks US air traffic controllers will get longer breaks between shifts to prevent fatigue, but transport officials have rejected another proposed remedy – on-the-job napping. The transportation secretary, Ray LaHood, said on Monday that while the government would not pay air traffic controllers to take naps while on duty, federal officials were open to other options to ensure aviation safety. He told CBS television’s The Early Show that officials “take very seriously” their obligation to solve the problem of sleepy controllers, adding: “Controllers have to make sure that they get the right rest and they come to work rested.” LaHood announced previously that the Ferderal Aviation Administration (FAA) would add an hour to the minimum time controllers must be off between shifts. He said under the plan staff should feel more refreshed when they arrive at work. Officials will visit control towers this week to discuss the problems of sleeping on the job. Five instances of sleeping controllers have been reported since late March. The latest incident occurred just before 8am on Saturday at a busy regional radar facility that handles high-altitude traffic for much of Florida, the Atlantic ocean and the Caribbean sea. Several other countries, including Germany and Japan, permit controllers to sleep during breaks and provide quiet rooms with beds for that purpose. Bill Voss, president of the Flight Safety Foundation of Alexandria, Virginia, said: “Given the body of scientific evidence, that decision clearly demonstrates that politics remain more important than public safety. People are concerned about a political backlash if they allow controllers to have rest periods in their work shifts the same way firefighters and trauma physicians do.” It has been an open secret in the US FAA since at least the early 1990s that controllers sometimes sleep on the job. The toughest are the midnight shifts, between 10pm and 6am. Scientists said it would be surprising if controllers did not doze sometimes because they were trying to stay awake at a time when the body naturally craves sleep. Studies show that 30% to 50% of night-shift workers report falling asleep on the job, according to Dr Charles Czeisler, chief of sleep medicine at Brigham and Women’s hospital in Boston. Six of eight present and former controllers interviewed by Associated Press admitted they briefly fell asleep while working alone at night at least once in their careers. Most of them did not want to be identified for fear of jeopardising their jobs or their colleagues’. Much more common is taking a nap on purpose, they said. During midnight shifts controllers take it in turns to sleep while the other covers both positions. The unsanctioned arrangements sometimes allow staff to sleep for up to four hours during an eight-hour shift, they said. The FAA does not allow controllers to sleep at work, even during breaks. Controllers who are caught can be suspended or fired. But at many air traffic facilities the sleeping swaps are tolerated as long as they do not affect safety, the controllers said. “It has always been a problem,” said former controller Rick Perl, who retired last year. Air transport United States guardian.co.uk

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PBS’s Tavis Smiley Claims 2011 Budget Deal ‘An Immoral Document’

As part of the political panel on NBC's Meet the Press on Sunday, PBS host Tavis Smiley decried the recent budget deal in Congress to fund the government through the rest of 2011: “I believe that budgets are moral documents….And I'm not so sure that this is not anything more than an immoral document where the poor are concerned.” Smiley went on to lament how the budget negotiations “effectively locked out the American people, namely, the poor.” He further ranted: “I don't understand why it is in this town that every debate about money always begins and ends with how we can further reward the rich and more punish the poor. I don't get that.” Following former Michigan Democratic Governor Jennifer Granholm describing the possibility of compromise between Democrats and Republicans on the 2012 budget, Smiley went after President Obama for not fighting harder against spending cuts: “…a week ago, the President comes out and congratulates Republicans on the biggest budget cuts ever in the history of this country, then the next week, you're slamming them about their deficit reduction priorities. So I'm not even sure I understand what side of his mouth the President's really speaking out of, respectfully.” Near the end of the program, Smiley shared some concluding thoughts with the rest of the panel: “The only thing I want to add to this conversation, because I would not – I couldn't live with myself if I didn't say this…. this conversation is not disconnected from these wars that we are engaged in. I have to say that. Dr. King said all the time that war is the enemy of the poor. If we're going to get this country back on the right track and get these poor and the underemployed and the unemployed lifted up, we have to understand that war is the enemy of the poor. And I just got to say that.” Here is a transcript of the April 17 exchange: 11:00AM ET (…) JENNIFER GRANHOLM [FMR. GOVERNOR, D-MI]: But here's the great thing, is that this week, the President gave the parameters on the Democratic side, and Congressman Ryan gave the parameters on the Republican side. So, now we know what the arena is, and they agree that the deficit reduction should be about $4 trillion. They agree that everybody should put entitlements on the table. They disagree on how to get there. And they agree on what they're going to do about business taxes, or at least in concept, that we should have a more competitive business tax that doesn't have all these loopholes. I think that is a huge arena for compromise, and I think the President really spoke to a lot of Democrats- DAVID GREGORY: But does that assume, Tavis, that that's really the arena that we're operating in, or is this the land of fantasy, in terms of what's actually going to get passed? TAVIS SMILEY: I think it's the latter, and I'm not even sure what the arena is. I note, with respect to the Governor, that a week ago, the President comes out and congratulates Republicans on the biggest budget cuts ever in the history of this country, then the next week, you're slamming them about their deficit reduction priorities. So I'm not even sure I understand what side of his mouth the President's really speaking out of, respectfully. What I know is this, I believe that budgets are moral documents. Budgets are moral documents. You can say what you say, but you are what you are. And when you put your budget on the table, that's when we learn who you really are. And I'm not so sure that this is not anything more than an immoral document where the poor are concerned. Yes to your point, David, we avoided a shutdown of government, but we effectively locked out the American people, namely, the poor. And I don't understand why it is in this town that every debate about money always begins and ends with how we can further reward the rich and more punish the poor. I don't get that. (…) SMILEY: The only thing I want to add to this conversation, because I would not – I couldn't live with myself if I didn't say this. Because these things seem so disconnected when we're talking about budget policy in this country, but this conversation is not disconnected from these wars that we are engaged in. I have to say that. Dr. King said all the time that war is the enemy of the poor. If we're going to get this country back on the right track and get these poor and the underemployed and the unemployed lifted up, we have to understand that war is the enemy of the poor. And I just got to say that. — Kyle Drennen is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here.

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M1 pressed into action by board man

Extreme ironing enthusiast takes advantage of motorway closure after scrapyard fire to iron his shirt in the middle lane Extreme ironing was born in the UK, so perhaps it should come as no surprise that one opportunistic enthusiast used the closure of the M1 motorway to indulge his passion for the sport. Described as “the latest danger sport that combines the thrills of an extreme outdoor activity with the satisfaction of a well-pressed shirt”, extreme ironing fittingly has its roots in Leicester, served by the M1 . Phil Shaw, who has written the definitive book on the sport , is oft credited with inventing it in 1997, and since then instances have sprung up across the globe. Last year the travel website Gadling.com compiled the 10 best ironing stunts from around the world, featuring two separate instances of ironing on canoes and a particularly daring attempt to press a shirt while skydiving . The dressing gown-clad individual who jogged onto the M1 to iron what appeared to be a single white shirt in reality had enough time to rattle through the rest of his wardrobe, with all southbound lanes between junctions one and four remaining closed until further notice because of fire damage. The seven-mile section has been shut since Friday after a blaze at a scrapyard underneath an elevated section in the Mill Hill area of north London. The full width of the motorway will not reopen until the middle or end of next week. The good news for extreme ironers is sadly unlikely to offset the misery suffered by motorists and holidaymakers. Road transport Extreme sports Transport Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk

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Nigerian election marred by violence

Nigeria’s Muslim north erupts in anger as Christian incumbent Goodluck Jonathan takes commanding lead in presidential election Angry opposition supporters in Nigeria’s Muslim north set fire to homes bearing ruling party banners and heavy gunfire rang out in several towns as officials released presidential election results on Monday showing the Christian incumbent Goodluck Jonathan had gained an insurmountable lead. Results were still pending in four states from Saturday’s election but tallies released live on national television indicated Jonathan had a commanding lead of more than 11m votes with about 6m left to be announced. The Muslim north had largely voted for former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari. Witnesses said youths in the northern city of Kano were setting fire to homes that bore the banners of Jonathan’s People’s Democratic party. Associated Press saw hundreds of youths carrying wooden planks in the street, shouting “Only Buhari” in the Hausa language. In Kaduna, home to the oil-rich nation’s vice president Namadi Sambo, angry young men burned tyres in the streets and threw stones at police and soldiers trying to restore order, according to witnesses. Shehu Sani, a civil rights leader, said: “I’m holed up in my room. There’s gunshots everywhere. They are firing and killing people on the street.” Kaduna state police spokesman Aminu Lawal described the fighting as an uprising. Federal emergency management agency spokesman Yushua Shuaib declined to release casualty figures, fearing the details would further stoke sectarian violence. “Such a thing can encourage a reprisal attack,” he said. Election officials said they would finish releasing election results throughout Monday regardless of the violence. Over the weekend, opposition supporters rioted in the north-eastern state of Gombe. Protesters burned down the house of the local chairman of the ruling party, two hotels and at least two buses. The rioters accused Gombe’s ruling party government of rigging the results to ensure Jonathan got at least 25% of the vote. Police chief Suleiman Lawal said on Sunday there had been a “complete breakdown of law and order”. Nigeria’s elections have long been marred by violence and rigging. On Saturday, a hotel blast in Kaduna wounded eight people and a police officer was shot dead at a Maiduguri polling station. Nigeria, a nation of 150 million people, is divided between the Christian-dominated south and the Muslim north. A dozen states across Nigeria’s north have Islamic Sharia law in place, although the area remains under the control of secular state governments. Thousands have been killed in Muslim-Christian violence in the last decade, but the roots of the sectarian conflict are often embedded in struggles for political and economic dominance. The country’s Muslim north regards Jonathan as the Christian from the south who took over after the death of the country’s elected Muslim leader. The People’s Democratic party has dominated Nigerian politics since it became a democracy 12 years ago. Many of the north’s elite wanted the ruling party to honour an unwritten power-sharing agreement calling for a Muslim candidate to run for president, yet Jonathan prevailed in the party’s primary election. Nigeria Islam guardian.co.uk

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Nigerian election marred by violence

Nigeria’s Muslim north erupts in anger as Christian incumbent Goodluck Jonathan takes commanding lead in presidential election Angry opposition supporters in Nigeria’s Muslim north set fire to homes bearing ruling party banners and heavy gunfire rang out in several towns as officials released presidential election results on Monday showing the Christian incumbent Goodluck Jonathan had gained an insurmountable lead. Results were still pending in four states from Saturday’s election but tallies released live on national television indicated Jonathan had a commanding lead of more than 11m votes with about 6m left to be announced. The Muslim north had largely voted for former military ruler Muhammadu Buhari. Witnesses said youths in the northern city of Kano were setting fire to homes that bore the banners of Jonathan’s People’s Democratic party. Associated Press saw hundreds of youths carrying wooden planks in the street, shouting “Only Buhari” in the Hausa language. In Kaduna, home to the oil-rich nation’s vice president Namadi Sambo, angry young men burned tyres in the streets and threw stones at police and soldiers trying to restore order, according to witnesses. Shehu Sani, a civil rights leader, said: “I’m holed up in my room. There’s gunshots everywhere. They are firing and killing people on the street.” Kaduna state police spokesman Aminu Lawal described the fighting as an uprising. Federal emergency management agency spokesman Yushua Shuaib declined to release casualty figures, fearing the details would further stoke sectarian violence. “Such a thing can encourage a reprisal attack,” he said. Election officials said they would finish releasing election results throughout Monday regardless of the violence. Over the weekend, opposition supporters rioted in the north-eastern state of Gombe. Protesters burned down the house of the local chairman of the ruling party, two hotels and at least two buses. The rioters accused Gombe’s ruling party government of rigging the results to ensure Jonathan got at least 25% of the vote. Police chief Suleiman Lawal said on Sunday there had been a “complete breakdown of law and order”. Nigeria’s elections have long been marred by violence and rigging. On Saturday, a hotel blast in Kaduna wounded eight people and a police officer was shot dead at a Maiduguri polling station. Nigeria, a nation of 150 million people, is divided between the Christian-dominated south and the Muslim north. A dozen states across Nigeria’s north have Islamic Sharia law in place, although the area remains under the control of secular state governments. Thousands have been killed in Muslim-Christian violence in the last decade, but the roots of the sectarian conflict are often embedded in struggles for political and economic dominance. The country’s Muslim north regards Jonathan as the Christian from the south who took over after the death of the country’s elected Muslim leader. The People’s Democratic party has dominated Nigerian politics since it became a democracy 12 years ago. Many of the north’s elite wanted the ruling party to honour an unwritten power-sharing agreement calling for a Muslim candidate to run for president, yet Jonathan prevailed in the party’s primary election. Nigeria Islam guardian.co.uk

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Mohammed Hasan Alwan’s Oil Field

A young boy finds his village transformed by the oil wells he can glimpse from the roof of his house, in this new story from Mohammed Hasan Alwan, translated by Peter Clark When Ja’far’s father went to work for SakOil, I asked my Dad about these oil fields everyone was talking about. He told me they weren’t that far from our village. That evening I kept on asking and asking him about them, and eventually he took me up to the roof of our house. He pointed with his slender hand to the eastern horizon, where five spots of light flickered uncertainly. “There,” he said gently, “under each of those flares is an oil well.” I was obsessed with these lights, staring at them like a moth which tries to steer by the stars, hoping that I could fly straight toward them. Over on the other side of the roof, the washing hung damp in the still air. An ant crawled over my foot, heading for a dark corner. I kicked it away – I wasn’t going anywhere. I stood up and followed my Dad back down to our living room like a disappointed Sufi. Yet my faith never vanished. All that hot, damp summer, I spent many hours looking at the flickerings of those flares as if I was some religious novice. They were like some great show, the gas squeezing up from the depths of the oil well to be consumed in flame against the intense black horizon, like some great dragon. I could hardly step onto the roof without looking to the east and counting those flares like a catechism. Every time one appeared I rushed to my Dad, a lucky astronomer who has sighted a new star in the sky. Dad never shared my excitement. Every morning I would watch the men setting off to work in those oil wells. Some went in cars to the SakOil headquarters wearing suits, though whenever they were in the village they wore the local thawbs. Others gathered at the vegetable souk where large buses took them to the distant fields. These wore blue overalls and long leather boots and carried yellow safety helmets. They were all enchanted for me, all heading for the mystical oil fields early in the morning and coming back at sunset. Out there they were subduing the earth, extracting oil, feeding those flares, discovering the impossible and mixing with Americans. In short, they were playing major roles on the world stage every day. And they weren’t just setting light to those flares above the oil wells, they were providing fuel for our village as well. When they got back they were full of illuminating stories, stories I collected up in my mind as if they were relics of an immortal saint. I treasured the tales cousin Sulaiman told when he came back from Bahrain for my grandmother’s funeral. He had worked on the first pipeline project, when American women were roaming the streets without covering their heads. “People used to be more accepting,” he said with a sigh. The men nodded. Once Ali, our neighbour, said he was one of the workers crowded around the king in the black and white photograph of a recently-discovered oil field hanging proudly on his sitting-room wall. I didn’t know he had been this close to royalty, so I asked which one was him. He said he was hiding his face because taking photographs is haram. My Dad said it was past my bedtime. Ja’far used to live in the street opposite our house. His Dad would spend three days without a break in the oil field, and then come home to spend a couple of days with his wife and children before setting off again. Ja’far told me his Dad boarded a fast boat that took him from the port of Ras Tannura to an off-shore oil rig in the Safaniya field in the middle of the sea. Ja’far became my best friend. Every day I heard a different story from him about his Dad. I didn’t ask myself whether a story was true or not – anything was possible for his Dad. All I wanted was one day to work in an oil field myself, and to have a son who would be as proud of me as Ja’far was of his Dad. My Dad didn’t work in the oil field. He taught at the deaf and dumb school at the end of our street. He spent his day with children who could not speak or hear, and so I could hardly expect him to bring home any interesting tales. When Dad came back with a bag of fresh hamour from the fish market and a bag of cabbage leaves from the souk, I’d be at the other end of the village, playing football with Ja’far. When his Dad got back from the oil rig he would greet me with a warm handshake. And one day he gave me a small medallion stamped with SakOil. I guarded it like a jewel from Paradise. One afternoon after prayers, Ja’far told me that he had some important news. His Dad would no longer be working in the Safaniya field. He was being transferred to a new oil field in the middle of the Empty Quarter. This meant that instead of boarding a fast boat he would be taking a plane owned by SakOil into the desert, translating him ever closer to heaven. I asked Dad that evening whether the flares we could see from our rooftop were in the middle of the sea or in the middle of the land. He replied with a laugh, his hands thrown up as if he was surrendering. “My boy, keep calm. One day you’ll see them at our front door.” “At our front door?” I almost shouted. He nodded, but he didn’t say any more. That night I dreamed about oil wells. I was up on the roof of our house singing the praises of the flares to a group of people down below, but I didn’t recognize them. The flares came closer and closer, and I carried on praising them loudly like a devoted sorcerer. They flickered even brighter and came right up to me in a circular wave of stars and fire. I bent down to the closest flare and reached out to touch it. My hand pierced the flare smoothly. It felt so cold. I kept my hand within the flame. I dreamed of the oil wells many times after that night, and it seemed as if my dreams were coming true. As the oil fields developed, the wells sprung up nearer and nearer to our village. Ja’far moved to al-Dammam – his mother muttering about the dangers of asthma and bronchitis – but I didn’t mind. Soon the wells were so close we could see the workers moving around the base, or climbing up to adjust the machinery. I was dreaming of the wells last night. My kid sister was coughing again, shaking and crying in the darkness as she struggled for air. She had woken up my mother as well, who came in with a drink of water and sat down beside her, stroking my sisters’ hair and humming an old song. I lifted my head from the pillow. “Do you think father knows anyone who could help me find a job at SakOil?” I asked. She stopped singing and looked up. “Go to sleep,” she said. • Supported by the National Lottery through Arts Council England Original writing Fiction Oil Oil spills BP oil spill Energy guardian.co.uk

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Tipoffs from former journalist Emma Smiter ended up in national newspapers A police community support officer has been jailed for 12 months for leaking confidential information to the press. Emma Smiter’s illegal tipoffs, one of which related to an allegation of attempted murder, were reported in national newspapers including the Sun and Daily Mirror. The material, gleaned from Hertfordshire police computers, was passed to a news agency journalist and then on to the wider media. The 26-year-old, of Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, was sentenced at Basildon crown court, a court official said. In March, a jury at the court found Smiter guilty of misconduct in a public office and attempting to pervert the course of justice. Smiter, a former local newspaper reporter with the Welwyn and Hatfield Times, had denied the charges. During the trial, prosecutor Richard Scott said that Smiter breached police and public trust with her various disclosures. On one occasion, this involved revealing the name of a woman alleged to have been the victim of an attempted murder, the court was told. At the time, detectives had deliberately withheld the woman’s personal details from the public for legal reasons. Information about a charity box at a police station in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, being “£12 short” also appeared in a newspaper, to the embarrassment of the force. Smiter joined the Hertfordshire force as a police community support officer in 2008. Once in this position, she passed some of what she knew to Neil Hyde, a director of the INS news agency, jurors heard. On arrest, she claimed certain details had come from blogs rather than police files. But the court heard she fabricated the internet material to support her defence and deliberately misled a jury. When interviewed, she admitted she “knew the rules” about police holding personal data and denied being responsible for passing information to Hyde between 2008 and 2009. She claimed she had only ever used police computers and emails for legitimate reasons and had been “just friends” with Hyde. Police Regional & local newspapers Newspapers & magazines Newspapers guardian.co.uk

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Deadly attack on Afghan ministry

Taliban claim responsibility for attack by infiltrators ‘aimed at French defence minister’ A man has opened fire in the Afghan defence ministry in Kabul, killing at least two soldiers. The Taliban has claimed responsibility for the attack.. The gunman is believed to have been killed after he began shooting at defence staff. Spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid said insurgents infiltrated the ministry and had planned the attack to coincide with the visit of the French defence minister, who they believed was meeting officials in the compound. French officials said the minister, Gerard Longuet, was not in the ministry. Mujahid said suicide bombers were also involved in the attack. Another spokesman, General Mohammad Zahir Azimi, said the perpetrator was an Afghan soldier who opened fire on colleagues in the ministry compound. Azimi said he did not know how many others had died. The two accounts could not be immediately reconciled. Reporters were not allowed in the ministry after the shooting. Extra guards took up positions at the entrances to the compound and security forces closed the road, but the area appeared calm from the outside. Lt Col Eric de Lapresle, a spokesman for French forces in Afghanistan, said Longuet was not in the ministry. The minister had arrived in Afghanistan on Sunday and had been meeting French troops in the east of the country. Some 3,850 French troops are deployed in Afghanistan as part of the Nato mission. The shooting comes on the same day that a protest against the arrest of a mullah in Parwan province turned violent with protesters and police shooting at each other, killing at least one person, officials said. The demonstration started over the arrest of a local mullah overnight in Charikar, the provincial capital, said provincial police chief Sher Ahmad Maladani. Armed men in the crowd started shooting and police have not been able to regain control, Maladani said. The attack at the defence ministry comes within month of foreign forces starting to transfer security responsibilities to Afghan troops. Nato-led troops have been claiming solid progress in efforts to bolster the numbers and quality of the Afghan police and army. On Saturday a suicide bomber in an Afghan army uniform entered a desert base in the east of the country and killed five foreign and four Afghan soldiers – the highest toll of Nato-led troops in a single attack for several months. On Friday a suicide bomber in police uniform evaded tight security at the police headquarters in Kandahar city and killed Khan Mohammad Mujahid, the provincial police chief. Afghanistan Taliban Global terrorism Adam Gabbatt guardian.co.uk

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Danielle Staub

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Danielle Staub

OMG Jersey star, is being sued for $350000 by the owner of the Penthouse Executive!!! OMG Danielle Straub Sued for Breach of Contract !!! OMG ‘Real Housewives’ Danielle Staub has a 75-minute sex tape!! Danielle Staub (housewife) sex tape? Foxs News | World News Today Anybody know where I can find the Danielle Staub sex tape for free? No BS websites please. you can find it here newdaniellestaub.tk. i found it here.. daniellestaub.tk/ really hot video.. I finally found a link that actually works. … danielle staub | Season Three of the Real Housewives of New Jersey … Video Rating: 5 / 5 Season Three of the Real Housewives of New Jersey Is About Strippers, Drag, and Fighting [Video] # previews. Danielle Staub (housewife) sex tape? Foxs News – US Hot Trends This entry was written by admin, posted on April 18, 2011 at 4:53 am , filed under Hot News and tagged danielle staub . Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post. … 'Real Housewife' Danielle Staub Sued by Swan Media Owner … Former Real Housewives of New Jersey star Danielle Staub , whose checkered past and sex tape upstaged the antics of the other wives on the show, is being sued for $ 350000 by the owner of the Penthouse Executive strip club for violating … Danielle Staub ??????? | Chief Blog Question by mandy: Danielle Staub ??????? What is her DEAL??? I watch The Real Housewives religiously basically haha, and Danielle makes me CRAZY! How agrees?? I think she has some sort of mental problem… Do you think anyone actually … leemangya says: danielle staub http://bit.ly/ikjWWX Anyone happy Danielle Staub left The Real Housewives Of New Jersey?

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Dana Perino Accuses President Obama of ‘Saying Offensive, Crazy Things’ in Budget Speech

Click here to view this media Well it looks like we’ve got another Republican who is terribly offended by President Obama’s budget speech; former Bush Press Secretary turned Fox shill Dana Perino. Perino accuses President Obama of “saying offensive, crazy things” in his budget speech, but doesn’t bother to fill us in on just what those things were, other than to lie and say that President Obama called the Republicans un-American, which he didn’t. I’m sure she thinks that expecting anyone to possibly pay more in taxes is just crazy talk as well, but she didn’t bring that up here. Here’s a little reminder for Perino of what the President did say : Now, to their credit, one vision has been presented and championed by Republicans in the House of Representatives and embraced by several of their party’s presidential candidates. It’s a plan that aims to reduce our deficit by $4 trillion over the next 10 years, and one that addresses the challenge of Medicare and Medicaid in the years after that. These are both worthy goals. They’re worthy goals for us to achieve. But the way this plan achieves those goals would lead to a fundamentally different America than the one we’ve known certainly in my lifetime. In fact, I think it would be fundamentally different than what we’ve known throughout our history. Full transcript below the fold. WILLIAMS: — in terms of this Republican field, right now the big money is standing on the sidelines. Everybody is holding their powder dry because they don’t see anything out there that indicates that any of these guys can beat President Obama. So what do you see going on? You see Donald Trump rise to the top of the polls. Donald Trump, out there yesterday, talking to Tea Party people. And they’re all talking to Tea Party people now. Sarah Palin, talking to Tea Party people. Pawlenty, talking to Tea Party people. Haley Barbour, talking to Tea Party people. And they’re saying crazy stuff. I mean, how is Haley Barbour going to get away with saying, oh, we shouldn’t be involved in the war in Afghanistan? Donald Trump saying, you know what? Those Japanese — after the tsunami and earthquake, those Japanese have been ripping us off for a long time. These are offensive, crazy things, but they just like to stir it up. WALLACE: OK. All right. But let’s talk, though — I’m going to take one of your points — don’t look at me like that. WILLIAMS: Well, I’m surprised. WALLACE: I’m going to take one of your points, which is the idea that there is — people are waiting to see who else is going to jump in. And I want to address that with you, Dana, because given the relative lack of excitement about the current field, some people are suggesting that — and let’s put a couple of candidates on the screen — that New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, or Congressman Paul Ryan could get in the race as late as next fall and still have a chance. Is that possible? PERINO: Well, I think anything is possible. And I call that the “maybe someone will emerge caucus,” because there is not anyone that has really taken fire. I want to address one thing on the point, though, which is that there is another person in this presidential race saying offensive, crazy things. And that is President Obama, who called the Republicans un-American this week in a speech in which he invited people. Now, you can do that if you want to make it a hyper-partisan thing. But the poll you haven’t shown yet is that 70 percent of the American people, according to Gallup, think the country is on the wrong track. So, I think if I were President Obama’s political team, I would think, wow, we should have had a better week last week than we did. Rising gas prices will continue to dog them, and maybe somebody will emerge out of this Republican field that will be able to catch people’s attention and go the distance. h/t Media Matters

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