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O’Reilly and Coulter try to explain why right-wing scroogery is really Christian charity

Click here to view this media Bill O’Reilly really took it personally when Stephen Colbert made fun of O’Reilly’s bizarre column claiming that Jesus really wouldn’t have helped the poor at Christmas time — or at least worried about their unemployment checks. So O’Reilly earlier this week featured an opening segment responding haplessly to Colbert, attempting a serious theological argument with a comedian — and miserably failing: But Judeo-Christian tradition does not require blind largesse. We are not mandated to buy people gin or cocaine, or pay someone’s bills if they refuse to work. If you want to do that, you can in a free society. But to force the responsible to pay for the irresponsible is immoral in my opinion. The U.S. government makes no distinction when it comes to entitlements. The feds do not drug test or regulate the behavior of those on the dole. And there is no question that the feds waste billions of dollars every year, money taken from hardworking people. Americans are the most generous people on Earth, but our government does not have a right to seize anyone’s assets in pursuit of an impossible social nirvana. And I do believe that Jesus would agree. The best part came when he invited on Ann Coulter to back him up. Coulter tossed out her usual turdlike bon mots: “Liberals think sending a check to the IRS constitutes charity” was about as cogent as she got — while claiming that good Christian Republicans are “actually giving to poor people.” Hey, I dunno about you, but when I think of Christian charity and kindness, Ann Coulter is the first person to spring to mind. That is, as someone in deep need of it. Grade: Massive FAIL.

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Biden: Marriage equality ‘an inevitability’ in America

Click here to view this media Vice President Joe Biden suggested Friday that it’s just a matter of time before same-sex marriage is legal in all US states. “I think the country is evolving,” Biden told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos. “I think there’s an inevitability for a national consensus on gay marriage.” Same-sex marriage is one issue where the president and the vice president don’t seem to agree. Obama has long supported civil unions but not marriage equality. “This is the president’s policy, but it is evolving,” Biden said. Earlier this week, Obama signed into law a measure that repeals the military’s ban on gays and lesbians serving openly. At a press conference following the signing event, ABC’s Jake Tapper gave the president a chance to explain whether his views on gay marriage had changed in light of the repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell.” “Is it intellectually consistent to say that gay and lesbians should be able to fight and die for this country, but they should not be able to marry the people they love?” Tapper asked . “My feelings about this are constantly evolving,” Obama replied. “I struggle with this. I have friends, I have people who work for me who are in powerful, strong, long-lasting gay or lesbian unions and they are extraordinary people. And this is something that means a lot to them and they care deeply about.” “At this point, what I’ve said is that my baseline is a strong civil union that provides them the protections and the legal rights that married couples have and I think that’s the right thing to do,” he added. “But I recognize that from their perspective it is not enough. I think we are going to continue to debate and I personally am going to continue to wrestle with going forward,” Obama said. “It’s good to hear his views are not solidly where they have been, but he’s still not there on marriage,” Brian Moulton, chief legislative counsel of the Human Rights Campaign, told The Washington Post .

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Raising the debt ceiling will be one of many battles facing President Obama in 2011

Click here to view this media Stuart Varney, a FOX News pro-business a-hole, was on during Megyn Kelly’s show yesterday and was all giddy because Republicans in the House passed a new rule which will make it tougher to pass legislation to raise the debt ceiling, House Republicans set to release their recommended rules changes Wednesday will change the names of several committees and repeal a rule making it more difficult to raise the debt ceiling. They will also require that all bills be posted online three days before a vote. {} The draft rules would repeal the “Gephardt Rule” that allows the House to raise the debt limit automatically when a conference report on the budget is approved. If the rule is repealed, a separate vote on raising the debt ceiling must be held. The Republicans will play chicken with Obama over the debt ceiling and of course the budget, which will come up, I believe, in March. How will the President handle these fights? Dan Pfeiffer says Obama will fight. Pfeiffer described 2011 as a “year with compromise and confrontation,” and on spending issues, he at least talked the language of confrontation. “The President is willing to draw tough lines in the sand… we’re not going to let the Republicans take the country in the wrong direction. You can’t make the car go faster by taking out the engine,” he concluded, referring to spending cuts. The President echoed some of these sentiments in his press conference yesterday , saying “I expect we’ll have a robust debate about this when we return from the holidays — a debate that will have to answer an increasingly urgent question — and that is how do we cut spending that we don’t need while making investments that we do need — investments in education, research and development, innovation, and the things that are essential to grow our economy over the long run, create jobs, and compete with every other nation in the world.” He’s made a distinction between “programs we don’t need” and programs that deserve investment, so the question becomes what programs does the President have in mind that are no longer necessary. As I said, Varney was very pleased that Republicans passed the new rule so they can hold hostage the government, which they hope will allow them to cut as much spending as they inhumanly can from the federal government. Varney makes the case that if Republicans don’t get what they want, they will at least threaten to shut down the government, which includes Medicare, Social Security and those screwed-up wars. Varney: There’s a new sheriff in town, it’s called the Republican Party that now runs the House of Representatives and they’re going to introduce new rules which will make it much more difficult-time consuming to raise that debt ceiling. You know it used to be automatic. That’s gone. Kelly: And if Republicans do freeze the debt ceiling it would mean the immediate succession of more than 40% of all federal government activities including Social Security, military operations in Afghan and Iraq, Homeland security, medicare, unemployment insurance. This would threaten the safety and economic security of all Americans. Why is he wrong? Varney: (Gleefuly) Oh, he’s not wrong. What we’ve done here is to raise the possibility of that happening if the Republicans don’t get their way on spending. It’s a political contest with the Republicans and the Democrats and President Obama. Who is going to win? What’s the price the Republicans will extract from raising the debt ceiling, what’s the price? They want to cut spending…The economist is right, You shut the government down and that’s a very serious thing. They will try to ram down spending cuts of all kinds to justify anything that the President will need when it comes to the purse strings. And Mitch McConnell already said ” just wait till next year ” which means that the GOP must rule or else. Doesn’t sound like Republicans want to be too bipartisan to me. Don’t look for the media to be offended if the government is shut down with some extra crispy obstructionism. They’ll salivate for it and hope it happens. Will the Obama administration finally call their bluff? The debt ceiling is now just a move on the game board for Republicans. The President should make them either shut down the government if they do indeed try to get him to cut spending on anything. Protecting Social Security will be one of my main goals in 2011.

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Marsha Blackburn Accuses the FCC of Usurping the Power of Congress with Net Neutrality Ruling

Click here to view this media As Karoli already informed us about , the FCC passed some fairly milk toast regulations on Net Neutrality this week and as expected we got the usual freak out from the right wing. Think Progress has more on some of the reaction from conservatives here. Conservatives Freak Out Over Mild Net Neutrality Laws: ‘It’s Total Government Control Of The Internet’ They missed Rep. Marsha Blackburn’s carping on Sean Hannity’s show the other night where she basically repeated the same fear mongering she has posted on her Congressional web site. FCC Internet Grab a Christmas Nightmare : There’s no such thing as hospice for federal bureaucracies. No quiet corner where bureaus who have outlived their usefulness can go to bravely face the end. The undead need no such niceties; not when they can leap vampire-like upon the next great sector of American life and proceed to suck it dry in the name of “public interest”, “fair play”, or any other euphemistic glamour the Executive and Legislative branches can be lulled into. This may sound like a Halloween tale, but the FCC’s Christmas Week takeover of the Internet is the best example of President Reagan’s maxim that the nearest thing to eternal life on Earth is a federal program. Just four days before Christmas, the FCC will make its vampric leap from its traditional jurisdiction- the terrestrial radio and land line telephones that have fallen into disuse; onto the gifts piled neatly under our trees. The iPads and iPhones, Androids, Wiis, Webbooks, and WiFi will all feel the federal bite in a way they never have before. Today the FCC, in spite of Congressional opposition and public outrage, is expected to adopt “net neutrality” regulations over the Internet. They will impose thousands of pages of rules on the most prosperous, creative, and exciting sector of the American economy. They’ll do it- and then Congress will have to undo it. The FCC’s blind impulse to regulate before the new Congress can restrain them ignores a host of consequences that will prove ill for America’s Creative Economy. First, in detaching the Internet Service Providers (ISPs) from the Internet architecture they have built, the FCC is effectively nationalizing the web. The FCC does this in the name of “fairness”, “non-discrimination”, and “leveling the playing field”. The consequence will be a restriction of bandwidth for users and a deterioration of the online architecture that ISPs no longer have an interest in expanding or maintaining. The underserved communities in this country who don’t yet have access to broadband are now much less likely to get it. Second, the FCC’s hysterical reaction to the hypothetical problem of anti-competitive online behavior is also redundant. By asserting jurisdiction over the Internet as a communications platform, the FCC is shortsightedly ignoring the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) who already has sufficient rules in place to contain the bad behavior in the virtual marketplace the FCC seems so worried about. This sets up a real jurisdictional fight and points out what happens when the bureaucracy decides to create work for themselves, rather than wait for Congress to dictate to them. Finally, when the FCC moves to regulate the Internet, they focus on those issues they understand: bandwidth, spectrum, and to a lesser extent content. They ignore emerging issues of fair trade, property rights, privacy, and copyright. In my view a more comprehensive approach to the new Creative Economy and how it can be protected is the most appropriate. Such a comprehensive approach can only begin on Capitol Hill. The real issue here is not that the Federal Government lacks the authority to sensibly regulate the Internet. Nor, even, that the Internet is in desperate need of regulation- it isn’t. The issue is that the FCC is running out of useful things to occupy their time. There is a real bi-partisan consensus that Congress should act first to regulate the Internet (or not regulate as the case may be). Industry and creative content providers who were coerced into this deal by an over zealous FCC Chairman should take heart. Like the breaking of dawn, the new Congress will prove a swift antidote to the federal bloodsucker you found at your throat this Christmas. Yeah, that’s the ticket Marsha. It’s the federal government and the regulators that are the bloodsuckers, not the telecom companies that want to overcharge people for their Internet access or potentially censor sites they don’t agree with. I’m sure her campaign donors will be very pleased with this appearance. This is the crap we’re going to get to look forward to in the next two years… endless hearings on laws and policies that Republicans would have supported in the past before their party lost their damned mind since they’re corporate friendly and calling them “government takeovers” and “socialism” because Democrats passed them. Good grief these lying hacks make my head hurt.

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Maddow: ‘Newt Gingrich is a direct mail scam artist’

Click here to view this media Speaking to a live audience at the 92nd Street Y Wednesday, MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow blasted former House Speaker Newt Gingrich for his opposition to federal unemployment benefits. “I’m opposed to giving people money for doing nothing,” Gingrich insisted during a recent speech to GOP activists in South Carolina. “Let is review for just a second how Newt Gingrich makes his money,” Maddow began. “For starters, he hands out fake awards in exchange for cash.” “Newt Gingrich makes money right now running a fake awards for small businesses scam,” she continued. “Last year he tried to give one of his fake awards to a small business called The Lodge in Dallas, Texas.” In exchange for a $5,000 donation, Gingrich offered The Lodge, a strip club, a certificate, a novelty gavel and a dinner with him. “When Mr. Gingrich realized he was giving one of his fake awards — for a $5,000 donation — to a strip club he decided to rescind the award and the dinner invitation,” Maddow noted. In mid-December, Gingrich sent another letter to The Lodge and asked them for a $2,000 donation to his American Solutions organization. “This is how Newt Gingrich makes his money but he doesn’t think that you earned yours,” Maddow observed. “Newt Gingrich is a direct mail scam artist. He hires the analog equivalent of spammers to troll the Yellow Pages, looking for businesses he can fool into thinking they are winning a ‘Newt award,’ and then he cons money out of them for accepting it,” she said.

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John Fund is very, very upset over the FCC’s weaksauce Net Neutrality declarations and he’s aiming at ‘wealthy left-wing’ organizations as the culprits. This makes me happy. When a winger can only squirm over something so weak and toothless as to be useless, it’s a good day. But look at who he aims at! Paranoid, much? Free Press and allied groups such as MoveOn.org quickly got funding. Of the eight major foundations that provided the vast bulk of money for campaign-finance reform, six became major funders of the media-reform movement. (They are the Pew Charitable Trusts, Bill Moyers’s Schumann Center for Media and Democracy, the Joyce Foundation, George Soros’s Open Society Institute, the Ford Foundation, and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. ) Free Press today has 40 staffers and an annual budget of $4 million. These wealthy funders pay for more than publicity and conferences. In 2009, Free Press commissioned a poll, released by the Harmony Institute, on net neutrality. Harmony reported that “more than 50% of the public argued that, as a private resource, the Internet should not be regulated by the federal government.” The poll went on to say that since “currently the public likes the way the Internet works . . . messaging should target supporters by asking them to act vigilantly” to prevent a “centrally controlled Internet.” To that end, Free Press and other groups helped manufacture “research” on net neutrality. I n 2009, for example, the FCC commissioned Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society to conduct an “independent review of existing information” for the agency in order to “lay the foundation for enlightened, data-driven decision making.” Considering how openly activist the Berkman Center has been on these issues , it was an odd decision for the FCC to delegate its broadband research to this outfit. Unless, of course, the FCC already knew the answer it wanted to get. Wow. Openly activist? The Berkman Center? Here’s the Berkman Center’s Berkman@10 page, with some of their research projects and discussions posted online. Such terribly activist things. Open innovation, The Dilemma of Games, The Musician and the Scientist, and yes, Network Neutrality (not Internet Neutrality, by the way), as well as one called The Battle for the Web. Hardly activist. Current projects include a Law Library wiki, a discussion of money in politics, and a paper about online political organizing. Again, not activist. Wonky. Educational. But not activist. I confess to zooming in on Fund’s remarks about Berkman because I am a huge fan and avid reader of Doc Searls , who has been a Berkman Fellow for the past 4 years. Berkman aside, the issue of Net Neutrality has always been about a democratic internet, one where everyone has equal access to content and pipes. The organizations Fund villifies in his post are organizations dedicated to the preservation of freedom of speech and free flows of information, so I’m struggling to reconcile the conservative maxim of constitutional freedoms above all with his abuse of organizations who strive to protect it. I didn’t have to struggle too long. A closer reading of his rant reveals a corporate agenda which trumps any speech rights. The net neutrality vision for government regulation of the Internet began with the work of Robert McChesney, a University of Illinois communications professor who founded the liberal lobby Free Press in 2002. Mr. McChesney’s agenda? ” At the moment, the battle over network neutrality is not to completely eliminate the telephone and cable companies,” he told the website SocialistProject in 2009. “But the ultimate goal is to get rid of the media capitalists in the phone and cable companies and to divest them from control.” A year earlier, Mr. McChesney wrote in the Marxist journal Monthly Review that “any serious effort to reform the media system would have to necessarily be part of a revolutionary program to overthrow the capitalist system itself.” Mr. McChesney told me in an interview that some of his comments have been “taken out of context.” He acknowledged that he is a socialist and said he was “hesitant to say I’m not a Marxist.” I am neither a socialist nor a Marxist, but I believe that the Internet should be preserved as something everyone can access equally, and am frustrated on a near-daily basis by the stranglehold providers have on that access. Fund’s suggestion that net neutrality and regulatory authority over access somehow stifles innovation is to believe that the sole innovators are cable and telephone companies. In fact, the opposite is true. The true innovation has come from many different sources, including inhabitants of the Internet itself. Facebook, Twitter, Google and blogs were not the invention of AT&T, after all. The real threat to innovation is handing the keys to all of the Internet gates to the likes of Comcast, AT&T and Verizon. And yet, that is exactly what the FCC did with their weird ruling yesterday.

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Fox & Friends appalled Daily Show gets 9/11 responders credit: People ‘think his show is real news, which is a problem’

Click here to view this media Now that the 9/11 first responders’ health bill has passed the Senate , Jon Stewart and the Daily Show obviously deserve a round of applause for stepping up and playing a critical role in getting it done. That really seemed to stick in the craws of the crew at Fox & Friends this morning. Check out this exchange between Gretchen Carlson (who I think is just still mad at Stewart for calling her out on the dumb-blonde schtick ), Steve Doocy and Brian Kilmeade, culminating with this: Carlson: I think it’s interesting when you have Jon Stewart, who apparently decided to get really serious on this topic, have a serious show about it. That’s like mixing apples and oranges, c’mon! I mean, people already think that his show is real news, which is a problem. So then when you have comedy and then one day you decide to just get totally serious — Doocy: He’s an activist. Carlson: But I don’t know if that works in the mind of the — mind of the American people. You know what’s an even bigger problem, Gretchen? That people already think every show on Fox News other than Shep Smith’s is real news. When in fact, it’s demonstrably little more than lying, smearing, fearmongering propaganda. Now THAT’S a problem.

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Fox host calls out Republicans by name for blocking 9/11 responders bill

Click here to view this media At least one Fox News host is willing to hold Republicans accountable for blocking a bill that would provide health benefits to 9/11 first responders. Fox News’ Shepard Smith called out Republicans by name Monday, placing individual responsibility for their successful filibuster of the bill and refusals to come on his show to talk about it. While Smith noted that they blocked the bill “in lockstep.” “We called a lot of Republicans today, who are in office at the moment,” he said. “These are the one who told us no: Sens. Alexander, Barrasso, Cornyn, Crapo, DeMint, Grassley, Kyl, McConnell, Sessions, Baucus, Gregg, and Inhofe.” In addition, Sens. Bunning, Coburn, Ensign, Graham, Hatch, and McCain failed to respond to his request at all. “I’m not really surprised, but what is your take? Why does no one want to talk about this?” Smith asked former Republican Gov. of New York George Pataki. “I can’t tell you why they didn’t come on and talk about it but I do believe that it’s important that the Senate act and I hope they act before they break,” Pataki said. House Resolution 847, the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act of 2010, would provide $7 billion in benefits to workers that responded to the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. Many of those workers are now experiencing health problems such as cancer, heart disease and respiratory disease. For his part, Smith seems to be the exception at Fox News, where only one other personality has gotten angry about the 9/11 first responders bill — but he neglected to mention that Republicans were the reason for its failure. “Shame, embarrassment, outrage, anger, all are proper reactions to the conduct of our Senators, who will now find one excuse after another to explain away the fact that they have turned their back on American heroes,” Peter Johnson Jr. said last week. “Heroes whose only sin was to expect nothing for their service and were then promised the world by politicians who couldn’t take enough pictures with them.” While other mainstream media outlets have yet to cover 9/11 responders during their nightly news coverage of the lame duck session, Comedy Central’s Jon Stewart devoted his final show of the year to the subject. Stewart noted that the only network that fully covered the topic was Al-Jazeera. “Our networks were scooped with a sympathetic Zadroga Bill story by the same network Osama bin Laden sends his mix-tapes to!” he exclaimed. “This is insane!” ——————————————————————————————————————————– Edit: Today Shep Smith called out Tom Coburn (R-OK) for vowing to block the bill until the next session, for no real reason other than personal pique. SHEPARD SMITH: He is the man who is vowing to slow this down or block it, so that the necessary funding for the illnesses of the first responders who made it to Ground Zero to try to save lives on the day that America changed — remember? This is the Senator who is vowing to block it so that it doesn’t make it through. Sen. Tom Coburn, Republican of Oklahoma.

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2010 Notable Quotables Lowlight Reel

Time's Joe Klein, ABC's Christiane Amanpour, and CBS's Lesley Stahl were just three journalists to see an outrageously baised quote of theirs land in the Best of Notable Quotables 2010 . A panel of 46 radio talk show hosts, magazine editors, columnists, editorial writers, and expert media observers chose the winners, and our news analysts introduce them and a few others in this highlight lowlight reel put together by Media Research Center video producer Bob Parks: read more

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Paul Bedard at U.S. News & World Report offered a scoop on how the new E! reality show Married to Rock — featuring former Billy Idol guitarist Steve Stevens and his wife Josie — outraged Reaganites by claiming to live in an old apartment of Ronald Reagan's and being haunted by his ghost…and having sexual fantasies about it. Brent Bozell was disgusted, among others: Josie suggests Reagan's ghost has joined her in the bathroom. “How cool would it be if it's the ghost of Ronald Reagan!” she says. Steve agrees. “Any president is welcome in my home. The idea of Ronald Reagan, myself, and my wife having a threesome is so damn kinky, come on, I'm in.” At another point, Josie Stevens tells other rocker wives how she will lure the ghost with jelly beans and her breasts… Brent Bozell, president of the Media Research Center, a conservative media watchdog, says, “This is beyond stupid, even by E!'s standards. This, we remind ourselves, is a 'reality' show. There is simply nothing more unrealistic and idiotic than this scenario. What an embarrassment for everyone concerned, except when you have no shame, you can't be embarrassed.” read more

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