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You hear the false meme everywhere: the overpaid public service employees are being vilified all over the media and blamed for the state of the economy . The nation’s public employees educate our kids, fight our fires, make sure our food isn’t tainted with toxic crap, provide services to the neediest and perform a thousand other vital tasks the private sector has no incentive to do. They earn less, on average, than their private-sector counterparts with similar qualifications. None become billionaires. But the government doesn’t engage in the kind of ruthless and relentless union-busting that corporate America has employed to make it virtually impossible for private sector workers to organize. That explains, in part, why public workers toil in the last sector of the U.S. economy where employees enjoy some job security, decent health care and the prospect of a dignified retirement. Now, the corporate Right has public sector workers in its cross-hairs. A viral email making the rounds in Tea Party circles sums up the charge, describing a dark conspiracy among “stinking, filthy libs” to use masses of sallow government bureaucrats to undermine America’s “capitalistic, independent, rugged individualists and entrepreneurs”: [Government workers] are supported 100% by the American taxpayers employed in the private profit producing sector [sic]. None of the gov. offices produce one red cent in profit–they are all parasites. Every 100 gainfully employed American tax payers supports 6.5 gov. employees 100% [sic]. Jonathan Cohn, writing in the New Republic, calls public employees, “the new welfare queens,” an easy target for the Right’s politics of resentment. And the comparison is apt. Just as there were no doubt a few welfare recipients gaming the system and living the high-life, a very small number of public sector employees — mostly the cops and firefighters to whom politicos don’t dare say no — have won lavish retirement packages. That small group of rather specialized workers is being held up as an example of both the perfidy of “big government” and the unbridled greed of public-sector unions. It’s manifestly nonsensical under even the most casual scrutiny. And the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees have decided to fight back : Public service workers are not the problem. Attacking public service workers will not create jobs. Attacking public service workers will not solve the problem of trying to save the vital public services that so many rely on. The only thing attacking public service workers does is divert attention from the real culprits of our country’s economic troubles and inequality: You, greedy Wall Street CEOs, politicians in Washington who turn a blind eye, and all right-wing talking heads who spin lies. When you attack public employees you are attacking the very folks whose work you benefit from — from providing basic public safety, to fixing potholes in the roads you drive on, to making sure clean water runs from your tap. No more. It’s time to stop the lies. You can sign AFSCME’s petition supporting public sector employees here .

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Nigeria to charge Dick Cheney in $180 million bribery case, issue Interpol arrest warrant

Click here to view this media I don’t expect this to go anywhere, but a person can dream, can’t they? I guess we’ll see if the Obama administration steps in to interfere with this case as well. Headline here and more from Raw Story: Nigeria to charge Dick Cheney in $180 million bribery case, issue Interpol arrest warrant : The energy services company Dick Cheney ran prior to becoming Vice President of the United States was atop the tongue of liberals each time it was awarded a contract in Iraq. Now the company’s name, Halliburton, is being spoken somewhere else: Nigeria. According to a story filed late Wednesday , Cheney will be indicted in a Nigerian bribery case as part of an investigation into an alleged $180 million bribery scandal. “Last week, Nigeria arrested at least 23 officials from companies including Halliburton, Saipem, Technip and a former subsidiary of Panalpina Welttransport Holding AG in connection with alleged illegal payments to Nigerian officials. Those detained were all freed on bail on Nov. 29,” Bloomberg News’ Elisha Bala-Gbogbo wrote. “Authorities in the West African nation are probing Halliburton, Saipem and Technip for the alleged payment of $180 million in bribes to win a $6 billion liquefied natural-gas contract,” Bala-Gbogbo added. “Panalpina is being investigated for illegal payments it allegedly made to Nigerian customs officials on behalf of Royal Dutch Shell Plc.” Go read the rest and The Nation’s John Nichols joined Ed Schultz in the clip above to briefly discuss the case. UPDATE: And here’s more from Jonathan Turley who appeared on Countdown tonight. Wikileaks: Obama Administration Secretly Worked To Prevent Prosecution of War Crimes By The Bush Administration Nigeria To Charge Cheney With Bribery Click here to view this media

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While the media have been hyping rich liberals like Ted Turner and Warren Buffett calling on Congress to raise taxes on Americans earning over $250,000 per year, they've failed to inform the public that the nation's top earners already pay a disproportionately large share of the nation's tax burden, NewsBusters publisher Brent Bozell told Fox News's Steve Doocy on this morning's “Fox & Friends” [video follows page break] : read more

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Spreading Christmas cheer with a KKK snowman

Click here to view this media Although I’m not a fan of “random idiot” stories, but this one might be reflective of deeper societal ills right now. It’s also somewhat telling that the people in the clip don’t seem that surprised. Via KOMO news in Idaho. HAYDEN, Idaho — While most see the holiday season as one of joy and merrymaking, at least one Hayden, Idaho, resident is taking the opportunity to spread a little hate courtesy of a noose-carrying, KKK hood-wearing snowman on their front lawn, KXLY.com reported. Several area parents first noticed the offensive snow sculpture, located in front of a home in the 9000 block of Hillview Drive, while taking their kids to school Tuesday morning. The sculpture depicts a snowman with a pointed hat and an outstretched right hand with a noose in it. Residents in the neighborhood say the homeowners also have an Aryan Nations flag on display. One resident said they were “appalled at the nerve they have to threaten people in our community with their signs of hatred,” adding that this is a season of love and hope, not hate. The homeowner who had the offensive snow sculpture in front of his home is Mark, who was profiled by KXLY back in July for posting flags ranging from an Aryan Nations flag to an SS flag at his home, drawing the ire of his neighbors. Then in October he angered residents further when, according to neighbors, he passed out bullets on Halloween. A self-described White Separatist, Mark, who declined to give his last name during an interview in July, said Tuesday there was nothing wrong with his snowman. enlarge

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Joe ‘You Lie’ Wilson Defends Anti-Gay Caller’s Remarks, Ignores Negative Impact of DADT and Defends His SOTU Outburst

Click here to view this media Rep. Joe “You Lie” Wilson appeared on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal and after ignoring the concerns of a caller who pointed out how the military’s Don’t Ask Don’t Tell policy is not working and responded by saying it did, he then defended as Think Progress pointed out, an anti-gay caller’s remarks. This man sounded like nothing but a broken John McCain talking points regurgitation machine during this interview, but with even less tact than McCain is capable of when defending his continually moving goalposts on DADT. Rep. Joe Wilson Thanks C-SPAN Caller For Anti-Gay Remarks : Wilson received a number of passionate calls on the issue, including one from a self-described “heterosexual 72-year-old Christan woman” who had been married for 49 years, who said she must “speak up” to Wilson, and offered a passionate defense of Lt. Col. Victor Fehrenbach and Lt. Dan Choi , who were both discharged under DADT. Wilson dismissed her pleas and moved onto the next caller, who went on an offensive anti-gay tirade, saying that no homosexuals are “great” and “all can be replaced in America.” Wilson did not rebuke the caller for the hateful comments, and actually thanked him: CALLER: Good Morning. Mr Wilson thank you. I try to hear your opening remarks on the floor every day, and I thank God we have someone that stood up to the establishment in Washington and called the lie a liar. Thank you. Now another thing. I can’t believe we’re talking about people — they’re not even one percent of our population, and we’re so worried about their sexual activities. Why are we talking — these people don’t even represent one percentage, not even one percent. And all can be replaced in America. None are great. None are number one. All can be replaced . Mr. Wilson, thank you from a third generation union member in Detroit, Michigan, where people do not want to get off unemployment. REP. WILSON: Well, thank you for your comments . I truly believe the system we have is working, but we need to have hearings. I’m happy to have hearings on any issue we’ve raised this morning. And that’s why I appreciate the incoming chairman Buck McKeon. Chairman McKeon will be having hearings this coming year, and we can go over this issue in a very calm way, but this should not be done in a lame duck session. Earlier in the show Wilson also defended his outburst during the president’s State of the Union address where he yelled out “you lie!” to President Obama and called his admonishment by the House for his political stunt… get this… a political stunt. This guy’s hypocrisy button is apparently severely broken. Click here to view this media

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FCC Commissioner Calls For Greater Regulation of News Media

In a Wednesday interview on BBC World News America, liberal FCC Commissioner Michael Copps told correspondent Katty Kay: “I think American media has a bad case of substance abuse right now ….we are going to be pretty close to denying our citizens the essential news and information that they need to have in order to make intelligent decisions about the future direction of their country.” As TVNewser reported on Thursday, after Kay asked about instituting a “Public Value Test” of media outlets, Copps replied: “What we've had in recent years is an aberration where we have had no oversight of the media. For years and years we had some public interest guidelines…they agreed to serve the public interest and that public interest to me right now is crying 'news and information, news and information, news and information.'” read more

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How Cities Must Change Radically in Face of Population Growth

Image credit: Forum for the Future , used with permission. As Lloyd reminded us, Alex Steffen once posted on the now sadly discontinued Worldchanging a fabulous piece called My Other Car is a Bright Green City . And yesterday, Lloyd also posted about a bike advocate complaining about the electric car hype that is so rife in the media (this site … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The art of compromise, GOP style

Click here to view this media Rep. Aaron Schock (IL-18) took his turn at spouting Republican talking points on Morning Joe , with the need to extend all the Bush Tax Cuts. When asked by Pat Buchanan on where Republicans could compromise to ensure that they reach a deal with Democrats before the Bush Tax Cuts expire at the end of the year, Schock’s answer — full extension for all of them — leaves both Buchanan and Eugene Robinson laughing out loud at the young congressman. And Schock does look a bit red-faced, of course, but he has no idea how foolish his response sounds to non-Republicans, because in Republican Land tax cuts always create prosperity and jobs (except for the dismal, almost no job creation during the Bush years). And that extending all the Bush tax cuts won’t add to the deficit because the tax cuts will magically spur the economy, in some fairytale Republicans tell themselves. And never mind that the national debt nearly doubled under George Bush with unfunded and misguided tax cuts, Medicaid Part D, two wars, etc. That’s yesterday’s news. Today it’s the Democrats who are the fiscally irresponsible ones, left trying to clean up after the Bush disaster. And this comes from supposedly one of the best and brightest of that crowd who’ll run the House in the new year. It boggles the mind. Whenever someone asks a straight-forward question from them they get a load of hogwash which should be greeted with scorn and ridicule, because their answers are ridiculous, but for whatever reasons they’re treated as serious people when all the evidence is to the contrary.

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Here’s the NYT’s Bill Keller and Carne Ross on the BBC debating WikiLeaks. As you can see, Keller seems to think it’s the job of the press to check with the administration before publishing information. There are many opinions on the WikiLeaks affair coming out with lightning speed and I think for the first time since President Obama has been in office we’re seeing true bipartisan agreement — both Democrats and Republicans want to shut WikiLeaks down. It’s a real win-win for right-wingers, who are openly calling for Assange’s assassination (and a few are shocked that he’s still breathing right now), but they are cool if the revelations do hurt President Obama. Roy Odroso via The Village Voice: Rightbloggers generally take a two-pronged approach to the leaks: They believe the new document dump is an unpardonable breach of U.S. security — except to the extent that it may be used to denigrate the Obama Administration, it which case they feel it deserves wider dissemination. — None of this altered their feeling that by leaking this info Assange was aiding the enemy, and possible guilty of murder. “Gosh, isn’t it nice that the enemy will be able to identify Iraqis who died by name and whose side they were fighting on, so they can go after their families, either to kill them or recruit them, depending on the circumstances?” said BizzyBlog . “What a guy this Mr. Assange is.” “Julian Assange: Jerkoff troop killer,” wrote The North Star National . National Review ‘s Jonah Goldberg asked, “Why wasn’t Assange garroted in his hotel room years ago?” …Last weekend the diplomatic leaks was released, and with them came the usual calls for Assange’s death and/or detention. “Julian Assange, Why is He Still Breathing?” asked Paladin’s Page . “Assange should be looking at the inside of a container on a ship doing lazy racetracks around the Indian Ocean,” said Blackfive . “I won’t think twice if Julian Assange meets the cold blade of an assassin,” said Donald Douglas . Etc. Sarah Palin shows her ignorance knows no bounds by calling Assange a “traitor. ” Maybe she thinks he lives in Hollyweird? A complete denouncing of Wilkileaks. but it goes farther than that. Even our media is joining in with the politicians and are taking on the same POV. Glenn Greenwald has a great post up about the reaction of CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, The NY Times and other media figures who are going on record denouncing Wikileaks . Then, with some exceptions, we have the group which — so very revealingly — is the angriest and most offended about the WikiLeaks disclosures: the American media, Our Watchdogs over the Powerful and Crusaders for Transparency. On CNN last night, Wolf Blitzer was beside himself with rage over the fact that the U.S. Government had failed to keep all these things secret from him… It’s one thing for the Government to shield its conduct from public disclosure, but it’s another thing entirely for the U.S. media to be active participants in that concealment effort. As The Guardian ‘s Simon Jenkins put it in a superb column that I can’t recommend highly enough: “The job of the media is not to protect power from embarrassment. . . . Clearly, it is for governments, not journalists, to protect public secrets.” But that’s just it: the media does exactly what Jenkins says is not their job, which — along with envy over WikiLeaks’ superior access to confidential information — is what accounts for so much media hostility toward that group. As the headline of John Kampfner’s column in The Independent put it : ” Wikileaks shows up our media for their docility at the feet of authority .” Most political journalists rely on their relationships with government officials and come to like them and both identify and empathize with them. By contrast, WikiLeaks is truly adversarial to those powerful factions in exactly the way that these media figures are not: hence, the widespread media hatred and contempt for what WikiLeaks does. Just look at how important it was for Bill Keller to emphasize that the Government is criticizing WikiLeaks but not The New York Times ; having the Government pleased with his behavior is his metric for assessing how good his “journalism” is. If the Government is patting him on the head, then it’s proof that he acted “responsibly.” That servile-to-power mentality is what gets exposed by the contrast Wikileaks provides. Shouldn’t the news journalists out there only be reporting the story itself instead of interjecting their opinion on the propriety of WikiLeaks’ actions? There are plenty of opinionators to do that for them already. Glenn mentions instances where WikiLeaks hasn’t been perfect in their execution and we’ll have to see how it all works out, but when BushCo decided that it was just fine to illegally wiretap phone conversations, the government lost all its credibility on privacy issues. Digby has an excellent take : My personal feeling is that any allegedly democratic government that is so hubristic that it will lie blatantly to the entire world in order to invade a country it has long wanted to invade probably needs a self-correcting mechanism. There are times when it’s necessary that the powerful be shown that there are checks on its behavior, particularly when the systems normally designed to do that are breaking down. Now is one of those times. I also think that all the sturm und drang about leaks is fairly bizarre considering that the technology to transfer large amounts of secret information has been out there for some time and has shown its capability in many facets of our lives already. Privacy and secrecy are very abstract concepts in this age. I would have expected the government to have anticipated this kind of document transfer in advance and guarded against it. As for the substance of the revelations, I don’t know what the results will be. But in the world of diplomacy, embarrassment is meaningful and I’m not sure that it’s a bad thing for all these people to be embarrassed right now. Puncturing a certain kind of self-importance — especially national self-importance — may be the most worthwhile thing they do. A little humility is long overdue. Since the media willingly aided and abetted Bush and his cronies in the distortions of the news that led us into war with Iraq, I do understand why they are reacting the way they are — after all, the habit of sucking up to power is a tough one to break once you get addicted to it. But it’s a sad thing to witness all the same.

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Rep. John Shadegg Denies That Unemployment Benefits are an Immediate Benefit to the Economy

Click here to view this media Apparently I’m not the only one that caught this segment with Rep. John Shadegg on Morning Joe and was completely appalled. With unemployment benefits set to expire for hundreds of thousands of Americans, we get this joker coming on the air and claiming that unemployment benefits aren’t stimulative to the economy and those Bush tax cuts for the rich are. Republicans really are determined to completely destroy the US economy. Tax cuts for the rich and the rest of you can eat cake. Rep. Shadegg Scoffs At The Fact That Jobless Benefits Are A Benefit To The Economy: ‘No, They’re Not!’ : According to calculations by the Congressional Budget Office , Moody’s Economy , and myriad other economists , unemployment benefits are the single best way to pump money into the economy and generate economic activity, as the unemployed are very likely to spend all of the benefits they receive (thus moving money into local businesses). But during an interview with MSNBC’s Mike Barnicle today, Rep. John Shadegg (R-AZ) scoffed at the notion that unemployment benefits help the economy. “Unemployed people hire people? Really? I didn’t know that,” Shadegg jeered: BARNICLE: What about the fact that unemployment benefits pumped into the economy are an immediate benefit to the economy? Immediate… SHADEGG: No, they’re not! Unemployed people hire people? Really? I didn’t know that. BARNICLE: Unemployed people spend money Congressman, ’cause they have no money. SHADEGG: Aha! So your answer is it’s the spending of money that drives the economy and I don’t think that’s right. It’s the creation of jobs that drives the economy… Actually, the truth is the unemployed will spend as little of that money as they possibly can. Job creators create jobs. BARNICLE: Have you ever been unemployed? Have you ever been unemployed? SHADEGG: Yes, I have. BARNICLE: What did you do with the money? Save it? Go read the rest of the post for more from Think Progress on why Shadegg is just dead wrong here and on the damage not extending unemployment benefits is going to do to our economy. And as they also noted, Shadegg saying he’s going to be unemployed soon is likely of little consequence to him. And while Shadegg joked that he will be unemployed come January since he is retiring from Congress, next year he will be eligible for a federal pension (if he opted for one), as he is turning 62 and served on Capitol Hill for more than five years. Given his resume , I would imagine some Republican lobby shop has got a cushy job waiting in the wings for him as well.

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