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India v Australia – LIVE

• Hit F5 or tickle the autorefresh button for the latest updates • Email rob.smyth@guardian.co.uk with your thoughts • Buy the Guardian’s Ashes OBO book, why don’t you? 1st over: Australia 3-0 (Watson 1, Haddin 1) India will open the bowling with the offspinner Ravichandran Ashwin. He was impressive against the West Indies on Sunday, and his second ball is a nice doosra that Watson defends respectfully. There’s an interesting atmosphere – unusually hushed by Indian standards (still deafening by any other standards), a reflection of the insecurity surrounding both sides. Watson takes a single to leg and then the fourth ball turns so sharply as to be a leg-side wide. There is a sense that this pitch will turn a lot more from this end than the other, so expect all the spinners from this end. The tense start continues when Haddin drags an inside edge over midwicket for a single. You can smell the fear. “Thanks for your link to that yoga video, which has left me scarred for life,” says Chris Hotham. “From now on I will be resting in the safe haven of the blog page and will certainly not be clicking any links.” Something for a Thursday morning, from Bharath Rajagopalan “As the title says, this is a very scary video .” And I thought Napoleon Dynamite was a comedy, not a documentary. Australia have won the toss and will bat first. MS Dhoni says he would also have batted, and that’s a decent toss to win on a pitch that should lose a bit of life as the day progresses. There’s some surprising team news on both sides. India have omitted Yusuf Pathan, with Suresh Raina preferred at No7 and the fit again Virender Sehwag coming back into the side. That really is a shock. Australia have also strengthened their batting, with David Hussey replacing Steve Smith. That’s a reflection of the poor performance of the middle order on both sides thus far. India Sehwag, Tendulkar, Gambhir, Kohli, Yuvraj, Dhoni (c/wk), Raina, Harbhajan, Ashwin, Zaheer, Patel. Australia Watson, Haddin (wk), Ponting (c), Clarke, M Hussey, White, D Hussey, Johnson, Lee, Krejza, Tait. The last time India went out of their World Cup , in 1996, the fans rioted . Just saying. In other news, here’s some rare footage of Graham Gooch sweeping India to death in the semi-finals in 1987 – the other occasion on which India were eliminated as hosts. Whoever wins tonight will play Pakistan on Wednesday. If India get through, that will make today’s match seem like a jaunty little warm-up fixture. Preamble This is a quarter-final only in name. In nature, India v Australia is something much grander, especially when it is the hosts against the holders. It’s almost too big for a final, never mind a last-eight game, and that adds a significant frisson to today’s contest. There is a unique tension when two superpowers meet ahead of schedule. If the quarter-finals is par for the heavyweights in a football World Cup, then in rugby and cricket it’s the semi-finals. If you go out before that you are generally doomed to bathe in ignominy for the foreseeable future. Everyone and everything has an unspoken minimum requirement when it comes to performance. For some, it’s a triumph to simply get through the day without making a total fool of themselves, or without brushing their teeth with the Original Source Chocolate and Mint Shower Melt and smearing Colgate under their armpits; for some of us you, defiant mediocrity really is a victory. For others, and certainly for these two teams, the bar is a little higher. A quarter-final exit alone is enough to invite widespread criticism – but this time that will be exacerbated by both teams’ modest performances during the group stage. Whoever departs today will have beaten just one of the top eight sides, New Zealand in Australia’s case and West Indies in India’s. That’[s not good enough. Both sides have problems, and have been dangerously dependent on their openers and one high-class fast bowler (Brett Lee for Australia, Zaheer Khan for India). Today’s match might not be decided by who reaches the greater peaks, but who best avoids the troughs. Chuck in the compelling subplots, particularly Ricky Ponting fighting for his life and Sachin Tendulkar on 99 international centuries, and it’s clear that this game is – as Mark Nicholas once said – massive, massive . It’s almost too much to comprehend that one of these sides will be out of the tournament by this evening. But they will and, whoever it is, they probably shouldn’t read the papers tomorrow. * Chocolate shower gel? That’s a still-drunk-the-morning-after accident waiting to happen. What next. Deodorant-flavour beer? Ready salted crisps with a hint of Ralgex? Cricket World Cup 2011 India cricket team Australia cricket team Over by over reports Cricket Rob Smyth guardian.co.uk

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Iranian TV cleared over ‘confession’

State-run Press TV showed Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani describing her alleged role in her husband’s death Ofcom has ruled that Iran’s state-run Press TV station, which has offices in London, did not breach the UK’s broadcasting rules in transmitting a programme that showed an Iranian woman participating in the reconstruction of her alleged part in the murder of her husband. Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, 43, whose sentence of death by stoning for adultery triggered an international outcry, was taken from prison to her home in Osku, in Iran’s East Azarbaijan province, last December. She appeared in front of a camera for Press TV recounting how she rendered her husband unconscious before the killer electrocuted him. Ashtiani’s 22-year-old son, Sajad Ghaderzadeh, played the part of her husband in the broadcast. Human rights campaigners described it as a forced confession aimed at collecting new evidence against her and distracting world attention from Iran’s embarrassment over the case. Press TV is Iran’s English-language state television station and has its main overseas office in London, where many of its programmes are made. People in Iran do not have access to the channel. Opponents of the Iranian regime believe the channel is used for propaganda purposes. In response to a complaint made by the Iranian human rights campaigner Fazel Hawramy, who asked whether it was ethical for Press TV to make the imprisoned son play his murdered father, Ofcom said in a letter, seen by the Guardian, that the broadcaster had not breached its code. “Given the broadcaster’s assurances that both Sakineh Ashtiani and her son willingly participated in this programme, we considered that the context was not materially misleading so as to cause harm and offence,” Adam Baxter, standards executive of the media regulator, wrote to Hawramy. Ofcom went on to say: “Given the high public salience of the case of Sakineh Ashtiani in Iran, and across the world generally, we considered that it was unsurprising for this matter to be discussed on a serious analysis programme such as this, which focused on Iranian-related matters.” The regulator admitted it was “unusual for a prisoner facing an allegation of murder to take part in a reconstruction of their alleged crime”, but ruled: “It is an editorial matter for broadcasters as to what issues and content they cover in their services, and how they cover them, as long as they comply with the code.” Ofcom added: “The fact that both [Mohammadi Ashtiani and her son] did not appear to be in any obvious distress in their appearances on screen” was another factor it had considered in reaching its decision that “the content, though potentially offensive to some, could be justified by the context”. Ghaderzadeh had been arrested by Iranian authorities before the programme after he spoke to foreign media in support of his mother. Hawramy, who writes for a human rights forum called Kurdishblogger , said: “It is disappointing for me to see that Ofcom has based its conclusions on the assurances Press TV’s editors have given to them. How come Press TV has access to Ms Ashtiani while she, herself, has been denied access to her lawyer? And while one of her lawyers was forced to flee Iran and the other one remains in jail? Why is it that independent journalists were not allowed to access her unrestrictedly while Iran’s state journalists were given permission to?” Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, an Iranian human rights activist based in Norway who is also a spokesman for the NGO Iran Human Rights, said: “I was simply shocked by reading Ofcom’s response. One would expect that Ofcom has sufficient knowledge of Iran’s history of using televised confessions, and the fact that Iran is one of the world’s biggest jailers of journalists. Iranian authorities claim that prisoners appear ‘willingly’ on the TV and confess against themselves but very often these confessions have been used as new evidence for the death sentences the prisoners have been given afterwards.” According to Ofcom’s letter, Press TV has responded to the regulator and has said: “The complaints are based on the complainants’ assumptions that Ms Ashtiani and her son were forced to appear in the programme and the reconstruction scene. Being that this assumption is false, there is no validity to the complaints. Press TV did not ‘make’ or ‘force’ Ms Ashtiani and her son to do anything they were uncomfortable with. Both participated willingly, and gave no indication that they felt humiliation, distress or violation of their human dignity at any time prior to, during, or subsequent to the filming and broadcast of the programme.” Ofcom said it had received three complaints over Press TV’s programme involving Ashtiani. According to Amnesty International, Ashtiani was sentenced to death by stoning for “adultery while married” but was also given a 10-year prison term in 2006 for the murder of her husband, which her lawyer said later was subsequently reduced to five years for “complicity” in the crime. Last October her son and her lawyer, Houtan Kian, were arrested, with two German journalists who were detained after trying to interview her family. The journalists were released after a few months. Sakineh Ashtiani’s stoning sentence was suspended last year, but she and her lawyer remain in jail. Ofcom Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani Iran Television industry Middle East Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk

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Iranian TV cleared over ‘confession’

State-run Press TV showed Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani describing her alleged role in her husband’s death Ofcom has ruled that Iran’s state-run Press TV station, which has offices in London, did not breach the UK’s broadcasting rules in transmitting a programme that showed an Iranian woman participating in the reconstruction of her alleged part in the murder of her husband. Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, 43, whose sentence of death by stoning for adultery triggered an international outcry, was taken from prison to her home in Osku, in Iran’s East Azarbaijan province, last December. She appeared in front of a camera for Press TV recounting how she rendered her husband unconscious before the killer electrocuted him. Ashtiani’s 22-year-old son, Sajad Ghaderzadeh, played the part of her husband in the broadcast. Human rights campaigners described it as a forced confession aimed at collecting new evidence against her and distracting world attention from Iran’s embarrassment over the case. Press TV is Iran’s English-language state television station and has its main overseas office in London, where many of its programmes are made. People in Iran do not have access to the channel. Opponents of the Iranian regime believe the channel is used for propaganda purposes. In response to a complaint made by the Iranian human rights campaigner Fazel Hawramy, who asked whether it was ethical for Press TV to make the imprisoned son play his murdered father, Ofcom said in a letter, seen by the Guardian, that the broadcaster had not breached its code. “Given the broadcaster’s assurances that both Sakineh Ashtiani and her son willingly participated in this programme, we considered that the context was not materially misleading so as to cause harm and offence,” Adam Baxter, standards executive of the media regulator, wrote to Hawramy. Ofcom went on to say: “Given the high public salience of the case of Sakineh Ashtiani in Iran, and across the world generally, we considered that it was unsurprising for this matter to be discussed on a serious analysis programme such as this, which focused on Iranian-related matters.” The regulator admitted it was “unusual for a prisoner facing an allegation of murder to take part in a reconstruction of their alleged crime”, but ruled: “It is an editorial matter for broadcasters as to what issues and content they cover in their services, and how they cover them, as long as they comply with the code.” Ofcom added: “The fact that both [Mohammadi Ashtiani and her son] did not appear to be in any obvious distress in their appearances on screen” was another factor it had considered in reaching its decision that “the content, though potentially offensive to some, could be justified by the context”. Ghaderzadeh had been arrested by Iranian authorities before the programme after he spoke to foreign media in support of his mother. Hawramy, who writes for a human rights forum called Kurdishblogger , said: “It is disappointing for me to see that Ofcom has based its conclusions on the assurances Press TV’s editors have given to them. How come Press TV has access to Ms Ashtiani while she, herself, has been denied access to her lawyer? And while one of her lawyers was forced to flee Iran and the other one remains in jail? Why is it that independent journalists were not allowed to access her unrestrictedly while Iran’s state journalists were given permission to?” Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, an Iranian human rights activist based in Norway who is also a spokesman for the NGO Iran Human Rights, said: “I was simply shocked by reading Ofcom’s response. One would expect that Ofcom has sufficient knowledge of Iran’s history of using televised confessions, and the fact that Iran is one of the world’s biggest jailers of journalists. Iranian authorities claim that prisoners appear ‘willingly’ on the TV and confess against themselves but very often these confessions have been used as new evidence for the death sentences the prisoners have been given afterwards.” According to Ofcom’s letter, Press TV has responded to the regulator and has said: “The complaints are based on the complainants’ assumptions that Ms Ashtiani and her son were forced to appear in the programme and the reconstruction scene. Being that this assumption is false, there is no validity to the complaints. Press TV did not ‘make’ or ‘force’ Ms Ashtiani and her son to do anything they were uncomfortable with. Both participated willingly, and gave no indication that they felt humiliation, distress or violation of their human dignity at any time prior to, during, or subsequent to the filming and broadcast of the programme.” Ofcom said it had received three complaints over Press TV’s programme involving Ashtiani. According to Amnesty International, Ashtiani was sentenced to death by stoning for “adultery while married” but was also given a 10-year prison term in 2006 for the murder of her husband, which her lawyer said later was subsequently reduced to five years for “complicity” in the crime. Last October her son and her lawyer, Houtan Kian, were arrested, with two German journalists who were detained after trying to interview her family. The journalists were released after a few months. Sakineh Ashtiani’s stoning sentence was suspended last year, but she and her lawyer remain in jail. Ofcom Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani Iran Television industry Middle East Saeed Kamali Dehghan guardian.co.uk

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Blast at Pakistan police station

At least five people dead after suicide bomber rams car loaded with explosives into a police station in north-west Pakistan A suicide bomber has rammed a car loaded with explosives into a police station in northwestern Pakistan, killing five and wounding more than two dozen people, police said. It was the second attack in as many days against police in Hangu, a district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province that has been hit by militants many times in recent years. The dead included one officer and four passers-by, said Rashid Khan, the top police official in Hangu. Most of the roughly 30 wounded in the attack in Doaba town on Thursday were also passers-by, he said. The police tried to stop the bomber to check his car for explosives, but he sped past them into the station, said Khan. The blast also damaged several nearby homes and shops, Khan said. On Wednesday, a roadside bomb struck a police patrol in Hangu, wounding six officers. No group has claimed responsibility for the attacks, but Taliban militants have regularly targeted police throughout the north-west. Hangu is located close to Pakistan’s troubled tribal region, where Taliban and al-Qaida fighters have flourished. Pakistan Taliban guardian.co.uk

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Chris Matthews and Robert Reich Ironically Discuss ‘Republican Lies About Jobs’

Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich wrote a truly nonsensical piece for the Huffington Post Tuesday ironically called “The Republicans' Big Lies About Jobs.” MSNBC's Chris Matthews must have loved this tripe and its sophomoric title for he invited the Berkeley professor on Wednesday's “Hardball” so that the pair could put on a clinic in liberal economic fantasy (video follows with partial transcript and oodles of commentary): (BEGIN VIDEO) REPRESENTATIVE ERIC CANTOR (R-VIRGINIA): We have adopted a two-track approach called cut and grow. Now, the first part, cut, is obvious. We know that we have to stop spending money that we don't have, and we have to begin managing the money we do have and spend it more wisely. The American people are tightening their belts and Washington should too. The growth part is about those gazelles, growing businesses that add new employees every month, keeping regulators from running amok. (END VIDEO) CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Welcome back to “Hardball.” That was House Majority Leader Eric Cantor Monday out at Stanford University. His speech on the economy prompted a reaction from former labor secretary Robert Reich in the Huffington Post. We all read it. Reich wrote about what he called, “Republicans’ Big Lies About Jobs.” Reich says there are five of them: deficit cuts somehow create jobs; tax cuts for the rich create jobs; corporate tax cuts create jobs; wage and benefit cuts create jobs; regulation killing creates jobs, and; regulations kill jobs. […] Robert, you say what we were taught in school. So, is there somebody teaching something else? I mean, if you want people to spend more money, you give them more money in wages or whatever, you don't fire them and leave them as paupers, because they're not very good consumers then. When you fire people, take away their rights to bargain for higher wages you take away their ability to spend their wages. So, what is this thing, this sort of religion course we’re getting, this primer we’re getting from Cantor? What is it, neo-classical from the 19th century? Where does he believe that stuff from? From here, Reich repeated some of the nonsense in his piece concerning how spending cuts would be the end of the world now, and President Obama needs to push back to prevent this from happening. However, what was stunning about this over eight minute segment was how Matthews and Reich admitted that the economy is in terrible shape while claiming it was caused by spending cuts that haven’t happened yet. What they both totally ignored was the fact that spending has increased by 41 percent since 2007 while unemployment has risen from 4.4 percent to 8.9 percent as the country lost seven million jobs. Sound to you like this massive increase in spending over the past four years has done any good? But even better, towards the end of the segment, Reich let a really inconvenient truth slip: “ This is the most anemic recovery we’ve had from a deep hole since the Great Depression .” Please notice that Matthews agreed, as of course do I. And that's the point, for we’ve increased federal spending by 41 percent without it resulting in much economic improvement. Yet Matthews, Reich, and their ilk believe cutting spending will hurt the economy. In reality, we now have two distinct economic periods in the past 80 years when huge increases in federal spending were made to try to pull the nation out of a “deep hole,” and neither has worked. From 1929 to 1939, annual federal outlays tripled from roughly $3 billion to $9 billion. Did it help? Hardly. The unemployment rate was 3.2 percent in 1929. Having peaked at roughly 25 percent in 1933, it was still at 17.2 percent at the end of 1939. Did a tripling in outlays end the Depression? Certainly not, which means that massive federal spending has not solved the worst two economic crises of the last 80 years. But let’s take this a step further. The Left and their media minions always like to use the Clinton Era as an example of how raising taxes can actually spark economic growth. Of course, we conservatives know that the early ’90s recession ended in the 2nd quarter of 1991, and that the economy was already booming before the former governor of Arkansas was elected. We also understand that the creation of the Pentium chip as well as internet routers sparked a technological and economic boom like nothing most baby boomers had ever seen. Ignoring all that, the 90s were also a period of fiscal restraint in Washington. On budget spending (meaning not including Social Security and Medicare) only grew by 42 percent. In the ’80s, this rose by 115 percent, which was actually down from 184 percent in the ’70s. Spending grew by 107 percent in the ‘60s. More recently, on-budget spending in the ’00s rose 117 percent. This means that if the Left and their media minions want to use the Clinton years as the blueprint for economic success, they should realize that government spending during that period increased at the slowest pace in the last five decades. Putting even a finer point on this, spending in the ’90s grew at less than 1/3 the rate of the average of the other four decades – meaning that the four decade mean growth was three times the ’90s. Add this to the failure of massive spending increases to get us out of the Depression and the most recent recession, and it’s clearly preposterous to claim that growth in government is at all economically stimulative. What was that Matthews and Reich were saying about big lies?

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Midsomer Murders – review

After Brian True-May’s comments on the all-white casting the programme now feels soiled, says Mark Lawson Viewers have always watched Midsomer Murders in a suspicious frame of mind, wondering which of the half dozen or so familiar British character actors contracted to look shifty in this episode will prove to be the latest English rural mass murderer sent to the presumably overcrowded Midsomer nick. But, following the suspension of producer Brian True-May for seemingly suggesting that the show benefits from an all-white casting policy, Wednesday night’s opening episode of the 14th series will have been watched with a different kind of suspicion – seeking evidence of acting apartheid. The background to this story, Death in the Slow Lane, was motor racing, a sport in which Britain has had a recent black world champion and so a promising opportunity to extend the facial palette. Characteristically though, the plot line involved events at a Silverstone Grand Prix in the 1960s and so the chance was missed. True-May will leave the show in the summer and this episode, completed before the furore, did suggest that the franchise could use a fresh overview. Although a sharp-eyed advance freeze-framer had spotted one black extra at the edge of a crowd scene, the programme’s traditional racial monotony soon prevailed and began at times to look wilful. For example, one suspect was a young urban DJ called Dave “Doggy” Day, speaking street patois (“Oh, my days, you still in school, innit?”), who had been hired to judge a vintage car contest at a local private school. Yet, although the departing producer has cited social realism as a reason for the series’ whiteness, even this representative of a notably multiracial profession was cast caucasian. Admittedly, there is a difficulty here. A black DJ could be viewed as a racial stereotype, an objection that might also have been raised if the “rough boy from the estate”, a crucial minor character, had been cast non-white. But, if this was the rationale behind these casting decisions, then Midsomer has moved to racial sensitivity without an intervening period of racial inclusivity. And it was striking that even though this episode required large school groups, another area of British life known for its range of races, these juvenile performers could have been recruited from a 1940s British stage school. Now that the row has opened eyes to this issue, it’s difficult to watch Midsomer innocently. The show feels soiled – a bit too like a South African Broadcasting Corporation programme circa 1980 – and True-May’s successor is surely going to have to change the colour scheme . Although how many future series there will be already depended, even before this fuss, on close inspection of the ratings for this run, as the focus of the episode was supposed to have been on a different casting decision. Following John Nettles’ retirement after 14 years, his DCI Tom Barnaby has been replaced by cousin DCI John Barnaby, played by Neil Dudgeon. The new top cop in Causton CID was introduced through a teasing camera angle, twice showing him in his kitchen speaking intimately to an unseen companion. In a useful rebuke to Midsomer’s current detractors, would the hidden listener turn out to be a black woman or a gay man? It proved to be his pet dog. Dudgeon, though, got through more facial expressions and vocal inflections in this one storyline than Nettles had managed in 81 – a positive note in an episode that will otherwise have done little to smooth the furrowed brows at ITV1 in relation to its crisis-stricken hit. Television ITV ITV1 Television industry Race issues Mark Lawson guardian.co.uk

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Fixing The Broken Health-Care System . . .In 1940.

enlarge Modern Medicine circa 1940 – well, they were trying. Click here to view this media Since today marks the one year anniversary of the signing into law of our present comprehensive health-care system (the one sneeringly dubbed Obamacare by the ones standing the most to benefit from it), it’s always nice to remember this thing has a history and it goes back for decades. It goes back way before even this broadcast from January 18, 1940, part of the America’s Townhall Meeting Of The Air series to 1909. But for argument’s sake (and since radio didn’t really get started until the late 1920′s), here is a reminder the argument has been around and so have the detractors. On this program the debate is carried on between various members of the medical community and from Johns Hopkins University and from Yale. Dr. C.E.A. Winslow: “We need, in other words, a broad national health program employing various procedures in the sense in which it was formulated by the conference held in Washington during the summer of 1938. Progress must be gradual and evolutionary. But if any progress at all is to be made, it is essential that Federal grants should be made available to stimulate experimentation by the various states. We stand still and quarrel about details and about hypothetical damage to our vested interests, while men and women and children suffer and die for the lack of the resources of modern medical science, Let us forget slogans and avoid vague terminologies which arouse the secretion of the Endocrine glands instead of stimulating the higher nerve centers. Let us recognize that the situation is serious and calls for action. Let us remember that there is no single easy solution of the problem. But that what we need is a national health program so constructed as to enable the people of these United States to obtain and to pay for the medical care they need, whether they pay for it as individuals, as groups or as tax payers.” Depending on who you spoke to, Winslow was either revered as a pioneering member of the Medical profession or reviled as a self-serving Quack . Even in 1940, no one was above the smear, especially when it came to fixing a system that was broken. Much the same way it is now. There is a whole section of the electorate who would prefer things stayed broken, that any attempts to fix it are ploys by some conspiracy bent on subjugating the American people into a Socialistic society. They used that argument in the 1930′s and they continue to use that argument – it hasn’t changed in tone very much – the fear is still the same. And even now there is a well-funded movement afoot to repeal the health-care law signed last year. A law that, even though far from perfect, is still the first one of its kind since it was talked about in this broadcast. How ever shaky the ground is, the health-care law is still standing a year after it was signed.

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Eddie Fisher

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Eddie Fisher

Elizabeth Taylor in and around Las Vegas Film Icon Elizabeth Taylor Dies at 79 Whos Afraid of Virginia Woolf Getting Angry, Baby ”Rip – Actress Elizabeth Taylor Dies at 79” Eddie Fisher & Liz Taylor: Brangelina of the 1950s | Hot News Today Eddie Fisher , left, with Elizabeth Taylor, posing in this May 12, 1959, file photo in Las Vegas. (Credit: AP). (CBS) They weren’t movie co-stars and they didn’t have six kids, but Eddie Fisher and Elizabeth Taylor ignited a scandal that … Eddie Fisher & Liz Taylor: Brangelina of the 1950s In My Trends … Singer Eddie Fisher , left, with actress Elizabeth Taylor, right, posing for the media after their marriage in this May 12, 1959 file photo taken Las Vegas. (AP/ file photo). (CBS) They weren’t movie co-stars and they didn’t have six … Eddie fisher | RKS News | News Around The World They weren’t movie co-stars further they didn’t have six kids, but Eddie Fisher also Elizabeth Taylor ignited a scandal that went unrivaled until 2005 when Brad Pitt divorced Jennifer Aniston to take up with his Mr. and Mrs. Smith … Elizabeth Taylor with husband Eddie Fisher leave clinic surrounded … Elizabeth Taylor with husband Eddie Fisher leave clinic surrounded by mob film 30728.WMV. Published March 23, 2011 | By D Lewis · Elizabeth Taylor with husband Eddie Fisher leave clinic surrounded by mob film 30728.WMV … Eddie fisher biography | www.5E8.net Eddie fisher biography. Posted on March 23, 2011 by admin · Eddie fisher biography reviews, answers and questions and tips for Eddie fisher biography. Tags: eddie fisher biography. This entry was posted in General and tagged Biography … markchappelle says: Debbie Reynolds on losing husband Eddie Fisher to Elizabeth Taylor http://bit.ly/b3CLuC | Daily Mail

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Chris Matthews and Robert Reich Discuss ‘Republican Lies About Jobs’

Former Clinton labor secretary Robert Reich wrote a truly nonsensical piece for the Huffington Post Tuesday ironically called “The Republicans' Big Lies About Jobs.” MSNBC's Chris Matthews must have loved this tripe and its sophomoric title for he invited the Berkeley professor on Wednesday's “Hardball” so that the pair could put on a clinic in liberal economic fantasy (video follows with partial transcript and oodles of commentary): (BEGIN VIDEO) REPRESENTATIVE ERIC CANTOR (R-VIRGINIA): We have adopted a two-track approach called cut and grow. Now, the first part, cut, is obvious. We know that we have to stop spending money that we don't have, and we have to begin managing the money we do have and spend it more wisely. The American people are tightening their belts and Washington should too. The growth part is about those gazelles, growing businesses that add new employees every month, keeping regulators from running amok. (END VIDEO) CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: Welcome back to “Hardball.” That was House Majority Leader Eric Cantor Monday out at Stanford University. His speech on the economy prompted a reaction from former labor secretary Robert Reich in the Huffington Post. We all read it. Reich wrote about what he called, “Republicans’ Big Lies About Jobs.” Reich says there are five of them: deficit cuts somehow create jobs; tax cuts for the rich create jobs; corporate tax cuts create jobs; wage and benefit cuts create jobs; regulation killing creates jobs, and; regulations kill jobs. […] Robert, you say what we were taught in school. So, is there somebody teaching something else? I mean, if you want people to spend more money, you give them more money in wages or whatever, you don't fire them and leave them as paupers, because they're not very good consumers then. When you fire people, take away their rights to bargain for higher wages you take away their ability to spend their wages. So, what is this thing, this sort of religion course we’re getting, this primer we’re getting from Cantor? What is it, neo-classical from the 19th century? Where does he believe that stuff from? From here, Reich repeated some of the nonsense in his piece concerning how spending cuts would be the end of the world now, and President Obama needs to push back to prevent this from happening. However, what was stunning about this over eight minute segment was how Matthews and Reich admitted that the economy is in terrible shape right now, but implied it was somehow caused by spending cuts that haven’t happened yet. What they both totally ignored was the fact that spending has increased by 41 percent since 2007 while unemployment has risen from 4.4 percent to 8.9 percent while the country lost seven million jobs. Sound to you like this massive increase in spending over the past four years has done any good? But even better, towards the end of the segment (minute 7:16), Reich let a really inconvenient truth slip: “ This is the most anemic recovery we’ve had from a deep hole since the Great Depression .” Please notice that Matthews agreed, as of course do I. And that's the point, for we’ve increased federal spending by 41 percent without it resulting in much economic improvement. Yet Matthews, Reich, and their ilk believe cutting spending will hurt the economy. In reality, we now have two distinct economic periods in the past 80 years when huge increases in federal spending were made to try to pull the nation out of a “deep hole,” and neither has worked. Consider that from 1929 to 1939, federal outlays tripled from roughly $3 billion to $9 billion. Did it help? Hardly. The unemployment rate was 3.2 percent in 1929. Having peaked at roughly 25 percent in 1933, it was still at 17.2 percent at the end of 1939. Did a tripling in spending end the Depression? Certainly not, which means that massive federal spending has not solved the worst two economic crises of the last 80 years. But let’s take this a step further. The Left and their media minions always like to use the Clinton Era as an example of how raising taxes can actually spark economic growth. Of course, we conservatives know that the early ’90s recession ended in the 2nd quarter of 1991, and that the economy was already booming before the former governor of Arkansas was elected. We also know that the creation of the Pentium chip as well as internet routers sparked a technological and economic boom like nothing most baby boomers had ever seen. Ignoring all that, the 90s were also a period of fiscal restraint in Washington. On budget spending (meaning not including Social Security and Medicare) only grew by 42 percent. In the ’80s, this rose by 115 percent, which was actually down from 184 percent in the ’70s. Spending grew by 107 percent in the ‘60s. More recently, on-budget spending in the ’00s rose 117 percent. This means that if the Left and their media minions want to use the Clinton years as the blueprint for economic success, they should realize that government spending during that period increased at the slowest pace in the last five decades. Putting even a finer point on this, spending in the ’90s grew at less than 1/3 the rate of the average of the other four decades – meaning that the four decade mean growth was three times the ’90s. Add this to the failure of massive spending increases to get us out of the Depression and the most recent recession, and it’s clearly preposterous to claim that growth in government is at all economically stimulative. What was that Matthews and Reich were saying about big lies?

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NPR’s Rovner: Dependent Constituencies Among the ‘Benefits’ of ObamaCare

NPR's Julie Rovner put the best liberal spin on the one-year anniversary of ObamaCare becoming law on Wednesday's Morning Edition. When an opponent of the legislation stated that supporters would try to “create constituencies that will fight to preserve it…[by] spending hundreds of billions of dollars on health insurance subsidies,” Rover added that “those are just a few of the law's benefits.” The correspondent led her report with sound bites from House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, who marveled over the “landmark law,” and Senator Orrin Hatch, who labeled it “one of the worst pieces of legislation in the history of this country.” She continued by focusing on the opponents of ObamaCare: ROVNER: In fact, sowing seeds of doubt about the law is all part of opponents' strategy , says Michael Cannon, head of health policy for the libertarian Cato Institute. That's because, at the moment, with Democrats still in control of the Senate and presidency, opponents know they can't actually do much to change the law. MICHAEL CANNON, CATO INSTITUTE: So, if you want a legislative fix to ObamaCare, if you want to repeal it, you have to keep it unpopular between now and January of 2013. ROVNER: That's the soonest Republicans could gain enough control to make the law go away. So what needs to happen between now and then? CANNON: You try to keep the law from taking root, and you try to educate the public about all its harmful effects. ROVNER: That's why all the defunding and repeal votes in Congress, not to mention the dozens of lawsuits challenging the law's constitutionality. Instead of noting that the majority of Americans are still opposed to ObamaCare, even a year after its passage, Rovner set up her spin about the law: ROVNER: Of course, if you're supporting the law, what you want is to sink those roots in so deep as to make the law, well, unrepealable. Cannon knows a little something about that too. CANNON: You want to create constituencies that will fight to preserve it, and by sending $250 checks to seniors, you may be creating constituencies; by giving tax credits and subsidies to employers, you may be creating constituencies; and, certainly, when the law begins spending hundreds of billions of dollars on health insurance subsidies to low and middle income Americans, you're going to be creating a huge constituency. ROVNER: And those are just a few of the law's benefits: things like starting to fill in the Medicare prescription drug donut hole for seniors . The NPR reporter then turned to one of the supporters of the legislation, Ron Pollack of the liberal organization Families USA. Unlike Cannon, who was identified as a libertarian, Rovner didn't give Pollack an ideological label: ROVNER: Ron Pollack of Families USA, who does support the law , says that as the public sees more of the law's benefits, support for it will grow. But he says it's about more than just buying off individual constituencies. It's about what the law actually does for people. RON POLLACK, FAMILIES USA: Those people who've got preexisting conditions, they don't want to be denied coverage by insurance companies. Those people who've got health conditions, they don't want to be charged an arm and a leg in discriminatory premiums. When people get sick, they don't want to lose the health coverage they've been paying for for many years. ROVNER: Pollack also says supporters of the law are still fighting to help the public understand the 2,000-page-plus measure. POLLACK: There are so many myths about this legislation, from death panels, government takeover, that this is adding to the deficit. None of those things are true. Pollack's denial that ObamacCare doesn't add to deficit doesn't square with an August 19, 2010 report by Ben Smith of Politico which points out that his own organization was among the “White House allies [that] are dramatically shifting their attempts to defend health care legislation, abandoning claims that it will reduce costs and the deficit and instead stressing a promise to 'improve it.'” The bipartisan deficit commission final report actually pointed out that these earlier claims about “count on large phantom savings.” Unsurprisingly, the NPR correspondent didn't fact-check any of the “supporter's” claims. Rovner gave one last hint of her views on the year-old law at the end of her report: “…On the law's first birthday, it's still one big race, a competition between supporters who hope the health law will have many more birthdays to celebrate, and opponents, who'd like to blow out the candles permanently .” — Matthew Balan is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. You can follow him on Twitter here .

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